Frost Advisory #796 – You Never Have A Second Chance…

By the time you are reading this, Christian music stations up and down the dial have swapped out their typical playlist for the 137 best versions of “Holly Jolly Christmas.” While the strategic upside to that wacky Clark Kent-to-Superman identity change has been well chronicled in these 15+ years of weekly Frost Advisories, I reckon’ one aspect of this format flip may not have received enough attention. That’s the part that isn’t about the music.

“You never have a second chance to make a first impression.”

Will Rogers
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Tommy Kramer Coaching Tip #651: The Importance of Timing

There’s a good lesson to learn from the World Series. Or the Super Bowl. Or the NBA Playoffs.
They all have one thing in common: It’s about doing the right things.
But not just that. It’s doing the right things at the right TIME.

It’s the same, in any music format, for what you say on the air when you make a comment. First, did you cut off the very end of that last word in the song’s vocal? Is that because you’re too anxious to talk? (Would you do that if you were the emcee for that artist’s live show? Chances are, the crowd would boo you, and the artist would never want you to be the emcee again.)

Patience.
Timing.
A sense of rhythm.
These things are essential to a great air talent.

Frost Advisory #795 – Encourage Me And I Will Not Forget You; A Thanksgiving Message

This week’s Frost Advisory is a bit of a departure from my weekly musings on how to make your radio station really nifty. Instead, I’d like to take this moment during Thanksgiving week to encourage you in the important work you’re doing at your station.

I’m told that the word “encouragement” means literally to pour courage into. This word for “encouragement” appears over 100 times in the New Testament.

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Tommy Kramer Coaching Tip #650: The Non-Competitive Pitch

If you’re not familiar with baseball pitcher David Cone, here’s a cool fact:

On July 18, 1999, he threw a perfect game (that’s 27 batters in a row,no hits, no walks, no runs, no errors). Pretty cool.
But even more notable was that it was “Yogi Berra Day” at Yankee Stadium, with Yogi and the pitcher of the only perfect game in World Series history, Don Larson, in attendance. (Yogi was the catcher in that 1956 game.)

David Cone is now an excellent baseball analyst. And one of his terms really stuck with me; what he calls a “non-competitive pitch” – a “waste pitch” that a pitcher will sometimes throw that’s out of the strike zone. It doesn’t make the batter do anything. No adjustments need to be made. No fielders move to field it. No baserunners try to advance on it.

As it applies to radio…it’s kind of the same when you do a break that’s just some “click bait” thing that you’ve added a punch line to.
SO predictable.

Nobody goes, “Oh wow, I’ve never heard that before.”

You have to search for what matters to your listener today. Don’t settle for anything less than that. It cheapens the whole listening experience.

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Tommy Kramer
Talent Coach
214-632-3090 (mobile)
e-mail: coachtommykramer@gmail.com
Member, Texas Radio Hall of Fame
© 2025 by Tommy Kramer. All rights reserved.

Frost Advisory #794 – The Outside Shot: How Your Station Can Be Transformative

Over the years I’ve learned that there are basically three different levels of discussions that happen about programming.

There are conversations about being competent. Basic stuff like having real people (even if voice-tracked) offering companionship in your listener’s life RIGHT HERE and RIGHT NOW.

And there are conversations about incremental improvements. Move this widget here, etc.

But those two topics are not necessarily transformative.

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Frost Advisory #793 – Authenticity, Lessons Learned From “Dear Younger Me” And…

And… FOX news! (Seriously!)

Have you seen FOX News’ latest image campaign? To me it’s reminiscent of ESPN’s classic campaign awhile back where famous athletes in uniform appeared in ordinary situations in the ESPN headquarters – in the break room, walking through a hallway, in the parking lot.

In other words, making celebrities (Aaron Judge, Payton Manning, Derek Jeter) ordinary, and making ordinary people (the ESPN anchors) celebrities.

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