play_arrow

keyboard_arrow_right

Listeners:

Top listeners:

skip_previous skip_next
00:00 00:00
chevron_left
volume_up
  • cover play_arrow

    The Bill Gay Show Atlanta Classic Hits & Talk Radio

The Grio

Why Gen Z Won’t Work In Radio—And The Bold Strategy To Change That

todayOctober 7, 2025 3

Background
share close

Dave Van Dyke, BridgeRatings

For decades, radio was where music discovery and big conversations lived. But for today’s 18- to 30-year-olds, that relationship never really took hold. They stream their music. They binge podcasts. Many don’t even own a radio. And that creates a double challenge for traditional broadcasters: it’s hard to hire young people when they’ve never felt a connection to the medium, and it’s hard to build programming for them without their input.

The good news? The solution to both problems is the same. Hire them—and let them help shape what comes next.

Make Radio a Creative Career

  • Young candidates won’t respond to a job posting that sounds like it’s from 1995. Skip the jargon about “board ops” and “traffic logs.” Instead, highlight opportunities in content creation, social strategy, live event production, and multi-platform storytelling.
  • Radio is an entertainment business—sell it that way.
  • Paid internships, part-time digital producer roles, and fast-track on-air opportunities send a clear message: this is a place where you can create, learn, and grow. Partner with universities, media programs, and influencer communities to find fresh talent who never considered radio a career path but thrive on creativity and culture.
  • Build Programming They’d Actually Listen To Hiring young talent is step one. Giving them a product they’d actually tune in for is step two. That means:
  • Short-form bursts. Segments under five minutes for quick-hit engagement and social sharing.
  • Real-time interaction. Live polls, listener texts, and TikTok tie-ins make the audience part of the show.
  • Digital-first voices. Personalities fluent in memes, streaming culture, and trending audio.
  • Local flavor. Younger listeners crave authenticity and community—things Spotify and podcasts can’t replicate.
  • Radio doesn’t need to replace Spotify or Apple Podcasts to win. It just needs to offer something different: immediacy, personality, and a sense of belonging.
  • When young hires help shape on-air strategy, they become more than employees—they become advocates. Their friends notice. Their followers notice. And suddenly, a generation that once ignored radio is creating it, promoting it, and maybe even listening.

The formula is simple: hire them, listen to them, and let them reinvent what radio can be.

Written by: admin

Rate it

Personality Radio At Its Best!

FOLLOW BILL GAY ON SOCIAL MEDIA