Transcript
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Hey friends send you here. Welcome
into Mike Club, and today I am
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excited to be joined by Ryan Becker, producer here at sweet fish. Ryan,
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happy to have you with us.
He Ben Jay, it's good to
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be here. I'm excited to talk
about podcasting with you and hopefully provide some
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great value to the my club.
Yes, passion of both of Ours podcasting
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and love might club as it exists. To just bring the news from this
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week. We'll do a member highlight. Coming up will answer a question from
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our MC club community. But before
we get there, people like who is
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Ryan? So we got to start
there. Give me your spark notes version
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of like how you got into podcasting. What makes you passionate about the work
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that you do? Yeah, so
I got into podcasting back in two thousand
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and sixteen. I actually did it
as a hobby and something to something to
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utilize, to have space for important
conversations or conversations that were important to me
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and to connect with people. I
was living at a at a time early
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in my career, I was living
in a city where I didn't really have
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a lot of friends. I actually
had some physical problems going on to that
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limited my ability to go out and
so podcasting became a way for me to
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sustain connection with people and create connections. And from starting my own that quickly
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spiraled into as it often does,
when your friends find out that you have
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a podcast, they now are like, well, I want to start one.
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I think I could do that too. Yep, and that actually that
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kept growing. That became sort of
a natural growth or pathway of growth from
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me where I was. I started
being invited to teach workshops, to seminars
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and help other people build a platform
for themselves, and I became really excited
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about that. I love equipping and
empowering people to to build a platform,
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to own their voice and to create
something great. And so all of that,
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everything that I know is something that
I've I've I've either learned through trial
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and error or through a ton of
research myself, and it's great to have
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seen that knowledge and experience validated over
the years too. And so I joined
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sweet fish late last year, in
two thousand and twenty one, and and
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I've I've absolutely loved coming on board
and working with the shows that I work
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with and now that I'm not buttering
anyone up, I genuinely enjoy what I
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get to learn through the content that
I work with and produce, and it's
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it's great to also support shows that
I think often are making a really big
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difference and important impact in the world. Yep, and isn't that all of
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our goals, I know, for
our audience listening like that's what you started
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your show for. You want to
make an impact, you want to have
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conversations that matter, and so pulling
in Ryan today is going to be fun
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to just get to cover what matters
to us and how we can continue to
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our shows better. So with that, Ryan, thanks for being here.
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Let's dive into the news, and
the first story I want to bring is
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the fact that clubhouse is on the
decline, which I actually thought was kind
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of funny that this needed to be
said, because I felt like this should
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have been said four or five months
ago. It also, though, was
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interesting because it's tied into the fact
that spotify, seemingly, you know,
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in the last few weeks as well, has decided they're going to pivot from
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a separate APP Green Room and go
spotify live built into the same platform.
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I think that makes way more sense. But Ryan, I'd throw it to
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you here, like what is your
thought around live audio and the fact that
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we're seeing it decline. was that
expected in your mind or how have you
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thought about live audio? Yeah,
I actually remember when clubhouse started kind of
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taking over the the Zekegeiston and everyone
was talking about it. Then spotify was
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launching something, twitter spaces, all
these different live, live areas were start
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are live spaces were existing, and
I just the whole time people were asking
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me, do you think that podcast
should feel threatened by this? Do you
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feel threatened by this? And simply
put no, because I always thought that
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clubhouse would be on the decline.
In this isn't like I know I saw
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it from the beginning, but rather
there are just key differences in the experience
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that you have and even from my
own experience with Clubhouse, there were often
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times where I miss something because it
was a self contained experience and there's yes,
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there's El exclusivity to that, there's
excitement to that, but there's also
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discouragement to that. When you miss
it enough, you miss something enough,
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you you lose interest in trying.
