Transcript
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Welcome in, everybody, this is
Mike Club and today I'm excited to have
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back with me co hosting a sweet
fish producer. Walt. How you doing
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man? Welcome in. I'm doing
good. Thanks for having me back.
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Glad I didn't scare you the last
time. Here we are and UH thrilled
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to get the chat with you about
some podcasting news and we'll do a member
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highlight and uh, we'll finish up
today with a question from our mic club
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community. But before we go there, I wanted to ask, like,
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what's a podcast episode that you've listened
to, let's say in the last week
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or two weeks, that you heard
and you're like man, that's a good
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episode, this is a good show. I want to highlight a couple.
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So what sticks out to you,
walt? Yes, I'm glad you asked
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this question too, because I don't
get to talk about this show enough.
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Um, the shows called truth be
told. It's by Tonia Moseley. Um,
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really great show, and this particular
episode is called the source and it
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was basically about black Americans and food
deserts and it's a topic that's probably not
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talked about enough. But just from
like a podcast production perspective like, well,
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the episode was great, but from
the production perspective is just so well
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done. It tied in the host's
own narrative. She brought in a few
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different guests who told the story of
her and her child, like serving McDonald's
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at a birthday party and no one
was here for it, and really like
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the history of McDonald's presence in America, the investment in the black community and
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its just tied in a lot of
different elements, interviewing, research, journalism.
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The music was beautifully added in in
a way that wasn't distracting but added
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to the whole story. It was
like a true story all wrapped up in
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one episode oat and it was just
like, well done. I want to
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go shake the hand of the production
teams of like yes, did it well.
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Now I got to check it out. You really sold the production of
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the episode. Did you say food
deserts? Yeah, food deserts. So
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that's basically yes, Um, y'all, do not quote me because I'm not
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I'm not the expert in it,
but essentially food deserts, Um. You
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think about dessert, right, there's
nothing there. When it comes to food
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deserts, it's essentially the same thing. Like a lot of times in Um,
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certain communities, lower income communities,
a lot of black communities. Um,
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there will be a lot of restaurants, there's always something to eat,
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but the quality of food that's there. Yeah, it's like the grocery store
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situation right. Like I know a
lot of like dollar trees and like dollar
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stores are in a lot of rural
communities and a big part of that is,
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like grocery stores don't want to invest
getting fresh produced to those communities.
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So then you see like in goods
and uh, like that's that's why dollar
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tree has that aisle of like food, so you could sort of grocery shop
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into dollar store. But it's not
healthy food, it's not good food,
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and dollar stores just eat up these
communities. Um, yes, it's interesting,
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man, you never heard of it's
great for great for balloons, not
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great for groceries. You know,
you'll see a fancy popelines being entered,
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like being built brand new and everything, but you won't see like a like
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a public or sprouts or whole foods, the restaurants. They're just all across
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the board. Quality of food,
access to it doesn't exist. Learning About
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Food Deserts on my club today I
didn't think it were going to come here
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for that, but that's that's super
interesting. Will definitely link to that show
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in the show notes if people want
to check it out and see what high
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quality producing looks like. uh,
it sounds fantastic. I haven't heard it
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yet, but I'll give it a
listen. I'M gonna highlight a show that's
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on the completely other end of the
spectrum. It's for well known, it's
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not really that highly produced, but
it shows that you can win in podcasting
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in multiple ways. So I want
to talk about Tim Ferris for a second
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and specifically because yesterday I was re
listening, uh, I like I got
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thirty forty minutes in and I was
like, oh my gosh, this is
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so good, I need to re
listen to the first thirty forty minutes again.
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So He's interviewing this guy will mccaskell, who will is famous for effective
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altruism and this idea of like,
how can we do the most possible good?
