Archives For Student Radio

At work I sometimes make radio packages. I work on a daily current affairs programme so it’s important to be able to do it at speed – normally I have about 90 minutes to create something. If you want to include the right music and sound effects, need to find different elements to go into it (such as a vox pop – which might take a bunch of time in itself), and, vitally, get the scripting, accuracy, editorial message and delivery right…90 minutes isn’t that long.

faders

I’ve answered many questions in the past about my methods for churning stuff out at speed – including yesterday when I made a short package about the Higgs Boson. I’ve written some thoughts down, so below are my top five tips for speed-packaging.

Top Five Tips in Brief!

Perhaps you’re making a speed-package right now in which case this post is too late. But in the name of brevity – here’s a summary of my top five before a longer explanation below:

  1. Get ready to speed-package NOW – bookmark your favourite websites for sound effects and audio production music.
  2. Take a breath, gather your thoughts. You don’t have long to make this package but spend a few minutes learning your subject and knowing what you might like to include in it.
  3. Do a very quick storyboard and write a script. Use bullet points to map out the messages you want to convey and what other audio or clips you’ll want to use. Then flesh it out with a script.
  4. Learn to edit well. Before you have to make a package quickly make sure you’re half-decent at audio editing.
  5. Have a voice-recording device available NOW! Have a smartphone in your possession that you can record good audio with and know how to use it.
And again – in greater detail:

1. Get ready to speed-package NOW!

Creating something like the package I posted above – at speed – requires being set up and ready to do so. You need a bunch of things already in place, and this is useful both for making packages quickly and for producing radio in general. There are a couple of pretty key things below – look to point 5 for more thoughts.

Sound Effects

“Ok! I need to make a comedy package about a donkey! Right – I need to find a good donkey sound effect.” *Fifteen minutes later…* “I can’t find a good donkey sound effect!”.

You can waste an awfully long time looking for the right sound effect. I’ve collected together a half-decent sound effects library over time, and I make sure it’s always to hand. Do the same – when you use or hear a good sound effect try to grab it for your own FX collection. You can also buy sound effects CDs which is often the simplest way to get everything you might need, and there are also free sound effects websites such as findsounds.com which can be a bit sketchy at times but invaluable at others.

Music

If you work in radio hopefully you have pretty decent access to popular commercial music. But ‘production music’ is often just what your package needs. If you’re making a package about aliens – please don’t use the X-Files theme tune. Instead, get on a production music website and just find something nice and spooky to score your package with. In the package I posted above I used music from westonemusic.com – but there are loads of sites just like this. Google it and explore! If you sign up to these sites and learn how to download the tracks and logging details – you’re ready to very quickly grab music for any occasion when the need arises.

2. Take a breath, gather your thoughts.

If you only have 90 minutes and you know how much work you have to do, it’s easy to see the clock ticking and get straight into scripting your package. But hang on – give yourself ten minutes to make sure you know your subject. If I’m making a factual piece I’ll use these ten minute to read the relevant news articles and see what archive audio is available to me. I’ll perhaps consult colleagues for their creative thoughts and jot down ideas I have that I might like to include. Taking a few minutes to properly understand the topic and what could go into the package helps a lot with point number 3…

3. Do a very quick storyboard and write a script.

This can normally be done whether you’re in the office or out on a job working on a story. Don’t go straight for the script. Think first about what you want to say overall and what audio you have to make that happen. Put that into a storyboard. And by ‘storyboard’ I just mean a sequence of bullet points roughly collecting your thoughts together.

Suppose there’s been a fire at a beach hut and you’re there to report – the ‘storyboard’ might look like this:

FX recorded from scene

Voice intro walking around ruins, end with “the firefighters said it was devastating”

Chief firefighter clip

Record on-location link into archive audio

Archive news audio from the previous fires

Final link from scene – include latest statement from local police

It’s a bit of a simple off-the-top-of-my-head example but you get the idea. Now – flesh it out. It’s much easier to write a script around a few bullet points like this than to write one from start to finish without having a master-plan.

