JULY 14, 2022

REGISTRATION OPENS TODAY

ANNUAL CONFERENCE IS SEPT 25-27TH IN OWENSBORO

LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, START YOUR REGISTRATION! Join us in Owensboro for KBA's 2022 Annual Membership Conference. This years conference has a RACE DAY theme with a full slate of activities, keynote speakers, entertainment and professional development opportunities.

Sunday, September 25th:

5PM - Opening Reception featuring Owensboro BBQ

  • Entertainment by Three On A String


Monday, September 26th:

8AM - Opening General Session

9AM - Professional Development Sessions

  • Sales, Management/Legal & Programming/On-Air

5PM - Excellence Awards Cocktail Hour

6PM - Excellence In Broadcasting Awards Dinner & Presentation

9PM - Excellence Awards After Party

  • Featuring The Kentucky Headhunters


Tuesday, September 27th:

9AM - Professional Development Sessions

  • Sales, Technology & Engineering

12PM - Closing Keynote featuring racing legend Dale Earnhardt, Jr.

KBA's Annual Conference is provided complimentary only to active member stations and funded by your generous PEP participation and airplay.


The estimated complimentary value per attendee is over $1,600.00!!


Overnight accommodations will be provided complimentary to members who register by August 15th. Beginning August 16th, accommodations will be the sole responsibility of the attendee.


If you need assistance logging in to register, please contact Amber Rhodes at [email protected] or (502) 545-3278.

REGISTER NOW

URGING THE FCC TO RETHINK REG FEES 

KBA JOINS OTHER STATES TO OPPOSE INCREASE

The Kentucky Broadcasters Association, in combination with the state broadcasters associations of all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, filed Joint Comments urging the FCC to modernize its methodology for setting annual regulatory fees to comply with the RAY BAUM’S Act of 2018. 


The Associations noted that while Congress increased the FCC’s budget for 2022 by $7.95M, the FCC has inexplicably proposed placing the burden of almost the entire amount of that increase solely on the shoulders of broadcasters. As a result, despite the FCC’s budget increasing only 2.13% over 2021, the FCC has proposed a 13% increase in the total regulatory fees to be paid by broadcasters for FY2022. The FCC failed to provide any explanation for this proposed increase, though it appears to result from burdening broadcasters with a portion of the FCC’s costs in 2022 of implementing the Broadband Deployment Accuracy and Technology Availability Act (“Broadband Data Act”). In 2021, in response to comments filed by the State Broadcasters Associations and NAB, the FCC acknowledged that the Broadband Data Act is not connected to, and delivers no benefits to, broadcasters, and therefore did not place the burden of Broadband Data Act costs on broadcasters for FY2021. In proposing FY2022 regulatory fees, it appears that the FCC has reversed course, and is proposing to place those “unrelated” costs on the shoulders of broadcasters. 


The State Broadcasters Associations urged the FCC to once again exclude broadcasters from covering costs associated with the Broadband Data Act or other FCC activities that bear no relation to broadcasting, such as Universal Service Fund activities. The Associations also urged the FCC to revise its methodology for setting regulatory fees in 2022 and beyond to adopt a more precise approach in assigning the costs for personnel the FCC currently classifies as “overhead” so that broadcasters do not find themselves continuing to pay a disproportionate share of the costs for FCC activities which deliver no benefit to broadcasters. Finally, the Joint Comments argued that the FCC should conduct an expansive review of its costs of collecting regulatory fees, permitting it to appropriately increase the “de minimis threshold” below which stations are exempt from paying regulatory fees where the costs of collection exceed the amount to be collected from a regulatee.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

POYNTER WEBINAR ARCHIVED FOR REPLAY

Watch Replay: Covering Guns - What Every Journalist Should Know

Hundreds of broadcast journalists across the country joined a livestream seminar and presentation from Al Tompkins from the Poynter Institute about strategies and information to help empower newsrooms in covering the conversation over gun laws.

Read More

EXCELLENCE IN BROADCASTING AWARDS

ENTRY DEADLINE IS FRIDAY JULY 22ND

The entry window for the 2022 KBA Excellence in Broadcasting Awards is now open until July 22nd. For rules, category descriptions and instructions for submitting an entry, please click on the button below.

The Excellence in Broadcasting Awards will be presented, along with the 2021 & 2022 Legacy Awards, on Monday evening, September 26th, during KBA's Annual Membership Conference in Owensboro, KY.