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And he's very like data and stats
and he keeps track of like the
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good he does in the world and
how he does it, and they talk
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about this. They talk about long
termism, this way of thinking of like,
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what are we doing in our lifetime
that will positively impact generations from now,
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and is there any way that we
could get more people to think like
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that, or are we just doomed
to think about our lifetime in our little
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pocket of the world and what's most
comfortable for us? And like, how
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could you get buy in from more
people to think long term? And it's
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just a super fascinating discussion. It's
really like I I love the idea of
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living from core values, from having
a life that impacts others positively and their
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their breakdown of it is much more
science than art and much more action rather
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than just constantly like thinking about all
the good you could do, and I
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really appreciated it. I love a
good interviewer. I love someone that can
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ask deep questions and can hold their
space well, and Tim is obviously a
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fantastic interviewer. That's why his show
has blown up. But also like his
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audio recording quality. Man, it's
not good, like there's an echo in
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the room. It's not like the
production. He reads ads for like the
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first five minutes of his show,
like it's not. But but because he's
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found his niche and what he's curious
about. You can win if you're in
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your zone of genius, and so
I love that you highlighted like a highly
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produced show. Clearly that team is
in the Arizona Genius and doing podcasting the
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way that they can do it,
like, to the best of their ability,
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and I think he's obviously found his
sweet spot as well on the other
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end of the spectrum, and I
just like highlighting how different people win in
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different ways. UH, so I'll
link to that episode as well. You
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should have no trouble finding the Tim
Ferres show, though. I can't wait
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to check that out. Familiar with
Tim Ferris and I'm realizing I've actually never
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listened to an episode. So that
episode sounds super interesting. So we're putting
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each other on today. Like it. Yeah, skip like the first five
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minutes. He does have the best, in my opinion, like some of
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the best ad reads, because he
won't promote things that he doesn't actually like,
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use or enjoy. Like he has
to be very bought into the sponsors.
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So if you ever want to learn
something about how to do sponsorships effectively,
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I think tim is a good person
to check out. It's just that
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it's, let's, way too much
in my opinion, so all right,
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let's let's get to the news here
and we're gonna highlight three stories. And
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it was funny because Walt and I
were talking about before, before recording,
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we were talking about like the power
of video and how it's it's just very
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necessary now in podcasting to be thinking
about how video can enhance your show or
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how you can be on youtube and
these different platforms. We're recording this on
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riverside right now and there's video here
as well as audio recording. Like a
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lot of the podcast recorders are know
the importance of video, and so two
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of our three stories today end up
being about video, and here's the first
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one. So remote recording to a
riverside, literally what we're recording in right
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now, has launched a number of
updates, but the one that I thought
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was pretty cool is that now you
can set up your iphone as a second
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camera and, because your iphone can
record in four K, you and just
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put it on a little tripod on
your desk, get a second angle and
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instead of needing some sort of fancy
switcher, it's just gonna record both and
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it's all going to be saved right
within in the riverside APP and when you
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export, you just export it as
a second camera. It's taking the audio
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from your mic only, so it
doesn't even record audio on your iphone.
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It's just golden. It's all set
and it's ready for you and it would
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make if you edit video and the
script or you, you know, send
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it to a third party. It's
all gonna be time stamped the same.
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So it's super convenient and I'm actually
gonna be working on my studio set up
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today to try to figure out how
I want to do this, because I
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think like second camera sounds so complicated, but they're making it easy. Man.
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What did you think about this?
Uh, this update? Oh,
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man, this, when I saw
this, I was like, Oh,
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you're for real, what you're you're
doing this for everyone, man. This
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like update is really, really important. Like when I um, when I
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speak to people who are wanting to
just start their podcast, whether it's a
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business or an individual group of friends, always ask them like what your budget?
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And no one ever thinks about the
budget at first. And I asked
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because podcasting can be an extremely expensive
pursuit. Um to be able to switch
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cameras before this update, you would
definitely need at least like two different tools.
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And both of them costs some money's
Um. So adding this feature in
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it just makes it more accessible,
just another level of production more accessible.
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Um, like one of my favorite
quotes ever from Arthur ash is basically like
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do what you can, use what
you have and start where you are.
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Um. And this just makes it
so that you could actually just start so
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now with to get that second angle, to add this whole new element to
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make sure your show is dynamic,
or videos dynamic, is not staleless,
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not just one shot. Now all
you literally need is a Web Cam date
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you can get for and use the
phone that you already have. So I
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love this feature. I think there's
well, what I'M gonna try. I
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don't know if this works yet,
so you can't quote me on it,
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but I'M gonna try recording my second
camera in like a portrait like Tiktok,
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you know, ready mode. So
if it will, if it'll take like
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that, which I mean even if
it's you know, if I have to
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rotate the clip, that's fine,
but having that as a set up so
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I can crop my I have my
cannon m fifty. I can crop that
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shot if I want and to be
like a close up on a on a
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tiktok or a youtube shorts, but
then for my iphone set up to have
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it like right to the to the
left of my computer, and just it's
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already in portrait. It's already ready
for it, and the whole conversation you
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can see my mic, you can
see maybe part of my computer and and
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then you can see my face,
like it's already ready to go. There's
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something there that you can you just
get get more creative of. I love
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the ability to get more creative when
you have more than one camera, and
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most people with more than one camera
you're just like a more complex studio.