4. Learn to edit well

If you’re a blacksmith you might be great at knowing how to forge iron. But if you’re rubbish at using a hammer, what you make might be useless. If you work in radio your hammer is the ability to edit audio. If it takes you a week to find out how to fade something out then you’ll never create a radio package quickly!

Never dismiss editing as geeky and therefore avoid learning how to do it. If you work in radio but don’t have much time to practice editing, make time. If you have a brilliant idea for a package and a brilliant (and slightly complicated) script, there’s no way you’ll be able to bring it to life quickly unless you’re practiced at the editing process.

5. Have a voice-recording device available NOW!

“Quick! You have to record a package immediately! It needs a few vox pops, some narration, and a clip of an interview.”

If that’s said to me I already know how I will record these things. Different radio stations have different ways of allocating equipment. Perhaps your station has a Marantz you can grab. Maybe you need to book kit out. Or it could be that it’s incredibly difficult to get something to record audio on at short notice – and even then perhaps the office is lacking in card-readers to get the audio onto your computer.

I make sure that wherever I work I know how I might quickly be able to go and record something. Basically – I know how to use the voicememo bit of my iPhone, how to email that back to myself, and how to convert that to a file I can use with my audio editing software. It’s not complicated, and there are plenty of smartphone apps that do a similar thing with .mp3 files – but the point is you have to know exactly how to do it, and be able to do it, in advance of when you need to make your speed-package!

That’s it

But here’s another one I made about PANDAS:

Unfortunately I couldn’t make it to this year’s Student Radio Conference hosted by the wonderful Demon FM in Leicester.

However, I was there in spirit, as I contributed a tip to the session about putting together the best award entry if you’re entering the Student Radio Awards.

Here it is. Last year I chaired the judging for the ‘Best Male’ category and this tip is based quite specifically on last year’s entries – so it may not be useful for categories such as ‘Best OB’, and it may seem obvious, but it is important.

This video was just part of a much longer session with all sorts of tips to help you make the best award entries, so it is just one small point among many – but hope it helps.

Job titles and job descriptions rarely do enough to tell you whether you realistically have a shot at getting a position or not. And that’s very true when you’re starting out at the BBC. ‘Producer’, ‘Researcher’, ‘Broadcast Assistant’ and others are titles thrown around that do nothing to explain how much experience you might need to get that job.

I started in student radio where most people do some sort of ‘producer’ role – but knowing how that experience applies to being a BBC ‘Producer’ can be mystifying. So the below is some information I wish I’d had when I graduated and set out to work for the BBC. It certainly won’t ‘demystify’, but it may ‘very very slightly demystify something’.

BBC Jobs Website

The organisation is so big, and job titles are so few, that no doubt for much of what I write there will be examples for which the opposite is true. I’m also only going to write about a few examples, otherwise we’ll be here all week.

Me

I’ve done a few jobs in BBC radio where the headline job-title didn’t really sum up quite what I did.

When I was a Broadcast Assistant I often felt more like an Assistant Producer, and sometimes even a Technical Operator. As a local radio Broadcast Journalist I usually thought I was more of a Producer or Presenter, and now I’m a Producer I feel more like a Broadcast Journalist. And so on.

Job titles are more like job grades

The first and perhaps most important thing to say about BBC job titles in radio, is that they often say far more about the ‘grade/level’ of the job than about what that job specifically involves. To make it more complicated, different departments can use different titles for what are often broadly the same jobs.

When looking at job titles on the BBC jobs website, it’s worth taking a closer look at the job’s numerical grade. You’ll see a number from 1 – 11. The majority of jobs are grades 3 – 7, and the grades give you a better idea of how senior the job is and correspondingly how much experience you might need to stand a chance of getting it. It goes without saying that where the job is plays a huge part in its competitiveness too – a grade 5 job on the Radio 1 breakfast show is infinitely more competitive than a grade 5 job as the district reporter for Slough (no offence if that job actually exists and it’s yours).

