Are you passionate about the intersection of podcasting and high-end video production? Then buckle up, and join us as we take you behind the scenes with Charlie Birney - a visionary in the field of podcasting and co-founder and CLO - Chief Listening Officer at Podville Media. He is also the brain behind the insightful book "The Tao of Podcasting." Charlie will share with us his profound understanding of the technical and creative aspects of multimedia production.
We'll discuss Podville Media's journey from a simple podcasting outfit in a coworking space to a bustling high-end facility with three studios. We'll delve into the investments in top-notch recording equipment, practical tips on soundproofing, and the impact of thoughtful studio design. Charlie will enlighten us on the modular wall system that brings client visions to life.
In this episode, Mathew and Charlie will also tackle the challenges of podcast discovery, internal corporate podcasting, and audience engagement. Come and explore the insights around data reporting tools in the podcasting realm.
This episode is a goldmine for podcasters and video producers aiming for excellence in their craft, as well as businesses looking to explore internal communication strategies. Whether you're a budding podcaster or a seasoned professional, Charlie Birney's insights will inspire you and equip you with the knowledge to take your productions to the next level.
Let’s keep pushing the boundaries of podcasting technology together!
IN THIS EPISODE WE COVER:
- (1:33) Charlie’s evolution from audio podcasting to high-end video production: How Charlie's business expanded to meet changing demands and essential equipment and studio space investments during COVID.
- (14:08) Insights into studio design: Charlie reveals the magic behind Podville Media's modular walls and enlightens us on the simple, yet effective, strategies for achieving the best sound quality, even in the most unexpected spaces.
- (21:08) The significance of internal podcasting for companies: An exploration of how companies like Uber and Yahoo utilize podcasting for internal communication and the potential for expansion in this area.
- (27:32) The challenges of podcast discovery and distribution: Charlie and Mathew exchange thoughts on making podcast discoverability more user-friendly and the role platforms like YouTube and Spotify play.
LINKS AND RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:
- Charlie Birney's books: “The Tao of Podcasting”, “Podcasting Made Simple“
- Follow Charlie on socials:
* https://www.linkedin.com/in/charliebirney/
* https://www.instagram.com/charliebirney/
* https://www.instagram.com/philosophyofpodcasting/
- Charlie’s podcast recommendations: Mike O’Meara show, The Daily podcast, Pocket Sized Pep Talks, Sounds Profitable, What's Poppin' Penny, For Immediate Release
- High-end equipment discussed: Behringer, Shure SM57, RE27 Microphone, Modular walls
**As an Amazon Associate, we may earn commissions from qualifying purchases of podcasting gear from Amazon.com. We also participate in affiliate programs with many of the software services mentioned on our website. If you purchase something through the links we provide, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. The team at Podcasting Tech only recommends products and services that we would use ourselves and that we believe will provide value to our viewers and readers.**
For additional resources and insights visit podcastingtech.com or follow us on social media:
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We're gonna do something a little bit different on the show today. Instead of just
going into a single podcaster studio, we are actually going
to a professional podcast studio setup. We are chatting
with Charlie Birney. He is the cofounder and CLO at
Podville Media. It's a podcast studio and production center
and in the Washington DC area. Charlie is also the
author of the tale of podcasting, and, we'll have a link
to it so you could check that out. Charlie, it is great to chat with
you today. It is great to chat with you, Mathew, and nice to see you
again after so many years. It's just wonderful. And I'm excited about
this. It is great to see you again and and excited to chat with you.
And and, you know, I I've definitely heard you chat with me about the studio
a little bit, but it'll be nice to get a little bit more in-depth on
it today. But just to kinda kick off, what was the
impetus for starting this studio? Like, how did that get
going? Well, when we first met,
I think I was still in Gaithersburg, so I'm into my 3rd location.
And in Gaithersburg, I was there for
originally unrelated podcast reasons, but it's part of the story. I was in a
coworking space. And from my background in real estate,
I I approached coworking with sort of how can this work, and, obviously, we've
seen the rise and fall, if you will, of WeWork, and that still has somewhat
to be determined. But there I was sitting in a brand new coworking space
with 1 on one other guy who did financial advice,
financial, services. And, actually, he's still doing a
podcast, doing really well, and I did, oh, close to a 100 episodes
of, Launch Financial with Brad Sherman of Sherman Wealth. And
Do you know Brad? Do you know Brad? I do. I I I chatted with
him a few times. Nice guy. Yeah. Yeah. He's a great guy.
So at any rate, I was in this coworking space and was, they were
hoping I could help promote it. I live in Montgomery County, and,
that's where the building was in Gaithersburg, Maryland here. And
one day, my friend Jeff Davis walked in, and he was doing some PR
for this new space. They were gonna get the county executive in, etcetera, etcetera.