EIB AWARDS INFO

NOT SO FAST!

KBA AMONG STATES OPPOSING ZONECASTING

49 State Associations Oppose Zonecasting - Radio Ink

In a letter to The FCC, 49 State Broadcasters Associations have come out in opposition of a potential rule change, proposed by GeoBoradcast Solutions, that would allow targeted content using FM boosters.

Read More

THIS WEEKS MEMBER PIC

BIG DAWG SUNSET

A beautiful summer sunset over the studios of WVLC, Big Dawg 99.9 FM in downtown Campbellsville.

JEFF SCHMIDT'S SALES TIP OF THE WEEK


PROFESSIONALS PRACTICE UNTIL THEY CAN'T GET IT WRONG

Sports fans are people who come together for the love of the game and their team. The people of Wisconsin take “fanatic” to a whole new level. Try presenting to a client Monday morning, or try motivating the sellers in the Monday meeting after a Packers loss. People here aren’t just fans of the team; they allow it to impact their attitudes, buying habits and moods. I’m not passing judgment, just sharing how unique this behavior is. It’s unlike anything I’ve seen in any other state. 


Last week at the Kellar Radio Talent Institute we had the opportunity to hear from high-profile talent in Nascar, the Carolina Panthers NFL Football Team and the Charlotte Hornets NBA basketball team.  All of the high-profile talent shared with us the importance of preparation and practice.  


Fan is derived from the word fanatic: A belief or behavior involving uncritical zeal or obsessive enthusiasm.  In a recent sales meeting I asked the sellers if you had an audience every time you presented; would you do anything differently?  Would you “up your game?”   The unanimous opinion was, yes, they would do better.   What would they do better? Answer: Preparation.  Each of the sellers revealed that if there was an audience, they would do more preparation.


In 1898 Norman Tripplett pioneered research on a theory that came to be known as Yerkes Dodson’s Law — The Theory of Social Facilitation.  Social facilitation is the tendency for people to do better on simple tasks when in the presence of other people. This implies that whenever people are being watched by others, they will do well on things that they are already good at doing. According to the Theory: “The mere presence of other people will enhance the performance in speed and accuracy of well-practiced tasks but will degrade the performance of less familiar tasks."  


Dodson’s Law would say that a star football player would perform better when more people are watching him. However, if a person who is not a professional mechanic is asked to fix a car’s engine during a road race, he will not perform as well in the presence of others as he would in a situation (like fixing a car in his garage) where he feels less evaluated or pressured. The difference is confidence in his/her ability to perform the task.


As the research suggests, if people are well-practiced and good at something, they love an audience, and it helps them improve their performance. However, if they have any doubt in their ability or apprehension about the presentation they are making, then the opposite effect occurs, and people do what we commonly refer to as “choke.”


This research supports an age-old sales training technique called role-play.  Prepare and practice your presentation in the sales meeting before you go live to clients.  Professional football players practice Monday through Friday for several hours a day, just to play one game on Sunday. Imagine how we would be as sellers if we spent Saturday to Thursday preparing for our one presentation on Friday. Think we would leave anything out?


I’m convinced that one of the things that helped me achieve almost instant success in sales was the fact that my manager, Bill Mann, made it very clear that I was never to present to a client without first presenting to him.    This role plays not only served as a great “visualization” of how things would go, but it also served as a preparation tool to ensure that I was well prepared with all the objections and questions covered before I faced the client.  


Amateurs practice until they can get it right; professionals practice until they can’t get it wrong.” Harold Craxton, Professor at the Royal Academy of Music in London. 


Practice and role-play are professional development tools that are critical to growing your income and effectiveness in sales.  When was the last time you did some role-playing in your sales meeting?

Jeff Schmidt is the SVP of Professional Development at the Radio Advertising Bureau. You can also connect with him by email [email protected] or on Twitter and LinkedIn.
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KBA NEWSLETTER SPONSORED BY PEM
DATES TO REMEMBER

JULY 20, 2022

KBA Board of Directors Meeting - Louisville, KY


SEPTEMBER 25-27, 2022

KBA Annual Membership Conference - Owensboro, KY


OCTOBER 28, 2022

Midwest Broadcast & Multimedia Technology Conference - Columbus, OH


*All times shown are Eastern

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