In fact, not so long ago I had a grade 5 staff job (permanent) in local radio and applied for a grade 2 part-time job on a national programme I really wanted to work on. That’s unusual, but such can be the discrepancy. I didn’t get it.

Local vs. National

You could be doing a pretty much identical job in BBC Local Radio to a job on national radio but have a different job title. Titles also differ between different national networks.

On top of that there are the ‘nations’ – BBC Wales/Scotland/Northern Ireland. They have a whole mix of all the different job titles used by network and by local radio.

And on top of that you can make BBC programmes for independent production companies – those companies choose their own job titles (often in line with the BBC) – but I’m leaving that out of this post.

BBC Local Radio

Over-generalising (as I am through this entire post) the local radio ‘ranks’ are a bit like this:

bbcradiojobs

The BBC jobs website highlights some common roles

  • Broadcast Assistant – grade 3
  • Broadcast Journalist – grade 5 (more experienced staff and some positions will be grade 7)
  • Senior Broadcast Journalist – grade 8 (and up)
  • Senior broadcast journalists make up a lot of the management team (eg. News Editor) and the boss of the station is the Managing Editor.

The most striking omission from this list is ‘Presenter’. Typically, BBC Local Radio presenters are categorised as ‘Broadcast Journalists’ – which because of the news-focussed programming, they often are.

Something also lacking from local radio is the ‘Producer’ job title. You can be an assistant producer or the producer of a programme in local radio but your main job title will be Broadcast Assistant or Broadcast Journalist. Likewise, in network radio (national) your job title may be Producer or Researcher but depending on the programme you may need to be a broadcast journalist first and foremost.

The ‘entry level’ job in local radio is usually the Broadcast Assistant role. But if you’re just starting out (even if you’ve done lots of student radio for example) you may not find it easy to simply apply for a job at a station you’ve never worked in and get it (see the last bit of this post for a more typical route in to employment).

If you’re fresh out of a journalism post-grad you may be aiming for a Broadcast Journalist job. The majority of people getting their first BBC Local Radio Broadcast Journalist job have either freelanced for a while at the station where they finally get a contract, have come from a job in commercial radio, or sometimes have come from newspaper/print/online.

National Radio

Network radio is understandably more complicated because it covers hundreds of programmes across multiple networks. But I just want to mention a few job titles that I often hear graduates discussing, wondering whether they should apply or not. With the grades below – they can all be +2 in some instances.

bbcjobsasiannetwork

As I write, an AP job is being advertised grade 5-7, showing there are always exceptions to ‘rules’

  • Unit Assistant – grade 2
  • Broadcast Assistant – grade 3/5
  • Assistant Producer – grade 5
  • Researcher – grade 5
  • Broadcast Journalist – grade 7
  • Producer – grade 7
  • Senior Producer/Editor/other – grades 8 and above

Even more so in network (because of its even more competitive nature) if you’re starting your career and apply for a full-time contract as any of these positions you’re unlikely to get too far. Normally people get work experience and the occasional paid shift, and work their way up the ladder from there, or get experience elsewhere then move across.

I’d like to highlight a couple of job titles above that are a little misleading to anyone browsing the BBC jobs website for the first time. I know a lot of people, based purely on the title, assume ‘Assistant Producer’ and ‘Researcher’ roles would be quite junior and within their reach. And why not, one’s got ‘assistant’ in the title and one seems to be about doing (for all you know) ‘a bit of background research’ for whatever the programme is. But those roles aren’t typically entry-level jobs, and getting a full-time contract as an AP or Researcher on a national BBC radio station is a rare thing as your first paid radio job.

Contracts

The issue of contracts is a whole other essay. But typically the longer the contract the more competitive it might be. If you’re starting out you’ve far less chance of going straight in with a job that’s advertised as permanent (continuing). Equally a 12-month contract may be more difficult to get than a 3-month contract.