And, he had got me started listening to
podcasts. The first guy who ever got me started listening to podcasts, Mathew.
We and I still listen to a show called For Immediate Release about
B to B marketing, basically. And Jeff was there.
We were probably having a sandwich one day, and I said, Jeff, why don't we
do a podcast in this coworking space? Because every
office in you know, around the the whole office layout is
doing something different. They had an enewsletter
lot of Pat Owens. I I listened to Ray Ortega. I listened to
Cliff Ravenscraft back in the beginning and tried to figure out what this
thing podcasting was. I'm an amateur musician, so I thought I could use
my PA system. You can't use a PA system to make a podcast,
but you can make a lot of noise. So I bought a $100
Behringer 4 track and used the Shure SM 57
that I had for open mic and stuff like that. And I started
to make a podcast called launch work Launch Podcast,
which was to support Launch, workplaces, and they would
put that episode out in their weekly newsletter. And I remember
first someone coming to me and say, I don't know what a podcast is
or, I how long will this be? And I said, it's as long as
you're interesting.
Episodes. And so we had a lot of fun. I did, I think, about 88
or 89 episodes before I partnered
with my current business partner, Oscar Ceballos, and moved
to Glover Park, which is if you're a Washingtonian or, you know, Washington, it's kinda
North Georgetown on Wisconsin Avenue. He had
started a studio, a one room studio
that came out of a terrestrial radio show, and all those formats
flopped. You remember that, you know, 9, 10, 11, 12 years
ago, and jack radio and all these other things. So they dumped
all their radio, if you'll forgive the expression, shock jocks.
And, there was a show called the Don and Mike show, and that became the
Mike O'Meara show. And so he went to Mike
O'Meara and said, let's do a podcast. And I think Mike O'Meara said, what's a
podcast? And I remember when I started listening to it and
found found it, you know, trying to find
Podcasting 10 years ago was was pretty Podcasting. And,
found finally found episode 1, and here on the microphone
in my ears comes Mike O'Meara saying, I just want all of you out there
to know that I'm not one of you. And I thought, god almighty, why
would he say that? So it's a very successful
podcast, a great example of a podcast that's that monetizes
itself. We still host that in our studios every day. So Oscar
had one little studio in this little office building in Glover
Park. We met. I interviewed him on one of my shows.
He was doing business school with, Smith School of
Business through University of Maryland at the time, and he did an outreach group. I'd
never been to the Reagan Center, and he did an outreach group for
his business degree at the Reagan Center about podcasting and
apps. And so I heard about it on their show. I signed up. I went
to it. And the way he tells the story, I'm telling it, but is I
kept asking good questions. So he said, well, when we do a breakout group,
I wanna sit with you. And that was the genesis of our first studio
in Glover Park. So we eventually took over half
of the third floor and and, most of the Tech
floor, which had been a passport office. And I had a wonderful bullpen,
Mathew. I'd always dreamed of being a comic strip artist. As you look
at some of my stuff online, you'll know I like to draw a lot. I've
gotten 2 new drawings in the past. They're great. I've dreamed of having a
bullpen. And at that time, this was before COVID, and we
had this large room where they'd assembled all the passports, so it had a
railing and a and desks around the edge of it. We used to have 10
people in there talking. We would buy lunch every day and have 10 people in
there talking and editing, and it was a joy. And so we
then we changed the 3rd floor to have 2 studios
back to back. So we had 1 production room, in the middle, and we
could use it sort of a double sided production room and then a third
studio for a newscaster who came in, sort of her studio for
the most part, and did, the Angie Goff show. She's a local,
news reporter here and a wonderful miss Angie.
So that were those were the days when my real estate heart would
when all 3 studios were going at the same time. That was just joy.
We were on kind of a membership format we just started out with,
but the truth of it is it just kept evolving as you would
assume. And we kept giving so much back to the clients
and evolving their shows and giving so much advice. By that time,
I did know what I was doing. And when you paired Oscar and I together,
I always liked running something with 2 people at the top. We had a
lot to give. We gave away hours and hours and hours and hours
of free podcast marketing and podcast advice. And
the truth of it is people who would rent the studios, the idea
was some some of them would learn how to run them, and we would let
them run them, but sometimes we would come in and run. It was a fee
structure. There just weren't anybody learning how to run their own studio. There
was one, Sarah Frazier, who's out in LA now, and we're very close.
