Every Program Director wants the big jump. The ratings spike. The book that finally gets them that bonus or, at minimum, a “nice job” email before corporate moves on to the next radio station crisis.
But here’s the truth most programmers learn the hard way. You don’t grow by hoping. You grow by behaving differently.
After two decades of hiring PDs and working with hundreds of programmers across every format, I’ve learned one thing that never fails. Ratings respond to behavior.
Here are four behaviors you can start today. These are not theories or consultant fluff. They’re actual actions that will move your ratings forward.
Let’s Phil-in the blueprint.
1. Promote Your Existing Products Better
Most stations don’t have a product problem. They have an awareness problem.
Your talent might be funny. Your promotions might be great. The station’s weekend features might be strong. But if listeners never hear about them, they don’t exist.
Better marketing is the fastest, lowest cost way to grow cume. And before you say “Phil, we don’t have a marketing budget,” great stations market through creativity, not invoices.
- Start by promoting what listeners already love, not what you wish they loved.
- Use video to highlight real moments from the audio you create.
- Put talent faces everywhere people look. Humans connect with humans, not logos and not slogans. Show your face, but please retire that blurry jock photo from 2014.
If you’re waiting for corporate to hand you a marketing budget, you’ll get it right after they update the lobby signs for the seven people a week who still walk into a radio station lobby.
Great stations don’t need more promotions. They need more promotion of the right promotions.
2. Incrementally Improve the Listening Experience
PDs often chase the giant swing when the real growth is hiding in the tiny adjustments. The stations that win aren’t always the most creative. They’re the most consistent.
Small improvements compound fast. Think of them like radio interest payments. The real ones are burying half the industry, so make these the kind that pay you back instead of paying the bank.
- Clean up those tiny dead-air gaps in your intros and imaging. They add up.
- Replace one weak category with one strong one. Update imaging that has outlived its timelines, that’s the audio version of an email signature stuck on “stay safe” in 2025.
- Audit every benchmark and cut the ones listeners tolerate but don’t actually enjoy. Tolerance is not the same as relevance.
Incremental doesn’t mean insignificant. Small improvements create big momentum.
3. Introduce a Breakthrough in Performance
Every station has its Highlander rule. There can only be one thing you’re known for.
But here’s the trap. Too many stations are solid everywhere and remarkable nowhere.
A breakthrough isn’t about adding more things. It’s about creating one moment, one voice, one show, or one idea that makes listeners say, “Did you hear what they’re doing over there?”
- Maybe it’s a talent who stops performing and starts connecting.
- Maybe it’s a contest that cuts through the clutter because it feels handcrafted, not recycled from the “Win $1,000” template. If your contest came free with a conference lanyard, it’s not a breakthrough.
- Maybe it’s a signature sound or production style that instantly distinguishes your station.
Breakthroughs don’t happen accidentally. They happen when PDs understand that average is expensive and remarkable is worth the work.
4. Create a New Category
The biggest growth in audience doesn’t come from beating your competitors. It comes from making them irrelevant.
Category creation is the rarest but most powerful behavior a PD can attempt. It’s when you stop trying to win the lane and start painting the whole road.
Create a category and the measurement shifts in your favor. Create a category and your competition starts sounding predictable. Develop a category and your brand becomes the listener’s first choice, not their backup.
- Maybe it’s a station that redefines a format instead of inheriting it.
- Maybe it’s a show that blends content in a way the market has never offered.
- Maybe it’s a music position that feels risky at first and obvious later. The best ideas usually age that way.
Every legendary station you admire created its own lane first. Then they owned it and everyone else tried to copy it.
Copying never beats creating.
The Closing Phil-Osophy
All four behaviors share one truth. They require action, not approval.
You don’t need a bigger budget to market smarter. You don’t need permission to introduce a breakthrough. Nor do you need corporate consensus to create a category.
What you do need is curiosity. You need courage. And you need the willingness to try something before your competition does.
If you take these behaviors seriously, your next book will come in strong. You can claim it was all strategy. I’ve been doing that bit my whole career.
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Phil Becker is a weekly music columnist for Barrett Media who has built his career at the intersection of creativity, strategy, and operations leading brands, marketing, and content teams across more than 200 radio stations worldwide.
Known for being ahead of the curve, he was the first to integrate social influencers into broadcast brands, launch station apps years before his peers, and pioneer AI air personalities before anyone else in the world.
With leadership roles at Clear Channel, Citadel, Cox Media Group, Alpha Media, and international ventures—as well as owning and operating stations—Phil blends entrepreneurial vision with operational discipline in the messaging and marketing space. He also hosts the Phil-Osophy podcast.


