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New data from the Infinite Dial shows podcasting's growth. Sponsored by RedCircle. Podcast hosts: part storyteller, part therapist, part unpaid intern. We can fix the last part. See how. https://podnews.net/cc/2905 Visit https://podnews.net/update/podcasts-iduk-25 for the story links in full, and to get our daily newsletter.
Now we get to know how the UK compares to other countries. Sponsored by RedCircle. Podcast-curious? Get your free podcast advertising campaign plan. https://podnews.net/cc/2890 Visit https://podnews.net/update/infinite-dial-uk-25-plans for the story links in full, and to get our daily newsletter.
With this year's Infinite Dial report from Edison Research now in the wild, and co-presented at Podcast Movement Evolutions in Chicago, it's the perfect time to have one of the presenters, James Cridland, on the show to dive into the findings.From online audio listening preferences to the opportunities for creators and brands, James walks us through some of the nuances of the report. James also dives into the Podnews Report Card 2025, where podcasters and creators get to share their feedback directly with the teams behind podcast apps and platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube and more. Join regular co-host Danny Brown and James in this very enlightening episode!Guest co-host this episode: James Cridland James Cridland is Editor of Podnews, the daily podcast newsletter. He is a radio futurologist - a writer, consultant and public speaker on radio's future. James has worked in audio since 1989 as an award-winning copywriter, radio presenter, and internet strategist. One of the organisers of Next Radio, the UK radio ideas conference, James has worked with the world's largest radio conference, Radiodays Europe, since its inception. He's also part of the programming team for Radiodays Asia and Podcast Day 24. James's Website @JamesCridland on X Links to interesting things from this episodeThe Infinite Dial 2025 - Edison ResearchPodcasting 2.0 with Dave Jones and Adam CurryPocket Casts - listen to podcasts with the best free podcasting app. Built by listeners, for listeners.iHeartMedia purchased podcast plays to game their download numbers and the IAB says it's ok!? John Spurlock talks OP3.dev and how it could help filter this bad practice.Adam Curry - curryirc.com (@adamcurry) / XJames Cridland | James Cridland - radio futurologistThe Podnews Report Card 2025 ResultsIn & Around Podcasting is a podcast industry podcast brought to you by Mark Asquith and Danny Brown.If you enjoy the show, we'd love for you to leave us a rating or review on your favourite podcast app! You can also drop us a tip at https://www.inandaroundpodcasting.com/support, too!If you're an independent creator who would like to co-host with us, please let us know via Twitter and we'll get you booked!Please tell your friends that the show is available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube, plus wherever else they may listen to their podcasts.If you'd like your podcast trailer featuring in our "Wave File" segment, submit it via this quick contact form, please.The podcast is also available at
The SuperFriends dissect Edison Research's 2025 Infinite Dial, The Amplii Media and Coleman Insights' State of Video Podcasting study, and Jacobs Media's Tech Survey, revealing key insights into podcast consumption trends. The group explores the rising popularity of video podcasts, the dominance of platforms like YouTube and Spotify, and the evolving media landscape. Discover how Gen Z consumes content, why metadata matters, and the challenges podcasters face when transitioning to video. With candid discussions about social media, podcast discovery, and the intersection of radio and podcasting, this episode offers a comprehensive look at the current state of podcasting. Whether you're a content creator or podcast enthusiast, this conversation provides valuable insights into the medium's future. Get The Survey's at each of the company's website, linked above. A full transcription of the episode is available on our website. Check out more from the Superfriends below: Johnny - Straight Up Podcasts David - Boston Podcast Network Jon - JAG In Detroit Podcasts Catherine - Branch Out Programs Matt- The Soundoff Podcast Network Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The intricacies of full time podcasting, discussing workflows, preparation, and the tools necessary for producing quality content, the reality of daily podcasting, the importance of research, plus tools and systems to get the work done! Then, analyzing insights from the Infinite Dial study 2025, highlighting trends in content consumption, the evolving landscape of podcasting, the importance of understanding audience preferences and adapting to the changing media environment ---- all with special guest Robb Dunewood! Audience feedback drives the show. We'd love for you to contact us and keep the conversation going! Email thefeed@libsyn.com, call 412-573-1934 or leave us a message on Speakpipe! We'd love to hear from you!
The intricacies of full time podcasting, discussing workflows, preparation, and the tools necessary for producing quality content, the reality of daily podcasting, the importance of research, plus tools and systems to get the work done! Then, analyzing insights from the Infinite Dial study 2025, highlighting trends in content consumption, the evolving landscape of podcasting, the importance of understanding audience preferences and adapting to the changing media environment ---- all with special guest Robb Dunewood! Audience feedback drives the show. We'd love for you to contact us and keep the conversation going! Email thefeed@libsyn.com, call 412-573-1934 or leave us a message on Speakpipe! We'd love to hear from you!
Send a question for 'Ask Megan'Hey, Podcasters! Podcasting has officially crossed into the mainstream! For the first time ever, more Americans listen to podcasts monthly than those who don't.In the latest episode of Buzzcast, the team dives into the latest Infinite Dial findings and what they mean for podcasters today. Listen wherever you get your podcasts.Learn and GrowBuzsprout Live: Magic Mastering Going live on April 17th and 2pm EST.Podcasting Made Simple LiveAsk Megan"What's the difference between 'downloads in the first 7 days' and total downloads?"Downloads in the first 7 days show how many downloads your episode had within the first week after it was published.Total downloads include every download that episode has ever gotten, whether it was the day it launched or two years later.Have a question for Megan? Send a text!That's all for this week! Thanks for listening & keep podcasting!
Edison Research Vice President Megan Lazovic joins us to unpack key findings from the Infinite Dial 2025 report and explore the growing phenomenon of podcast fandom.Send James & Sam a messageSupport the showConnect With Us: Email: weekly@podnews.net Fediverse: @james@bne.social and @samsethi@podcastindex.social Support us: www.buzzsprout.com/1538779/support Get Podnews: podnews.net
Send us a textPodcasting has officially gone mainstream according to Edison Research's Infinite Dial, with 55% of Americans now consuming podcasts monthly. Does this mean we never have to explain what a podcast is again? Let's hope!Mentioned in this episode: Rory McIlroy's club switch during tournamentBuzzsprout Hang Out at Podcast Movement EvolutionsNetflix exploring video podcasts as potential content on their platform Bulksprout: New bulk upload tool released for Buzzsprout usersKeith Morrison's storytelling techniques and how to apply them to podcasting2025 Infinite Dial ReportBuzzcast 121: Spotify's New Podcast Strategy Sound-Off: Have you ever had an embarrassing foot-in-mouth experience? Support the showContact Buzzcast Send us a text message Tweet us at @buzzcastpodcast, @albanbrooke, @kfinn, and @JordanPods Thanks for listening and Keep Podcasting!
In this episode of the New Media Show, hosts Todd Cochrane and Rob Greenlee discuss key insights from the 2025 Infinite Dial report and delve into HLS (HTTP Live Streaming) video streaming. The episode begins with Todd and Rob introducing the program, noting the late afternoon timing, and discussing the recent activity within the podcasting … Continue reading The Infinite Dial Insights & HLS Streaming Explained → The post The Infinite Dial Insights & HLS Streaming Explained appeared first on New Media Show.
We speak with Matt Medeiros on Podcasting 3.0, and how to fix Podcasting 2.0. Plus, the Infinite Dial 2025, and more podcast industry news.Send James & Sam a messageSupport the showConnect With Us: Email: weekly@podnews.net Fediverse: @james@bne.social and @samsethi@podcastindex.social Support us: www.buzzsprout.com/1538779/support Get Podnews: podnews.net
It's a big news day in the podcasting world! In today's episode, we're breaking down the latest headlines, including:[03:36] Who's topping the podcast charts? – Apple & Spotify's latest #1 shows[10:42] Podcasting events & industry meetups – Upcoming networking and learning opportunities[14:12] Gen Z's podcast preferences – Do younger audiences really prefer video, or is audio still king?[18:46] Edison Research's Infinite Dial 2025 – What to expect from the latest podcast industry report[20:07] Zoom's PodTrak P2 Recorder – A new USB mic recorder with built-in noise reduction[20:42] Spotify removes Andrew Tate's episodes – Why they took action and what this means for podcasters[25:50] Edison's new download metrics – A better way to track podcast analytics[26:37] Google's latest AI updates – How Gemini and NotebookLM can help podcasters[42:56] Using NotebookLM for podcasting – How AI can summarize transcripts and even generate podcast episodesLinks & Resources: The Podcasting Morning Chat: www.podpage.com/pmcJoin The Empowered Podcasting Facebook Group:www.facebook.com/groups/empoweredpodcastingZoom PodTrack P2: https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1877794-REG/zoom_zp2_podtrack_p2_dual_usb.html Community member, Dan Woerhide's new podcast: https://podcast.unbreakablemission.com/ Community member, Jeff Dwoskin's CustomGPT Show Notes Writer: https://chatgpt.com/g/g-rtKKdmp5m-podcast-show-notes-and-social-coach
This time we welcome Larry Rosin, President of Edison Research and a pioneer in media and consumer insights. With over three decades of experience, Larry has shaped the audio industry's understanding of audience behavior through groundbreaking studies like The Infinite Dial and Share of Ear. These reports spotlight the rapid changes reshaping radio, podcasting, streaming, and digital audio.As colleagues and peers see their positions eliminated in the face of industry upheaval, the time to innovate is now. Fortunately, Larry brings us a POTENTIALLY OPTIMISTIC message: 53% of Americans aged 13-34 still listen to radio daily, proving its enduring relevance—but ONLY if the industry evolves. As layoffs and shrinking budgets threaten stations nationwide, radio is at a pivotal moment. Larry stresses that adapting to today's digital realities isn't optional—it's survival.Drawing on Edison's findings Larry outlines the urgent steps radio must take to remain competitive. He explains why the industry must fully embrace digital platforms, prioritize seamless user experiences, and focus on live, local content that audiences can't find elsewhere. From optimizing over-the-air and streaming integration to addressing ad loads that drive listeners away, Larry offers a practical roadmap for success.He also highlights podcasting as a major growth opportunity and stresses the importance of adapting to the evolving mediascape, where smartphones and on-demand options dominate. For radio to thrive, leaders must recognize the shift and act decisively. This episode isn't just informative—it's a call to action. Radio has the tools to succeed, but survival hinges on understanding and implementing the key strategies Larry shares.Learn where radio stands, what it must do to adapt, and how to secure its future in a fast-changing world.***This Time We'll Learn:[02:01] Why Larry says ‘dipping a toe' into digital is no longer enough for radio's survival…or YOURS! [05:15] How the explosion of smartphones and new platforms has transformed audio consumption forever. [09:00] Why compelling content—not just convenience—is critical for radio's dominance in the car. [14:00] How research proves LIVE and LOCAL radio can seize more than just breaking news opportunities to stay relevant. [16:26] Why radio's unmatched reach makes it a cornerstone of ad-supported audio. One Minute Martinizing Dave Martin explores WHAT's NEXT?Please help us thank these BRANDWIDTH ON DEMAND supporters:Musicmaster RadioContentProThrowback Nation RadioGet the
What could doing less look like for your podcast? Life is chaos these days. The hours often seem to fill up instantly with all the things on your plate, so don't feel bad if publishing podcast episodes start to slide to the bottom of your to-do list. Stumbling on the podcasting flow is totally normal—and totally fixable. The good news is that you can cut back on your workload and still release an impactful, exciting show. Curbing the number of hours you spend prepping, recording, editing, publishing, and promoting doesn't have to result in lower-quality episodes. By circling back to your original goals and finding ways to trim, rearrange, and even cut tasks that don't serve you, a process emerges that keeps you excited to create but not bogged down for hours and hours you just don't have. Yes, you have the potential to balance more rest and a meaningful show: How to check in on your definition of success Why you're getting better with every show, even if you didn't notice How to go out with heart if you decide to take a break Links worth mentioning from the episode: Episode 84, “Simplify Your Workflow to Keep Your Podcasting Passion Alive with Craig Constantine” - https://www.organizedsound.ca/simplify-your-workflow-to-keep-your-podcasting-passion-alive-with-craig-constantine-episode-84/ Episode 86, “Warm Up to a Healthier, More Confident Voice with Nic Redman” - https://www.organizedsound.ca/warm-up-to-a-healthier-more-confident-voice-with-nic-redman-episode-86/ Edison Research, Infinite Dial 2024 - https://www.edisonresearch.com/the-infinite-dial-2024/ Edison Research, Infinite Dial 2023 - https://www.edisonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/The-Infinite-Dial-2023.pdf Connect with Mary! Leave a voicemail with your feedback at https://www.speakpipe.com/VisibleVoice or email visiblevoicepodcast@gmail.com Get the full transcript of the episode at http://www.visiblevoicepodcast.com Read up on more secrets with the Visible Voice Insights Newsletter https://www.organizedsound.ca/newsletter To learn more or work with Mary, check out https://www.organizedsound.ca Link up on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/marychan-organizedsound/ Engage on Instagram @OrganizedSoundProductions https://www.instagram.com/organizedsoundproductions Show Credits: Podcast audio design, engineering, and edited by Mary Chan of Organized Sound Productions Podcast cover art by Emily Johnston of Artio Design Co. Show notes written by Shannon Kirk of Right Words Studio Post-production support by Kristalee Forre of Forre You VA [MUSIC IN - GHOSTHOOD FEATURING SARA AZRIEL “LET'S GO” BEGINS] MARY: What's possible if you can do less on your podcast, but still achieve your goals. This very specific moment in time. We're looking at the very end of 2024. We're in early November. As I record this, I feel like the collective Western world is at a standstill, kind of waiting in the wings, in limbo to see what's going to drop next. Whether that is interest rates for housing, local or federal elections, cost of living, like grocery prices rising. And you know, there's still like the day to day stuff like managing your work and your podcast is part of that. So there's a lot happening in your world, and podcasting might not be at the top of your list of to do's. I know. And you know what? I'm here to say that it's okay if that's what you're thinking. Like, I got other things to do than to work on my podcast right now. And yeah, it's okay. And this is coming from someone who makes a living editing, managing and strategizing other people's podcasts. Podcasts is mainly what I do. So that's a scary thought for me that if I'm telling people to podcast less, is that going to be less for me as well? How do I survive that? But once you take a step back, less is more. As they say, doing less at this time in history can reap many benefits in the future. During your podcasting journey, just like any other parts of your life, it's always good to take a step back. Ask yourself, is there anything I can optimize or do less of, while still enjoying making my show? So let's get into how you can reassess your podcast, so you can still have fun creating a show that you love and have the work of making a podcast that meets your capacity. This is episode 87 on the Podcaster's Guide to a Visible Voice. > [MUSIC ENDS]