Nothing will ever beat the on demand access
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that something like podcasting gives you,
and I it was very easy for me
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to see that happen and as brands
start to enter more and more into live
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audio, the concerns about not censorship, but the concerns about what is actually
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being said on the show how that's
representing the brand. It doesn't surprise me
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that, yeah, there would be
now hesitation and second thoughts about utilizing live
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audio within brand promotion. I totally
agree with you. Most people just aren't
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that good live either, even if
you're a podcast host like there's just too
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many factors into making the live experience
a great experience. And so for us
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to think as podcasters also like,
what am I trying to accomplish by doing
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this live instead of in the format
that someone can, you know, digestible
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at any time? To me it
was always a question. This is what
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I will say about spotify. They
probably have one of the best ways that
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you could utilize live if it's built
into the APP and automatically becomes an episode
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immediately following for an industry like,
let's say, sports podcasts, immediate following
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or at halftime, or you could
bake it in where it makes sense and
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you went live right at that moment. But for us as be tob podcasters,
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are there really that many times where
we should be live? Probably not.
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I think live is a great time
for community building. Personally, I
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don't think I would go the route
of okay, like just live content for
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the sake of it. I would
rather have a podcast format where people can
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digest it at any moment. And
the second thing I would say is,
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if I was going to go live, I would rather host a meet up
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and make it more personal than a
lot of these APPs did. And so
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that's just what was rattling around in
my head. Honestly, interested to see
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if it works for spotify live audio. There maybe there will be a future
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player that figures out a way to
do it. But it also does come
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down to the host themselves and can
they actually operate in a way that that
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makes sense live? Okay, I
loved how they ended this article, so
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I'm just going to read you a
quote real quick. They said there are
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no clear winners in the live social
audio race, only losers and new contenders,
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and I thought, Yep, that's
absolutely true. The there's no winner
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there, and everyone thought clubhouse was
a winner. And you just fast forward
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a little bit more in time and
here we are. So Yep, well,
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that sort was brought to you from
protocol. Remember, you can always
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go to the show notes and find
all these stories so you can read and
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go into more detailed the second thing
I think is we're noting is actually it's
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just a press release straight from buzz
sprout, but they're talking about how they
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just announced buzz sprout ads, and
I'll read from their press release here.
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Buzz Sprout ads helps podcasts get their
shows in front of the right audience of
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people who already love listening to podcast
and are interested in similar topics. Okay,
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the second part of this is what
I found interesting. It says it's
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a self service platform where any PODCASTER
can sign up and buy ads, regardless
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of where they host their show.
Once a podcaster uploads their promo audio,
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it will be immediately matched with optimal
audience based on categories and listening preference.
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So this is a good opportunity,
I think, for be to be podcasters,
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you got to be like just advertising
on other people shows doesn't I mean
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it doesn't necessarily mean you're going to
find more listenership, but because the you
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could put a hundred dollars into this
and it's a way of promoing. I
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see this as a pit potential for
be to be podcasters to get into adds
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at a low, a low level
and test some things. What do you
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think about ads more broadly? Ryan, specifically, for for be TOB PODCASTS?
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I think they're so it's got a
largely depend on what industry you're in,
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how many competitors are in that industry
or how many friends you could consider
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in that industry other shows, but
I think that this is a pretty if
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way to do it. I know
of another APP. I think it's overcast.
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Is the APP that that you can
also buy ad space on, and
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I've seen over the years on Reddit
people have used it and tested it.
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You can actually I think the podcasting
subreddit is is a great source of information
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for people sharing their experiences buying ads
and talking about promotional strategies. It's where
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I learned you can submit their actual
platforms or you could submit your show to
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be featured on the front page.
I didn't. I didn't know that the
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whole time I was podcasting and I
think this is a great way to do
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this to target listeners. I probably
wouldn't spend a whole ton doing it right
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now. I think there are I
think there are more high value areas to
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advertise in, but if you're if
your goal is demand Jin, if your
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goal is thought leadership, if your
goal is building the audience directly, then
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I would say absolutely go for this. Or if your goal is ABM plays
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and you need to validate your show
by having a listener base, then this
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is also something. I don't think
this hurts you. I think this is
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something that can help you and at
best, like yeah, it's a low
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cost entry fee into doing it,
so, at the very worst it's not
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going to kill your budget. I
don't think to to give it a shot
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and see what you can what you
can do with it. And I love
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that. There's no there's no you
don't have to be on buzz broute to
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use this. You can sign up
and use their platform without actually hosting your
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podcast on busprout. It's interesting to
watch so many of these hosting platforms getting
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into ads and how they do it. I love what you just mentioned there.
