Answer:
Playlist issues are almost always related to track weighting. This is a common complaint resulting from a misunderstanding of how the Stream101’s Media Control Panel track weighting system works.
How Track Weighting Works
Track weighting is explained in section 9.6.1 of the Stream101’s Media Control Panel user’s guide, and a brief example is provided below.
Take the following playlist configuration as an example:
Playlist Type | Playlist Contents | Playlist Weight |
General rotation | 1000 tracks | 1 |
General rotation | 5 tracks | 10 |
In this example, weighting between the two general rotation playlists is calculated as follows:
1 + 10 = 11
So out of every 11 songs played, on average, 10 of them are going to be chosen from the 5-track playlist (the entire 5-track set will be repeated twice), and only 1 of them will be selected from the 1000-track playlist.
We’re often asked why we designed the track selection mechanism this way. This was a deliberate design decision to make sure that a large playlist doesn’t overwhelm your station’s programming. To understand why this is necessary, consider another example scenario in which you are operating a Pop Top 40 station.
Assume for a moment that Stream101’s Media Control Panel handled weighting based on simple ratios, the way many Stream101’s Media Control Panel users expect them to work. We’d like to achieve a 10:1 ratio, wherein Current Top 40 Tracks are played 10 times more often than older tracks, so we’ve set the weight for the Current Top 40 Tracks playlist to 10, and the Older Tracks to 1:
Playlist Type | Playlist Purpose | Playlist Contents | Playlist Weight |
General rotation | Current Top 40 Tracks | 40 tracks | 10 |
General rotation | Old Tracks | 400 older tracks | 1 |
Unfortunately, this won’t work the way you might have expected it to. Because the Old Tracks playlist actually contains 10 times the number of tracks in the Current Top 40 Tracks playlist, you will actually see a 50/50 split of airtime between the two playlists:
40 x 10 = 400
400 x 1 = 400
ratio = 400:400 or 1:1
Now, say you look at the numbers above and realize that by changing the Current Top 40 playlist to a weight of 100, you can achieve a 10:1 ratio:
40 x 100 = 4000
400 x 1 = 400
ratio = 4000:400 or 10:1
That would work exactly as you expected — you would hear Current Top 40 tracks 10 times as often as older tracks, at least for awhile. It’s important to consider, however, what will happen to your ratios as you change the number of tracks in each playlist. Building on the example above, say after a year you have increased the number of tracks in the Old Tracks playlist to 800. You still have 40 tracks in your Current Top 40 playlist, and the weights are still set to 100 and 1. Suddenly your ratios are no longer the same:
40 x 100 = 4000
800 x 1 = 800
ratio = 4000:800 or 5:1
By simply changing the number of tracks in the Old Tracks playlist, you have skewed your ratios and will now hear old tracks far more often than originally intended.
This is a common example of why Stream101’s Media Control Panel does not use simple ratios when calculating playlist weighting. Instead, Stream101’s Media Control Panel uses the weighting algorithm described at the top of this article, which guarantees that no matter how many tracks you have in each playlist, your weighting values are always honored and alwaysconsistently applied.