In this episode of the School of Podcasting (episode 949), we get some great insights from media research expert Tom Webster. With a focus on optimizing podcast content and strategy, Tom and Dave explore common pitfalls that podcasters face, particularly the importance of engaging content from the outset. They discuss practical tips on improving podcast narrative and editing, handling advertiser concerns, and leveraging audience feedback to refine your podcast. Whether you're a seasoned podcaster or just starting, this episode provides valuable lessons on creating captivating content that resonates with listeners and satisfies advertisers. Don't miss the unique strategies and actionable advice that could transform your podcast into a must-listen show.About Tom WebsterTom Webster is a partner at Sounds Profitable, dedicated to setting the course for the future of audio. He has thirty years of experience in streaming, podcasting, audiobooks, terrestrial radio, and everything else that we stick in our earballs. In his previous work, with Edison Research, Webster was the co-author of the annual Infinite Dial® study, the longest-running study of consumer media habits since 1998, as well as the Share of Ear® and Edison Podcast Metrics studies. With Sounds Profitable, his body of work includes dozens of the most influential reports in podcasting, and he is one of the most widely cited audio researchers in the world.Got Feedback On This Episode?I'd love to hear what you thought about this episode. If you have a minute or two, it's less than five questions and works great on your phone or computer. Share Your ThoughtsMentioned In This EpisodeJoin the School of Podcasting CommunityProfit From Your Podcast BookPower of Podcasting NetworkDave's YouTube ChannelDave's Podcasting NewsletterBuy Dave a CoffeePut Dave In Your PocketWhere Will Dave Be?Question of the MonthThe Audience Is Listening: A Little Guide to Building a Big Podcast BookTom's Webster's Website for the BookSounds ProfitablePodcast Guru AppPodpage (website builder for Podcasters)Listen NotesChartable
Welcome to Start the Week, our Monday scene-setter for the week ahead. In today's audio-led edition: Should Nine's journos have gone on strike?;The AI content snake threatens to eat itself; and a chance to hear the Infinite Dial launch.If you've been thinking about upgrading to an Unmade membership, this is the perfect time. Your membership includes:* Member-only pricing for our HumAIn and REmade (October 1) conferences;* A complimentary invitation to Unmade's Compass event (November);* Member-only content and our paywalled archives;* Your own copy of Media Unmade.Are Nine's journos right to strike?Nine's big Olympics fortnight in Paris has been overshadowed by its journalists going on strike. Several regular columns are missing from today's papers. But should they even be striking?Plus, we examine the latest developments in AI, including the launch of OpenAI's own search offering, Google's attempt to position Gemini as a blog writer, and Mutinex cofounder Henry Innis's (bad) idea for resurrecting the axed Pedestrian brands.And as bonus content we also share a replay of this month's Infinite Dial webinar.Further reading:* Unmade: Torch relays, both good and bad* The Australian: Nine's strikers misread the room, and their audience* The Guardian: Nine journalists do their block over Scott Cam's Paris Olympics appearance amid strike* 7news: Nine CEO refuses to answer questions as newspaper reporters strike over pay as Olympics starts* The Australian: Fair's fare – big tech must pay for the news it uses* LinkedIn / Henry Innis: Someone could start a very profitable local business using the remains of the Pedestrian licences* OpenAI: SearchGPT Prototype* CRA: The Infinite Dial 2024 Today's episode features Tim Burrowes, Abe Udy and Cat McGinnEditing was courtesy of Abe's Audio, the people to talk to about voiceovers, sound design and podcast production.Time to leave you to start your week. We'll be back with more tomorrow.Toodlepip…Tim BurrowesPublisher - Unmadetim@unmade.media This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.unmade.media/subscribe
Recent headlines have been quick to proclaim the demise of podcasting, citing layoffs at major platforms like Spotify and Public Radio. Yet, amidst the tumult, there lies a different narrative – one of resilience and growth. Contrary to naysayers, podcasting is not dying; it's evolving, adapting, and flourishing in unexpected ways. In this post, we'll explore why podcasting remains a vibrant medium, despite challenges, and discuss strategies for monetization and success.THE RESILIENCE OF INDEPENDENT PODCASTSWhile it's true that some major players in the podcasting industry have faced setbacks, independent podcasts have continued to thrive. These grassroots creators epitomize the essence of podcasting – a platform where anyone with a microphone and a story can find an audience. Unlike traditional media, where gatekeepers control access, podcasting offers a level playing field for creators of all backgrounds and interests.Independent podcasts often have loyal and engaged audiences, built through authenticity, niche content, and community engagement. Unlike corporate giants, these creators are nimble, able to pivot quickly in response to audience feedback, and can produce content with little to no budget. Moreover, they're not beholden to shareholders or advertisers, allowing them to maintain creative control and pursue their passions without compromise.PODCAST LISTENING IS UPAccording to the Infinite Dial 2024 report by Edison Research, the podcast landscape is witnessing significant shifts, with nearly 100 million Americans engaging with podcasts weekly. Despite concerns over a decline in downloads due to alterations in Apple iOS 17, indicating a drop in figures for major podcasts like This American Life, Edison's survey-based findings present a more nuanced perspective. Contrary to download metrics, Edison's data reveals a positive trend, with 47 percent of Americans aged 12 and above tuning into podcasts monthly, marking a five-point increase from the previous year, the largest jump since 2019. Moreover, weekly listeners have increased from 31 to 34 percent, estimating around 98 million individuals. By relying on survey data rather than raw downloads, Edison's report offers insight into the evolving podcast landscape, underscoring its integration into mainstream media consumption habits. Additionally, the report touches on various other trends such as social media usage, smart speaker ownership, and audiobook consumption, providing a comprehensive view of the evolving media landscape.MONETIZATION STRATEGIES FOR PODCASTERSFor those looking to monetize their podcasts, there are numerous avenues to explore:Advertising and Sponsorships: While recent layoffs at major platforms might suggest a slowdown in advertising revenue, independent podcasters are still attracting sponsors. By cultivating a dedicated audience and producing high-quality content, podcasters can command competitive advertising rates or secure sponsorship deals with brands aligned with their niche.Crowdfunding and Patronage: Platforms like Patreon have empowered podcasters to monetize directly from their audience. By offering exclusive content, merchandise, or behind-the-scenes access, creators can incentivize listeners to support them financially. This model not only provides a steady stream of income but also fosters a deeper connection with fans.Merchandise Sales: From t-shirts to mugs to stickers, merchandise sales offer another revenue stream for podcasters. By leveraging their brand and creating unique, appealing products, creators can turn their listeners into loyal customers while generating supplementary income.Live Events and Ticket Sales:...
WHAT WOULD A TIK TOK BAN MEAN FOR PODCASTING?Well, like most things in life, it's all about knowing your audience. OK, I'm not going to get into all the international politics about TikTok, and their Chinese-owned parent company, Byte Dance. But as you may have heard, President Biden, depending on when you consume this podcast, is expected to sign a bill requiring Byte Dance to sell off their ownership in the company, or have the app banned in the US. In 2023 and 2024, the big discussion around podcasts has been about video. And while I'll spare you the audio only or video for FULL podcasts discussion today, short video clips can be a great way to market your show to new audiences. I can think of two shows, New Heights with the Kelce brothers, and Games with Names, with Julian Edelman, that I've seen hilarious short clips from, and it's resulted in me checking out the full podcast.Now the jury is still out on what the conversion rate is between short term video clicks to podcast downloads, but the more places you can market your show, the better.According to my favorite annual survey, Edison Research's Infinite Dial, Tik Tok is now the #3 social media brand among Americans age 12 and up, trailing only Facebook and Instagram.91% of this total population is aware of it, and 35% use it. (Some of that actually comes from Twitter and X being a dumpster fire lately. Thanks Elon!)Now as you might expect, Tik Tok usage DOES skew younger. While 13 % of everyone age 12+ say it's their MOST used social media app, that number jumps to 23% among age 12-34. And it falls to single digits age 35 and up. So back to my original question. WHO is your audience? Who is your podcast talking to? If it's a younger demo, a Tik Tok ban could affect your discoverability. And you're going to have to keep tabs on WHERE your audience Is going, and be where they are. If your audience skews older, keep banging the Facebook and Twitter drum. If your audience is more in the professional space, don't forget about LinkedIn too. Fish where the fish are.As always, if you have any questions about podcasts or the industry, you can always find me at JAGinDetroit.com.Lata! Find jag on social media @JAGinDetroit or online at JAGinDetroit.com
No more Google Podcasts? George Carlin's estate reaches settlement after AI Podcast, marketing your episodes with Apple Podcasts and the new transcripts feature! Two soapboxes
No more Google Podcasts? George Carlin's estate reaches settlement after AI Podcast, marketing your episodes with Apple Podcasts and the new transcripts feature! Two soapboxes
NOTE: Some of this audio is a little sketchy because it was recorded using some Bluetooth mics on site at Podcast Movement Evolutions 2024. Probably worth an upgrade...As the podcasting industry descended on Los Angeles for Podcast Movement Evolutions, the talk centred around YouTube, podcast downloads in mobile games and the annual geek out over data thanks to The Infinite Dial and The Podnews Report Card.But what was Podcast Movement Evolutions 2024 like, really? Let's review...TakeawaysPodcast Movement Evolutions is a valuable event for both industry professionals and creators.There is a need to clearly differentiate between industry-focused and creator-focused content at podcasting events.Networking at the parties is a crucial aspect of podcasting events and can lead to valuable connections and opportunities.Podcast Movement is a must-attend event for podcasters looking to expand their knowledge and network with industry leaders.The 'Stupid Stuff in Podcasting' segment provides insights into the challenges and annoyances faced by podcasters in the industry.Chapters00:00 Sing along intro00:25 Podcast Movement Evolutions 2024 Review31:35 The Wave File32:10 LIVE Stupid Stuff in Podcasting with Industry Leaders52:07 Conclusion and Thank You to ListenersLinks to interesting things from this episodeEvolutions by Podcast Movement 2025Podcast Movement 2024 | Podcast Conference | August in Washington, D.C.Podcaster & Podcast Industry Conference - Podcast Movement Evolutions | Los Angeles 2024In & Around Podcasting is a podcast industry podcast brought to you by Mark Asquith and Danny Brown.If you're an independent creator who would like to co-host with us, please let us know via Twitter (https://twitter.com/inaroundpodcast) and we'll get you booked!Please tell your friends that the show is available on Spotify (https://inandaroundpodcasting.com/spotify), (https://inandaroundpodcasting.com/apple) and YouTube (https://inandaroundpodcasting.com/youtube), plus wherever else they may listen to their podcasts.The podcast is also available at https://www.inandaroundpodcasting.com.Mentioned in this episode:The #1 Place for Podcasting News - Podnews NewsletterPodnews is our #1 place for podcasting news and is trusted by tens-of-thousands of indie creators, industry experts and curious creators every single day. Every week, James Cridland and Sam Sethi recap the week's podcasting news from the daily newsletter into an easily digestible weekly review. It's free and we highly recommend that you subscribe!PodnewsThis podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: OP3 - https://op3.dev/privacy
Começa agora o POD NOTÍCIAS, a sua dose semanal de informação sobre o mercado de podcasts no Brasil e no mundo! Falando de Serra Negra eu sou Leo Lopes, hoje é segunda-feira, dia 8 de abril de 2024 e esta é a nossa décima edição! Sabia que você pode anunciar com a gente aqui no Pod Notícias? Se você tem uma marca, produto ou serviço e quer atingir um público qualificado que se interessa pelo podcast aqui no Brasil, o nosso público é o seu público. Manda um e-mail pra gente no contato@podnoticias.com.br, que a gente vai ter o maior prazer em conversar com você. Além disso, se você quiser colaborar com a gente, mandar texto, mandar pauta, também é muito bem-vindo, e pode fazer isso também pelo mesmo e-mail, que vai estar na descrição do episódio. 1 - Abrindo as notícias desse programa, vamos falar da nossa manchete de hoje. De acordo com a empresa Edison Research, lá nos Estados Unidos já existem mais de 100 milhões de ouvintes semanais de podcast. A gente pincelou essa informação no episódio da semana passada, quando a gente falou que os podcasts já tem mais adesão do que a Netflix, mas hoje vamos trazer mais dados sobre como esse número impacta o cenário do podcast. Primeiramente, o podcast não é mais considerado uma "mídia alternativa" nos Estados Unidos. Com esses números, por lá, nós já seríamos uma mídia mainstream, um veículo que caiu no gosto de todo mundo. O hábito de ouvir podcasts no carro, principalmente num país cheio de carros tipo os Estados Unidos, também está em alta - e isso ameaça as rádios AM/FM, que sempre dominaram os trajetos dos americanos. A pesquisa também indicou aumento da familiaridade do público geral com podcasts, além da fidelidade dos ouvintes ao formato, com 47% deles ouvindo todo mês. Outro ponto importante levantado no relatório, foi a diminuição da diferença de gênero no consumo de podcasts, com um aumento no número de ouvintes mulheres. A faixa etária dos ouvintes também está cada vez mais equilibrada. Ouvintes mais velhos são cada vez mais comuns - e talvez até passem o número de ouvintes jovens daqui a alguns anos. Link 2 - Ainda de acordo com o Infinite Dial da Edison Research, o número mais expressivo de ouvintes de podcast ainda está na faixa dos 18 aos 34 anos. De toda essa faixa etária, cerca de 60% é ouvinte leal de podcasts. Aliás, nesse grupo etário, o engajamento com anúncios de áudio é bem maior do que com anúncios feitos em streaming de músicas ou na TV. Mas, apesar dos números indicarem que o podcast é uma das melhores mídias pra colocar uma propaganda, os investimentos publicitários em podcasts ainda são baixos e representam só 1% do total de gastos com publicidade nos Estados Unidos. De acordo com vários especialistas de marketing, a sugestão é que as marcas reavaliem suas estratégias e dêem mais destaque aos podcasts, especialmente considerando o público feminino - já que cada vez mais mulheres tem acompanhado podcasts, e o poder de compra feminino tende a ser maior do que os homens para produtos. Uma recomendação específica que foi dada, é que as empresas adotem a "solução 5% de Semsky", que consiste em colocar 5% do orçamento de mídia digital em podcasts, seguindo uma abordagem parecida com a que foi utilizada no início da TV a cabo pelo especialista Arnie Semsky. Talvez agora que o podcast é considerado uma mídia convencional pros americanos, os anunciantes comecem a investir mais no áudio. Tomara que sim. Link 3 - E chegamos ao dia em que o Google Podcasts foi oficialmente encerrado. Na terça-feira passada, dia 2, a plataforma foi descontinuada na América do Norte, com previsão de ser retirada do ar em até um mês. Com o fim iminente do Google Podcasts, a empresa já estava fazendo campanhas havia vários meses pros usuários migrarem pro YouTube Music, que agora tem um novo visual na seção de comentários. No novo formato, a aba de comentários do YouTube Music “empurra” o reprodutor para cima, exibindo os comentários dos usuários como se fosse uma gaveta de aplicativos, e o reprodutor encolhe no topo da tela pra virar um “mini player” que exibe o nome da música e do artista. De acordo com o Google, outro recurso que está sendo testado é a otimização de comentários na parte dos podcasts. Esse novo design já foi liberado apenas para smartphones e não deve aparecer em tablets. Link AINDA EM NOTÍCIAS DA SEMANA: 4 - No