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That makes this a little bit unique
and I have to say also,
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having started podcasting around when you did, back two thousand and fifteen, two
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thousand and sixteen, seeing the rise
of like dynamic ads and some of these
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companies, you're just like mind blown
at how far podcasting has come and how
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easy some of this stuff is getting, even the fact that we're recording on
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riverside right now, the convenience of
this entire recording process, I'm like,
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oh my gosh, it's such a
good year to be a podcaster and the
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future is so bright for this as
a medium because you can now monetize easier
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than ever, you can record easier
than ever, and again, this would
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be my only push back, because
it's easier than ever. If you're going
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to go this route of advertising this
way, don't be another interview sales show
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marketing and on another interview sales show, like if you are have no differentiator,
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I don't think you're going to see
a lot of success doing this because
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people are already spending their time listening
to another show that might be doing the
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exact same thing as you. So
just make sure you differentiate and give people
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a reason why they should listen.
that. That's me, becomes a very
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important conversation in this you got to
find the right audience and where they hang
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out, and then you have to
tell them why they should continue to get
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come over and hang out with you. We see this in every form of
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marketing currently but the the lower the
barrier the entry, the barrier to entry,
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the more creative and the more unique
your presence has to be in order
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to make a difference. That's just
going to be the reality. It is
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easier to access, which means that
you need to be that much more intentional
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about how you use the access that
you have. Final story here in the
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news. Crooked Media Bruise more than
just podcasts with new branded coffee line.
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This is from Ad Week. Okay, I don't care about who crooked media
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is. You can have your opinions
on them as a podcasting as a media
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company, but I thought this was
fun in that the idea of incentivizing listeners
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with branded products and thinking about let's
say you have an audience that you've built
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around your be tobe show. You
can do things with merch that actually create
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this this feeling of like I'm a
part of something bigger and maybe it's a
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phrase that you're all bought in on
and you create shirts around that phrase merch
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in some way. But I thought
a coffee line, it's pretty unique.
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It's different than what most people go
for. They've chosen this unique out their
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branding is magnificent and I thought it
just really pops. But Ryan, what
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do you think about the idea of
merch maybe more broadly coffee, very specific,
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but attaching some form of merch and
personalized product to a show? So
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I love the idea. How however, I think that implementing it without without
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doing the work of identifying your audience
and getting to know your audience and connecting
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with your audience, that's where it's
very clear that you're just trying to get
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money out of them rather than give
them something more for their what they're doing.
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And this is we talked about owned
audiences versus paid audiences, but this
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is this is something that I do
believe that, because podcasting and analytics aren't
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to the point that we can very
clearly identify listeners right now, it it
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is always important for podcasters to be
of any in any space, be to
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be BBC, general podcasting, for
any audience, to figure out how you
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can connect with your audience and give
them enough value that they're willing, like
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connect them via community get interact with
them actively, and whether that's you have
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a community manager that does it or
you as the host, you do it
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as well, and I think it's
more important at the beginning of that process
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for the host to but in doing
that you can actually find out that,
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oh, your audience loves coffee,
your audience loves this kind of or I
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see this meme or this joke about
something that was said on the show all
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the time and and you can create
these limited run experiences to hey, we're
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doing this one off shirt because everyone
seems to love this phrase that was said
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or or this joke that we've said. We want to we we want your
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feedback. What do you what would
you want to see on this shirt?