But we ended up being sort of a Blue Diamond podcast
studio where we would help people evolve their shows. And what they wanted to come
in is, I'm sure you would know, Mathew, is they wanted to come in, have
a cup of coffee waiting on the table, sit down, and talk, and create, and
they didn't wanna deal with any of the other issues. We started doing
Santana Moss's podcast. He was really doing it as a
proving exercise to get to the big leagues and get on network television. He's former
Washington red skin. And the University of Miami alumni. Yeah.
Exactly. Right? And so we did. Tech would come in and pay
me in cash, and I would freak out. And and that's when
social media was evolving. We were doing Tana's show, and Instagram
stories came out one day, and we were producing video for stories that
afternoon and trying to post it. So we we evolved into doing the podcast,
to doing very high end video podcast, to doing the social media
content, whether it was Twitter, whether it was Facebook, whether it was
Instagram, and then, of course, now TikTok, and YouTube
shorts. But we would do those for the clients. It just became in,
so we sort of turned into a high end production studio.
And I love the days at Glover Park, but it was situated
for my commercial real estate mind. It wasn't situated near a
metro. Now I know this from real estate, Mathew.
Not it doesn't mean people will use the metro, but they
like knowing there's a metro there, and that's Washington for you. So we
ultimately moved really during COVID. We had started to
occupy one room at the studio here at 1900 M Street,
to do a video production for a local marketing guy who
wanted a a video production, and then we started working with ESPN
doing a couple of their shows under the,
sub name of, The Undefeated, which became landscape,
in the ESPN family. And then sort of COVID
hit, and we started to think what was gonna work. We ended up taking
over this half of the floor of the 4th floor here
and moving out of Glover Park completely. So we still have 3 studios.
1 is sort of small one. You can do 2 people or a 1 person
shot with a camera facing you for the a camera facing you for the person
who's inevitably remote. And then a slightly larger
studio, we can do 2 or 3 or even 4 people in a pinch, and
we've got a very custom made desk for that. And then this the original large
room that we rented where we can do essentially television shows. We can
do the White House Historical Association is set up in one corner
and this ESPN show that we do for Dominique Foxworth in the other side of
the room. And it's complicated. You know? When I met you, I was
still learning about microphones, and we've had to learn about lighting
and the things about lighting that I know and don't know could you know, are
overwhelming. So to do a really good shot that's that
you could use on TV, you've gotta eliminate all shadows, and
we've the money we've spent on lighting, if I knew, I'd I'd go into
another career, probably. Well, so I I
wanna I wanna talk to you, actually. Going back to the equipment, that's an Podcasting,
place to bring up because when podcasters are getting started, right, they're working in
their home, they're working in their office. Right? Maybe they're taking it on the road.
You know, we're typically looking at equipment that's in the 60
to maybe $150 microphone range or maybe a mixer in the
2 to $600 range. Obviously, when you're dealing with
a professional studio, you are bringing in the likes of an ESPN and, you
know, former NFL players and, you know, other big wigs in
and around our nation's capital, you have to really step up
your performance. So We did. What, like,
what were you thinking about when you were making investments in
microphones and cameras and whatnot to really turn
this into a professional operation? Well, it's a
great question. I call it falling forward or to put it in the
language of Chris Kremitzos from PodFest. It's starting ugly.
I and and as I think I told you off mic, when I started out,
I had some Shure SM 57, the kind of thing you could use to
put a nail into a board practically. But it wasn't until I
partnered with Oscar, and I think you're on an RE27 there, perhaps. I
know I am I first talked on a microphone
that cost more than, you know, $70, and it
blew my mind away. And I thought, why? Of all the things I'd
spent money on up till that point, why hadn't I bought a
really good microphone? And and I probably should have called you up, you know, 2
years before that because you were the first person I met who had, like, a
microphone array in front of them, I think. And, anyway, you're right.
It was a tough decision. We just knew I
had the instincts that's sort of how dad ran his businesses, that
the this industry, the media industry was gonna be
big in terms of what we were doing with podcasting. I didn't know
it, but even back in Glover Park, my clients were
asking and demanding video. My intention in the
beginning, Matthew, as you may know already, was just to do audio.
It was a big enough chore for me to learn audio after 26 years in
in real estate and development, and I thought I was gonna be
perfectly happy running a humble little studio that did audio Podcasting that
just wasn't gonna work. And so as soon
as the client started asking and demanding video, we just fell into
it. So, yes, it was a major investment, mostly on
my part. And we've borrowed a lot of equipment
from ESPN, but most of it, we've, you know, we've plowed
any money we've made back into the investment in the equipment. So
we have, I don't know, half a $1,000,000 worth of
equipment here probably. Well, we'll we'll get a few of those
enlisted, here in the show notes so people can kinda get a sense of Yeah.
