How To Work in Radio
How To Work in Radio
How To Work in Radio
Radio broadcasters present news, sports, gossip, music and currents events over the airways
to an audience. They may also interview guests and promote local events and festivals. Radio
stations often focus their content on a certain subject or area. For example, some stations will
play rock or country music, while others will broadcast sporting events or news shows.
In addition to working on the radio, broadcasters may also make promotional appearances.
Some of these workers are self-employed, which allows them to set their schedules and
possibly work from home. However, the radio industry can be stressful, with plenty of deadlines.
Many radio stations run 24 hours a day, which might require some late hours.
Career Requirements
Requirements for this career vary by employer; however, applicants can anticipate they'll be
expected to possess strong speaking, research, reading, and writing skills. Radio broadcasters
are skilled in interviewing and moderating guests and providing commentary alongside callers
and news stories. They perform technical skills on broadcast automation systems, control and
mixer boards, and CD players. Radio broadcasters generally work flexible schedules.
Degree
Bachelor's degree
Level
Journalism, communications or broadcast communication may include
Degree
courses in speech, news reporting, broadcast writing, sound production and
Field
interpersonal communication
Key Skills Speaking, research, reading, and writing
Salary
£33,220/year
(May 2019)
Steps to Be a Radio Broadcaster- training needs and
opportunities
Radio broadcasters generally have a combination of education and experience.
We also have the hospital radio station dedicated for anyone in the hospital so we
could help out there to gain more experience and what it’s like being in and
around our radio knowledge for when we go on and find a job in the future. At
Warrington Hospital patients on the wards are able to listen to the hospital radio
station brought to them by Hospedia. All you need to do is, on arrival at the ward,
simply pick up the 'phone, press the operator button and register for free. Radio
General is on the air 24 hours a day with music to cater for all tastes. Programmes
include your music requests, live commentaries of the Warrington Wolves rugby
league matches as well as programmes of local interest. Concerts are also
broadcast live from the Parr Hall and events from around the town are relayed
over the air. On Sundays, the Church of England service is broadcast live from the
hospital chapel.
Are you a recent graduate with at least a 2:1 or higher in Journalism, English, Media, Marketing or
Public Relations with a desire to fast-track your career?
The Relations Group media and client teams are so busy right now and are looking to recruit a few
enthusiastic and creative Interns to join our team!
Our paid Internship allows you to dip your toes in a variety of tasks - the responsibilities range from
liaising with the media, generating ideas, researching news stories and stats, tracking coverage and
media relations. The ideal candidate will have first class communication skills and a passion for
broadcast and radio.
Personality: You will need to stand out from the crowd and put your personality into everything you
do, whether that’s talking to media contacts like radio presenters, TV producers or news editors, or
holding brainstorms with other colleagues.
A Natural Communicator: You will be spending a lot of time talking to seasoned journalists and
producers so the ability to be articulate and eloquent is very important.
Phone Friendly: This is no place for anyone with a fear of the phones, it’s a busy environment and
may require patching in on conference calls, networking and building rapport to influence broadcast
journalists and radio presenters.
Enthusiasm: All team members at the Relations Group are passionate about what we do and we’ll
expect no les from you. We want someone who has a fresh perspective and is creative and eager to
learn and develop new skills.
Tenacious: In the early days you may spend lots of time contacting the media to sell-in news and
feature stories and not all ideas and content will generate interest, therefore you need to be
adaptable and tenacious – maintaining focus and drive.
Creativity: You will need to identify what makes a story interesting for different radio presenters, TV
newsrooms or websites. Identify the hook and make it relevant to their audience and your ideas will
turn into stories that will be broadcast to millions of people throughout the UK - week in, week out!
Calm Under-Pressure: This is a role where you need to influence people every day! You will have
targets and deadlines so if you are easily stressed then please don't apply.
Research: You will need to create original content and may need to do desk research or track down
new media contacts - so an ability to research quickly is essential.
Writing: There will be opportunities to write content for the company websites, blog, and media
property platforms. You must have a keen eye for detail and a fresh outlook.
As a growing agency, we like to nurture exceptional talent; some of our best staff became full-time
employees after an initial internship. You will be contacting radio presenters and producers offering
them spokespeople for radio interviews, writing engaging blogs for our sites and social media,
researching celebrity spokespeople and brainstorming ideas based on the current news agenda.
It will be a steep learning curve in the world of broadcast PR with a genuine opportunity to impress
and be offered a full-time position. Enthusiasm and determination are more important than
qualifications. If you have the right qualities, then get in contact.
https://www.broadcastnow.co.uk/
https://www.radiotimes.com/
https://monocle.com/