dia 1º de abril, a empresa Accu Radio anunciou o lançamento de uma nova interface revolucionária chamada AccuGesture, com a qual os usuários poderiam controlar a experiência de streaming de música por meio de gestos humanos, sem precisar usar a tela sensível ao toque, o mouse ou mesmo a voz. De acordo com o comunicado de imprensa, o sistema AccuGesture utiliza câmeras web e de smartphones para permitir que os ouvintes personalizem suas preferências apenas com movimentos. Alguns dos controles de movimento incluem se inscrever em um canal fazendo um simples sinal de "ok" para a câmera, ajustar o volume colocando os dedos nos ouvidos, classificar músicas desenhando estrelas no ar e banir músicas ou artistas com gestos específicos - que aqui é melhor a gente não comentar, mas talvez você imagine do que a gente tá falando... A AccuRadio é uma plataforma de rádio online que desde o ano 2000 se destaca pela sua personalização, a variedade de conteúdos e a curadoria humana. E, sendo uma empresa que já é conhecida por ter esse approach humano, é claro que o anúncio era uma pegadinha de primeiro de abril. Só que o press release foi tão bem bolado, que muitos veículos de notícias acabaram noticiando como se fosse verdade - inclusive o Pod News, um dos maiores hubs de informação sobre podcast do mundo. De acordo com o texto, a interface AccuGesture estava em período de testes e logo seria disponibilizada para outras plataformas. Quem sabe no dia 1º de abril do ano que vem esses testes se concluam. Link 5 - E esse ano os podcasts estão tendo um crescimento bem significativo, talvez o maior desde 2022, o que levou alguns estudiosos da área a especular os motivos. Alguns dos fatores chave desse crescimento incluem os avanços tecnológicos recentes, as mudanças nas preferências do consumidor e a evolução da mídia de áudio em geral - incluindo streamings de música e um novo fortalecimento do rádio. Os podcasts, especialmente, estão impactando positivamente várias indústrias, como a do entretenimento, a da educação e também o marketing. Isso sem contar que os podcasters estão sempre buscando novas estratégias de monetização, o que movimenta novas pontas da economia. As últimas previsões sobre o futuro do podcast indicam aumento contínuo do número de ouvintes nos próximos anos, e também aumento no valor de mercado da nossa mídia. Nada mais justo. Link E MAIS: 6 - O Realm Podcast Fellowship, sediado em Austin, Texas, anunciou uma nova parceria com o Festival de Cinema de Austin para patrocinar a Competição de Podcasts de Ficção de 2024. A premiação está em busca de séries de áudio nos gêneros de terror, suspense, romance ou drama voltadas para os públicos millennial e Geração Z. Os vencedores vão receber um prêmio em dinheiro de 1.000 dólares e um reembolso de viagem de 500 dólares para participar do Austin Film Festival em outubro de 2024, além de também ganharem reuniões com executivos do Realm pra receberem feedbacks sobre os seus roteiros. Mas por que esses feedbacks seriam relevantes pros criadores de conteúdo? Porque a Realm é uma empresa líder na indústria de séries de áudio monetizáveis. Alguns dos títulos deles são as séries "Harley Quinn & The Joker", "The Flash: Escape the Midnight Circus" e "Outliers", grandes sucessos de público. Link 7 - E se você sentiu falta de um momento "é mole?" no episódio passado, já pode ficar feliz, porque hoje tem. Usuários do Twitter estão postando álbuns inteiros de K-pop como "podcast" no Spotify, e por conta das leis locais da Coréia do Sul, o Spotify não pode retirar os episódios do ar. Só que não é pra qualquer álbum que isso funciona e eu vou explicar por quê. A questão toda começou com o grupo TVXQ (ou tê-vê-xis-quê), que desde 2009 têm travado várias batalhas legais contra a sua agência, a SM Entertainment. O grupo alegou que a empresa tomou créditos por composições que eram dos membros do grupo, fizeram o grupo assinar a renovação de contrato sem saber do que se tratava e mais um monte de coisa, os processos foram uma bagunça. Alguns deles ainda estão acontecendo nesse momento, e é aí que entra o Spotify. O processo judicial da vez é sobre a quem pertencem os royalties dos últimos álbuns do grupo, se é pro TVXQ ou pra agência. Até que a questão legal seja resolvida, as músicas desses álbuns foram retiradas do Spotify e não podem ser adicionadas ao perfil do TVXQ. No entanto, enquanto o processo acontece, a justiça coreana entende que as músicas não pertencem a ninguém. Com essa brecha, os fãs do grupo colocaram os álbuns na plataforma como episódios de podcast. Nesse caso, mesmo que a SM Entertainment ou o grupo entrem com o pedido pra retirar os episódios do ar, ele vai ser negado já que a música não é, legalmente, de ninguém. Já dizia o ditado: "cachorro que tem dois donos morre de fome". Link HOJE NO GIRO SOBRE PESSOAS QUE FAZEM A MÍDIA: 8 - O podcast Não Inviabilize está testando uma assinatura premium que vai oferecer histórias em dobro para os assinantes regulares do programa. Atualmente, a assinatura regular custa R$15 por mês e dá acesso a um acervo com mais de 200 histórias exclusivas, e além disso, os assinantes podem ouvir as histórias novas antes de serem lançadas nas plataformas gratuitas. Se der tudo certo com o teste da nova assinatura premium, ela vai ficar disponível aos ouvintes a partir de maio. Link 9 - E na semana passada, o Alexandre Maron - sócio fundador da Ampere - postou no seu LinkedIn um agradecimento emocionado pelo lançamento do podcast Ditadura Recontada, feito numa parceria da CBN com a Globoplay. Com seis episódios no total, o podcast apresenta áudios inéditos de Elio Gaspari, autor da coleção Ditadura. Inspirado nos cinco volumes da coleção e em mais de 300 horas de gravações do Elio, o podcast narra os bastidores e eventos do período militar no Brasil, desde a intervenção de 1964 até a abertura democrática. O Alexandre agradeceu a equipe envolvida no projeto e mencionou com muito carinho a dedicação e esforço de cada pessoa que contribuiu para o sucesso do podcast. O Ditadura Recontada é apresentado por Nadedja Calado e pela pesquisadora Helena Dias, e cada episódio fala sobre personagens, situações e fatos fundamentais para compreender os anos sombrios da ditadura na história brasileira. Os primeiros episódios já estão disponíveis em todas as principais plataformas de podcast. Link 10 - E a Central3 apresentou o podcast Itinerâncias, o primeiro projeto selecionado na campanha Mais Vozes. Pra quem não tá lembrado, a Mais Vozes foi uma campanha afirmativa focada em apoiar podcasters, jornalistas e produtores independentes que fossem mulheres cis, pessoas trans, não-brancas, PCDs e outras minorias marginalizadas. Os projetos selecionados receberam prêmios como recurso financeiro, equipamentos de gravação e vinhetas originais. O podcast Itinerâncias é uma produção que conta histórias de mulheres de cinco cidades brasileiras: Manaus, Belém, São Luís, Teresina e Fortaleza. As histórias dessas mulheres foram conhecidas durante uma itinerância realizada pelo Instituto Rebbu, levando o projeto "Não À Pobreza Menstrual" para diversas comunidades - daí o nome do podcast. O Itinerâncias vai ser lançado em breve na grade de programas da Central 3. Link SOBRE LANÇAMENTOS: 11 - Na semana passada foi ao ar o Podcast Aisholpan: O Poder da Inspiração (na língua original), um programa educacional idealizado pelo parlamento do Cazaquistão para adolescentes do sexo feminino, com apoio da União Europeia. O podcast tem o objetivo de capacitar e empoderar as adolescentes, promover liderança feminina, construir conexões geracionais e defender valores como humanismo, tolerância e proximidade com o meio ambiente. Apresentado pela modelo e jornalista Aruzhan Khafiz, o podcast vai ser um bate-papo com convidados especiais, incluindo embaixadoras da União Européia no Cazaquistão e líderes de programas de subsídios na Europa. Os episódios vão ser lançados com poucos dias de intervalo. Link 12 - Também na semana passada foi ao ar o Confraria do Charuto, o podcast oficial da Cigar Sommelier Academy, apresentado por mim e pelo criador da CSA, o chef e sommelier Gabriel Lourenço. O podcast é produzido pela Rádiofobia Podcast Network, e lá a gente vai falar sobre tudo que orbita o mundo do charuto. O episódio de estreia foi lançado na última quarta-feira, 3 de abril, e, modéstia à parte, como todo bom podcast, já está disponível em todas as principais plataformas de áudio. Se você, assim como eu, é um entusiasta - ou apenas um curioso - sobre o mundo do charuto, não deixa de conferir. Link 13 - E na quinta-feira, dia 4 de abril, também foi lançado o podcast Fita Amarela: Bastidores do Crime, trazendo detalhes chocantes do Caso do Posto Querência. O Fita Amarela é um podcast de true crime, e o primeiro episódio trouxe o caso de Cleudison Bernardi, um adolescente desaparecido que foi vítima de um crime brutal em 1996. O programa é apresentado pelo jornalista Jota Júnior, que é quem vai explorar casos policiais marcantes da região de Maringá em sua primeira temporada de cinco episódios, lançados todas as quintas-feiras. Link RECOMENDAÇÃO NACIONAL: 14 - E por falar em true crime, a recomendação nacional dessa semana vai ser pra não um, mas pra dez podcasts. O portal Olhar Digital fez na última semana uma lista com os programas que eles consideram os 10 melhores podcasts brasileiros sobre Crimes Reais. O tema têm sido muito popular aqui no Brasil e no mundo, desperta o interesse do público por motivos diversos, então aqui vai o top10 do Olhar Digital sobre podcasts brasileiros de true crime: Linha Direta Modus Operandi Quinta Misteriosa Arquivo Mistério 1001 Crimes Fábrica de Crimes Colecionador de Ossos Café com Crime Assassinos em Série e Casos Reais. ...É sangue que não acaba mais aqui na nossa pauta. Os links para todos os podcasts mencionados estão disponíveis na matéria completa do Olhar Digital, que você encontra na nossa página do LinkedIn, e na descrição desse episódio, como sempre. Link E assim a gente fecha esta décima edição do Pod Notícias. Acesse podnoticias.com.br para ter acesso à transcrição e os links das fontes de todas as notícias deste episódio! Essa semana a gente vai dar um descansinho pra nossa Caixinha de Perguntas do Instagram, mas a gente volta semana que vem com a nossa interação! Acompanhe o Pod Notícias diariamente:- Page do Linkedin- Instagram- Canal público do Telegram Ouça o Pod Notícias nos principais agregadores:- Spotify- Apple Podcasts- Deezer- Amazon Music- PocketCasts O Pod Notícias é uma produção original da Rádiofobia Podcast e Multimídia e publicado pela Rádiofobia Podcast Network, e conta com as colaborações de:- Camila Nogueira - arte- Eduardo Sierra - edição- Lana Távora - pesquisa, pauta e redação final- Leo Lopes - direção geral e apresentação- Thiago Miro - pesquisa Publicidade:Entre em contato e saiba como anunciar sua marca, produto ou serviço no Pod Notícias.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
OK, fine, I podfaded. Other client projects took priority, and it's been awhile. But today was the perfect day to bring back The JAG Show.Google Podcasts, as of April 3rd, is no longer available to listen to shows on. Users are going to have to go elsewhere. If you want to take your subscriptions with you, you can TRY. Here's Google's how-to. https://support.google.com/youtubemusic/thread/249139848/migrate-your-podcast-shows-from-google-podcasts-us-only-%F0%9F%87%BA%F0%9F%87%B8?hl=enMeanwhile, Apple Podcasts has unveiled auto-transcriptions, beginning with iOS version 17.4. I found the transcriptions to be pretty good, except that there are no timestamps or speaker labels. I found it very difficult to upload my own transcript, and my podcast host (Simplecast) advised me to just use Apple's automatic transcript for now. Apple did not give podcast hosts an early heads up about this, and they are playing catchup.Speaking of Podcast Hosts, Spotify for Podcasters (formerly Anchor) is the decisive leader for episodes published in March, 2024. I'll tell you why I'm very lerry of using Spotify as a host, though.Finally, Edison Research's Infinite Dial survey is out. This is THE benchmark survey for podcast listening every year. I'll go through some key takewaways on podcasting being at an all time high, its growth among women, and its potential to steal ad dollars from television.As always, reach out with any questions. jag@jagindetroit.com
This is the 1,000th episode of Business Essentials Daily! So we stop, and discuss with Nick Schildberger, Managing Director of SoundCartel, why we started the podcast, how we navigated the pandemic, and reaffirm our focus on providing SMEs the information they need to grow their business, during the rollercoaster economy of the last four years. Nick also takes a look at podcasting as a medium and its impact on business over time. References: We'd really appreciate you rating and reviewing this podcast at the link below, or wherever you are listening now:https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/business-essentials-daily/id1511116318 Listen to the ‘Great Australian Detour Kids' Cast':https://soundcartel.com.au/work/subarus-great-australian-detour-kids-cast/ Listen to ‘The Churchill Collective' podcast:https://soundcartel.com.au/work/the-churchill-collective/ Listen to ‘Podcasting Essentials'https://soundcartel.com.au/podcast/ Australian podcasting statistics from Edison Research's The Infinite Dial 2023 Australia:https://www.edisonresearch.com/the-infinite-dial-2023-australia-from-edison-research/ Business Essentials Daily is produced by: SoundCartelsoundcartel.com.au+61 3 9882 8333See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week on the 500th episode of the On Brand podcast, I talk to audio research veteran Tom Webster. He shared his state of the podcasting industry, audience research insights, and the various touchpoints in the podcast brand experience. He even told a story about Tom Jones! Don't miss this very special episode of Blossom. Er, I mean — a very special episode of On Brand. And, thank YOU for listening. About Tom Webster Tom Webster is a partner at Sounds Profitable, the leading voice of significance for the digital audio industry, devoted to growing the podcast sector through audio insights, education, and connections. As a 25-year audio research veteran, he is a trusted advisor to the biggest companies in audio and has dedicated his career to the advancement of podcasting for networks and individuals alike. Tom has been a co-author and driver behind some of audio's most influential studies, including the Infinite Dial® series, Share of Ear®, and The Podcast Landscape. Additionally, he has led hundreds of audience research projects on six continents, for some of the most listened-to podcasts and syndicated radio shows in the world, from Howard Stern to All Things Considered. He's done a card trick for Paula Abdul, shared a martini with Tom Jones, and sold vinyl to Christopher Walken. With Tom's partnership at its helm, Sounds Profitable is dedicated to setting the course for the future of the audio industry. From the Show What audience research questions should you be asking? Is it the same audience or are they changing? Where are they today? Where does your show fit into their life? Why do they listen to your show? How you can learn more about your listeners. Here's a helpful article Tom wrote at Sounds Profitable on learning more about your listeners. Speaking of listeners ... Listener shoutout! I referenced On Brand listener Mark Gamis. Thanks for listening, Mark! What brand has made Tom smile recently? “I'm going to share a local favorite — Ministry of Supply.” Tom loves their wrinkle-free stage-ready clothes and the entire brand experience. Connect with Tom on LinkedIn and the Sounds Profitable website. As We Wrap … Listen and subscribe at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon/Audible, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeart, YouTube, and RSS. Rate and review the show—If you like what you're hearing, be sure to head over to Apple Podcasts and click the 5-star button to rate the show. And, if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review to help others find the show. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you'd like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. On Brand is a part of the Marketing Podcast Network. Until next week, I'll see you on the Internet! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Lo que está cambiando el podcasting y el marketing digital:-Un anuncio del Super Bowl equivale a 300 millones de anuncios de pódcast leídos por los anfitriones.-Spotify for Podcasters integra las funciones de grabación y edición de Riverside.-¿Qué son los pódcast de escucha cero y por qué son una herramienta poderosa para las empresas?-Edison Research presentará The Infinite Dial en vivo en Podcast Movement Evolutions.-Informe revela que Brasil está entre los principales países del mundo que más consumen pódcast.Pódcast recomendadoSexo, amor y parejas. Cada capítulo presenta conversaciones honestas, abiertas y explícitas sobre el amor, las relaciones de pareja y el placer sexual.Si te gustó esta "newsletter" ¡Suscríbete!Patrocinado por Rss.com (compañía de alojamiento de pódcast).