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But now your iphone is all you
need. Yeah, and it's actually I
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think it would probably like elevate how
people just view you, right because,
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like, I don't know if you
even noticed, but like those there's a
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lot of videos like where people are
like sharing like how to do something and
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they get super high level and the
talk will they do it like you know,
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in the camera, but every now
and then you'll see a video where
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it's off to the side, he's
getting that side look, and so it's
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almost like, oh, what am
I seeing? I'm like peeping into some
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behind the scenes stuff. Riverside,
making it look like you got a lot
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going on, even though you might
just be like this is on top,
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party on the bottom, like this
is uh. This is definitely a great
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way to raise your raise your I
don't know what you call it, but
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just level up on Social Yep.
I will say if you guys want to
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see a cool micro video cut,
go look up the Rick Roll podcast and
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he's doing this the edits where he
has like a super wide shot video and
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they he always interviews his guests in
person at like a really long table and
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they each sit on one side and
he wants the video look really crisp,
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so it's all a black background,
it's a wood desk, they always have
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like matching glasses of water and it's
so he's already got like his aesthetic built
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in. But then you typically right, like when you think of a micro
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clip of video, it's just like
a person talking into a camera and they
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have those tight angles on both him
and his guest. But they have this
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wide shot that shows the whole table
and each guests on the sides and they
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cut that video and they put that
at the top of their youtube shorts or
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Tiktok. So you can see the
whole table and the two of them talking,
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and then whoever's talking gets the majority
of the screen, where it's like
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actually still the close up that we're
typically used to, and they have both
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overlaid on top of each other.
It is so smart. It is such
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a cool angle and a cool shot
and I love watching people get creative with
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it. Oh Man, that that's
really what it's all about, right.
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People are like, oh, how
should I do how should I do that?
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Well, like, as you can
see, this features like a new
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riverside feature. It's like, what
the like? The way to do something
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is still being created, like just
continue to just put to the boundaries,
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because that way it maybe trash and
may we like never do that again,
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or it could be the future of
how other people model their content. So
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I'M gonna gonna check that out because
I'm gonna see what I could do with
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it. Awesome. Okay, the
second podcast story, but it's it's a
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video thing again, is from Youtube. Youtube added a new option to cut
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long form videos into shorts. So
this just gets right back after what I
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feel like I've been we've been preaching
sermons on this on this podcast. I've
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been talking we've been talking about on
Bob. Growth. We're really doubling down
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on video and it's going to get
easier and easier for those that are creating
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video content, because that's what youtube
shorts wants, that's what Tiktok wants,
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that's what instagram reels it's all about. And so this is, I think,
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brilliant for Youtube, because what sets
youtube apart from Tiktok? Youtube has
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long form video content. So what
if you uploaded your long term long form
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video content and could instantly cut it
and it, or it would cut it
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for you, put it into reels
and then now you're discoverable in or there.
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I guess they're called shorts, but
like in their youtube shorts algorithms.
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So if you have a podcast,
the best clips of that automatically are now
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digestible in short form, and Youtube
has built it into where that that youtube
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short clip, if they click on
the description, they go right to the
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long form content. So if they
like your clip enough, they can just
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go watch the full episode. Absolutely
brilliant on their part. Definitely needs to
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be part of your podcast strategy and
I'll say we're guilty be to be growth.
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We're just now figuring out how do
we use long form video content.
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We've only been doing micro videos and
it's just this is what a convenient way
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to get in the game, man, right. Mm Hmmm, take like
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probably reduced this production time. But
this feature, like you, if you're
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if you're in this podcast and gave
me, probably already had no or have
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a good idea of where the clips
can be. So, like, if
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you're doing this, you upload it
and you literally just picked the time stamps,
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maybe add a little caption and youtube
takes care of everything else. Like
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this is amazing. Like, Um, the thing that people don't well,
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the biggest thing about like Tiktok reel's
youtube shorts, is like the discoverability.
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That's the best feature of it.
These short form videos are being pushed,
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literally shoved in the faces of other
people. Like Youtube, Tiktok, instagram,
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they work really hard to make sure
people are seeing new stuff every day.