What we're talking about and, like, they're usually very complicated names and
numbers and and things that most of us aren't gonna know, but still people are
gonna wanna check it out. We'll have some pictures. One thing you were telling me
about before we get started that I think is interesting for folks who might be
thinking about not just recording, but being able to offer
recording services to other, basically starting a studio. Maybe not to the
same level, but Right. You know, offering it out to other folks was
you're talking about the modular walls
that, you know,
different clients. How did that come about? Well, in the
Glover Park studio, we had built a green wall. We painted a green
wall and found that we really never used it.
There just wasn't a need for it. However, there is some need
for different shows to have a different look. And one of the things I learned
in Glover pa in, Gaithersburg was I
always forgot to take a picture in the very, very beginning, 11 years ago before
you and I met. I'd always forgot to take a picture, which I call the
studio selfie, of me and you doing a podcast
around that original form form round formica table. Before
I ever had any soundproofing, I was collecting egg cartons, to be honest with
you, in a big pile in the corner. I never used them because then I
started buying, off of, what is it, B and H, Mathew,
or or, the other one, Sweetwater. W or, yeah, one of
those big Right. And, and that was the long kind with the
slits, but not like this little pyramid triangle kind you
see before behind me. We've set my office here up as sort of
an Ersatz podcast studio if you needed to to use 1 and our
other ones are used, also because I'm very loud and they wanna soundproof in my
office because my voice carries very far. And I have
animated conversations quite often. So quick
aside on that topic, and in the first book that I mentioned to
you, one of my clients does this to this day. If you can't
afford, soundproofing, speaking about
that just for a moment, do it in your closet. And you can't buy
that that quiet that you get in a walk in closet with, you know, your
clothes and your wife's clothes or whatever you've got in there. And,
Debbie DeChambeau, one of my first friends and clients out in Gaithersburg, she'll she
says she still sets up a card table in her closet when she does her
podcast. Can't do better with the acoustics. You can't buy it.
Right? So the modular system is pretty simple. We have kind of a
a ledge, a debit, you know, all along all the hallways here
at Podville Media, and all of our
vertical, say, 3 feet wide and 8 feet tall
panels hang on those, davits. And
so we have white brick, red brick, distressed
metal, wood, weathered wood, and
green. We can turn any studio and then a type
of panel that also has pegs in it. Local,
adaptive, DC adaptive, Chris Jones developed the
system originally for children's rooms where you could put pegs in
it anywhere just like in an old workbench, and then you can put shelves on
the pegs and you can put other items, and it's a
limitless designing sort of Rube
Goldberg machine where you can create any environment, and then you can
put, you know, MP in in letters on top of 1 shelf on
your logo in 1 or a logo card hanging behind you. I
love mixing, so I often think of it as a high school play or a
college play where we were building sets. And so we're literally
doing, you know, high high audio and high video and
advanced technical stuff as possible, but we're also using sets like we
did in those theatrical productions. Because if you've
got got 40 minutes and I've got someone with a good
back, I can have that whole room change to look completely different, as
I say, red brick, white brick. And the the brick on these panels is
not brick. It's just, you know, a plastic fascia. And,
or, like I say, wood or when I did a golf industry show, it can
look completely green behind me, which is kind of a cool look. And, I think
the Mike O'Meara show, if anybody wants to go on YouTube and look at that,
it's the distressed metal look with 2 sections of
panels, with the peg in it, and, then you can
cover over the peg with a black material, which we've done,
and then, you know, have it shelves that hold sort of the mementos
from, you know, 30 years of that show. Then on the
corner of studio a, we can bring in panels that are
custom built and make it look like a corner of the White House. We do
a a production with the White House Historical Association, so it's everyone
is nonpartisan. It's just about the history of the White House. And we can
make it look it's got the tartan of the White House hanging on one side
and some of the White House plates behind the host Stewart.
So you can give any kind of a different look, but we really
typically don't use green screen or infinity wall or any of those things.
We we like to do it sort of a mix of new and and old,
I guess. It's interesting. I like the idea of
the the not just the modular walls, but also having that kinda, like,
corkboard being able to change out everybody's accessories. Right? We we're
obsessed, especially after, you know, COVID and the Zoom age of what do we have
behind us? What books are we showing? What, you know, what tchotchkes are living on
the shelf behind us? So the fact that every one of your clients who comes
in can get a personalized, customized experience
and really make the show theirs and not just another
Podville, you know, media show No. Is a is a really
great thing that you're offering offering. The only thing digital, and
Passy for power station often uses the Mike O'Meara studio. So they'll
take all their stuff off the shelves. And then behind her
is a large monitor, and we'll just put the show logo up on that. We
used to do that in Glover Park for Santana's show. So we will theme
it out with the digital if you want. But often when we build this and
put the shelves and very, good point, we'll put the books that
that host wants. Maybe the host has written a book or has section of books.