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Or, you know, giving them
some say gives them the way to feeling
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like they're a part of something more. Yeah, but if you just release
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what you think is okay to release
without doing that kind of research within the
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podcasting world, then I do think
audiences will see through that very clearly and
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very easily. HMM. I think
if I was starting a show from scratch
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and if you're in like the first
five or six episodes, you could probably
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still do this pretty easily, but
I would bake it into my content strategy,
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the way I'm thinking about the show
that I would have. This is
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funny because we talked about live as
a dying thing. But all, if
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you do it right, some form
of meet up early on in your show
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and doing that consistently is so valuable
to understanding who's actually listening. And even
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if you only had a group of
like ten to fifteen people who joined you
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on that call, the conversations you
have and what could be birth there for
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what types of content you create in
the future. And if you go and
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land on Merch or something bigger like
that, awesome. But it starts hyper
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personal. You actually know who is
engaged and then you grow from their community,
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then drives podcast. PODCAST and community
both then collectively decide what's the thing
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we put out. So you don't
come out with a coffee line as you're
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starting your podcast, like those things
don't happen in tandem. You actually know
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who's listening and then you go,
okay, awesome, let's tailor this experience
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to them and actually enhance their experience
because we were here high as personalized as
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we could be. Right, and
it works both ways. If you have
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a product line that has a strong
community around it, you can also create
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a podcast that serves that specific community
too. I mean that's my club exists
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that way in some way, shape
or form and that we're not. I
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don't know how any strategy behind monetizing
my club. I don't think there is
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one. I think this exists to
specifically serve our podcasters that that we work
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with and and so this is something
of we have a community of podcaster.
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So we wanted to create something that
served that community of podcasters from sleepfish.
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That that's important and I think you
can do that with the services and products
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that you offer as a company to
so I this is a great way to
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monetize and this is a great way
to think about monetizing, because podcasting as
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in and of itself is not as
directly like. The monetization route for podcasting
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directly is not as high value as
it is on other platforms, but the
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monetization opportunities are almost endless. You
just have to you just have to utilize
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them and pivot correctly. Yep,
I think having some form of just to
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talk merch or second two or something
along those lines. You can be creative.
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Doesn't just have to be a shirt. People do all sorts of stuff,
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but it does if you have some
loyalty, some loyalty to the show.
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It gives people a way to like
feel more connected. So if you've
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been around for a while and you
do have some sort of audience and you
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could even pull them to find like
what they might be interested in having a
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limited run of something. To me, I think it is just a worthwhile
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way of thanking your audience for being
there and being like hey, you are
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attached to something bigger. I've bought
products from shows that I listened to and
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it's just a fun way of I
maybe I would put it behind me or
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something on my wall, like I
it's it's a way that it can endear
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the audience and so I love this
as a play and coffee was very unique.
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So any thoughts on creative merch ideas, Ryan, like something you want
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to see? Coffee is a is
a fun one, but I was like
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trying to think. Is like what
would I do? That's just like hyper
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unique. I don't know that I
have one that immediately comes to mind.
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Yeah, that I mean. It
just it depends on what your audience is.
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I could see I could see custom
decals on on microphones or something,
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if you if you're someone that serves
podcasters, for example, or I would
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love to see. I personally will
always love t shirts most of the t
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shirts I have are ones that were
gifted to me, so I legit.
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I love like the T shirt I'm
wearing right now is one that was gifted
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to me by my wife, so
it's like this is I always love receiving
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that and and growing my my walking
billboard collection it that. That is something
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that's really cool to me and I
did want to. I actually wanted to
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make sure I shared this. I
don't want to forget it, but there's
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a show. I forget which one
it is, but there's a show that
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the way they engage with their community
is they it's a debate show and after
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and at the end of every show
they encourage listeners to go and fill out
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a form that basically says who did
who, which of the debater ors swayed
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your opinion the most, and then
that actually, that data is how they
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determine who won the last episode's debate. Is who not who made you believe
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them, but rather who gave you
the most convincing or had the most convincing
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arguments. It may even be that
I disagree with them, but I believe
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that they argued better for their position
than the person who agree with me.
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That's a great way to identify and
connect with listeners and those are the kinds
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of things that I that I really, really love to see and I think
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those can that. I hope that
can spark some ideas for for listeners here
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as well. But I I don't
have any like specific big march. I
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just if you guys want to make
shirts and send them to me, I'm
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okay with that. that. You
can find me on linkedin or email me.
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I'm all about it, all right, I'm good. I love it.