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As far as these real stuff and
the ability to link it back to
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the longer form video. That takes
care of any call to action. Any
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how do I find the show is
literally a click of a button. So
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this feature, if you're not using
it now, don't worry. You can
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get started today. It's there for
everyone. The thing I'm interested on this
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one is I wonder how, like
you know, most micro videos that get
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traction have captions, like live captions
and like cool some sort of upscaling on
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the editing front. So you do
need to be thinking through that. I
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would be like I would be testing
how does a micro video work when it's
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just pulled straight in this new format, versus the typical editing, adding maybe
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some music, adding some pop up
captions as you go. It'll be interesting
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to see how those features start like
playing together in the long run, and
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I'm sure there will be updates to
this that will continue to make it better,
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but that is one one area that
I'm sure they'll have to to continue
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to iterate on. That'll be the
biggest chance story here. And this is
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going to take us over to Linkedin, but I know a lot of us
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are thinking about okay, we've created
this podcast content and you know, for
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us in the B two B podcasting
space, we're trying to repurpose that content
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on Linkedin and I found an article
this week I was talking about what to
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post on Linkedin. Five content types
that work best, and so I'M gonna
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list off the five wall and I'll
just have you pick one that sticks out
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to you and we can kind of
discuss here. But the five that they
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suggest, the five content types,
would be blog posts, third party content,
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native video, text only and photography
and illustrations. When you hear those
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five does does one of them seem
to jump out at you? Yes,
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actually, and it's text. Um, text is king on Linkedin, but
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I think the what everyone really needs
to do is focus on having like a
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hybrid of it all. It shouldn't
just be one thing. Um To really
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grow on Linkedin, it's not just
about finding the template stick in to it,
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it's about really bringing some value and
after whilst a text post over and
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over and over again, even though
it Joe's text, a text posts over
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and over again, it'll work,
but to truly stand out you want to
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have a mixture of all of the
above. But the real reason why I
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chose text, even though Texas king
text posts, they still work incredibly well,
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is because, Um, a video
posts, a native video post that
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you post with a simple caption,
it'll work, but when you combine it
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with a lengthy text caption, it's
gonna do even more right now video is
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growing on all platforms. Linkedin it's
doesn't linkedin's video doesn't have the same effect
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as like a tiktok video, but
Um, it's it's it's rising, it's
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growing more important and when you do
pair like a super strong text post with
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video, it gives people an option
to watch the video, listen to the
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video or just read the post.
So having that combination of the two,
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I would actually create like a text
video baby and like that's the thing you
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need to bring out into the world. Um that that should be the main
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goal. But switching up the types
of content. Um, when I was
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in a linkedin creator accelerator program they
advised to Um, create different types of
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posts throughout the week, just as
long as one of them is video,
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and that just shows us how important
video is and will continue to be.
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So yeah, that's that's my recommendation. Text Video, but just make sure
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there's a strong text p post to
go with it. I like the variety.
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I like that you spoke to that
because I think when you're thinking of
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content types, just as it's the
same thing, like you don't want to
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eat the same dinner seven nights in
a row, right, like it just
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gets boring. People don't want to
consume your content in the same format every
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time, and if you're trying also
to have people understand more of who you
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are and your personality on a platform, then you need to give them variety
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and how they interact with you,
and so that's one of the quickest ways
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to do that is just to switch
up the type of posts or Combo some
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of these and uh, I think
it's interesting for podcasters specifically, because a
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lot of times we think, okay, if we have a video, then
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we'll just cut it into micro clips
and that will be our content on Linkedin,
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and that's a starting place. Absolutely. There's some people that aren't even
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there yet. Totally fine. It's
good time to get in the water,
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get in the game. But if
you're there and you're going, how else
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should I be repurposing content? You
can go back and listen to any of
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your episodes at any time and you
can find a concept that you guys talked
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about and you can post a quote
from that show. You can post the
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biggest points and you don't even have
to link back to the podcast. You
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just got a text post from an
old episode and that can live on as
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a piece of content. The other
thing is you have blogs on your website
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and those blogs are great. They
even tell you like a blog post is
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something that's great to post. But
where many B two B companies make mistakes
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is they post their blog on linkedin
and think people are going to read it.
