What do top radio personalities say about how they prepare for their radio show?
Scott Shannon

- Carry a recording device at all times (Smartphone)
- Read everything.
- Watch everything.
- Hang out with normal people.
- Seize the moment.
- Create talk.
- Always remember these three words: preparation, concentration, and moderation.
Ross Brittain

- Over-prep the day before.
- Do the things your listeners do.
- Make things bigger than they really are. Use theater of the mind … produce big or overproduce.
- Structure your breaks before the mic opens. Use Post-it notes to remind yourself.
- Remember your audience composition when building in features.
- Don’t get caught up in “information overload.”
- Cluster your commercials correctly and clean up your talk breaks to avoid clutter.
- Speak concisely. Edit copy or write down important items so you won’t get lost. Use a sense of forward motion to move, or not move, your show.
- Edit your calls and your bits. Leave people wanting more.
Matt Siegel

- Don’t put women down. It’s easy, it’s cheap, and you are better than that.
- Be nice. Let the audience see something in you they like, no matter how far you want to go or how wild you act.
- Keep a tablet handy for observations and ideas. Prep your show every waking moment.
Bob Rivers

- Meet every listener. Have your morning show visit listeners three times a week.
- Wake-up calls: this classic bit still works like a charm.
- Create local characters to champion local causes.
- Make a “Hot Topic” list every day.
John Lund

- Devour media – read and view everything you can.
- Be interesting.
- Be memorable.
- Be funny; have fun.
- Don’t put people down.
- Be nice – let the audience see something in you they like.
Dan O’Day

- No air talent has ever lost by leaving the audience wanting more.
- Although thousands are hearing you, each of your listeners needs to feel you’re talking directly to them.
- Try to engage your listener in mental conversation.
- Seek to involve your listeners, to reach them on an emotional level.
Dave Sholin

- Be personal
- Origination beats imitation
- Don’t feel the need to be funny in every break. Forced humor sounds that way.
- Push the envelope; try different techniques.
- Music is the star; leave negative opinions at the door.
- Become an expert on the varied interests of the local community.
- Less is more. The fewer the words, the greater the impact.
Paul Kaye, Rogers Communications in Canada.

- Speak visually – so the listener can picture what you’re saying.
- Do your best material.
- Tell the truth.
- Never be boring.
- Be relevant – Make it matter to the listener.
- Talk to one listener at a time.
- Do engaging transitions and handoffs.
- Promote authentically.
- Be who you are.
John Lund is President of the Lund Media Group, a radio programming consulting firm with specialists in all mainstream radio formats. Did you find this article useful? You can leave a comment below or email John at John@Lundradio.com.