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I think if I was going to
go and I'm with you on the
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shirts like that's it's a good one. I love artwork, so if there
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was some way of doing like custom
art that I could put on my wall
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that somehow tied back to the show, I would be all in to see
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someone do a limited run of that
and you could whether it was like you
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could go kind of more cheesy,
like quote style, but if you could
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pull in more art and like,
I think there's something there that, at
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least for me personally, something I
can hang on my wall, is something
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I like. Okay, I want
to take us to our member highlight and
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keep this thing rolling. Accreditation conversations
by we've education. It's a podcast for
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higher education leaders that are specifically seeking
to collaborate insights and a and the accreditation
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process. So I'll just read you
the brief description of the show. Episodes
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feature conversations from education colleagues about all
things institutional effectiveness. So you're going to
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hear about higher education, accreditation and
assessment, data analysis and software and the
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Labor of love that is creating narratives, not just processes. Here's what I
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like about this. I am so
outside of the world of accreditation. I
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am very much outside of the world
of education and higher education, but they
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had super welldone show notes and I
want to commend them on that. That's
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it's that in itself to use their
own language as a Labor of love,
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and I also thought their artwork it
was fun and bright, so I like
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that. And then the depth of
insights. They're not this is not like
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for anybody to listen to. They're
intentionally in the weeds on accreditation. It's
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good niche work if you actually need
to know this information. And so those
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would be the three things that stood
out to me about accreditation conversations. I
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want to say thank you to we've
education and those over at the pod for
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being part of our my club community
and we're really appreciative. there. Thanks
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for being part and I wish you
the best of luck with your show because
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I know you're only like six episodes
in at this point. You're early in
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the journey, but man, keep
it up and I believe with time you
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just learned so much in podcasting.
You it is. The gold is in
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sticking with it. I will just
say that. All right, we'll wrap
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up, Ryan, with a question
from our might club community, and the
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question today post to us is where
do I find great guests for my show?
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And before we started and hit record, you and I were talking about
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it kind of does depend on what
the goal of your show is. Some
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people here are your in more of
a content based networking frame of mind about
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your podcast. Others are going,
I want to be a thought leader.
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That's going to drastically determine where you
find guests for your show. What immediately
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comes to your mind, Ryan,
with the clients you work with and the
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way you think about finding great guests? Yeah, I so. The first
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thing I would say is if you
already have guests that have lined up,
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are guests that you've talked with in
the past. You can always ask them.
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Hey, we're looking for some more
amazing guests in this area and you
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you already are in this area,
but I'd love to know. Do you
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have any connections, anyone that you
think would make a great guest for the
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show? We'd loved having you on
and I trust your judgment, for example,
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or, and you know I would
trust a recommendation from you. That's
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a great way because word of mouth
always helps and that creates a connection and
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builds a bridge to so that that's
actually one of the first things that comes
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to my mind. But yeah,
it largely depends ends on what your goal
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is. I will say if your
goal is demand Jin and just audience growth
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in general, just trying to get
a guest that already has a platform isn't
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going to do a whole lot for
you in the audient door department to do.
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It's not it's going to be cool
and then you're going to feel neat
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for a minute, but it's not. Their audience isn't going to flock to
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your show, or they might for
that one episode, which usually doesn't even
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happen that much, and then they
they dip because they were there for the
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for the guests. They weren't there
for the show and they weren't there for
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the content itself, and so I
would say the biggest thing is determine what
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your goal for a guest is and
then think about where that guest might actually
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be or or how to find that
kind of guest. If you are using
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it for an ABM play, then
your guest list might come from your sales
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prospects, and which case you want
to loop in your sales team and work
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with them to identify good leads,
because the last thing you also want to
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do is double up the sales efforts
and podcasting efforts and make it, you
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know, really time those that messaging
at the wrong time and actually scare them
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away from both, from both opportunities. And so I would say that those
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are the first things that I that
come to mind as I talked about that.
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I if you're going for more of
a build an audience play, there
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is something to be said about talking
to people that just know their content really
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well. So what I mean is
not just the best selling authors, but
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those that can go really deep on
a topic. You can build an audience
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there because they just know their content
so well. And someone might be tuning
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in actually because of the expertise.