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It's just a link and I even
think it's a mistake. Maybe what
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you're saying well, like I think
I tend to agree more with what you
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said, like if you did a
long form, really thought out piece of
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written content and then Lin linked to
a blog, maybe it would work,
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but because the blog is more reading, I actually think it's more effective to
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just not make people click through to
the blog, like just make a long
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text posts on Linkedin that adds value
and doesn't link off the platform. You
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have tons of blogs that you could
do that with. You don't even have
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to post the whole thing. Just
post the most valuable content from each of
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those blogs and you've probably got months
worth of content right there. When you
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start to see how easily you can
repurpose things, oh, we have this
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blog post that can now become a
podcast if we just change it up slightly,
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and now we can infuse our P
O v in a different way and
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people can hear our voices or see
us on video. Like there's so many
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ways to do this. And then
I really liked, honestly, that they
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threw in photography and illustrations. That's
like not something you see that much of,
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but if you have that talent,
there are a few people I see
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on Linkedin that really win in that
category because they can do just even like
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simple drawings, and people love it
on on the platform. M Hmm.
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There's a reason why instagram worked.
People love looking at pictures, seeing what's
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going on in your life outside of
work. Even when you do that,
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it's it's going to succeed as a
business capturing what's going on in the workplace
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and events you were at. Um
Special Project there. There's a lot of
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things that can be captured in an
image until a really beautiful story. and
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Um there's one other thing that was
on that list, but it's it's very
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underrated and it'll have a lot of
potential, and that's going live on Linkedin.
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Lincoln has live streams, which you
need a third party school to do,
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but very effective. And then live
audio. If you've heard of clubhouse,
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twitter spaces, you've probably heard all
the horror stories and all of that
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is true on those platforms, but
linkedin live audio it's it's really special and
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I've used it a lot. That's
the thing I've done the most consistently.
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It's a great way to build relationships
with people who you just connected with but
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haven't really gottenstance to schedule that call. Way Too busy, or to meet
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New People. I've met some really
incredible people through doing linkedin audio and it's
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still such a new thing that you
can can actually create your own space on
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the platform. So Um Lincoln audio
live streaming super underrated. It is effective,
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takes skill, takes talent, takes
time to figure out, but highly
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recommend looking into it. All right, let's go to our member highlight here
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and today I want to talk about
growth marketing camp. Rex used to be
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on our team. Before he was
on our team, he actually hosted growth
335
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marketing camp for a time. Uh. That's it's a show produced by open
336
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sense and I love the branding around
growth marketing camp. I think it's really
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fun, very like. It's camp
vibes, got a little camp fire on
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their art and they do a great
job with their their micro clips and the
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00:24:26.400 --> 00:24:30.759
way that they promote the show,
but here's what they say about about the
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podcast. This is their description.
We're lighting up the Campfire and swapping stories
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on everything involved in building a brand, scaling a startup, launching new products
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00:24:41.160 --> 00:24:49.799
and and unembellished career talk from the
brand builders that we admire most. I
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love all of what they're highlighting there. It's a fun way to still talk
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topics with experts but bring it in
in a little bit of a fresh,
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uh perspective, and they do that
in several ways. So, uh,
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I think the number one reason I
picked this as our member highlight today is
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because of their branding and I think
a lot of B two B podcasts are
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still lacking in their art and in
their creative like they're proud that they now
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have a show and they think that
that's creative, but there's so much more
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that goes around a podcast that makes
it truly uh, I don't know,
351
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standout, I guess in my mind. And so specifically, if you want
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to learn some things around branding,
I would I would take a look at
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at growth marketing camp and uh,
we we want to shout you guys out
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00:25:38.720 --> 00:25:42.119
because you guys who do an excellent
work and bonus because you've been doing it
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00:25:42.160 --> 00:25:45.359
for a long time. This is
not a podcast that is like a flash
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in the PAN. You know,
we're not congratulating you on your first five
357
00:25:48.599 --> 00:25:53.039
episodes like you've been have been in
the game for a bit. So growth
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00:25:53.039 --> 00:25:56.640
marketing camp. We we recommend going
and checking them out. All right.
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00:25:56.680 --> 00:26:00.960
Well, let's wrap up this episode
with a question from our linkedin mic club
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community. And here's the question for
today and I'll pose it at you first.
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You take it where you want.
