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Pod-Crashing Episode 35: The
evolution of the podcast question
I love questions. It
doesn’t mean I locate answers but it opens the gate to explore. Since I
began my journey into the digital universe it’s been quite entertaining to see
how the podcast questions keep evolving. In 2012 I was bombarded with,
“Why am I doing this? Do I really need to do this?” To co-workers and
bosses asking, “Are you gonna get any other work done? What are you doing
and why?”
The biggest question from
myself and all others has been, “How can I make money?” It’s a fair
question that still doesn’t have a true answer. There’s a lot of people
trying. I mean 700,000 plus. Which has evolved into a new age
podcast question, “Why would I want to get started with podcasting when I’d be
nearly next to invisible?”
Boom! How can your star
be located when the Montana late night Big Sky is overflowing with light?
What are you gonna do to bring people to your source of podcast art?
Great questions! Do you have the energy or sound to grow a podcast
organically? I’m blessed with the opportunity to sit with many different
decision makers and podcast creator’s who want to jump into the rat race.
Inside their tiny circles they invite two words, “What if?” I mean it
seems pretty easy the what if should come with an earned bonus.
Right? Until listeners can’t find you. You were last seen somewhere
near the Big Dipper or was it Orion’s Belt?
Being fair to yourself.
As we grow into a new pair of podcast slippers labeled 2020… You have the right
to put it on the table, ”Why would I want to get started with podcasting when
I’d be nearly next to invisible?”
Here’s my question, “Why
not?” The other day I spent some time with Tom. He loves robotics
but doesn’t like the podcasts that put focus on their importance. This
huge global business leader feels in his heart that he and his company need to be
pumping out two to four podcasts a week. Not so information driven but
something listeners will be entertained by while learning new things about
robotics. He’s doing it right. He’s asking podcast questions!
Before he leaps into the project he’d like to understand its presence, growth, time
well spent or wasted. All things that could or should lead him to serving
current and future clients.
Then there’s Chris. He
was calling for a major player in the advertising world, “We know we need to be
podcasting. But we don’t know how. We can’t just start one.
How will anyone know we exist? How much time should we put into social
networking? Do we need to invest in a bigger team of players? What
platform should we jump onto iHeart, Spotify or Apple Podcast?”
Very real podcast
questions. Most of them didn’t exist when I first got in. If they
did, it was probably in emails and text messages from the brilliant minds of pioneers
that figured out a way to bring content to a new level of connection and
conversation.
Look, I’m no expert at this
game. An all-out armchair quarterback
with a serious amount of passion to get people involved. Whether you create a podcast filled with 10
episodes to several hundred, the opportunity to reach an audience anywhere in
the world sits in front of you.
You’re supposed to be asking
questions. I’ve yet to meet a podcaster
that won’t talk about your personal journey.
There’s podcast groups on Facebook that love to chat it up. Always willing to share new ideas and ways to
fix all that echo caused by recording your podcast in a poorly soundproofed
atmosphere.
I walked in on a couple of
people podcasting the other day and was shocked to see how far their faces were
from the microphone. Even worse, one of
them had their mic 45 degrees in the wrong direction.
With so much inexperience
inside the podcast galaxy there’s bound to be baby Yoda’s trying to piece
together what their hearts are screaming for.
An opportunity to participate, be accepted, touch a little bit of
success or just feed the beast that always wants to create.
Sometimes the podcast
questions we ask others should actually be directed at ourselves first. Where is podcasting moving toward? Is it more than a fad? If podcasting is so big why are the
politicians running for the White House campaigning on lesser known podcasts
that still have an impact and reach? Why
do I continue running into comedians that won’t waste a second of their day
talking to a podcaster?
Grab a notebook or journal
and start piecing together your side of the story. This show Pod-Crashing didn’t start out being
a place to swap experiences. I actually
wanted to team up with my good friend Gabe and be like Roger Ebert. Instead of talking about movies, we’d break
down podcasts.
While sitting down to record
the first episode I quickly dropped the plan.
I came from the world of terrestrial radio where every player on the air
is brutally judged by program directors, consultants, GM’s and OM’s. I didn’t need to invite that atmosphere
here. I’m sure someone’s already doing
it because like all things in podcasting you can search for any subject and
find 600,000 different talkers expressing their opinions.
Will there ever be answers to
our podcast questions? Chris wanted to know if there’s more money to be made
producing episodes for the experience then there is for those physically being
the voice? I know of three production
houses that not only write and produce commercial copy but they’ve opened their
digital stage for companies and performers who don’t have the luxury of a great
sounding home studio.
As much as I truly and
wholeheartedly support their business effort I took one look at the number of podcast
episodes I’ve brought to life over the past seven years and know for a fact if
I was shelling out money for studio time my deficit would be bigger than that
of the United States.
I also run into a lot of
people who’re afraid to ask podcast questions.
The typical reaction, “I didn’t want to bother you. I don’t want to look
like a beginner. You don’t the
time.”
Always ask. We may have to set up a time to have a great
conversation but always ask. I had no
idea how fast time flew while I was with robotics man Tom. That 2pm meeting suddenly hit several ticks
on the clock. Once podcasters get locked
in on sharing each other’s information, you might as well set up ten to twenty
more meetings.
So what’s the moral of the
story? I learned one valuable lesson in
high school with huge architect dreams.
Never stop asking why. Nothing is
drawn, built, rented or sold without questions straight out of the gate. Podcasting is something you build. It won’t happen overnight and you shouldn’t
bombard yourself with stress filled expectations that may or may not be
reached.
Find your peace of mind by
hanging out with other podcasters. People
that are living the life by way of never turning off the desire to constantly
create or generate newer ideas. The one
thing I’ve learned about sitting down with others playing the game is to do it
one person at a time. You’ll get more
out of it. The very second three or more
begin to participate the questions usually stop a battle of I did this, well I
did this, no I was first.
Podcasters use a lot personal
energy to bring their styles forward. Please shy away from comparing analytic
numbers and the size of your guests or subjects unless you’re willing to help
each out. Your image as a podcaster has
already been drawn by the way listeners digest your episodes. To walk into a conversation with a He Man
attitude twists the stomach and creates an ache that’ll keep me from tuning
back in.
There’s no such thing as a
bad question. While creating together we
can come up with brilliant answers.
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