By David Kidd, BPR

As radio heads into 2026, the challenge is no longer about defending the medium. Audio is thriving. The real question is whether radio is evolving quickly enough to match how people now live, listen and choose.
Audiences haven’t rejected radio; they’ve rejected clutter, friction and predictability. I suggest growth will come not from doing more, but from doing less and doing it better.
Here are five practical thought starters that will separate stations that grow from those that simply hold on.
Listeners no longer “tune in” for blocks of time. They move fluidly between platforms, dipping in and out based on mood, context and need.
Stations that perform best in 2026 will:
Radio’s competitive edge lies in understanding why someone is listening — not just when.
One of radio’s biggest self-inflicted wounds is noise.
Too many elements competing for attention — long links, crowded breaks, layered messaging — create mental fatigue. In a world of infinite choice, friction is fatal.
Improvement will come from:
Energy doesn’t come from busyness.
It comes from clarity.
As synthetic voices and AI-generated audio become commonplace, human presence becomes radio’s most valuable asset.
Stations that grow will:
Listeners don’t connect with formats.
They connect with people.
Research is often used to avoid risk. The smarter use of data is to remove weakness and protect strength.
In 2026, best-practice stations will:
The goal isn’t to please everyone.
It’s to be compelling and memorable to someone.
Reach still matters but relationship matters more.
Radio’s enduring advantage is its ability to feel local, live and personal. Stations that grow will:
Attention is rented.
Loyalty is earned.
Remember the days when you were proud to wear your favourite radio station’s T-shirt?
I don’t see that in 2025.
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