Maybe a, you know, fake plant. We've got a whole lot of stuff if you
walk down the hallway. Just limit, you know, unlimited stuff. We've got r two d
two if you want that. And, then don't forget to
take a picture so you know how to rebuild it if you need to do
it 2 weeks from now. Because if you forget that, you know,
shame on shame on you, because we wanna make it look like it's
been the same. So our clients love the I I appreciate you bringing it
up. Our clients love the shelving systems because they're able to bring
in, and, many clients keep a box of that stuff here, you
know, just in storage so that they can rebuild that or add to
it. My gosh. Angie Goff had so much Dolly Parton paraphernalia,
that it filled up a half a room. So she likes DALL E.
That's awesome. Well, so as a reminder, if you're listening to this, check out podvillmedia.com.
You can get a little glimpse of what we're talking about. We'll have a link
there. Also, while you're checking out the show notes and you're you're interested, check out
the Tao of Podcasting. That's the book that, Charlie wrote recently
released, which also features some of his own drawings, which he is great
at. I I've actually been the subject of a few of his drawings after having,
interviewed him before, and they're always really good. Before we let you go,
a couple of questions that we're trying to ask everybody. And so Sure. You know,
one thing that I wanna know from you is in
the podcasting space in general, whether it's from the listener side, the creator
side, is there any place that you'd like to see improvement? Any
new technologies, new services, you know, something that could make it better for
everyone involved? Wow. What a what a great
question. I'll I'll sort of take it a little sideways because it occurred to
me the just before you finished your question. The the thing
that I like talking about, the thing that I think is
underutilized so far, and one person who I helped when they were
starting out is literally doing this for his own company now. He's
in, legal services, legal informational services. What
I don't see enough of, Mathew, is the inward facing
podcast. By that, I mean, a podcast that's made not
made to be private necessarily, but to made to be
for the company and for communicating inside
a company. Do you know what I mean? I actually had a client who I
I can't say who the client was because it was it was actually proprietary. But,
yeah, it was the HR, arm that came to us and
wanted to produce a podcast, and it was meant just for the employees
there. Talking a lot about DEI and, like, some of the initiatives that they were
doing with, with other employees. Yeah. I I I'm
absolutely fascinated by it and don't know why it's not
happening more. Back when we were renting studios, and we still rent the studio,
depending on the client and and what their needs are. We you know, we'll give
it to you for a couple episodes or a day. We had Uber
come in to our Glover Park studio, and I thought, oh, this is fascinating. Uber's
doing a podcast. Well, it's not for you and me. It was for
inside Uber for translate I mean, translating, for communicating their
ideals and whatever they were worried about, you know, whether it was legal
or or marketing wise or trying to talk to drivers. Now I've never met
a driver who who had heard of the podcast, so I'm not sure which
part of the company it was meant for. But they came and rented our
studio for about 4 hours one day. Yahoo has rented
our studios a couple times. We do a lot of that, but I'm fascinated by
the inward facing podcast. And Ray Ortega, who I mentioned to you earlier,
he worked before he went moved to the West Coast. He lived here in
Maryland and worked for NIH doing a podcast. Now it was
hard to find that podcast. You had to burrow
down on their website, and you had to know which page.
But finally, I found it one day because he gave me the breadcrumbs, and there
were 2 little blue hyperlinks, you know, but it was just really for
the doctors. Understand. Fascinates me. You know that
11 years ago, you and I were saying spend most of our time explaining to
people what this thing they call a podcast is, and I think Cliff
Ravenscraft used to tell a story about that and pointing out what that purple icon
on your on your iPhone was meant to be, and nobody knew what that purple
thing was. Now today, mostly, I say to people, why aren't you podcasting?
Because there's so many good reasons. There's so many different financial levels. You could do
it with your phone if you want. It'll sound like you did it with your
phone. But, but there's so much whether you're and I
came from a commercial real estate background. A lot of times on that
show, I mentioned FIR, they talk about the CEOs behind the door
because CEOs usually come to work and they shut their door. And most of the
people in the company are fascinated and interested in the c I
the CEO, and and sometimes they're sort of an iconic figure
to those people. And I have said to previous bosses, why
don't you do video? Why don't you address your company? Even on
Slack, people don't do video addresses to say thank you, this.
