March 2026: Reasons Teaching and Hybrid Audiences are Turning Off Your Station

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What makes someone reach for the preset button on Christian radio? The latest 2025 Why Listen  Surveyfrom Finney Media gives us a pretty clear answer—and some of the results might make programmers smile (and maybe sweat a little). We asked listeners when they’re “Very” or “Somewhat Likely” to turn the station off.

The biggest tune-out trigger for everyone? Easy. A negative, angry, or judgmental tone. A whopping 78 percent of Hybrid (Music + Teaching) listeners and 71 percent of all-Teaching listeners say that’s their cue to exit. In other words, if the vibe gets cranky, the audience gets gone. Listeners want encouragement, not a scolding.

After that, the paths start to split a bit.

Hybrid listeners show their music-first instincts. Commercials (47%) and songs they don’t like (47%) tie for second place. They’ll also drift away if the topic isn’t interesting (46%) or if the announcer talks too much (42%). Translation: keep the flow moving and the music strong.

Teaching listeners, on the other hand, are more content-focused. Their next triggers are songs they don’t like (56%) – interesting given that Teaching stations don’t play songs: topics they’re not interested in (53%), announcers talking too much (46%), and songs they’re tired of (41%).

The takeaway? Keep the tone hopeful, pick great songs, and remember: sometimes the best thing a host can say… is less.

Coming in April: Why do Hybrid and Teaching Listeners give? How are they the same or different?