Remote workers boost daytime radio listening as a third change audio habits

Almost half use radio as companion, and one in five say it makes them more productive

Some 28% of people use radio to lift their mood when working from home. Photograph: iStock
Some 28% of people use radio to lift their mood when working from home. Photograph: iStock

The working-from-home phenomenon continues to boost daytime radio listening, industry research suggests, with almost half of remote workers saying they use radio as a source of companionship as they remain outside the office.

The advent of greater control over their audio choices saw 36 per cent of people change their listening habits during the pandemic, with listeners experimenting with different stations at different times of day and also trying new platforms, according to Radiocentre Ireland.

About four in 10 of this group said they listened to the radio more during daytime since the Covid-19 crisis, with 27 per cent listening to more news, 23 per cent consuming more current affairs and 20 per cent tuning in to more talk shows.

Podcast listening has also exploded, with half of adults now indicating they listen to podcasts, rising to 76 per cent of 18-34 year-olds.

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Some 46 per cent of people say radio helped keep them company when working from home, while 28 per cent said it lifted their mood and 18 per cent said it made them more productive, a survey of 1,000 adults conducted in February by Amárach Research on behalf of Radiocentre Ireland found.

The survey found that 26 per cent of people were currently working from home and one in three of this group want to continue to do so. Only 5 per cent want to return to the office full-time, with 56 per cent saying they would prefer hybrid working.

“It is a very different way of working and it did give radio a way of benefitting from the situation,” said Ciarán Cunningham, chief executive of Radiocentre Ireland, a new audio industry body.

Swelling audience

The research echoes the patterns seen in the massive Joint National Listenership Research (JNLR) surveys, which have pointed to a sustained swelling in radio audiences from morning until mid-afternoon for both news programmes and shows with lighter content.

This growth has eclipsed the softness seen for some early portions of radio stations’ morning schedules, which may have been affected in some cases by lower rates of commuting.

Mr Cunningham said that as well as having more time to listen in some instances, remote workers were exercising their freedom to choose the stations and platforms they want to consume without interference from others.

The research suggests the fate of daytime listening figures and working-from-home rates are intertwined.

To date, there is evidence that many people have maintained the listening habits they established at the outset of the pandemic, with the latest JNLR showing that the audiences for some of Ireland’s biggest radio programmes remains above their pre-pandemic level.

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery

Laura Slattery is an Irish Times journalist writing about media, advertising and other business topics