Delaware Valley residents will begin receiving economic stimulus checks from the Internal Revenue Service as early as today. In all, local consumers will receive more than $6.6 billion in payments.
This infusion of cash into the Philadelphia area economy was authorized by Congress last week in the American Rescue Plan legislation.
The stimulus relief legislation calls for a one-time payment of $1,400 to single adults. Married couples who filed jointly will receive $2,800 total ($1,400 apiece). Families will get an additional $1,400 for each eligible dependent regardless of age. A family of four could get $5,600 in total payments. Like the second round of stimulus payments, the third round specifically prohibits payments to anyone who died before January 1, 2020.
Many of the stimulus dollars will end up in the wallets of 1.3 million Philadelphia area homeowners. Based on research from Modernize, a leader in the home improvement and home services industry, 57% of these consumers are planning to spend all or part of their checks on home improvement projects.
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Since 1922, advertising on Philadelphia radio has helped small business owners survive and thrive during times of peril. This includes world wars, natural disasters, depressions, and recessions.
Even during a pandemic, by almost every key marketing metric, radio advertising remains the best way for a Delaware Valley business to market its goods and services.
To prove the point, here are five statistics that vividly demonstrate the value of advertising on Philadelphia radio.
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There are 2,218,500 adult women in the Delaware Valley. Based on research from the Harvard Business Review, as a consumer group, females account for 70-80 percent of all consumer purchasing through a combination of their buying power and influence. According to Nielsen, this will amount to between $74.4 billion and $85 billion this year.
Overall, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the US Census Bureau:
- Single women across all income brackets spend, on average, $34,817 on goods and service
- Working married women contribute over a third of their families’ incomes
- Over a quarter (29.4%) of wives earned more than their husbands in 2018, an increase from 15.9% in 1981.
Furthermore, according to research published by Forbes:
- The top homebuyers after married couples are single women (18%, double the percentage for single men at 9%).
- Women are 50% more likely than men to regularly watch online how-to videos.
- 94% of women between the ages of 15-35 spend over an hour per day shopping online.
- 70% of travel consumers are women.
- 85% of women say that if they like a brand, they will remain loyal to it.
For Philadelphia area small business owners to successfully capture a meaningful share of the local female economy requires advertising.
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Philadelphia's first radio station, WGL-AM, began broadcasting in March of 1922. The process of getting the station's programming from the studio into the home of local listeners required tall-transmitting towers with miles of underground copper wire in the middle of massive fields.
For the next 69 years, this massive investment in real estate, steel, and cooper was the only method of delivering a radio advertiser's message into the ears of Delaware Valley consumers.
In 1993, however, new technology permitted Philadelphia radio stations to augment the reach of their tall towers by simultaneously streaming its over-the-air programming via the internet. This provided local consumers with the choice of listening to their favorite stations on their car radios, clock radios, and boom boxes or on an internet connected devices like computers, smartphones, or tablets.
Today, based on estimates from Edison Research, 11% of listening to local radio stations occurs on a streaming media device. The ability for AM/FM to migrate from their tall towers to internet streaming allows Philadelphia radio to reach more local consumers every week than all other media.
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Radio came to Philadelphia on February 8, 1922, when The Bureau of Navigation, Radio Services Division, of the United States Department of Commerce granted a license to station WGL. This station was the 42nd to be licensed in the county.
Little is known about WGL except it was owned by Thomas Howlett who broadcast from home at 2303 North Broad Street near Temple University.
From that day, many predicted radio's success would succumb to advances from new technologies. In 1927, the challenge came from talking movies. In the 1940s, the predators were 13-inch TV sets. In the 1970s, it was 8-track and cassette tapes. In the past 20 years, there was a multi-flank attack from iPods, Zunes, YouTube, Sirius, XM, Pandora, Spotify,
So far, all of these challengers have failed. Not even a pandemic has been able to remove radio as a vital force in the life of Delaware Valley consumers.
Every week, according to Nielsen, more adults tune-in to Philadelphia radio than watch TV or cable. Use social media platforms like Facebook or Instagram. Read newspapers. Or, stream music from Pandora or Spotify.
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How important is Twitter to Delaware Valley consumers? Yesterday, for instance, the social media platform was mentioned in at least ten articles published by the Philadelphia Inquirer yesterday. Almost every local TV newscast included references to the site as well.
Twitter's outsized presence in the news, however, is enormously disproportional to the importance of the micro-blogging app in the life of Philadelphia's consumers.
According to Nielsen, only about 17% of adults in Philadelphia use Twitter during the course of a month. This is minuscule compared to other social media platforms like Instagram and Facebook.
Twitter offers 20 different options that Delaware Valley small business owners can utilize to market their goods and services to local consumers. The platform's minimal reach, however, can hamper the success of any advertising campaign.
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Delaware Valley Small Business Owner,
Philadelphia Small Business Owner,
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Local radio came to Philadelphia on February 8, 1922, when The Bureau of Navigation, Radio Services Division, of the United States Department of Commerce granted a license to station WGL. This station was the 42nd to be licensed in the nation.
Little is known about WGL except it was owned by Thomas Howlett who broadcast from home at 2303 North Broad Street near Temple University.
In March of 1922, however, the second radio license in Philadelphia was awarded to WIP owned by the Gimbel Brothers Department Store. Early programming included remote-broadcasts of live music featuring Charlie Kerr and his orchestra from the Cafe L’Aiglon at 15th and Chestnut Streets.
For almost 100 years, Delaware Valley small business owners have depended on local radio stations to successfully market their goods and services through depressions, recessions, wars, and natural disasters. Even now, during a pandemic, advertising on Philadelphia radio remains a dependable way to make cash registers ring.
Here are five facts every Delaware Valley small business owner needs to know about local radio in 2020.
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Topics
Delaware Valley Small Business Owner,
Philadelphia Small Business Owner,
Small Business Advertising,
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Online Advertising,
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