In Podnews today: Spotify for Podcasters goes Riverside. Visit https://podnews.net/update/infinite-dial-2024-la for the story links in full, and to get our daily newsletter.
The podcast industry is BOOMING right now, and maybe you've contemplated jumping on the bandwagon. Tune in to hear 3 reasons why sooner is better than later, and 2024 is YOUR time to start a podcast!Convinced? Join the waitlist for the January session of Podcast Startup Academy: www.ThePodcastTeacher.com/waitlist You'll get first dibs on the limited spots in this highly supportive 6-week group program, and receive a special offer!Mentioned in this episode:The Infinite Dial, Edison ResearchLAUNCH GIVEAWAY DETAILSI'm giving away FIVE $50 (USD) Amazon Gift Cards and a FULL Scholarship to Podcast Startup Academy ($997 value)! To enter for your chance to win:-Listen & follow the show-Review and/or rate on your favorite listening platform; take a screenshot of your review before submitting-Tell someone else about the podcast; take a screenshot of your post/shareOnce completed, head to https://forms.gle/9GEAtA81JbpyZzNm9 to let me know.All entries must be received by December 15th, 2023, and are subject to the giveaway terms and conditions. This episode was produced by me, The Podcast Teacher! Contact me at Hello@ThePodcastTeacher.com.
Are you a podcaster looking to better understand your listeners and maximize your podcast downloads? Look no further! Join us as we hear from Larry Rosin of Edison Research about the importance of choosing like-minded business partners and conducting listener surveys. Larry shares valuable insights on using download data effectively to reach more listeners and receive accurate insights into demographics, topics, and more. Plus, he cautions against certain pitfalls of podcasting research - all with the goal of helping podcasters succeed! Don't miss out on this must-listen episode for anyone involved with podcasting - listen now! About Our Guest Larry Rosin is President of Edison Research, which he co-founded in 1994. Since then, he has been a primary force in building the company into one of the world's most respected survey research companies, with a particular specialization in media and election polling. Edison is best known as the company that performs Exit Polls for all U.S. Elections for the National Election Pool. In addition, Edison is well known for its groundbreaking media research series “The Infinite Dial” which tracks developments in digital media, and “Share of Ear” which measures all audio usage in the U.S., among many other things. Rosin is a graduate of Princeton University where he majored in Public and International Affairs, and he received an MBA from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania. Connect with Larry Visit the Edison Research website: https://www.edisonresearch.com/ Edison Podcast Listener Survey: https://www.edisonresearch.com/edison-research-podcast-listener-survey/ Email: info@edisonresearch.com
(The below is AI generated)What if you could access exclusive insights on the latest podcasting developments, straight from the industry's experts? Join us this week as we sit down with Skye Pillsbury, creator of the Squeeze newsletter, to uncover the most recent news in the podcasting world, including Spotify's exciting new Ad Analytics platform and a closer look at WNYC's recent challenges.Together with Skye, we explore podcast monetization with a focus on Spotify's efforts in Asia, as well as the implications of YouTube's entry into podcasting and Apple's policy on value for value podcasting 2.0. Don't miss our discussion on recent industry news such as Triton's ad booking platform, Spotify's investment in Saudi Arabian gaming podcast PodCamp, and the forthcoming Infinite Dial 2023 Australia report.As if that's not enough, we also touch on the potential of AI and chatbots in podcasting and share exciting details about upcoming events like Podcast Movement, Pod News Live, the British Podcast Awards, and the Independent Podcast Awards. Plus, we can't help but chat about our vacation plans, working from home, and the joys of long-haul flights. Get ready for an engaging and informative episode you won't want to miss!Support the showConnect With Us: Email: weekly@podnews.net Twitter: @jamescridland / @podnews and @samsethi / @samtalkstech Lightning/NOSTR: ⚡james@crid.land and ⚡sam@getalby.com Mastodon: @james@crid.land and @samsethi@podcastindex.social Support us: www.buzzsprout.com/1538779/support Get Podnews: podnews.net NEW: Podnews Live Events: (Tickets on sale now!) Podnews Live (London) - 27/09 Podnews Live (Barcelona) - 25/09 Podnews Live (Mexico City) - Nov
J&E discuss Scandoval
Special Guest: Jordan Blair - Buzzcast Co-Host and Producer Show Notes: Anchor is now called Spotify for Podcasters. The new podcast hosting service includes automated ads (US-only, invite-only), and podcast subscriptions (in 34 markets). Spotify will allows any podcaster to use Q&A and polls - wherever they're hosted.Spotify also announced an expanded video podcasts lineup.Spotify revealed their latest interface, a vertically-scrolling way to discover new shows Spotify has also added Autoplay for Podcasts Spotify is also partnering with Patreon.Spotify Hi-fi, announced in February 2021, has still not been launchedPodcast host RSS.com is the first podcast host to have released fully free automatic transcripts for all its customers. The transcripts appear on episode pages on the RSS websitePodcast listening has hit record highs, according to The Infinite Dial® from Edison ResearchCaptivate just released a massive range of RSS enhancements, powered by Podcasting 2.0, for free to all Captivate Podcasters. A proposal has been made for the podcast namespace's author tag.Support the show Website: weekly.podnews.net Email: weekly@podnews.net Twitter: @jamescridland / @podnews and @samsethi / @samtalkstech Lightning/NOSTR: ⚡james@crid.land and ⚡sam@getalby.com Mastodon: @james@bne.social and @samsethi@podcastindex.social Support us: www.buzzsprout.com/1538779/support This podcast supports both transcripts and chapters, if your podcast app doesn't then grab a new app from podnews.net/newpodcastapps
Gavin: This is The Download from Sounds Profitable, the most important news from this week and why it matters to people in the business of podcasting. I'm Gavin Gaddis, in for Manuela Bedoya. Shreya: And I'm Shreya Sharma.Gavin: The Download is brought to you by Magellan AI. Track the trends in spend, ad load, podcasts on YouTube, and more with Magellan AI's advertising benchmark report for Q4, available now. You can find a link in the description or visit Magellan dot AI.Shreya: This week: Spotify Stream On Announces New Features, RSS.com and Spreaker make transcripts more accessible, Marketers adapt to serve niche communities, and The Infinite Dial turns 25. Let's get started. Spotify live stream Gavin: Yesterday Spotify hosted their annual Stream On live event from LA. Throughout the 90 minute presentation a series of guest speakers, ranging from Spotify executives to the Jonas Brothers, debuted new features from Spotify and the company's goals in the near future. Let's look at the ones relevant to podcasting:Starting yesterday the Anchor brand has been retired. The hosting service and other podcasting features will be brought under the name Spotify for Podcasters. In addition to the new coat of paint for Anchor, several features originally only available to podcasts hosted on Anchor have been made platform-agnostic. Chief among these features is the ability to upload video podcasts to Spotify, a particular pain point for video podcasters outside the Spotify umbrella. In addition to video uploads, users will have access to net-new features like Q&A posts and polls that will be visible on the podcast's page in Spotify. The Spotify for Podcasters dashboard will also feature more advanced analytics. As one slide of the presentation announced: “Spotify is open for business.” Speaking of business, during the segment focusing on the Spotify Audience Network, Chief Business Officer Alex Norstrom announced the newest publisher to join SPAN is none other than podcasting giant NPR.In the world of monetization, Spotify podcasters are getting a sizeable upgrade in the form of a Patreon partnership. Now podcast listeners will be able to listen to premium content hosted on Patreon from within Spotify itself. With this announcement, Spotify now has a direct answer to Apple's paid podcast subscription service.This year's Stream On was a promising one, with a healthy focus on the podcasting industry overall. This renewed focus on upgrading the platform, adding new features, and making older features more accessible to podcasters everywhere is a promising one. Spotify seems to be interested in growing with podcasting instead of growing independently. We love to see it. RSS.com and Spreaker make transcription freeShreya: To continue the trend of features that benefit everyone in podcasting we have two big transcription announcements. First: this Monday RSS.com announced all podcasts hosted on their platform will now have access to automated transcription. When generated, these transcripts will be posted automatically to the show's episode page on RSS.com, as well as pushed the show's RSS feed. This will allow the transcript to be displayed in podcast listening apps that support Podcasting 2.0 tags. According to this Monday's issue of Podnews, the list of apps that actively support transcripts through this method includes Podverse, Podbean, and Podcast Addict. At launch the automatic transcripts support thirteen languages: English, Spanish, Arabic, Catalan, Dutch, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese and Turkish. In the official press release, RSS.com co-founder Ben Richardson said there were several features the company considered essential to the tool for it to be ready, including multiple languages and ease of use for the podcaster. From the press release: “We encourage all types of podcast player apps to facilitate the use of captions and transcripts our podcasters can provide in order to open up even more of podcasting's potential.” And for the second part of this Monday transcription tale: the folks at Spreaker launched FreePodcastTranscription.com, a free tool available to anyone regardless of affiliation with Spreaker. The website touts a high level of privacy and security due to everything being run locally in the user's browser. From the site's copy: “We don't send the mp3 file to a server. All the processing happens on your device.” Since that processing is kept in-browser instead of farmed out to an expensive server network, the burden of effort and cost is shifted to the user, allowing a lightweight, free option for podcast transcription. Users pick from one of sixty language options, select the file needing transcription, and run the process. After some time, dictated by the power of the computer, a .SRT file is generated for download. The easier it is for podcasters to generate transcripts, the more pressure there will be for podcast apps to fully implement them. Not only does the popularization of transcription make podcasting more accessible to a wider audience, it increases the search engine optimization far beyond what can be written in a given episode title or description. More people can enjoy podcasts, and more people will be able to find them. A win-win scenario. Marketers adapt to serve niche communities as culture fragments. Gavin: This week an eighth-part article series on social fragmentation in the internet era kicked off on Digiday. The first piece, written by Kristina Monllos focuses on the death of the classic “water cooler moment.” From the article: “Today, we not only don't have a watercooler — as the return to the office hasn't been a return to pre-pandemic normal — but we have fewer mass cultural moments where everyone is paying attention to one thing. In recent years, the proliferation of content online has made the experience of the internet more individualized, according to agency execs, allowing people to focus on specific niches that they find interesting rather than tune into whatever they're supposed to like because everyone else says they should.” A natural reaction to this fragmentation is to focus down on appropriate niche groups and meet the individuals at their own individualized online experiences. Unfortunately this also comes with the task of convincing marketers to buy in, as they tend to want to stretch their budgets as wide as possible. Some of this convincing comes in the form of sobering conversations explaining that even the largest brands don't have the money to target every audience at once. Fragmentation has lead to more digital boots-on-the-ground marketing, such as Cristina Lawrence, EVP of consumer and content experience at Razorfish, aiding a CGP company in establishing a viral TikTok account. Primarily by being flexible and producing content quickly, the company could pursue moment-to-moment trends as they developed and meet users where they naturally were going.Much like when Apple Tracking Transparency turned the advertising world on its head, save for podcasting, our industry is uniquely positioned to serve targeted communities. Podcasts, by their very nature, create their own niche groups. If properly maintained and surveyed, a podcast community is the perfect place for niche targeting. Edison Research Publishes 25th Anniversary Edition of The Infinite Dial Shreya: For our final story of the week, why not end on some more good news? A flashy 25th anniversary edition of Edison Research's report The Infinite Dial dropped last Thursday. Here's some highlights from the 73 page document to take you into the weekend: Monthly podcast listening for the total US population 12 and up dipped last year, going from 41% in 2021 to 38% in 2022. Listenership has risen once more, with 2023 numbers sitting at 42% of the population, an estimated 120 million listeners. Weekly podcast listening took a similar dip in 2022, slipping from 28% of the population to 26%. This year it has climbed back up from the slump to 31%, or an estimated 89 million podcast listeners in the US alone. From the observations slide: “Data appears to reflect ‘post-pandemic': on pattern from previous years.” In essence, it appears the number fluctuations caused by the COVID-19 pandemic severely changing daily routines have calmed. Now the industry is back to the familiar, steady growth seen in previous years. Shreya: Finally, it's time for our semi-regular roundup of articles we're calling Quick Hits. These are articles that didn't quite make the cut for today's episode, but are still worth including in your weekend reading. This week: Advertisers can use their own first-party data to target podcast ad campaigns, but are they? By Alyssa Meyers. A piece interrogating how podcasting can implement first-party data in ad campaigns, as well as interrogating why certain companies prefer or avoid it. Spoiler alert: first-party, like programmatic and any other tool, has its uses and can work well when used appropriately. Not All Audio is Created Equal: Why Media Buyers Should Avoid Bundling Podcasts with Streaming in Programmatic Transactions by Acast. A brief article highlighting the potential downsides to bundling podcasts with digital or streaming inventory. Bad things happen when trying to fit the square peg of podcast ad measurement in the round hole of streaming measurement. Ambie Awards: ‘Chameleon: Wild Boys' Wins Podcast of the Year by J Clara Chan. The Podcast Academy's yearly awards ceremony, known as the Ambies, took place earlier this week and The Hollywood Reporter has coverage, including a list of the big winners. Spreaker is now free, a press release by Spreaker. Spreaker's existing free plan has new offerings with unlimited episode uploads, access to Spreaker's programmatic monetization, and customizable RSS feeds. For more on Spreaker's offerings, check out the Sounds Profitable DeepDive. Gavin: And that was The Download, brought to you by Sounds Profitable! Today's episode was built using Spooler and hosted on ART19. Find out more at Spooler.fm and Art19.comI know we went through today's stories fast, so be sure to check out the links to every article mentioned, right in your podcast listening app, or on SoundsProfitable.com/TheDownload. And thank you for sticking with us as we bring you the top stories you might have missed from the past week. I'm Gavin GaddisShreya : And I'm Shreya Sharma. Our producers are Bryan Barletta, Gavin Gaddis, and Tom Webster. Special thanks to Art19 for hosting The Download. And thanks to you for joining us.
