Radioplayer celebrates six months with 6.7m listeners

Radioplayer, the online radio initiative by commercial radio and the BBC, celebrates its six month anniversary this month by reporting 6.7 million unique users in August, its highest figure to date.

Radioplayer: celebrates six months with 6.7m listeners
Radioplayer: celebrates six months with 6.7m listeners

Launched on 31 March, RadioPlayer offers live streams and listen-again content in a simple internet radio experience.

Some 282 stations are now live in Radioplayer, including all BBC national and local stations, the major commercial radio groups, and a growing list of community and student stations. 

Last month, official Rajar figures confirmed that digital's share of radio listening has risen to 26.9%, helped by a small year-on-year rise in internet listening. However, internet listening's share dropped between Q1 and Q2.

Radioplayer data measures unique users and player-launches, across all Radioplayer stations, for live and on-demand listening sessions. It doesn’t currently reflect listening duration, so isn’t directly comparable to other "streamed hours" statistics.

However, the trends in Radioplayer and Rajar figures have been closely aligned so far and Radiplayer is confident the second half of 2011 will continue to record a "steady growth in users numbers".

Michael Hill, managing director of Radioplayer, said: "Attracting 6.7 million users in August is testament to the strength of the UK radio industry, combined with the simplicity of putting ‘UK radio in one place’. We’ll see further peaks and troughs, but I’m really proud of what we have achieved so far."

Data collected by Radioplayer in the six months since its launch provides a snap-shot of listening across the entire radio landscape, showing what kind of events and guests drive traffic, with some clear themes emerging. 

Listeners use Radioplayer heavily during the working day, with a peak at 9am, (later than ‘normal’ radio listening which peaks around 8am), then a drop-off at the end of the working day, with another weekday evening peak when people arrive home. 

There are noticeable dips in traffic at weekends, bank holidays and across holiday periods when people aren’t at work. 

Music-related events show a big effect on listening, with stations doubling or tripling their normal traffic for special guests.  Real Radio in Manchester saw three times their normal Radioplayer traffic when One Direction visited, after the band tweeted to alert their huge fan base.

Big news stories have a similar effect – London talk station LBC saw six times its normal traffic during the recent riots, with BBC Local Radio stations in affected areas picking up five times their normal traffic, BRMB in Birmingham four times, and BBC Radio 5 Live doubling its normal Radioplayer traffic during the riots. 

The data suggests that these are largely new listeners, on top of the habitual Radioplayer listenership. 

Unsurprisingly, sport appears to be another big driver of traffic at weekends, across both BBC and commercial, as well as national and local stations. The effects of football coverage are very visible, with overall Radioplayer traffic rising by 5%-10% at the start of the season. 

, meaning users can now listen to the radio while chatting with their friends, and early indications show a strong take-up of the app.   

Topics

Market Reports

Get unprecedented new-business intelligence with access to 北京赛车pk10’s new Market Reports.

Find out more

Enjoying 北京赛车pk10’s content?

 Get unlimited access to 北京赛车pk10’s premium content for your whole company with a corporate licence.

Upgrade access

Looking for a new job?

Get the latest creative jobs in advertising, media, marketing and digital delivered directly to your inbox each day.

Create an alert now

Partner content