A typical way to get a job

Ok – there’s not really a typical scenario because there will be examples of just about everything under the sun. But this is a route that I’ve seen time and time again:

  1. Sitting in on a show can often lead to work experience
  2. That can lead to continued work experience on a particular programme
  3. Eventually, along comes an opportunity for paid shifts on freelance/casual contract
  4. Now you’re on the books and part of a team – you may get more shifts on more teams across the radio station you’re working for
  5. Now you’re in a good position to apply for a full-time contract if one comes up. Alternatively if something comes up the boss might be able to give you a short contract (for example to cover absence or work on a special project)
  6. Once you’re on a contract, if you apply elsewhere for similar roles you’ll have more chance (not just because ‘being on a contract’ is important, but typically by this stage you’ll have a lot more experience)
  7. Once you’re on a fixed-term contract in a particular department (ie. for a specified period of time, normally a number of months), you have a better chance at getting a permanent job if one comes up

More questions than answers?

Hopefully not – confusing as it all may be I hope that helps more than it hinders. Having a realistic expectation of a job you’re applying for is better than being ill-informed. However – please don’t let any of the above put you off applying for jobs you think might be ‘above’ you. I very much subscribe to the view that it’s always worth giving it a go. I over-enthusiastically applied to dozens of jobs in the past and got nowhere!

Leave a comment if you’ve any questions and if I don’t know the answer, I’ll find someone who does.

Well, tell them roughly what you’re going to ask them, but don’t give them precise questions.

I post this because I’ve noticed that for almost every interview I’ve ever given to journalism or media students, they’ve tried to tell me beforehand the exact questions they’ll want to ask me in the interview. While I may only be giving interviews about non-political subjects such as Lincoln Shorts, BBC Introducing or student radio, the principles about briefing a guest remain.

My frustration lies with the fact that I feel like students are routinely taught to hand over interview questions in advance. I work full-time in radio and behind the microphone I’m careful not to hand over specific questions, so when I’m in front of the mic there’s a certain annoyance when question-handing-over occurs.

Imagine if Michael Howard had been handed the precise questions for this interview before he agreed to go on air…

The beauty of questions not being prescribed is that things like this can happen. 

Repeatedly (when I’ve been the interviewee, booked by student journalists) I’ve experienced an interview setup that’s something like this (because it’s been taught that way):

1) Email contributor, ask if they’ll be interviewed

2) If they say yes, decide what you will ask them and email them the questions

3) Go and interview them

Points one and three are marvellous, number two is not.

Yes, it’s a difficult line to tread. The person you’re interviewing needs to know what the interview’s about. They need to know the sort of thing they will be asked. They need to know if they will have to debate the subject with someone else. They need to understand where the conversation could go and what topics could be discussed. You need to make sure they’re clear on the nature of the interview and the interviewer (for example you shouldn’t tell them it’ll be a fluffy interview where they can promote their goat-hairdressing business if in fact you’re planning to pit them against Jeremy Paxman who’s set to make the case for how goat-hairdressing businesses are tearing the UK apart).

But – it’s remarkably rare you would ever give your interviewee a precise list of questions. It doesn’t (for the most part) happen in the professional broadcasting world, so if you’re ever taught that’s what you should do, well, it’s wrong.

It needs a bit of common sense; most of the above can usually be dealt with very easily. For example, if you interview a local councillor for a community radio station about a sponsored charity walk they’re doing, you probably just need to say “can I interview you about your walk?”. If you’re trying to set up the head of a local NHS trust to debate abortion ethics with someone else you’re going to have to give them a lot more detail. But for neither of those examples should precise questions be handed out.

Biased as I may be, I think the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines have much wisdom scattered throughout them. On this topic, I believe this section sums things up perfectly regarding potential guests:

The more significant their contribution, the more detail we should provide. We should normally expect to explain the following:

  • The kind of contribution they are expected to make. We should tell them in advance about the range of views being represented in the specific content to which they are contributing and, wherever possible, the names of other likely contributors
  • We can only give a broad outline of question areas because the direction the interview takes will be dependent on what is said

You can read more about that here – and in fact the entire guidelines are online here.