Gavin: This is The Download from Sounds Profitable, the most important news from this week and why it matters to people in the business of podcasting. I'm Gavin Gaddis, in for Manuela Bedoya. Shreya: And I'm Shreya Sharma.Gavin: The Download is brought to you by Magellan AI. Track the trends in spend, ad load, podcasts on YouTube, and more with Magellan AI's advertising benchmark report for Q4, available now. You can find a link in the description or visit Magellan dot AI.Shreya: This week: Spotify Stream On Announces New Features, RSS.com and Spreaker make transcripts more accessible, Marketers adapt to serve niche communities, and The Infinite Dial turns 25. Let's get started. Spotify live stream Gavin: Yesterday Spotify hosted their annual Stream On live event from LA. Throughout the 90 minute presentation a series of guest speakers, ranging from Spotify executives to the Jonas Brothers, debuted new features from Spotify and the company's goals in the near future. Let's look at the ones relevant to podcasting:Starting yesterday the Anchor brand has been retired. The hosting service and other podcasting features will be brought under the name Spotify for Podcasters. In addition to the new coat of paint for Anchor, several features originally only available to podcasts hosted on Anchor have been made platform-agnostic. Chief among these features is the ability to upload video podcasts to Spotify, a particular pain point for video podcasters outside the Spotify umbrella. In addition to video uploads, users will have access to net-new features like Q&A posts and polls that will be visible on the podcast's page in Spotify. The Spotify for Podcasters dashboard will also feature more advanced analytics. As one slide of the presentation announced: “Spotify is open for business.” Speaking of business, during the segment focusing on the Spotify Audience Network, Chief Business Officer Alex Norstrom announced the newest publisher to join SPAN is none other than podcasting giant NPR.In the world of monetization, Spotify podcasters are getting a sizeable upgrade in the form of a Patreon partnership. Now podcast listeners will be able to listen to premium content hosted on Patreon from within Spotify itself. With this announcement, Spotify now has a direct answer to Apple's paid podcast subscription service.This year's Stream On was a promising one, with a healthy focus on the podcasting industry overall. This renewed focus on upgrading the platform, adding new features, and making older features more accessible to podcasters everywhere is a promising one. Spotify seems to be interested in growing with podcasting instead of growing independently. We love to see it. RSS.com and Spreaker make transcription freeShreya: To continue the trend of features that benefit everyone in podcasting we have two big transcription announcements. First: this Monday RSS.com announced all podcasts hosted on their platform will now have access to automated transcription. When generated, these transcripts will be posted automatically to the show's episode page on RSS.com, as well as pushed the show's RSS feed. This will allow the transcript to be displayed in podcast listening apps that support Podcasting 2.0 tags. According to this Monday's issue of Podnews, the list of apps that actively support transcripts through this method includes Podverse, Podbean, and Podcast Addict. At launch the automatic transcripts support thirteen languages: English, Spanish, Arabic, Catalan, Dutch, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese and Turkish. In the official press release, RSS.com co-founder Ben Richardson said there were several features the company considered essential to the tool for it to be ready, including multiple languages and ease of use for the podcaster. From the press release: “We encourage all types of podcast player apps to facilitate the use of captions and transcripts our podcasters can provide in order to open up even more of podcasting's potential.” And for the second part of this Monday transcription tale: the folks at Spreaker launched FreePodcastTranscription.com, a free tool available to anyone regardless of affiliation with Spreaker. The website touts a high level of privacy and security due to everything being run locally in the user's browser. From the site's copy: “We don't send the mp3 file to a server. All the processing happens on your device.” Since that processing is kept in-browser instead of farmed out to an expensive server network, the burden of effort and cost is shifted to the user, allowing a lightweight, free option for podcast transcription. Users pick from one of sixty language options, select the file needing transcription, and run the process. After some time, dictated by the power of the computer, a .SRT file is generated for download. The easier it is for podcasters to generate transcripts, the more pressure there will be for podcast apps to fully implement them. Not only does the popularization of transcription make podcasting more accessible to a wider audience, it increases the search engine optimization far beyond what can be written in a given episode title or description. More people can enjoy podcasts, and more people will be able to find them. A win-win scenario. Marketers adapt to serve niche communities as culture fragments. Gavin: This week an eighth-part article series on social fragmentation in the internet era kicked off on Digiday. The first piece, written by Kristina Monllos focuses on the death of the classic “water cooler moment.” From the article: “Today, we not only don't have a watercooler — as the return to the office hasn't been a return to pre-pandemic normal — but we have fewer mass cultural moments where everyone is paying attention to one thing. In recent years, the proliferation of content online has made the experience of the internet more individualized, according to agency execs, allowing people to focus on specific niches that they find interesting rather than tune into whatever they're supposed to like because everyone else says they should.” A natural reaction to this fragmentation is to focus down on appropriate niche groups and meet the individuals at their own individualized online experiences. Unfortunately this also comes with the task of convincing marketers to buy in, as they tend to want to stretch their budgets as wide as possible. Some of this convincing comes in the form of sobering conversations explaining that even the largest brands don't have the money to target every audience at once. Fragmentation has lead to more digital boots-on-the-ground marketing, such as Cristina Lawrence, EVP of consumer and content experience at Razorfish, aiding a CGP company in establishing a viral TikTok account. Primarily by being flexible and producing content quickly, the company could pursue moment-to-moment trends as they developed and meet users where they naturally were going.Much like when Apple Tracking Transparency turned the advertising world on its head, save for podcasting, our industry is uniquely positioned to serve targeted communities. Podcasts, by their very nature, create their own niche groups. If properly maintained and surveyed, a podcast community is the perfect place for niche targeting. Edison Research Publishes 25th Anniversary Edition of The Infinite Dial Shreya: For our final story of the week, why not end on some more good news? A flashy 25th anniversary edition of Edison Research's report The Infinite Dial dropped last Thursday. Here's some highlights from the 73 page document to take you into the weekend: Monthly podcast listening for the total US population 12 and up dipped last year, going from 41% in 2021 to 38% in 2022. Listenership has risen once more, with 2023 numbers sitting at 42% of the population, an estimated 120 million listeners. Weekly podcast listening took a similar dip in 2022, slipping from 28% of the population to 26%. This year it has climbed back up from the slump to 31%, or an estimated 89 million podcast listeners in the US alone. From the observations slide: “Data appears to reflect ‘post-pandemic': on pattern from previous years.” In essence, it appears the number fluctuations caused by the COVID-19 pandemic severely changing daily routines have calmed. Now the industry is back to the familiar, steady growth seen in previous years. Shreya: Finally, it's time for our semi-regular roundup of articles we're calling Quick Hits. These are articles that didn't quite make the cut for today's episode, but are still worth including in your weekend reading. This week: Advertisers can use their own first-party data to target podcast ad campaigns, but are they? By Alyssa Meyers. A piece interrogating how podcasting can implement first-party data in ad campaigns, as well as interrogating why certain companies prefer or avoid it. Spoiler alert: first-party, like programmatic and any other tool, has its uses and can work well when used appropriately. Not All Audio is Created Equal: Why Media Buyers Should Avoid Bundling Podcasts with Streaming in Programmatic Transactions by Acast. A brief article highlighting the potential downsides to bundling podcasts with digital or streaming inventory. Bad things happen when trying to fit the square peg of podcast ad measurement in the round hole of streaming measurement. Ambie Awards: ‘Chameleon: Wild Boys' Wins Podcast of the Year by J Clara Chan. The Podcast Academy's yearly awards ceremony, known as the Ambies, took place earlier this week and The Hollywood Reporter has coverage, including a list of the big winners. Spreaker is now free, a press release by Spreaker. Spreaker's existing free plan has new offerings with unlimited episode uploads, access to Spreaker's programmatic monetization, and customizable RSS feeds. For more on Spreaker's offerings, check out the Sounds Profitable DeepDive. Gavin: And that was The Download, brought to you by Sounds Profitable! Today's episode was built using Spooler and hosted on ART19. Find out more at Spooler.fm and Art19.comI know we went through today's stories fast, so be sure to check out the links to every article mentioned, right in your podcast listening app, or on SoundsProfitable.com/TheDownload. And thank you for sticking with us as we bring you the top stories you might have missed from the past week. I'm Gavin GaddisShreya : And I'm Shreya Sharma. Our producers are Bryan Barletta, Gavin Gaddis, and Tom Webster. Special thanks to Art19 for hosting The Download. And thanks to you for joining us.
I want to know more about you. Actually, I need to know more about you. The more I know about you, the better I can make this show. The better the show, the happier you are being a listener. Of course, in full transparency, the more I know about you, the audience, collectively, the better I can select sponsors or advertisers to bring to you. I don't want a podcast ad to turn you off, so knowing you better allows me to say within some degree of reason that an advertiser either is or isn't relevant for you to know. Either way, my focus on wanting to know more about you is to continually improve your experience. If I don't do that, I won't have listeners or advertisers. Fortunately for me, my friend Tom Webster shared some great insights about discovering more about your podcast audience this week on Sounds Profitable. That's the podcast from the company of the same name. Sounds Profitable is an industry think tank if you will for podcasting and podcasters. The Marketing Podcast Network which I run and on which Winfluence airs is a Sounds Profitable partner. Tom has deep experience as a consumer researcher. He spent nearly two decades at Edison Research and was the main engine behind its Infinite Dial research which is still the social and online media research report of record. I attend its unveiling each year and devour the stats as it informs all the strategies I develop for clients. Tom shared questions he would ask listeners of a podcast to get to know them better. I have borrowed those recommendations with some minor tweaks into a listener survey I'd like to direct you to. But I thought I'd choose this episode of the podcast to share those questions with you and give you time to think before you jump in and answer. If I can persuade you to jump over to the Winfluence survey after sharing the questions and why I am asking them with you on the show today, I will be very grateful for your participation in helping me make a better show for you. And even if you're not necessarily inclined to have a small take-home assignment and fill out a survey after listening to a podcast, please do listen to the full episode. It may give you a better understanding of what you like and dislike about podcasts and help you choose more satisfying ones in the future. I'm going to break down Winfluence, all of its elements, explain my intention and expectations for them, then ask you for feedback to make it all better. Fill out the listener survey at jasonfalls.com/survey. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Podnews today: Podcast numbers rebound, says the Infinite Dial from Edison Research Visit https://podnews.net/update/spreaker-is-now-free for all the podcasting news, and to get our daily newsletter.
Segunda-feira, 20 de fevereiro de 2023. Eu sou Leo Lopes e está no ar o terceiro episódio do Castnews, o podcast semanal de notícias para podcasters. Aqui você ouve, toda segunda-feira pela manhã mesmo no carnaval, um resumo das principais notícias sobre o mercado de podcast no Brasil e no mundo. Segurança da publicidade em podcasts, a volta do Trade Secrets e o lançamento do podcast original da ex-primeira-dama americana Michelle Obama. Essas e outras notícias você vai ouvir nesta edição semi carnavalesca do Castnews! Notícias 01 – É em clima de carnaval e festa que vamos começar essa edição com boas notícias: com a publicidade nos podcasts estando numa crescente desde 2018, uma pesquisa da Acast feita com a plataforma de dados Walr, mostrou nessa semana que o podcasts é a mídia mais segura para as marcas investirem em publicidade. O estudo fez apontamentos interessantes: 52% dos ouvintes, ou seja, mais da metade deles, afirmou que não se preocupa com a segurança de conteúdos apresentados em podcasts, porque a mídia é bem regulada com os ouvintes e o mercado – o que garante que o conteúdo que eles ouvem seja confiável e seguro. Essa relação de confiança entre apresentadores de podcast e ouvintes acontece de forma natural, já que a responsabilidade recai sobre os podcasters se o produto ou serviço anunciado não for bom. A mídia podcasting também foi a referência número 1 em brand safety, ou seja, a publicidade é quase sempre muito bem alinhada com o gênero e conteúdo dos podcasts. Pra você que produz podcasts e tem objetivo de fechar contratos de publicidade, pode ser uma boa hora para atualizar o seu mídia kit com essa informação. Ler a notícia completa 02 – Ainda dentro da grande discussão dessa semana: os termos “podcast” e “carnaval”, juntos, cresceram mais de 75% nas pesquisas do Google desde a terceira semana de janeiro. O pico da pesquisa foi em 5 de fevereiro, quando o crescimento foi de 82% segundo o Google Trends. Esses números são muito próximos dos dados recolhidos em 2022, quando também no meio de janeiro os podcasts temáticos de carnaval passaram a ser mais procurados, e continuaram sendo uma pesquisa popular até o meio de fevereiro daquele ano. Ler a notícia completa 03 – O podcast ‘E eu com isso?' do Instituto Brasil-Israel recebeu essa semana o autor e diretor Cao Hamburger para um bate-papo sobre o projeto Contar pra Viver, Viver pra contar. Os apresentadores Anita Efraim e João Torquato discutiram com Cao sobre empatia, intolerância, ódio e repressão – assuntos que foram explorados nos filmes dirigidos por Cao Hamburger, que colocaram frente a frente sobreviventes do holocausto com vítimas de outros tipos de opressões de ódio. Os encontros são emocionantes e deixam evidente uma verdade difícil de engolir; ainda existe muito ódio por aí, e por isso é tão importante que a gente continue falando sobre isso. O episódio do E eu com isso? pode ser conferido na íntegra em todos os agregadores de podcast. Ler a notícia completa AINDA EM NOTÍCIAS DA SEMANA 04 – O Grupo PodX de produção de podcasts, acaba de comprar seu primeiro