How to Automate Your Radio Show Using StationPlaylist Studio
Automating a radio show with StationPlaylist Studio lets you run professional-sounding broadcasts with minimal hands-on work. This guide shows a complete, prescriptive workflow to set up automation: preparing content, building playlists, scheduling, configuring live assist vs. full automation, and monitoring a live stream.
1. Prepare your audio assets
- Organize folders: Create separate folders for music, jingles, sweepers, voice tracks, and ads.
- Standardize formats: Convert files to MP3 or WAV at consistent bitrates (e.g., 128–192 kbps MP3) and sample rates (44.1 kHz).
- Tag tracks: Ensure ID3 tags for title, artist, album and genre are accurate for logging and on-air metadata.
2. Create and import a music library
- Add to StationPlaylist library: In Studio, use File → Add Folder to import your organized folders.
- Categorize with subfolders or metadata: Use genres, moods, or custom fields to allow dynamic playlist rules.
- Remove duplicates: Use the built-in duplicate finder or sort by filename/duration to clean your library.
3. Build playlists and elements
- Make jingle and spot playlists: Create short playlists for station IDs, sweepers, and adverts. Set them to non-random if you want fixed rotation.
- Create show templates: Build a base playlist that represents one hour of programming (e.g., music-block → jingle → talk break → ad pod → music-block). Save it as a template.
- Set transitions: Configure gap settings and crossfade time per playlist to maintain consistent audio flow.
4. Use Rules and Automation features
- AutoDJ / Scheduler: Open the Scheduler window and create recurring shows. Assign your saved playlist templates to time slots.
- Rotation rules: Define rotation constraints—e.g., minimum spacing between plays, maximum plays per day—for each track or category to prevent repetition.
- Smart blocks: Use category-based blocks (e.g., “Top Hits”) and let Studio fill them automatically according to rules and target durations.
5. Voice tracking and talk segments
- Record voice tracks: Use Studio’s voice track recorder or import pre-recorded segments. Trim and normalize levels.
- Insert into playlists: Place voice tracks between songs using fixed positions or markers so they play as if live.
- Automate frequency: Schedule voice-tracked breaks throughout the hour to simulate live presence.
6. Live assist vs full automation
- Live Assist: Keep Studio in manual mode during live segments; use the cart or playout panels for jingles and live cuts. Schedule automation to take over when you go off-air.
- Full Automation: Set the Scheduler to cover ⁄7. Ensure all blocks, ads, and required IDs are scheduled and rotation rules applied.
7. Connect to streaming/server
- Configure Encoder: In Studio, set up an encoder (e.g., Icecast, SHOUTcast) with server URL, mount point, and credentials.
- Test streaming: Run a test stream, check audio levels on the server, and verify metadata (song titles) appear in the stream.
- Failover: If available, configure a backup stream or secondary encoder to switch automatically on failure.
8. Logging, monitoring, and compliance
- Enable logging: Turn on play logs for music, ads, and talk tracks for reporting and royalties. Export logs in required formats.
- Monitor levels: Use Studio’s meters to keep consistent loudness; apply normalization or a limiter if needed.
- Compliance reminders: Schedule mandatory station IDs and legal announcements as recurring events.
9. Testing and go-live checklist
- Verify all files play without errors.
- Confirm rotation rules prevent repeats within your target interval.
- Test voice tracks in context with music.
- Run a full-hour test on the stream and review logs and metadata.
- Set alerts or watch the log for encoder disconnects.
10. Maintenance and optimization
- Refresh library regularly and add new content.
- Review play logs weekly to spot scheduling issues.
- Adjust rotation and crossfade settings based on listener feedback and analytics.
Following these steps will get a stable, automated radio show running with StationPlaylist Studio. If you want, I can produce a one-hour playlist template and sample rotation rules tailored to a specific music format (e.g., Top 40, Classic Rock, Adult Contemporary).
Leave a Reply