My wife had been very sick. I did a Slack inside our 10 person company,
and I got a thunderous response back because everybody's in those
larger companies. Everybody wants access to the CEO, and you've probably
heard in some groups they've done, hey. Win lunch with the CEO, or
once a month, the CEO has has a, you know, a meet and greet
with people. And I'm like, why aren't these groups doing more
inward facing communications? I just don't
quite understand, maybe you do, why there isn't more of that. I think it's
starting to catch on. But It is starting to catch on. I think the big
is the distribution. Right? The whole joy and the benefit of the podcast is being
able to download, have it on your phone, listen in the car, listen while you're
working, things like that. And when they are private and proprietary,
the platforms are getting much, much better to do that. But, it it is
a expensive and complicated thing sometimes to arrange that.
We we tried to work with a pharmaceutical company, and the level
of security that was required just overcomplicated the
project to such a degree that it it just it wasn't even worth it.
They just wound up recording audio and just putting on the backlink on their, you
know, Internet. Right. So that's that's probably one of the bigger ones.
And I I think also just I don't think people
appreciate how useful it could be. I agree with that. But like you
said, sometimes you put that stuff out in workers like, I didn't even know this
existed. I'm not gonna list it. Right? I'm I'm already on company time, and I'm
on company time. I'm not using non company time to listen to more stuff for
the Right. Well, what is it? Tom Webster calls the media diet,
and, you know, the people who aren't listening to podcasts might not ever start because
they've got other stuff they do. I mean, you have a you have a
very fancy studio. You have a lot of good stuff, but is there any tech
out there that's on your wish list to to improve the
studio or just something you wanna get your hands on or something you wanna see
created, to help you guys up? Well,
we're working with Casted now because the thing that didn't
exist until recently is the right the right numbers, the right feedback.
The reporting which the clients have asked, you're aware of this probably as much
or more so than I. The the feedback, the actual demographics, if you
will, of the podcasting consumption. And, that is something
we've searched and searched for. We've talked about building ourselves, but we're
working with a company called Casted, now c a s t e d, and Lindsey
Chip Lindsay Tjepkema, who post quite regularly about, what
they're doing on LinkedIn. It's absolutely fascinating, and it
is also incorporating AI into
doing really functional data
reporting. That's what we need. What what as an aside, what
I find still the feedback I get, and I don't know if
you know Ariel Nisblad and what is her Sure. You
know, is the collation of how do I find this? Now you and
I know how to find podcasts, Mathew, but a lot of the
feedback that I get from the non listeners is, well, I I'm never
gonna be able to find my food group, my my special interest.
And, you know, you gotta look if you're gonna find it, back to an old,
you know, joke dad told. But the aggregation
of content still seems to be something that's underdone. I think Ariel
does it with what she's accomplishing, and I'd love to meet her
someday and talk to her about what she's doing. But finding those
in your zone of interest, I guess you you gotta
lead the horse to the water, right, because they're not gonna look. You
and I both know, again, how to find those things. It's not really that
hard, but that seems to be a problem. I think it's
interesting to see what Katie Kremitzos has done with her network of
meditation podcasts, and there's there are networks out there now. But
then you've gotta kinda saddle saddle up to the, you know, come up
to the network and jump in. I think, the New York
Times is trying to do that with their audio app. Right? But I still think
there's a lot of growth there, and I don't think it's fully baked yet
because now that we have TikTok, YouTube Shorts,
Instagram, Reels, etcetera, etcetera, how do we blend
all of that together? I can't watch a YouTube short
and necessarily find your show, your audio show. Now if you're
doing a good job as a YouTube producer, you should have all your links there.
Right? But I won't name names, but I've got clients
who I finally trained to make Instagram posts about their show who have
no hyperlink. So we're still at a place where we're not functioning
and giving enough feedback and giving the discoverability.
I think the thing that I need that we're I think we found with this
company is the data that I can share with my clients
because they want that feedback. You know what I'm talking about. They want those
numbers. They wanna be able to use I guess, the right way
is to say, I need data that's actionable so I can
know what kind of a monetization, what kind of content,
what kind of content that I'm putting out there is the most appealing
and the most vital and the most worth my time. Right?
Since day 1, that's been one of the biggest complaints from clients has always been,
you know, how do I get better data? How do I know who's listening? And
interesting about the discoverability, right, it's easy to go to a podcast store and find
Podcasting. Or if you know what you're looking for, type in the name. But right,
I I'm, you know, trying to find a podcast about x, and there's
just 100. It's just like, how do you figure out which is the right one
for you? That's Right. I don't know I don't know how you solve that problem.