Allowing an interview the possibility of going anywhere is all part of a democratic society with a strong, independent broadcast and print media. If that’s not enough for you, there’s one final reason why you shouldn’t give precise questions to your guest if you work in radio or video:

Your interviewee will often sound BORING.

If they’re used to being interviewed, like the head of a prominent charity or a local MP might be, it won’t be a problem. But most people aren’t used to being interviewed, and when given a set of specific questions will prepare a set of specific answers, and churn them out on tape or on camera like robots. Boring robots. Way more boring than the ones in ‘I, Robot’ feat. Will Smith. And if you’re broadcasting you don’t want to be boring.

So keep the specific questions to yourself.

Many working in radio, including broadcast journalists, are pretty awful at spelling and grammar. I’m not perfect so don’t shoot me down if I make a mistake in this post…(though I am totally asking for it).

Plenty struggle with the ol’ spelling thing, especially when working under pressure or at speed. That’s fine. But I’ve also met plenty who think it’s ok to be lax because it’s ‘just for radio’. This seems to make them more likely not to check what they’ve written or to be lazy about trying to improve.

I’m including here spelling accuracy – that is – making sure you’re spelling people’s names correctly and getting details like job-titles perfect.

Just cos’ your working in radio its, not ok too get the SPAG all bad.

There are many reasons why, but here are just a few.

badspellingedit

Getting handed this last-minute note as a presenter would suck

Social media

Twitter and Facebook are the obvious examples.

You write up some research on a music track for radio-play and spell the artist’s name wrong. Someone else could have a look at what you’ve done and tweet that.

You get the spelling wrong of a place name in a news bulletin. Before you know it someone’s looked at your script and tweeted it from your station’s official account.

You may work in radio but it’s increasingly likely that you’ll also write tweets and Facebook messages on official accounts yourself. Sloppy spelling, missing capital letters and strange punctuation makes your brand look rubbish, unprofessional and less authoritative, perhaps especially if it’s journalism-based.

Who knows where your words will end up

This is especially true of any organisation with multiple outlets, but my example is specific to the BBC, where I have the most experience.

We use a shared bit of software across all of BBC News. Anyone can read what I write in a radio script. I can read the scripts of others.  And you’ve no idea where your words could end up. Once you’ve saved something in a ‘greened’ script (ie. ready for broadcast) it’s assumed that it encompasses all the BBC values of accuracy.

Let’s say I’m working in an empty BBC newsroom for a local radio station on a Sunday evening when there’s a MASSIVE local fire. I write a quick bit of copy for the regional news bulletin. All I want to do is be the first, the quickest with the information. In my three lines I misspell the name of the fire officer who told me they were “working hard to control the fire”, because I don’t have time to check the spelling. I know how it’s pronounced so I give it my best guess, because it’s ‘just for radio’.

Despite the fact I’m sitting alone in a small office, and it’s been successfully read on air to a few thousand people, suddenly what I’ve written starts appearing elsewhere. There it is on the ticker on the BBC News Channel. Then BBC Breaking News have tweeted the quote. Then BBC News Online have written an article. Then it’s on 5Live and they’re tweeting it. And so on. Suddenly something with the wrong spelling has spread to the entire BBC network.

Sight-reading on air

A presenter reading stuff on air from a script they’ve never seen before is called sight-reading.

Whether you’re a producer, journalist, broadcast assistant or manager: mess up your spelling and grammar, and sight-reading becomes a whole lot more difficult for the presenter. What goes out on air can then sound a whole lot worse. And someone probably gets annoyed at you.

Even if what you’ve written sounds phonetically right, it can mess up the train of thought and lead to awkward uncertainty when read on air.  ‘Their’ instead of ‘there’ and ‘its’ instead of ‘it’s’ suddenly changes the meaning of a sentence and to a shrewd presenter makes it a lot more difficult to make sense of a sentence.

And an misplaced, comma can make a sentence, sound rediculous when, read, allowed.

Would you have read that last sentence out loud perfectly the first time you saw it, if you were also on air at the time?