estúdio de podcast nos países nórdicos, o Filt. O grupo já tinha comprado o estúdio francês de podcast Nouvelles Écoutes em 2022, e agora está trabalhando para se tornar a principal produtora de áudio e podcast nos países nórdicos. A Filt é uma empresa de podcast independente, líder de mercado com sede em Estocolmo na Suécia e suas produções têm alcance semanal de 1 milhão de ouvintes. Com certeza é uma aquisição que vem aí para agregar bastante valor ao Grupo PodX. Ler a notícia completa 05 – A YouGov Profile realizou uma pesquisa nos Estados Unidos para descobrir quais são as atividades favoritas dos ouvintes de podcast pra se realizar enquanto eles ouvem seus programas preferidos. Quase metade dos entrevistados assinalou a opção “atividades domésticas” como o melhor momento pra ouvir podcast. Lavar louça, tirar o lixo, passar um pano na casa… São nesses momentos que os ouvintes mais prestam atenção nos fones de ouvido ou na caixinha de som. A segunda atividade foi “em deslocamento”, seja indo ou voltando do trabalho, da escola ou da faculdade. Logo logo vamos realizar uma pesquisa assim aqui no Castnews, então assim que ela tiver início a gente avisa pra você aqui, na newsletter e no castnews.com.br. Ler a notícia completa 06 – E os podcasts estão se popularizando cada vez mais na África do Sul. Um estudo de 2022 da Infinite Dial, descobriu que a escuta online mensal cresceu para 61% entre os jovens, em comparação com os 39% de 2019. A previsão é que a audiência mensal de podcasts na África do Sul pode aumentar para 19 milhões até o ano que vem. Alguns relatórios colocam a audiência atual de podcasts por lá em cerca de 10% da população, cerca de seis milhões de pessoas. Vale lembrar também que os podcasts mais ouvidos na África do Sul não são produzidos por sul-africanos, então o mercado de podcasting tem ainda muito espaço pra crescer por lá. Ler a notícia completa E MAIS 07 – Na última semana foi publicado o último episódio de “Altamira”, a quinta temporada do podcast Projeto Humanos. No dia 16 de fevereiro, o podcast ganhou ainda um episódio bônus, trazendo a entrevista com a escritora e criminóloga Ilana Casoy. “Altamira” traz a história de vários garotos foram mortos na cidade de Altamira, interior do Pará entre os anos de 1989 e 1993. A quinta temporada do Projeto Humano estreou em abril de 2022, com episódios lançados semanalmente às quintas-feiras. Ler a notícia completa 08 – Daniel J Lewis, criador do The Audacity to Podcast, atualizou sua plataforma que rastreia o número de podcasts ativos no mundo. Nela, é possível ver o número total de podcasts ativos nos últimos 30 dias, considerando a publicação de pelo menos um episódio. Quase 4 milhões de podcasts foram publicados ao menos uma vez nos últimos 30 dias. Ler a notícia completa 09 – O podcast pioneiro Trade Secrets está de volta! Criado pelo Adam Curry, que é conhecido como o pai do podcasting, e o Dave Winer, programador responsável pela criação do RSS, que possibilitou a distribuição de mídia via FEED, o podcast foi publicado entre setembro de 2004 e janeiro de 2005, e a partir de hoje pode ser ouvido novamente graças à equipe do Podnews.net, que publicou os áudios originais em um novo FEED, otimizado para os agregadores atuais! Vale a pena conferir o trabalho do Adam e do Dave, nem que seja só pra prestar homenagem a essa mídia que nem existiria se não fosse por eles. Ler a notícia completa 10 – E temos uma nova colunista no portal do Castnews. A Aline Hack se juntou a nós e publicou seu primeiro artigo no site, comentando 6 questões jurídicas para se pensar antes de começar um podcast. Conteúdo indispensável aí pra quem não quer ser chamado no processinho. E como essa é a terceira menção à Aline em três episódios seguidos do Castnews, ela acaba de ganhar o direito de pedir uma música na próxima vez que a gente falar dela aqui! Ler a notícia completa SOBRE LANÇAMENTOS: 11 – A ex-primeira-dama dos EUA Michelle Obama vai publicar seu próprio podcast de entrevistas daqui a algumas semanas. Em cada episódio do ‘Michelle Obama: The Light Podcast', Michelle vai conversar com uma grande personalidade dos Estados Unidos, como por exemplo a Ellen DeGeneres, a Oprah Winfrey, o David Letterman e muito mais. Os tópicos abordados devem incluir construção de relacionamentos, questões ligadas à raça, gênero e visibilidade, e a importância de buscar “a iluminação, ou a clareza” – daí o nome do programa. O podcast deriva do livro ‘The Light We Carry‘, lançado em novembro de 2022, onde a ex-primeira-dama compartilhou práticas e estratégias poderosas para manter a esperança e o equilíbrio em um mundo tão incerto como o de hoje. O podcast estará disponível na Audible a partir de 7 de março e, duas semanas depois, nas outras plataformas. Ler a notícia completa RECOMENDAÇÕES NACIONAIS: 12 – E aqui a gente vai inaugurar um espaço novo, pra recomendar podcasts nacionais que tenham chamado atenção da nossa equipe, e que com certeza merecem a sua atenção também. No episódio de hoje vamos indicar o Plugcast, um programa que fala sobre muito mais do que cinema. O Plugcast usa a ótica do cinema como pano de fundo para discutir pautas polêmicas com criatividade e responsabilidade. Com apresentação de Águida, Daniel, Édson e Willian, o podcast já discutiu temas como a pirataria, a importância do cinema nacional, transfobia, dublagem… Vale muito a pena conferir o trabalho que eles têm feito até aqui. A distribuição do Plugcast é realizada principalmente no Spotify, mas ele também está disponível nas principais plataformas de podcast. Ler a notícia completa E essas foram as notícias desta terceira edição do Castnews! Você pode ler a íntegra de todas as notícias e assinar a newsletter semanal em castnews.com.br. Ajude o Castnews a crescer espalhando o link deste episódio em suas redes sociais e assinando o feed do podcast para receber em primeira mão os episódios assim que forem publicados. Você pode colaborar com o Castnews mandando seu feedback e sugestões de pauta para o email podcast@castnews.com.br. Siga também o @castnewsbr no Instagram e no Twitter e entre no canal público do Castnews no Telegram para receber notícias diariamente. O Castnews é uma iniciativa conjunta do Bicho de Goiaba Podcasts e da Rádiofobia Podcast e Multimídia. Participaram da produção deste episódio Bruna Yamasaki, Izabella Nicolau, Lana Távora, Leo Lopes, Renato Bontempo e Thiago Miro. Obrigado pelo seu download e pela sua audiência, aproveite o carnaval com responsabilidade e até semana que vem!
Lo que está cambiando el podcasting y el marketing digital:-Spotify guarda silencio sobre la última controversia de Joe Rogan.-CBC está buscando terminar sus transmisiones tradicionales a favor de una estrategia exclusivamente digital.-Revelan que la gran mayoría de estadounidenses escuchan pódcast.-Hindenburg anuncia un evento para presentar la versión 2.0 de su popular editor Hindenburg PRO.-Edison compartió la fecha de publicación de su encuesta anual “The Infinite Dial 2023”.Pódcast recomendadoAbecedario del bienestar. Un programa de entrevistas en el que diversos expertos abordan los temas de mayor interés para la vida de una persona, como la alimentación, cuidados físicos, psicología y sexualidad. Su objetivo es brindarles a los oyentes todo tipo de consejos para que aprendan a vivir mejor.Patrocinado por Rss.com (compañía de alojamiento de pódcast)https://dashboard.rss.com/es/auth/sign-up/
Manuela: This is The Download from Sounds Profitable, the most important news from this week and why it matters to people in the business of podcasting. I'm Manuela Bedoya. Shreya: And I'm Shreya Sharma.This week: Podcasting a ‘bright spot' at SXM Media, Amplifi Media CEO counters ‘jarring headlines,' new Black Podcast Listener Report from SXM and Mindshare, and the state of Google in podcasting.Let's get started.Podcasting remains ‘a bright spot' at SXM MediaManuela: ‘Tis the season of quarterly earnings calls. It seems like we get a batch of these every three months! SiriusXM has published their Q4 and full-year results for 2022. Overall the company saw a 4% year over year increase in revenue, hitting 9 billion dollars. The company shouted out its agreements with, as the official copy puts it, “podcast powerhouses” like Crooked Media, Freakonomics, and a 24/7 original comedy channel captained by Conan O'Brien's Team Coco. Podcasting is on the mind at SXM. CEO Jennifer Witz spoke highly of the company's podcasting arm during the call. To quote from the transcript: “In a challenging ad market, podcasts continue to be a growth opportunity for us. This past quarter, we expanded our podcast offerings while doubling down on the shows that have proven most successful with five of the top 20 shows in Edison Research's top 50 podcast rankings, the most of any network.” Witz went on to say podcasting was a bright spot for the industry overall and SXM in particular, driving their 34% increase in off-platform business in 2022. We've said it before and will say it again: it's a good day to hear good news in podcasting. Podcasting is doing fine; thank youShreya: Last week an opinion piece from Amplifi Media CEO Steve Goldstein was published on RainNews, built to assuage fears over recent doom-and-gloom media coverage. A quote from Goldstein's opening: “If you are reading the headlines about podcasting, you might be a little nervous. There has been a lot of confusing and contradictory chatter about what the drop in new podcasts in 2022 means. Has the podcast bubble burst? Are podcasts on the way out? Not likely.”The piece puts to bed the air of uncertainty as recent reports show a decrease in active podcasts. Goldstein points to the marked increase in podcast production at the beginning of the pandemic, along with air fryer sales, used car sales, and views for cooking videos on YouTube. Now the Field of Dreams era of podcasting is over. Companies can no longer invest with the philosophy of “if you build it, they will come.” Which leads to Goldstein's conclusion. Quote: “Just like all media, the podcast space is dynamic, exciting and rapidly evolving. It's full of possibility and wonder. We just need a little more rigor and a little less throwing spaghetti against the wall. The next generation of podcasts will likely have greater research, focus and muscle behind them. Companies that produce and promote fewer high-quality podcasts will be better positioned for optimal growth. So, let's get past the jarring headlines.“SXM Media and Mindshare publish Black Podcast Listener Report 2.0Manuela: SXM Media is back with the second edition of their Black Podcast Listener Report. The study is the result of over 2,500 online interviews with Black and/or African American adults in the United States during September of last year. According to SXM's footnotes, the data was weighted for age, sex, census region of the US, and the Edison's Infinite Dial 2022 podcasting listening statistics. Among the findings are some promising results for advertisers. From the SXM blog post: “The best way to win over Black podcast listeners is to run ads on shows that represent their voice, culture, and point of view. Black audiences who have listened to a podcast with a Black host in the last month are more likely to take action than those who've never listened to a podcast hosted by Black talent.”82% of respondents would consider a brand if they heard their ad on a podcast with a Black host, as well as 78% saying they would purchase said brand. The recap article ends by encouraging brands who set aside ad budget to target Black audiences during February for Black History month to continue that spend throughout the year. From the article: “Like so much of the population, Black audiences are listening to podcasts—and, as you've learned, they're leaned-in and here for ads that support the shows they love.” The State of Google and PodcastingShreya: Continuing the trend of earnings calls, let's talk Google. It was a mixed bag in this year's Q4 earnings report. Parent company Alphabet reported a 0.7 billion increase year over year in total revenue for Q4 2022. According to Insider Intelligence writer Daniel Konstantinovic, this 1% increase falls short of the anticipated revenue by nearly half a billion dollars. James Hercher, writing for AdExchanger, breaks down the more Google-relevant numbers: “YouTube advertising was down from $8.6 billion to $7.9 billion, while the Google Display Network decreased by almost $1 billion YoY. Net income (which is to say, profit) dropped even more steeply, from $20.6 billion in Q4 2021 to $13.6 billion.” Alongside the earnings, there has been discussion of Google and YouTube's investment into podcasting as the search engine giant retools podcast searching. Since 2018 Google has displayed individual podcast episodes and a play button whenever searching for a specific podcast. As of mid-January the feature was removed. James Cridland's coverage in Podnews at the time also noted the Google Podcasts app had not received any feature updates in eighteen months.Now even the carousel of Google Podcast links in searches for podcasts is going away, but will be replaced with a new feature called What to Podcast. In a YouTube Short by Transistor Podcasting, the new feature appears to add a new section to the top of search results that shows podcasts relating to the search term. While not as easy as a play button and episode list, it does serve as a funnel to direct foot traffic into podcast apps. Meanwhile, earlier this month, YouTube launched ad monetization for YouTube Shorts. Previously, the program had operated on a TikTok-esque fund divvied between creators who met certain engagement goals. Now any account with over 1,000 subscribers and 10 million Shorts views in the previous 90 days can earn ad revenue at a split of 45% to them and 55% to Google. Digiday's Krystal Scanlon notes this is not as attractive a revenue split as similar programs at Facebook and TikTok, but the YouTube Shorts equivalent has a lower barrier to entry for newer accounts. In this week's earnings call, Google Chief Business Officer Philipp Schindler spoke on CTV, YouTube being at the top of Nielsen's measurement of US streaming watch time, and content integration. Tuesday's issue of Ben Thompson's Stratechery points out it's clear YouTube is dreaming of becoming a media streaming aggregate with the implementation of Primetime Channels on top of existing offerings like YouTube Music and NFL Sunday Ticket. From Stratechery: “The idealized future is one where YouTube is the front-door of all video period, whether that be streaming, linear, or user-generated.” With all their investments in YouTube and gentle downgrade of podcast presentation in the search engine, it feels like Google is becoming gently insistent podcasting's round peg will be expected to conform to the square hole of their media platform. Podcasting likely isn't going to come to YouTube as we know it, podcasters are simply incentivized to become YouTubers.Shreya: Finally, it's time for our semi-regular roundup of articles we're calling Quick Hits. These are articles that didn't quite make the cut for today's episode, but are still worth including in your weekend reading. This week: Media Briefing: The case for and against monthly and annual subscriptions in the battle for retention by Kayleigh Barber for Digiday. An excellent breakdown of the current debate between annual vs. monthly subscriptions, how they affect churn, and detailed pros and cons for both options. Edison Research's Weekly Insight: Of all people aged 13-34 in the US, one third listen to podcasts every day. Manuela: And that was The Download, brought to you by Sounds Profitable! Today's episode was built using Spooler and hosted on Triton Digital's Omny Studio. Find out more at Spooler.fm and Art19.comI know we went through today's stories fast, so be sure to check out the links to every article mentioned, right in your podcast listening app, or on SoundsProfitable.com/TheDownload. And thank you for sticking with us as we bring you the top stories you might have missed from the past week. I'm Manuela Bedoya.Shreya : And I'm Shreya Sharma. Our producers are Bryan Barletta, Gavin Gaddis, and Tom Webster. Our editors are Reece Carman and Ron Tendick. Special thanks to Art19 for hosting The Download. And thanks to you for joining us.
