Anita Iyer    15 Jan 09 17:31 IST

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Looking back, 2008 was the year of commencing operations for many commercial FM stations in eastern India. To make their presence felt, these stations carried out a lot of marketing initiatives.

Many of these stations, located in small towns and marked by hefty retail advertising, have managed to escape the current heat wave of the global slowdown and have managed to sustain themselves with satisfactory profits, especially in the last quarter.

SFM's Shillong station is just over five months old, having launched in July 2008. Station head Ian Khongmen puts in, It was a good year despite many hurdles which we had to overcome time and again. The response has been good and music lovers are now hooked on to our station without any difficulty as we played new, good music....

SFM entered the fray in Shillong where the only other player Oo La La had commenced operations a few months earlier.

Over in Sikkim,  Radio High managing director Milon Chakrabarty adds, Having launched in the second half of 2007, last year was a successful and eventful year for us. Business wise, we did well and radio seemed to be a viable venture for our group(High Media Entertainment, a venture of Syntech Informatics). The best sign was that we managed to break even in the first year itself....

Earlier we had to push the advertisers to try our medium and also had to give free trial air time on experimental basis, but today, we are selling air time on our terms....

Like all the SFM station launches, Guwahati and Shillong stations also distributed gold and silver coins during the first month of their launch. Although only a few months old, the station already occupies 30 per cent of market share.

We launched the station in April, so it was a learning experience for us and the station was involved in a lot of branding activities like hoardings for increasing visibility,... states SFM Guwahati station head Debojit Phookan.

Content

Music played across radio stations varies from region to region. Stations targeting the youth in the extreme north east seem to be playing a lot of English music, and on the other hand, some stations resort to playing regional music like Khasi, Oriya, and Bengali to lure listeners.

As Khongmen says, The major aspect that sets our station apart from all other SFM stations is the music content. Because of the



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