What others think of you

I generally find those working in radio to be helpful, supportive and accommodating, but equally ruthless when help and support is not deserved.

If you struggle with spelling and grammar and say so, or perhaps do your best despite dyslexia, no-one’s going to mind. But if you’re of the opinion that it’s not a top priority because ‘it’s just radio’ you’ll be judged pretty quickly by some colleagues, bosses and potential employers.

If in doubt, take your time, double-check what you’ve written, and don’t worry about asking someone else to check it too. Someone can make a snap decision about your ability simply based on how you’ve written an email to them asking about work experience. If you’re continually making mistakes working as a broadcast journalist or senior producer the damage can be worse.

Vox Pop Top Tips

November 11, 2012 — 8 Comments

I’ll be honest. Unless it’s for something fun I hate doing vox pops. But sometimes they’re a necessary evil.

Vox populi – ‘Voice of the People’ (or for broadcasting new-starters often considered ‘a boring painful waste of time’)

Though overused and sometimes a symptom of lazy journalism, the humble vox pop has its place in broadcasting and is a basic tool that is here to stay.

I’ve had the honour (?!) of dispatching many a student on work experience to go and grab a vox pop. It’s amazing how much of an impression you can make by either doing one really well, or really badly.

But rather than list what makes a vox good or bad (because that depends on exactly what the subject and brief is), below are some tips for getting started with one in the first place that tend to work for me.

So often I’ve seen people meekly approach members of the public who mostly keep walking, and when they do stop are put off by the way what’s about to happen is sold to them. An hour later the poor vox-popper will still be standing in the cold.

Depending on the topic and how many people are about, you should be able to easily grab what you need in 10-20 minutes.


1. It’s all about the approach. I’ll let myself explain…

2. Get straight in with the question

I know that on many media and journalism courses across the country the ‘method’ of getting into a vox is taught as something along the lines of…

– Ask a member of the public if they can spare a moment

– Explain where you’re from

– Explain the subject you are covering and see if they have an opinion on the matter

– Ask if they’re willing to be recorded

– Hit record, ask them the question again, record the answer

Don’t do this. You want to get to the point where you’re recording a decent answer as quickly as possible, otherwise you’re just wasting time.

After getting someone’s attention, you want to be straight in there with “I’m from x, and I’m just asking everyone around here what they think about dog’s shoes”, by which point you’re already recording (because you pressed record as you approached them) with the microphone in their face.

However – once you’ve recorded something that you think could be broadcast, you need to be confident that the person you’ve recorded understands what they need to. For most people having a microphone in their face is explanation enough that they’re being recorded, and by saying as you leave “thank you, that’ll be part of x programme at x time” is generally enough.

There’s no reason you can’t be both quick (almost ruthless) with a vox but also entirely professional and polite throughout.

 3. Don’t make them feel singled out

Point #2 contained a really key line. When I say to someone “I’m from x, and I’m just asking everyone around here what they think about dog’s shoes”, a vital part of that is ‘everyone around here’.

By mentioning that you’re asking ‘everyone’, I’ve found a distinct difference in people’s concern at suddenly being asked a question on tape. They tend to immediately grasp that they’re not being singled out and that they’re just adding to a pile of opinion.

If there’s still concern on their face, a follow up of “don’t worry, I don’t need your name or anything” tends to alleviate their worries.

 4. Milk the good ones (not literally)

So often I’ve heard the raw recording of a vox someone’s done for me where they’ve got a great speaker, who hasn’t quite worded their answer right. And it’s unusable.

If you’ve got someone with a strong opinion and who’s stopped to talk to you, make the most of them. Don’t be afraid to ask the same question twice. Three times. Four. Don’t worry about wasting their time – they’ll tell you if that’s the case.

Don’t be afraid to guide them with tricks like “repeat after me and finish the sentence: ‘I like dog’s shoes because'”. So long as you’re not guiding their thoughts or putting words in their mouth there’s nothing wrong with pursuing the same question until you have them voicing their opinion in the clearest and strongest way.


And while we’re at it, here’s everything a vox pop shouldn’t be.

