RnM Team    05 Dec 11 18:06 IST

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Pic by Tarachand Wanvari

BANGALORE: South India would be a major place of action for the Phase III of radio licensing and it will also bring in differentiated programming, believe experts who were part of the session 'The New Listener in Phase III Radio Reforms' at the third edition of the Ficci Media and Entertainment Business Conclave (MEBC 2011).

Ficci Radio Forum chairman and ENIL MD and CEO Prashant Panday, during his keynote address before the session said, "As many as 63 new stations are coming in the four states in the South -Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala. The South is going to be a major part of the action. South is a very intensive consumer of radio with a listenership of 40 million of the almost 120 million radio listeners in the country."

Panday spoke about the new policies that the Phase III would bring - these included having multiple frequencies, which meant that a broadcaster in a particular city could actually operate more than one station and hence allowed for differentiated programming.

"To bring in programming variety you need a lot more channels. In most cities in other parts of the world, you have as many as 45 to 50 channels in a city. In a city like Chennai we have only nine private radio stations, in Mumbai you have only seven private channels. It's a shame that a country like ours which has 500 to 700 television channels, a few million outdoor sites, a few million websites, definitely more than a dozen newspaper editions in every city, we have only about seven or eight radio stations in any major city," bemoaned Panday.

However, he lauded the expected amendments in the lock-in clause which would stand reduced from the current five years to three years in the Phase III policies.

Panday also looked forward to a proposal that Trai was considering - to double the number of channels which can come in one single step, which is to reduce the separation between the radio stations to half of what is there currently.

While speaking about the perceptions about radio in many people's minds, Panday said, "One of the reasons that private radio is often considered as a secondary medium is that it came after television and print, but in the case of clients, and clients are very decisive in terms of spending their money, I don't think that



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