I'm sure Right. People are working on it, but I I kinda feel that that
way as well. Well, I do have one more item on this topic,
and, you know, you and I will go let's say we're trying to find out
about, I don't know, some some hobby, basket weaving,
overused hobby item. But then we'll look at those 5 shows
that we've found, and you and I will know to check and
see if they've done episodes recently
or not or if they've pod faded or not. But the other folks who aren't
as deep into this as you and I are don't know that. Right.
They'll listen to a show for fun and listen to one that's
faded, then you're disenchanted with the whole thing. You know? It's like,
screw it. Podcasts are a waste of my time. So that's that's part of
the problem. I've actually changed my title here, Mathew, sort of a joke,
but I call myself the CLO because I try to
listen to as much of our content, if not all of our content, and
then as much exterior content produced by other people. So I call
myself the chief listening officer. The thing, I guess, to also
answer your question that I found, do you remember back, I know you
do, when we used to listen to the radio, we would simply turn the
dial. Right? And there's even audio of dials turning and
tuning into news, tuning into music, tuning into talk shows. Right? It seems
funny to me that when we're listening to a podcast,
we tend to hunker down and listen to that whole podcast
and not turn the dial as much. I have an enormous playlist,
and I would love an app where I could almost turn the radio dial
back and forth from shows. So I'll listen to a show. I've
got 2 former employees who are out doing other shows, and I really
try to listen to them, but I don't really follow basketball. I'm sorry
if everybody's groaning at me. And 1 and Ethan does a show
about the cavaliers, and he's really well done, and I love hearing him. And I'll
listen to it for a few minutes. Maybe I'll learn and start watching basketball and
television, and then I'll sweep through and go to the next one.
So I know Ray Ortega was horrified when I told him that I'd listen at
accelerated speeds. I still do occasionally listen at accelerated
speeds. But I'm trying to tune that radio dial, and I don't
know a functional way of doing that other than just
manually scrolling on that screen, trying to pick a different
show. Because as I say, I'm trying to listen to everything that we produce plus
as much other content as possible so I keep learning. Just like if you are
a chef in a restaurant, you wanna go eat the other guys cooking. Right? And
so I don't think other than what I'm doing, which
is either scrubbing so that I can get to the next show or just
manually going out and in, I don't know that there's a tool so that we
could just tune and sample different shows because that's what we were doing with the
radio. Right? If the WTOP, which is our local news, wasn't talking about
the traffic, I didn't really care about their content. So they do traffic on the
8th. If the, rock and roll station back in the day wasn't playing
Blackwater by the Doobie Brothers, then I was gonna go try to find that somewhere
else. And it seems to me there ought to be a way, in addition
to what Ariel is doing to find other shows and sample other
shows. There was a tool. Didn't you and I talk about this on a
what was that tool called? Sounder or
something. There was a tool with a with one of those vowel
no vowel and then r back in the day that would do
brief, brief parts of audio. I can't
remember what that was. I think you and I did an interview a long, long
time ago, and I might have talked about that, but that died. There was
an interest in it, and there is no way to sort of
quickly go through just like when we're channel surfing,
I guess, is the best analogy, through Podcasting try and find
that one that you know, even Alice and I will do it. My wife's name
is Alice when we're, you know, trying to find a show to watch on Netflix.
We'll just go and look at the trailers. Right? And there's no
way to do that. And I think that is somewhat makes it
exclusionary for the non listener, the ones who are not
listening now. How can I get in? Well, I have to get in, and I
have to subscribe, and I have to listen to a whole 20 minutes or 30
minutes of that show. It seems to me that
it's still a cumbersome process to get orientated to following new
shows. Sorry if I've gone on too long. No. It's alright. So it's almost like
what you're saying is the the podcast store, the Apple Podcasting stores, they're
showing you new and noteworthy ranking shows. Instead of
clicking on it and just getting the latest episode, it should automatically
play a trailer or a snippet or a preview that maybe even the Podcasting
themselves is selected so that people can get a good taste of what they're gonna
be getting. I think that's a, yeah, I think that's a great idea because, you
know, when you hover over that show on Netflix, it starts playing
the movie. Right. Right. Right. It literally plays the
movie until you decide whether to go on or not. That would
be great in podcasting. And and what is it? 50%
of these are videos well now. That would be very interesting.
Would be absolutely fascinating. I think Spotify
is is trying to help with some of these things. My daughter is
24 now. As I told you, my twins are 24 now. She
won't listen to a podcast, and I can't say if it's all of her generation.