Manuela: This is The Download from Sounds Profitable, the most important news from this week and why it matters to people in the business of podcasting. I'm Manuela Bedoya. Shreya: And I'm Shreya Sharma.This week: Podcasting a ‘bright spot' at SXM Media, Amplifi Media CEO counters ‘jarring headlines,' new Black Podcast Listener Report from SXM and Mindshare, and the state of Google in podcasting.Let's get started.Podcasting remains ‘a bright spot' at SXM MediaManuela: ‘Tis the season of quarterly earnings calls. It seems like we get a batch of these every three months! SiriusXM has published their Q4 and full-year results for 2022. Overall the company saw a 4% year over year increase in revenue, hitting 9 billion dollars. The company shouted out its agreements with, as the official copy puts it, “podcast powerhouses” like Crooked Media, Freakonomics, and a 24/7 original comedy channel captained by Conan O'Brien's Team Coco. Podcasting is on the mind at SXM. CEO Jennifer Witz spoke highly of the company's podcasting arm during the call. To quote from the transcript: “In a challenging ad market, podcasts continue to be a growth opportunity for us. This past quarter, we expanded our podcast offerings while doubling down on the shows that have proven most successful with five of the top 20 shows in Edison Research's top 50 podcast rankings, the most of any network.” Witz went on to say podcasting was a bright spot for the industry overall and SXM in particular, driving their 34% increase in off-platform business in 2022. We've said it before and will say it again: it's a good day to hear good news in podcasting. Podcasting is doing fine; thank youShreya: Last week an opinion piece from Amplifi Media CEO Steve Goldstein was published on RainNews, built to assuage fears over recent doom-and-gloom media coverage. A quote from Goldstein's opening: “If you are reading the headlines about podcasting, you might be a little nervous. There has been a lot of confusing and contradictory chatter about what the drop in new podcasts in 2022 means. Has the podcast bubble burst? Are podcasts on the way out? Not likely.”The piece puts to bed the air of uncertainty as recent reports show a decrease in active podcasts. Goldstein points to the marked increase in podcast production at the beginning of the pandemic, along with air fryer sales, used car sales, and views for cooking videos on YouTube. Now the Field of Dreams era of podcasting is over. Companies can no longer invest with the philosophy of “if you build it, they will come.” Which leads to Goldstein's conclusion. Quote: “Just like all media, the podcast space is dynamic, exciting and rapidly evolving. It's full of possibility and wonder. We just need a little more rigor and a little less throwing spaghetti against the wall. The next generation of podcasts will likely have greater research, focus and muscle behind them. Companies that produce and promote fewer high-quality podcasts will be better positioned for optimal growth. So, let's get past the jarring headlines.“SXM Media and Mindshare publish Black Podcast Listener Report 2.0Manuela: SXM Media is back with the second edition of their Black Podcast Listener Report. The study is the result of over 2,500 online interviews with Black and/or African American adults in the United States during September of last year. According to SXM's footnotes, the data was weighted for age, sex, census region of the US, and the Edison's Infinite Dial 2022 podcasting listening statistics. Among the findings are some promising results for advertisers. From the SXM blog post: “The best way to win over Black podcast listeners is to run ads on shows that represent their voice, culture, and point of view. Black audiences who have listened to a podcast with a Black host in the last month are more likely to take action than those who've never listened to a podcast hosted by Black talent.”82% of respondents would consider a brand if they heard their ad on a podcast with a Black host, as well as 78% saying they would purchase said brand. The recap article ends by encouraging brands who set aside ad budget to target Black audiences during February for Black History month to continue that spend throughout the year. From the article: “Like so much of the population, Black audiences are listening to podcasts—and, as you've learned, they're leaned-in and here for ads that support the shows they love.” The State of Google and PodcastingShreya: Continuing the trend of earnings calls, let's talk Google. It was a mixed bag in this year's Q4 earnings report. Parent company Alphabet reported a 0.7 billion increase year over year in total revenue for Q4 2022. According to Insider Intelligence writer Daniel Konstantinovic, this 1% increase falls short of the anticipated revenue by nearly half a billion dollars. James Hercher, writing for AdExchanger, breaks down the more Google-relevant numbers: “YouTube advertising was down from $8.6 billion to $7.9 billion, while the Google Display Network decreased by almost $1 billion YoY. Net income (which is to say, profit) dropped even more steeply, from $20.6 billion in Q4 2021 to $13.6 billion.” Alongside the earnings, there has been discussion of Google and YouTube's investment into podcasting as the search engine giant retools podcast searching. Since 2018 Google has displayed individual podcast episodes and a play button whenever searching for a specific podcast. As of mid-January the feature was removed. James Cridland's coverage in Podnews at the time also noted the Google Podcasts app had not received any feature updates in eighteen months.Now even the carousel of Google Podcast links in searches for podcasts is going away, but will be replaced with a new feature called What to Podcast. In a YouTube Short by Transistor Podcasting, the new feature appears to add a new section to the top of search results that shows podcasts relating to the search term. While not as easy as a play button and episode list, it does serve as a funnel to direct foot traffic into podcast apps. Meanwhile, earlier this month, YouTube launched ad monetization for YouTube Shorts. Previously, the program had operated on a TikTok-esque fund divvied between creators who met certain engagement goals. Now any account with over 1,000 subscribers and 10 million Shorts views in the previous 90 days can earn ad revenue at a split of 45% to them and 55% to Google. Digiday's Krystal Scanlon notes this is not as attractive a revenue split as similar programs at Facebook and TikTok, but the YouTube Shorts equivalent has a lower barrier to entry for newer accounts. In this week's earnings call, Google Chief Business Officer Philipp Schindler spoke on CTV, YouTube being at the top of Nielsen's measurement of US streaming watch time, and content integration. Tuesday's issue of Ben Thompson's Stratechery points out it's clear YouTube is dreaming of becoming a media streaming aggregate with the implementation of Primetime Channels on top of existing offerings like YouTube Music and NFL Sunday Ticket. From Stratechery: “The idealized future is one where YouTube is the front-door of all video period, whether that be streaming, linear, or user-generated.” With all their investments in YouTube and gentle downgrade of podcast presentation in the search engine, it feels like Google is becoming gently insistent podcasting's round peg will be expected to conform to the square hole of their media platform. Podcasting likely isn't going to come to YouTube as we know it, podcasters are simply incentivized to become YouTubers.Shreya: Finally, it's time for our semi-regular roundup of articles we're calling Quick Hits. These are articles that didn't quite make the cut for today's episode, but are still worth including in your weekend reading. This week: Media Briefing: The case for and against monthly and annual subscriptions in the battle for retention by Kayleigh Barber for Digiday. An excellent breakdown of the current debate between annual vs. monthly subscriptions, how they affect churn, and detailed pros and cons for both options. Edison Research's Weekly Insight: Of all people aged 13-34 in the US, one third listen to podcasts every day. Manuela: And that was The Download, brought to you by Sounds Profitable! Today's episode was built using Spooler and hosted on Triton Digital's Omny Studio. Find out more at Spooler.fm and Art19.comI know we went through today's stories fast, so be sure to check out the links to every article mentioned, right in your podcast listening app, or on SoundsProfitable.com/TheDownload. And thank you for sticking with us as we bring you the top stories you might have missed from the past week. I'm Manuela Bedoya.Shreya : And I'm Shreya Sharma. Our producers are Bryan Barletta, Gavin Gaddis, and Tom Webster. Our editors are Reece Carman and Ron Tendick. Special thanks to Art19 for hosting The Download. And thanks to you for joining us.
Did you know that 41 percent of Americans 12 and older have listened to a podcast in the last month? Twenty-six percent have listened in the last week. That's 74 million people. And of the people who listen each week, they average hearing eight podcasts. All that information is from The Infinite Dial. It is the annual social media and audio listening habits research provided by Edison Research. I mark my calendar each March to get the latest download. It's easy to be bullish about podcasting when you are a podcaster. But if 74 million people listen each week, that means over 200 million people in the U.S. alone do not. So there's room to grow, not just in listenership, but in understanding of why podcasts matter. They matter to businesses and content creators because they are an easy platform to build authority and trust upon. And you don't have to start a podcast to build it … you can simply be a guest on one. Spencer Carpenter saw the advantages and opportunities for businesses and creators at the onset of the pandemic. He spent 15 years in the music business but saw podcasts as an opportunity to communicate in a world where communication was changing. He founded Outlier Audio to help businesses and brands, including content creators, take advantage of podcasts. Outlier Audio can not only pitch you to be a guest on relevant podcasts that help build your brand and trust in the community, but they'll also help you build of podcast of your own, if that suits you better. Spencer joined me recently to talk about the challenges some businesses have with understanding the power of podcasts, the opportunity and advantages they bring and who is right and maybe not right for podcasting. We'll hear from him and learn more to help you with the pods today on Winfluence. This episode of Winfluence is presented by Tagger, the complete influencer marketing software platform. Sign up for a free demo today at jasonfalls.co/tagger. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week: A birds-eye view of how podcasting is doing political ads this year, Spotify stock drops after announcing price increase, podcast companies discuss diversity at Advertising Week and the IAB Upfront, and a massive new Nielsen study shows podcast ads universally boost brand metrics. How podcast networks are making their own rules for political advertising—and how they differ from one another. Manuela: Midterm elections are approaching fast in the United States and that means political ads are on the rise. This Wednesday MarketingBrew's Alyssa Meyers published an article giving an overview of how different publishers and networks are handling the sensitive issue. “Political advertisers, including candidates and advocacy groups, have expressed interest in podcasts, according to several network execs, but not all networks want to play ball. And because the FCC doesn't regulate political ads in podcasting, the rules are left entirely up to platforms and networks.” iHeart, Wondery, and Vox declined to comment on Meyer's story, but those that did gave a wide variety of responses and opinions. Cadence13 has always been open to political ads, for instance. That said, the decision on whether or not to run any particular cause or campaign is left to the individual hosts of Cadence13 original podcasts. Spotify has flipped the switch to allow political ads again, having banned them after accusations of spreading disinformation during the 2020 presidential election. Curiously, both Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts do not directly mention political advertising in their ad policies. Due to government regulations, NPR cannot run political ads on terrestrial radio. CEO Gina Garrubbo told MarketingBrew NPR chooses not to run political ads on other platforms. Meyers continues: “Execs from other podcast networks told us they're starting to see increasing interest from political candidates and issue-based organizations, and though they're open to these opportunities, some don't have formal policies in place yet.” Shira Atkins, co-founder and CRO of Wonder Media Network, has taken the approach of allowing political ads but only as part of sponsored content or via baked-in host-read. She says the network has gotten pitches from PACs and candidates, but some have blanched at the idea of handing over creative control to a host instead of running an ad produced by the campaign. “While political ad dollars aren't flooding the podcast space the way they are CTV, as the industry continues to grow, its political ad policies will likely continue to evolve and solidify, even if they differ across networks.” If there's one clear consensus in the world of political advertising on podcasts, it's that there currently is no consensus. Spotify Shares Slip 10% After CEO Says Price Hikes Coming Next Year Shreya: On Wednesday Denny Jacob, writing for The Wall Street Journal and reposted to MarketWatch, published coverage of the Spotify's Tuesday earnings call. The results were a mixed bag for Spotify. “For its third quarter, Spotify reported 456 million monthly active users, up 20% from a year earlier and above the company's guidance. Paying subscribers, Spotify's most lucrative type of customer, climbed 13% to 195 million, also exceeding the company's expectations, thanks to promotions and household plans.” That said, Spotify also posted a Q3 loss of 195 million dollars. Spotify Premium has cost $9.99 since the service launched in 2011, but CEO Daniel Ek says that'll change some time next year. Spotify shares fell 10% after the announcement. Podcast companies want to increase diverse content—but say they need better ad budgets to do so Manuela: Time for another article from MarketingBrew's Alyssa Meyers, this one published on Monday. In it, she covers conversations about the podcasting industry stemming from Advertising Week New York and the IAB Podcast Upfront last week. “Part of the push for more diversity in podcasting is about getting creators from different backgrounds behind the mic in the first place. Conal Byrne, CEO of the iHeartMedia Digital Audio Group, said that podcasting, like other mediums, has a problem with representation, but that there are efforts underway to “course-correct.” Meyers cites the Edison Research's 2022 Infinite Dial to demonstrate that the average makeup of the regular US podcast listeners - 53% men and 59% white, has declined in recent years. She also notes the diverse makeup of podcast hosts is outpacing wider US population statistics, using statistics from The Creators, a study published by Edison Research and Sounds Profitable on June 28th. Conversations about diversification also raise questions about brand safety. “During Acast's panel, global head of ad innovation Elli Dimitroulakos said that brand-safety tech can be imperfect as well, because it “has been built by people with preconceived notions or biases.” Dimitrioulakos provides the example of a retailer avoiding any instance of the word ‘bomb' in an attempt to distance themselves from any content to do with war, but in the process unrelated content like discussions of bomber jackets are caught in the crossfire. “Or “if I say ‘a bomb lipstick,' I'm not talking about a weapon,” added Brooke DeVard Ozaydinli, host of the Naked Beauty podcast.” Tenderfoot TV co-founder and president Donald Albright says advertisers should be prepared to invest in the industry and support the diversity they want to see in the industry. “Black content is what creates the culture, all culture, so invest in that,” he said. “Put the money in it, and also pay a premium on it. Don't just pay the normal rate, pay extra, because you're reaching a very targeted market that's going to set the trends. That should be more valuable.” New massive Nielsen study finds podcast ads universally boost brand metrics, long ads work. Shreya: On Wednesday Gillian Follett, writing for AdAge, covered a new Nielsen study purported to be the ‘largest ever' study of podcast ads. “The study, titled “Podcast Ad Effectiveness: Best Practices for Key Industries,” consolidates the findings of 610 separate studies conducted by Nielsen to measure how ads inserted into podcast episodes affected several performance metrics, including brand familiarity, brand affinity and brand awareness. It also measured consumers' intent to search for more information about the brand; purchase something from the brand; or recommend the brand to others.” The individual studies cover a period of four years and involved over 147,000 respondents, leading to the claim this is the largest ever study of podcasting advertising effectiveness. This claim was made by study commissioner Magna, an investment and intelligence unit of IPG Mediabrands. One notable bit of data is the finding that ads longer than 35 seconds drive better results than shorter creatives. Magna executive VP and managing director of audience intelligence and strategy Brian Hughes suggests this is due in part to the tendency for longer creatives to be tailor-made for podcasting. Shorter ads have a higher likelihood of being repurposed from another medium - such as radio - while longer ads likely have been built with podcasting in mind. “Additionally, podcast ads largely had the same impact whether they were read by the podcast host or they came from the brand. In fact, custom ads—which typically involve the host sharing their personal experience with the brand, according to Hughes—were generally less effective than those that didn't feature the podcast host. The report points out that “custom content may not be worth the price of creation given it lags in performance.”” It's also worth noting with both the results we've covered and the rest in the article that Nielsen's methodology actually suppresses positive results, in a way. Respondents aren't actually listeners of the podcasts they're being tested with. It then stands to reason that if a result comes back positive in this study, the results are likely even better with an individual podcast's actual audience. Quick Hits Manuela: Finally, it's time for our semi-regular roundup of articles we've named Quick Hits. These are articles that didn't quite make the cut for today's episode, but are still worth including in your weekend reading. This week: Pocket Casts Mobile Apps Are Now Open Source by Yael Rubinstein for Pocket Casts. This one does what it says on the tin: podcast listening service Pocket Casts announces their decision to make both the iOS and Android versions of their mobile apps open source. SoundExchange wins $9.7 million judgment from Slacker/LiveOne for unpaid music royalties by Kurt Hanson for RainNews. A brief rundown of the background behind the case and its outcome. The Download is a production of Sounds Profitable. Today's episode was hosted by Shreya Sharma and Manuela Bedoya, and the script was written by Gavin Gaddis. Bryan Barletta and Tom Webster are the executive producers of The Download from Sounds Profitable.