How detailed should my show outline be
362
00:26:10.599 --> 00:26:18.119
before we actually hit record? It's
gonna be different for everybody. Um,
363
00:26:18.680 --> 00:26:25.359
I I have some structure to my
shows where I like to keep it very
364
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organic. I tell every guest like, here's the antennas structure, but I'm
365
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ready to throw it all out the
window as soon as we hit record.
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And the reason I do that is
because I like to just go deeper into
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something that a guest mentioned bring and
just just flow naturally and have a really
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00:26:41.079 --> 00:26:45.839
great conversation. But that's something I'm
personally good at and even though I have
369
00:26:45.920 --> 00:26:51.799
a very just like fluid, organic
conversation, Um approach to it, I'm
370
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actually very detailed with my show notes
that my prep talk. I have links
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to resources, stats ready to go, and it's because, Um, if
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I have as much like, if
I'm very structured, then I can just
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be free and flow. So when
I do my prep, I like to
374
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look up the guests, everything about
them. I like to truly study them,
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what shows they've been on before,
anything they mentioned on a previous episode
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that they didn't go deep enough in. But I have some more questions on,
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or even just like some topics that
I actually want to talk about with
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them and just making sure that I'm
just as knowledgeable as they are. I
379
00:27:29.599 --> 00:27:33.839
learned that from a show called earnier
leisure. Every episode they're learning something new
380
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from their guests, but they make
sure they're familiar with that topic as well.
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So, Um, I have used
notion and I like it because I
382
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could break things up in sections,
drag and drop. I could have check
383
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boxes next to topics so I could
quickly check off everything. I do all
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my podcast by myself, so I
have to make sure it's very easy for
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me to make edits and changes on
the go. That's not an ad,
386
00:27:56.000 --> 00:28:00.599
but it should be. Um.
Yes, so I like to be superstructured,
387
00:28:00.799 --> 00:28:03.480
very organized, but when it comes
down to recording. I just have
388
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this as a backup safety net,
for a guide. I think I would
389
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say I'm I'm fairly similar to you
in that. Do you find that you're
390
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you edit the way that you write
out notes for shows like over time,
391
00:28:19.119 --> 00:28:22.400
or do you feel like you're pretty
locked in now you have got your structure
392
00:28:22.440 --> 00:28:29.480
you feel comfortable in it? That's
a good question. I like to Um,
393
00:28:29.519 --> 00:28:32.960
I think because podcasting is so new. Well, here's actually a better
394
00:28:33.000 --> 00:28:37.599
example. I have some shows I
recorded in end of twenty. I didn't
395
00:28:37.599 --> 00:28:41.079
get to released them because of burnout
capacity and then also just like I gotta
396
00:28:41.119 --> 00:28:44.920
save this for later. I'm going
back to them now and I'm like,
397
00:28:44.960 --> 00:28:48.960
Oh, I I. I'm a
different type of host now. I want
398
00:28:48.960 --> 00:28:52.559
to have a different type of episode, and so when I think about that,
399
00:28:52.680 --> 00:28:56.720
um, when I record episodes,
I like to before even pressing record,
400
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I like to envision what I want
the episode to sound like at the
401
00:29:02.039 --> 00:29:04.920
end. But when it comes to
editing, I'm very comfortable with trying something
402
00:29:04.920 --> 00:29:10.440
new. So as far as like
systems, I feel pretty confident on the
403
00:29:10.440 --> 00:29:15.200
approach, but I'm always looking to
try a new style at a new segment
404
00:29:15.440 --> 00:29:22.400
just continue to test the waters.
For me, I I love writing out
405
00:29:22.799 --> 00:29:26.920
kind of almost word for word,
what I'd like to say, specifically in
406
00:29:26.039 --> 00:29:32.599
segments of the podcast where it can
get repetitive. Uh. So I start
407
00:29:32.680 --> 00:29:36.720
to think of what's a different way
we could say this and how could I
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communicate it still be personal and still
be authentic, but say it in a
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in a different way, and I
won't be able to do that quite the
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same on the fly as if I
wrote out a new way of saying it
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verbatim. So I just like put
that in my notes and then I noticed
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with questions I'll do that too,
like what's a different way than I would
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typically word this, and like,
let's see if I could throw in a
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question and like that. Uh.
But then I'm very much open at all
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times to rabbit trails with guests,
specifically, like if I'm interviewing someone and
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they say something fascinating, I don't
want to be so caught in my notes
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that I can't go where they're going. And then also, if we're guides
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as podcast hosts, then I'll lead
us back out and back to you know,
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where we ultimately want to end up. But let's go explore that trail
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a little bit because that might end
up being, you know, the best
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part of the episode. So there's
a good push and pull there as a
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hoax that you get to to walk
on your own and I think there's benefits
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to all different types of notes.
