In all, says NADA, there are 863 new-car dealerships in Pennsylvania. Despite the pandemic, these dealers, including those in the Philadelphia area, sold $38 billion worth of new vehicles.
Through June of this year, these same dealers have already rung up $23.9 billion in new car sales.
When it comes to buying new vehicles, Philadelphia consumers have a broad range of preferences. Some buyers want Fords while others want Chevrolets, Toyotas, or Teslas. Some buyers want pick-up trucks, while others want sub-compacts, SUVs, or sports cars. Of course, some want blue vehicles, while others want pearl white, orchard green, or redolent red.
There is one purchase criterion, however, that most Philadelphia car buyers can agree on. They want an AM/FM radio smack-dab, in the middle of their dash.
According to new findings by Edison Research, 89% of car buyers in the U.S. want AM/FM radio to be standard in every vehicle. This study was released as part of the WorldDAB Summit.
The study also reveals:
Radio ubiquity in cars is what drives radio's dominant reach among adult consumers in Philadelphia.
Every week, according to Nielsen, significantly more adults tune-in to a Philadelphia radio station than are reached by any other medium including local TV, social media, and local cable.
Car radios came to Philadelphia in June of 1930. For just $120, about $1200 in present dollars, local drivers could install these early mobile devices into their Fords, Studebakers, Packards, and DeSotos,
The first car radios were built by the Galvin Manufacturing Company of Chicago. They named their invention, and eventually their company, Motorola.
Today, more than 3.5 million car radios fill the ears of area drivers with music, news, sports, and information. And if Philadelphia consumers have their way, every new car that comes of the assembly will continue to have an AM/FM radio installed in the dash.