But unless it's on Spotify, she's like, dad, I won't listen to it. I've
eliminated the app from the Apple Store, and as long as it's
on Spotify, I will I will take the time to listen to it. But if
it's not, I'm not going to. Well, a lot of people say that about YouTube
as well. Right. Right. Well, we we encourage our
clients to make YouTube shorts. I'm not making any. I'd like to make some about
the book, but I just haven't haven't made the time. But, I mean,
YouTube Shorts are pretty damn darn important right now. Those are being
consumed massively. And I think what sounds profitable,
they talk about, you know, the the matter
that YouTube you can help me out here, Mathew, is one of
the main ways people are finding podcasts now.
Yeah. I mean, YouTube we we always talked about this with clients about wanting to
do video. YouTube is the 2nd largest search engine behind Google itself.
People just go there to search for stuff. And so if you're not on there,
you are probably invisible to to a lot of your target audience. It's a
huge segment. I don't see that as changing.
So if they can figure out ways to do this this sampling, this changing of
the radio station, or what Netflix is doing with just letting the dang
movie roll while you're hovering, And I remember being
surprised at first. Well, what's going on? And I think it's a great idea,
so I'll give you credit for that. I think in the idea Apple, if you're
listening do that. Yeah. Apple, if you're listening, please,
start start giving us free samples. You you know who I am. Because that's what
we all want. You know? Excellent. Alright. And lastly,
you know, I know you work on a lot of shows. You produce a lot
of shows. Any podcast in particular you're listening to these days, just
the personal joys or, you know, something you recently discovered that,
you think is worth sharing? To so many. I'll always
talk about for immediate release. It took me a month of listening to it before
I understood what they were talking about. I'm now on a weekly phone call
with 1 of the hosts, and it's been a great joy to get to know
him. But that's if you're really interested in in b to b marketing, frankly.
I love marketing and such has been a passion of mine,
although I didn't go to school for it. I just like marketing. When dad and
I were doing work 30 years ago and building brochures, and I I
liken that, you know, that experience to thinking about what podcasts
are today, kind of a audio brochure. So I I tend to
listen in the mornings, Matthew. I don't know if you do to The Daily. One
of our former employees works on The Daily podcast, so I'm very proud of
her. I actually was just visiting town, and I actually saw her for the
first time in 3 years last night. And I tend to like The Daily
because it's short, and I enjoy getting a
little, hopefully, nonpartisan catch up in news that I
probably should be aware of. I've just looked at their app.
I don't know if I'll use it. Maddie was talking to me about it and
and was very complimentary of it. So they've, as you know, they've created an audio
app. I tend to use, as I just mentioned, Spotify a lot.
Someone in the Maryland Podcasting Association, Rob Dallas, does
a show called Pocket Sized Pep Talks. Now you're not gonna
like any all episodes from any one podcaster. Right, Mathew?
But he does something that I appreciate as someone who listens to a great many
podcasts. He often does short format. So to
answer your question right now, because I'm consuming so much,
I occasionally really like a Podcasting who does something that's
under 15 minutes long. I really appreciate it. And I
think sounds profitable generally fits that length. So I would
I would also answer sounds profitable because I that's a daily.
It's often less than 15 minutes long, not always.
And, occasionally, I'll be listening to it and say, wait a
minute, and go back. There was one before Christmas, and I had to listen to
it three times because I was like, he really hit the nail on the head
for me on that one. So I'm interested in industry
news, but I'm also interested in storytelling. My friend
Steven Hart is a voice on What's Poppin' Penny, which is like the electric
company or Sesame Street Podcasting for kids, and I think it's
absolutely delightful. You just get transported
into this sweet young girl's fantasy world and, you
know, still like fantasy and science fiction and, getting
away from the daily grind. So I try to listen to a lot of formats.
I'd recommend, if if anyone out there is listening to have young kids, to check
out What's Poppin' Passy. I like The Daily, and I and for industry
folks, I really do think Sounds Profitable is a must listen.
Stupendous listening. I'll definitely check out that, one for the kids, see if they're interested.
We've we've tried a couple of podcasts with them, and it's give or take. You
know? When you have twins, it's, trying to find something they both like is really
tough. Well, we Well, we both understand that.
We have had the joy and pleasure of chatting with Charlie Birney. He is
the co-founder and CLO. That's chief listening officer at Podville
Media. You can find them at podvillemedia.com and the author of Tao
of Podcasting. We'll have a link to that so you can pick it up and
check it out. Charlie, it has been a pleasure as always. Thanks for joining us.
Thank you, Mathew. It's been a pleasure to see you again.
Co-Founder, CLO (Chief Listening Officer)
Co-founder & CLO at Podville Media | Podcast Advisor, Author & Illustrator | Championing Creative Storytelling and Media Innovation | Pecha Kucha Speaker | Enthusiast of Folk Music