You also need to have and develop your
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point of view. The more that
you do that and you actually have your
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that is what gross thought leadership is
point of view, and obviously there's more
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facets to that, but that's a
key one. They actually have to know
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what you believe on something and what
you think about it. You have to
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be a guide. So, but
if I was doing just interviews, we're
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talking just getting guests. I look
for authors. I would also look at
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conferences and look at the topics that
are covered by the people that are speaking
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and then, if you can find
their talk, listen to their talk,
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find one point in their talk that
you really enjoyed and say, I want
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to go really deep on this,
because you didn't have enough time to go
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you know, and that gives you
a topic to talk to them about.
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They've already been thinking about it and
you're asking them to go deeper. So
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you're going to give away original content. It's not just what they said at
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the conference. You don't you don't
want to make someone regurgitate the exact same
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thing they did somewhere else. If
you can get them in, ask some
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unique questions like that's that's also creates
a better show. And then obviously linkedin.
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Like linkedin is a great place to
just connect with people if you see
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posts that you are interested in and
you can just even comment. I do
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this all the time. DM them
say I really liked this post, linked
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to the post and there you go. But again, in content based networking
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or in an ABM play, a
lot of those people may not be active
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on Linkedin. If they're like your
sales team is targeting these AC counts and
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you're going like, Oh, we'd
love to have someone from them. Like
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a lot of those people searchling dinners. They still think of it as like
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this is where I post my resume
and then I'm not over there most of
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the time. So that's always an
interesting hurdle that you kind of got to
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get used to. Well, and
I would I would add two things here
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adding, yes, ending what you
just shared. I think the other side
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of that is looking at press releases
within your industry and within your target market,
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because if those people aren't posting on
Linkedin, maybe they have a quote
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in a press release or maybe they
led something in their company and there and
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they just announce something in which case
you still have some relevant way to reach
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out to them because they're doing something
impactful. There's a there's a connection point
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there and I think you may still
find that that person is in a great
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interviewee, that that may still be
the case, but that's what the pre
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interview that we encourage so much is
is for, is identifying those matches and
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those those but those potential misfires.
So that would be number one. Number
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two, and this one surprised me, and I that the majority of people
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I've talked to didn't think of it
this way, but this is something I
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just kind of started doing, not
just looking at the conferences the guest lists
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and and the speakers and topics,
but actually creating a like bringing some podcasting
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equipment with you to trade shows and
gatherings that you go to and as you
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build relationships with people, literally say
hey, would you have any I've had
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a this has been an amazing conversation. Would you have any interest in like,
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I'd love to talk further with this
about with you on my podcast,
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and I actually brought some stuff with
me here or just in case I ran
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and I'm always prepared as a podcaster
and you may find some amazing conversations and
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opportunities right then in there and you
can create a you know, get a
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small Pelican case. It's a just
a hard case with foam that's packed in
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and you can grab a couple cheap
microphones and and a little recorder that you
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can take with you and and easily
set up something very quickly, and I
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absolutely love the idea of doing that
and I think that's another great way to
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find great guests and you don't have
to worry about scheduling or booking. You
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just have to make some time and
dedicate some time to that, or potential
404
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time to that, while you're at
a trade show and while you're at these
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events. And Yeah, that can
lead to some that. Some of the
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best episodes of my personal podcast have
come from those spontaneous meetings and in person
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events. I like that and I
know we've done that in the past.
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We've tested that even with be to
be growth and we got some great live
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00:29:26.640 --> 00:29:32.279
conversations. I love in person interviews
and conversations. There's a different energy when
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you're sitting in the same space.
So I like that we're bringing that as
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an option. Well, Ryan,
it's been so fun to have you here
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on the podcast with us. Thanks
for Stopping Buy Mike Club and if you
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want to connect with Ryan or myself, you can do that over on Linkedin.
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We're active over there. We'd love
to hear from you and chat with
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you. If you have questions and
you want us to answer in a future
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episode, feel free to drop a
question in my club at any time and
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you can get answers from the entire
community, not just the podcast, which
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is fantastic. So always worthwhile to
to engage over in the linkedin group.
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All right, we'll be back real
soon with another episode. Ryan, thanks
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again for being on my club today. Thank you.