Tag Archives: radio

What makes great content? Global Producer’s Day at Global Radio

Last week we held the first of our Global Radio Producer sessions in London, discussing with Global Radio producers from around the UK, not only our digital plans for the year ahead, but also how to produce great content that can be easily shared across multiple platforms.

It was an interesting couple of days as was a great opportunity for the digital teams to hear about the challenges and opportunities the radio teams face on a daily basis and how to make content work in that unique environment.

Here’s some random thoughts from the event and I look forward to the next session early next year.

  • Amazing content doesn’t necessarily mean complex ideas, the ideas themselves can be quite simple. What’s more important is that they are executed brilliantly with an attention to detail that demonstrates you really understand your audience. Sometimes executing brilliantly means stripping away the idea to it’s simplest (and most understood) component.
  • Make it as easy as possible to share these ideas in your organisation. Identify silos and training requirements otherwise you’ll have teams trying to reinvent the wheel every time they sit down to plan the week ahead. Avoid the trappings of email where there is often the illusion of communication and understanding.
  • Radio is an extremely reactive environment buzzing with brilliant ideas so getting the right balance between proactive planning and spontaneity can be tricky.
  • Discussing what makes great ‘content’ is a fruitful conversation to have in any organisation – but let’s talk about content with a small ‘c’ shall we? Take radio as an example, there are very slight but important differences between digital and radio editorial ideas and sometimes we run the risk of obscuring this with conversations around Content. Let’s recognise the differences so we can recognise the best ideas and facilitate them through the best platforms available.

What’s the secret of talk radio?

What’s this? Two blog posts in one day? Well, on Wednesday night I attended the Radio Academy’s excellent event  ‘Who’s On Line 1?‘ at London’s Gibson Rooms and I simply had to tell you about it.

The event featured LBC’s James O’Brien and BBC Three Counties Radio breakfast presenter Iain Lee and offered a great insight into the popular phone-in format. Topics discussed included how they both started out in radio, what makes for a good radio conversation and why this format still works after many years.

Regarding that last point, O’Brien offered a wonderful soundbite describing the phone-in format as “live, immediate moments of personal revelation“. O’Brien argued there’s simply no other medium that can deliver this kind of audience interaction. I have to agree.

Not that it’s an easy thing to achieve. Both presenters agreed that there’s an element of trust you need to establish with the audience before people feel comfortable calling in on live radio to reveal their innermost selves.

“It’s too easy these days to go for the easy target” argued Lee as he told us about his early radio days as a presenter when he felt anyone was fair game for a ribbing.

Now, post -kids and more experienced, he’s no longer interested in winding up 15-35 males which, he admitted “is pretty easy to do”.

“Racists or homophobes are the most predictable”, said Lee “They just speak and they’ve done the job for you”. Both presenters agreed that they now tried to nurture a quality conversation, although they still teased “complete idiots”.

The evening finished with more than a few complements from the audience, loyal fans themselves of the phone-in format.

Altogether, a great evening and thanks to the Radio Academy for putting the event together.

Audio has now been posted to The Radio Academy website.

 

A short note on how wonderful it is to see Hitch Hiker’s back with us

Firstly, I just confess sincere apologies for not keeping my blog updated since taking up the role of Head of Editorial at Global Radio. Yes I know, I’ve been extremely poor and it will never happen again.

Although I will, in time, blog about all the amazing things we are doing over at Global, I wanted to take the opportunity to comment on the Beeb’s broadcast of Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Yes, it’s going to be one of those kind of posts…

The original radio series was broadcast in 1978 and I must have been 4 at the time when I heard it first. I remember this very vividly because I was recovering from a very bad dose of chicken pox,  reading endless copies of The Beano and, frankly, going bonkers with boredom. Then my parents handed me an old battered radio so I could listen to this new sci-fi programme.

Instant transportation.

I’m not saying I understood everything (I mean, what the hell was a ‘bypass’ anyway?) but the way this radio production brought the story to life completely blew me away completely. Towels, Dolphins, 3 pints of bitter and a packet of dry roasted peanuts – I became the ultimate Hitch Hiker’s fan (gauntlet thrown).

Since then I’ve  been a member of several terribly named rock bands, attended many, many committee meetings where I’ve almost taken my own life and spent a good deal of time wearing nothing but black. Vague literary allusions I’m sure, but I reckon they make me an instant member of the Arthur Dent appreciation society – and I still wear my dressing gown with pride.

For years after listening to this show I tried to write my own radio plays but they they were always awful and frankly embarrassing plus they got even worse when I went to University. A little knowledge may be dangerous but a splattering of half-read Dylan Thomas and T.S Eliot can be bloody appalling.

So, anyway, fantastic that it’s back on radio and I can’t thank those crazy guys on the original radio production team enough.

And yes, I know that’s a image from the TV series which was also good.

And no, the movie was terrible.