I've actually gone into some episodes just to
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try it. Like I'll tell you
I'm I've been working on a side project
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and the whole premise of this side
project is basically just using like four quotes
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from an author, and so for
that episode I didn't write out any specific
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questions. I only highlighted parts of
the quotes that I want to follow up
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and talk to the person about,
and so it puts me in a different
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frame of mind conversationally because I'm thinking, okay, these are things that I
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find curious in the quote, but
I don't have an outline to rely on
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in the same way. So I'm
in the conversation differently than I typically would
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be, and I don't know if
I love that, but I love changing
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it up and I love seeing how
I can get more engaged in the conversation.
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So it is it's just finding your
sweet spot, constantly tweaking things.
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And then I think segments you mentioned
that Walt great idea there too. That's
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an easy way if you found a
rhythm, but you want to try something
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new at a segment and that might
force you to rethink things or or find
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a new, fresh angle. You
know, I have um one, I
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00:31:47.480 --> 00:31:52.799
guess, podcasting tip that I learned
from being an insurance Um. So the
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00:31:52.880 --> 00:31:56.519
insurance company. I worked with them
very surely it's not a great experience,
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00:31:56.599 --> 00:32:00.079
but I learned a lot from them. Learned a lot. and Um one
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00:32:00.119 --> 00:32:04.400
thing they had every new agent two
has had. They gave us a script
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to go through this entire insurance presentation
and they really wanted us to say it
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verbet a word from word. The
scripts stuck, to be honest, um,
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but I really had to memorize the
whole thing to pass their test.
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00:32:16.839 --> 00:32:21.119
Um, and I couldn't do it. Like my whole life. Always thought
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like if I ever got to be
an actor, I wouldn't be able to
448
00:32:22.480 --> 00:32:25.160
go off script. I'd had to
add Lib everything because I'm not gonna remember
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00:32:25.200 --> 00:32:30.839
word from word. But Um,
what I learned was to Um write down
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bullet points, not the full sentence, not the full script, but bullet
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00:32:35.279 --> 00:32:38.400
points of each point I want to
make and as I'm working to memorize again,
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the bullet points are really prompt so
when I'm thinking about what the next
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00:32:42.799 --> 00:32:45.160
thing is, I don't have to
think about the the actual full sentence because
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deep down I do know it.
I just need to remember the prompt the
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00:32:49.279 --> 00:32:52.279
next prompt in the order. So
I used that when it comes to solo
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00:32:52.400 --> 00:32:57.319
episodes or even like the notes for
the podcast, always focused on the prompts,
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00:32:57.559 --> 00:33:00.680
making it clear so I could remember
it. Kind of trigg there's my
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00:33:00.799 --> 00:33:06.640
memory to be able to recite the
full question, the full thought. I
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love it. Well, it's been
a great episode. Thanks for everyone who
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00:33:10.319 --> 00:33:15.039
has tuned in and we're trying to
bring the news you need to know as
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00:33:15.039 --> 00:33:19.799
a podcaster. talked a lot about
video today, but that's good because we
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00:33:19.839 --> 00:33:22.440
need to be thinking about it.
Talked about how we can be more relevant
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00:33:22.559 --> 00:33:27.400
on Linkedin as well in different content
types, which I think is important for
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00:33:27.480 --> 00:33:31.240
us. And then again, go
check out gross marketing camp and UH,
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00:33:31.440 --> 00:33:38.079
maybe reach out to Walter I on
instagram or on Linkedin as well and tell
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00:33:38.160 --> 00:33:42.440
us how you're doing your outline for
your show. I would love to hear,
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00:33:43.119 --> 00:33:45.960
even in our linkedin group, different
ways that you build an outline and
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00:33:46.119 --> 00:33:50.240
uh, how you how that maybe
has evolved for you as you've been a
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00:33:50.240 --> 00:33:53.119
host. We appreciate you listening.
Walt, thanks for being here. Man,
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00:33:54.440 --> 00:33:58.640
yes, thanks for bringing me back. All right, everybody, have
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00:33:58.680 --> 00:34:08.920
a great week. We'll be back
next week to another episode. M Hm.