It was created as some sort of jokey test vox when Radio Lincolnshire launched, broadcast for fun on the station’s first birthday.

My first post on this blog is dedicated to the wonderful world of student radio. And rightly so. For me it was the best fun ever, provided the best training ever, and I’m confident I wouldn’t be where I am today without it.

WHERE DO I START in trying to justify why it’s ‘the best’?! I could write a (short) book on the matter, but that won’t hold your attention, so I’ll try and pick out just five points. They’re mostly based on why student radio could be good for your career, rather than all the creative and fun reasons…


fresh air ob pic

Me being a ‘student radio type’ on Edinburgh Fresh Air

1. It’s where the big names look for new talent.

It’s not a very romantic notion of why you should partake in student radio, but it’s true. There’s no other voluntary radio sector that has the remarkable attention from industry giants that student radio does. Radio budgets are tight. So it says a lot when BBC Radio 1 and Global Radio compete over who should pay out as main sponsor of the awards, only to decide it’s mutually beneficial to sign a three-year deal costing them thousands every year for the honour of sharing it.

It’s not just them, each award category has a big-name sponsor and big-name interest. At a time when radio presenters are newly-employed on salaries of peanuts and cuts are being made wherever possible – those very same employers line up to financially support what they see as a vital source of talent for the future of their industry.

2. Experience.

Simple. The more time you spend doing radio the better you’ll be at it. Sure, it’s helpful to have guidance and teaching along the way where possible, but it’s the hours of creating terrible features, conducting awful interviews and making horribly-bad radio (which at the time you think is great) which is invaluable. Being told how to make radio, or taking a course where you’re allowed one hour structured broadcasting a week – is not enough.

Student radio can provide hours of airtime that you can fill with all your early mistakes, and give you the freedom to be excited about what you’re doing and make you want to learn more and practice more. There are no professional radio stations, and remarkably few community and hospital station that afford you such true freedom (though don’t get me wrong – community and hospital radio are remarkably important in many of the same ways student radio is).

3. Networking. Or…accidental networking.

A lot of radio people say…

“It’s not what you know, it’s who you know”.

No. Of course not. When wheeling out that phrase most forget to mention that you have to have skill and ability before people take notice of you – networking can’t solve everything. However there is, in radio or pretty much any industry, still plenty to be said for who you know. Perhaps a better phrase would be…

“If you’re very good at radio, having a good network of people in the industry may well help your career at some point”.

It’s not so catchy, but I think it’s better. So let’s assume you’ve done some student radio and become pretty good at some radio-type-skills. It’s astonishing how by doing student radio, attending a student radio conference or two, heading along to the awards and so on – you can accidentally build up an incredible network of contacts. At the time it may just seem like ‘I said hello to Jim from LSR’ or ‘I ended up meeting that tech-bloke from Xpress Radio’, but have enough of those little connections and five years later you realise you sort-of know half the radio industry.

4. It’s full of DO-ERS and POTENTIAL!

People are remarkably lazy. Some think they can sign up to a media course and magic up a media career. Of course, you need some experience to go alongside it. To get on in student radio you have to at least bother to sign up, make a demo, turn up for a radio show (and hopefully prepare it too) on a voluntary basis. Those who are really passionate end up entering awards and getting involved with SRA stuff.

So almost by default you end up with a bunch of people who are passionate and motivated about radio, which is perhaps why if you’re involved in student radio you probably know someone right now (or a few people) who will go on to a paid radio or media career. So just by being part of that group you’ve improved your chances!

5. It’s fun.

The old ones are the best eh? But yeah, it’s masses of fun. The friends, the parties, the ridiculous radio programmes and the incredible achievements you’re so proud of because you feel like you gave Radio 1 a run for their money despite your £10 budget.


Hang on though – obviously I’m totally biased. But if you want to work in radio and are in any doubt as to whether getting involved in student radio is worth it – it is. And I’m not just talking about your local station, embrace the Student Radio Association too, and all it has to offer!

What your favourite bit about student radio?