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week: A birds-eye view of how podcasting is doing political ads this year, Spotify stock drops after announcing price increase, podcast companies discuss diversity at Advertising Week and the IAB Upfront, and a massive new Nielsen study shows podcast ads universally boost brand metrics. How podcast networks are making their own rules for political advertising—and how they differ from one another. Manuela: Midterm elections are approaching fast in the United States and that means political ads are on the rise. This Wednesday MarketingBrew's Alyssa Meyers published an article giving an overview of how different publishers and networks are handling the sensitive issue. “Political advertisers, including candidates and advocacy groups, have expressed interest in podcasts, according to several network execs, but not all networks want to play ball. And because the FCC doesn't regulate political ads in podcasting, the rules are left entirely up to platforms and networks.” iHeart, Wondery, and Vox declined to comment on Meyer's story, but those that did gave a wide variety of responses and opinions. Cadence13 has always been open to political ads, for instance. That said, the decision on whether or not to run any particular cause or campaign is left to the individual hosts of Cadence13 original podcasts. Spotify has flipped the switch to allow political ads again, having banned them after accusations of spreading disinformation during the 2020 presidential election. Curiously, both Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts do not directly mention political advertising in their ad policies. Due to government regulations, NPR cannot run political ads on terrestrial radio. CEO Gina Garrubbo told MarketingBrew NPR chooses not to run political ads on other platforms. Meyers continues: “Execs from other podcast networks told us they're starting to see increasing interest from political candidates and issue-based organizations, and though they're open to these opportunities, some don't have formal policies in place yet.” Shira Atkins, co-founder and CRO of Wonder Media Network, has taken the approach of allowing political ads but only as part of sponsored content or via baked-in host-read. She says the network has gotten pitches from PACs and candidates, but some have blanched at the idea of handing over creative control to a host instead of running an ad produced by the campaign. “While political ad dollars aren't flooding the podcast space the way they are CTV, as the industry continues to grow, its political ad policies will likely continue to evolve and solidify, even if they differ across networks.” If there's one clear consensus in the world of political advertising on podcasts, it's that there currently is no consensus. Spotify Shares Slip 10% After CEO Says Price Hikes Coming Next Year Shreya: On Wednesday Denny Jacob, writing for The Wall Street Journal and reposted to MarketWatch, published coverage of the Spotify's Tuesday earnings call. The results were a mixed bag for Spotify. “For its third quarter, Spotify reported 456 million monthly active users, up 20% from a year earlier and above the company's guidance. Paying subscribers, Spotify's most lucrative type of customer, climbed 13% to 195 million, also exceeding the company's expectations, thanks to promotions and household plans.” That said, Spotify also posted a Q3 loss of 195 million dollars. Spotify Premium has cost $9.99 since the service launched in 2011, but CEO Daniel Ek says that'll change some time next year. Spotify shares fell 10% after the announcement. Podcast companies want to increase diverse content—but say they need better ad budgets to do so Manuela: Time for another article from MarketingBrew's Alyssa Meyers, this one published on Monday. In it, she covers conversations about the podcasting industry stemming from Advertising Week New York and the IAB Podcast Upfront last week. “Part of the push for more diversity in podcasting is about getting creators from different backgrounds behind the mic in the first place. Conal Byrne, CEO of the iHeartMedia Digital Audio Group, said that podcasting, like other mediums, has a problem with representation, but that there are efforts underway to “course-correct.” Meyers cites the Edison Research's 2022 Infinite Dial to demonstrate that the average makeup of the regular US podcast listeners - 53% men and 59% white, has declined in recent years. She also notes the diverse makeup of podcast hosts is outpacing wider US population statistics, using statistics from The Creators, a study published by Edison Research and Sounds Profitable on June 28th. Conversations about diversification also raise questions about brand safety. “During Acast's panel, global head of ad innovation Elli Dimitroulakos said that brand-safety tech can be imperfect as well, because it “has been built by people with preconceived notions or biases.” Dimitrioulakos provides the example of a retailer avoiding any instance of the word ‘bomb' in an attempt to distance themselves from any content to do with war, but in the process unrelated content like discussions of bomber jackets are caught in the crossfire. “Or “if I say ‘a bomb lipstick,' I'm not talking about a weapon,” added Brooke DeVard Ozaydinli, host of the Naked Beauty podcast.” Tenderfoot TV co-founder and president Donald Albright says advertisers should be prepared to invest in the industry and support the diversity they want to see in the industry. “Black content is what creates the culture, all culture, so invest in that,” he said. “Put the money in it, and also pay a premium on it. Don't just pay the normal rate, pay extra, because you're reaching a very targeted market that's going to set the trends. That should be more valuable.” New massive Nielsen study finds podcast ads universally boost brand metrics, long ads work. Shreya: On Wednesday Gillian Follett, writing for AdAge, covered a new Nielsen study purported to be the ‘largest ever' study of podcast ads. “The study, titled “Podcast Ad Effectiveness: Best Practices for Key Industries,” consolidates the findings of 610 separate studies conducted by Nielsen to measure how ads inserted into podcast episodes affected several performance metrics, including brand familiarity, brand affinity and brand awareness. It also measured consumers' intent to search for more information about the brand; purchase something from the brand; or recommend the brand to others.” The individual studies cover a period of four years and involved over 147,000 respondents, leading to the claim this is the largest ever study of podcasting advertising effectiveness. This claim was made by study commissioner Magna, an investment and intelligence unit of IPG Mediabrands. One notable bit of data is the finding that ads longer than 35 seconds drive better results than shorter creatives. Magna executive VP and managing director of audience intelligence and strategy Brian Hughes suggests this is due in part to the tendency for longer creatives to be tailor-made for podcasting. Shorter ads have a higher likelihood of being repurposed from another medium - such as radio - while longer ads likely have been built with podcasting in mind. “Additionally, podcast ads largely had the same impact whether they were read by the podcast host or they came from the brand. In fact, custom ads—which typically involve the host sharing their personal experience with the brand, according to Hughes—were generally less effective than those that didn't feature the podcast host. The report points out that “custom content may not be worth the price of creation given it lags in performance.”” It's also worth noting with both the results we've covered and the rest in the article that Nielsen's methodology actually suppresses positive results, in a way. Respondents aren't actually listeners of the podcasts they're being tested with. It then stands to reason that if a result comes back positive in this study, the results are likely even better with an individual podcast's actual audience. Quick Hits Manuela: Finally, it's time for our semi-regular roundup of articles we've named Quick Hits. These are articles that didn't quite make the cut for today's episode, but are still worth including in your weekend reading. This week: Pocket Casts Mobile Apps Are Now Open Source by Yael Rubinstein for Pocket Casts. This one does what it says on the tin: podcast listening service Pocket Casts announces their decision to make both the iOS and Android versions of their mobile apps open source. SoundExchange wins $9.7 million judgment from Slacker/LiveOne for unpaid music royalties by Kurt Hanson for RainNews. A brief rundown of the background behind the case and its outcome. The Download is a production of Sounds Profitable. Today's episode was hosted by Shreya Sharma and Manuela Bedoya, and the script was written by Gavin Gaddis. Bryan Barletta and Tom Webster are the executive producers of The Download from Sounds Profitable.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It's easy to make a podcast, right? You just need an idea, buy a mic and off you go right? ... Wrong! Multiple factors that make or break a podcast and if you don't start in the right place, you're setting yourself up for failure. In the second part of this three part series produced by Ampel, , Michelle Lomas, Ampel GM & Head of Strategy sits down with Darren to discuss the development of a successful branded podcast. We'll discuss knowing your listener, the strategic process, being innovative with formats and finding a great host. Michelle will share mistakes to avoid in development, audio trends, and why podcasts are the most exciting storytelling platform since instagram. We'll bring in one of Ampel's clients to discuss their branded podcast, how they approached the decision to start, the ups and downs of the creative process, their feelings now it's live, what they'd do differently and what they want to do more of in the future. MIchelle hosts the ‘Flex Your Hustle' podcast. FYH tells the stories of amazing marketers and founders who did things a little differently! You can hear that podcast here: pod.link/1628927417 Zane McIntyre is the CEO and Co-Founder of affiliate marketing company Commission Factory, the brand behind the Flex Your Hustle podcast. Zane tells Michelle about his experience creating and implementing the Flex Your Hustle podcast with Ampel.If you would like to find out more about Commission Factory, you can visit them here: https://bit.ly/3RNAptk Tom Webster is one of the leading podcast industry market researchers with 25 years experience and 18 years in podcasting. After beginning in radio, Tom has dedicated his career to being an advocate for podcasting and contributed to building the podcast industry leading hundreds of audience research projects on six continents, including the audio industry's benchmark Infinite Dial study. In 2022, Tom joined Bryan Barletta at Sounds Profitable to continue to grow the podcast industry with the best in tech and research. To check out the "After These Messages" podcast study, follow this link: https://soundsprofitable.com/article/after-these-messages With thanks to Josh Butt, Michelle Lomas, Stuart Buckland, Lauren Deighton, Tania Peres, Justin McArthur, Luke Sewell, Brittany Frappell and Sez O'Neill from Ampel If you are interested in finding out more about what a professional audio channel can do for your company, visit ampel.com.au or email us at hearhere@ampel.com.au Thanks to Melod.ie for their music. Recorded at King Sound Studio with thanks to Joe Lewis. For more episodes of TrinityP3's Managing Marketing podcast, visit https://www.trinityp3.com/managing-marketing-podcasts/ Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/managing-marketing/id1018735190 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75mJ4Gt6MWzFWvmd3A64XW?si=a3b63c66ab6e4934 Listen on Google: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5zb3VuZGNsb3VkLmNvbS91c2Vycy9zb3VuZGNsb3VkOnVzZXJzOjE2MTQ0MjA2NC9zb3VuZHMucnNz Listen on Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/managing-marketing Listen on Podbean: https://managingmarketing.podbean.com/
We're back with more podcast recommendations all in the name of celebrating International Podcast Day 2022! Sarah has updates, recommendations, and a brand-new feature this year. Listen, like, and follow along... we hope you find some new favorites! Follow Us on Social! Ritter on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/RitterIM Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/ritter.insurance.marketing/ LinkedIn, https://www.linkedin.com/company/ritter-insurance-marketing TikTok, https://www.tiktok.com/@ritterim Twitter, https://twitter.com/RitterIM and Youtube, https://www.youtube.com/user/RitterInsurance Sarah on LinkedIn, https://www.linkedin.com/in/sjrueppel/ and Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/thesarahjrueppel/ Tina on LinkedIn, https://www.linkedin.com/in/christina-lamoreux-6384b7199/ Podcast Recommendations: Afterschock: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1119-aftershock-83996090/ Arcadia, CA: https://arcadiacalifornia.lawofnames.com/ Articles of Interest: https://www.radiotopia.fm/podcasts/articles-of-interest The Beautiful Liar: https://qcodemedia.com/the-beautiful-liar Bridgewater: https://www.grimandmild.com/bridgewater From Now: https://qcodemedia.com/from-now The Midnight Symphony: https://www.themidnightsymphony.com/ Missing Pages: https://thepodglomerate.com/shows/missing-pages/ Normal Gossip: https://defector.com/tag/normal-gossip/ Overleaper: https://www.realm.fm/shows/overleaper The Polybius Conspiracy: https://www.radiotopia.fm/showcase/the-polybius-conspiracy Sam Archer Third Grade Detective: https://www.gokidgo.com/samarcher The Trojan Horse Affair: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/podcasts/trojan-horse-affair.html X Marks the Spot: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/x-marks-the-spot-the-legend-of-forrest-fenn/id1626203378 Young Ben Franklin: https://gzmshows.com/shows/listing/young-ben-franklin/ More Recommendations: Behind the Scenes of the Agent Survival Guide Podcast: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/behind-the-scenes-of-the-asg-podcast-%C7%80-asg100-%F0%9F%8E/ International Podcast Day 2019: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/international-podcast-day-2019/ Top 5 Podcasts of 2019: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/top-5-podcasts-of-2019-the-friday-five/ Podcasts We're Currently Listening To: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/podcasts-we-re-currently-listening-to-the-friday-five/ Podcast Recommendations for Summer 2020: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/podcast-recommendations-for-summer-2020-the-tuesday-ten/ International Podcast Day 2020: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/international-podcast-day-2020/ Top 5 Podcasts of 2020: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/top-5-podcasts-of-2020-the-friday-five/ Podcasts We're Currently Listening To (Winter 2021): https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/january-1-2021-the-friday-five/ March 12, 2021 | The Friday Five: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/march-12-2021-the-friday-five/ Podcast Recommendations for Summer 2021: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/podcast-recommendations-for-summer-2021/ International Podcast Day 2021: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/international-podcast-day-2021-1632944993/ Top 5 Podcasts of 2021: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/top-5-podcasts-of-2021/ Winter 2021 Podcast Recommendations: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/winter-2021-podcast-recommendations/ Podcast Recommendations for Summer 2022: https://agentsurvivalguide.podbean.com/e/podcast-recommendations-for-summer-2022/ References: Bridgewater Season 2 Update from Twitter: https://twitter.com/BridgewaterPod/status/1570019391907004418?s=20&t=YRxCMwOz98h2Txojk_49XA Podcast Statistics and Data [August 2022]: https://www.buzzsprout.com/blog/podcast-statistics Radiotopia from PRX Announces Forthcoming Series from Acclaimed Indie Podcasters Avery Trufelman, Ian Chillag, and Kaitlin Prest: https://medium.com/prxofficial/radiotopia-from-prx-announces-forthcoming-series-from-acclaimed-indie-podcasters-cd4d42db8447 The Infinite Dial 2022: http://www.edisonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/Infinite-Dial-2022-Webinar-revised.pdf
Welcome to episode #845 of Six Pixels of Separation - The ThinkersOne Podcast. Here it is: Six Pixels of Separation - Episode #845. If you ever need to know anything about the state of Podcasting (or where it's going), just ask Tom Webster. Tom has a new role as Partner at Sounds Profitable, dedicated to setting the course for the future of the audio business. He is a 25-year veteran audio researcher and trusted advisor to the biggest companies in podcasting, and has dedicated his career to the advancement of podcasting for networks and individuals alike. He has been the co-author and driver behind some of audio's most influential studies, from the Infinite Dial series to Share of Ear and the Podcast Consumer Tracker. Tom has led hundreds of audience research projects on six continents, for some of the most listened-to podcasts and syndicated radio shows in the world. He's done a card trick for Paula Abdul, shared a martini with Tom Jones, and sold vinyl to Christopher Walken. Tom is known as a results-driven consumer insights visionary, and I am honored to call him a friend. We've both been in the podcasting game longer than most and enjoy the back-and-forth banter about the industry. Enjoy the conversation... Running time: 51:39. Hello from beautiful Montreal. Subscribe over at Apple Podcasts. Please visit and leave comments on the blog - Six Pixels of Separation. Feel free to connect to me directly on Facebook here: Mitch Joel on Facebook. or you can connect on LinkedIn. ...or on Twitter. Here is my conversation with Tom Webster. Sounds Profitable. Follow Tom on LinkedIn. Follow Tom on Twitter. This week's music: David Usher 'St. Lawrence River'.
Podcasting is like crack for your ears, many have said. Listen once, and they're hooked for life, right? Well... wrong. What do we need to do—as podcasters and an industry—to help build listening habits? It's a harsh reality that most people who listen to podcasts don't keep listening to podcasts. 62% of the US population +12 have listened, but only 26% frequently listen, according to https://www.edisonresearch.com/the-infinite-dial-2022/ (Edison Research's Infinite Dial survey). I blame the podcast listening app makers. But I also blame us, the podcasters who provide the content to those apps. We could both do a better job of helping listeners develop the podcast listening habit. What happens when your Netflix series ends? Netflix immediately makes recommendations. Not after the credits. But during them. And it works. What happens when you reach "the end" of an ebook on your Kindle? Amazon is making recommendations. Not after the book's back matter. And it works. Why aren't podcasting apps doing that? Podcast apps are the ones that actually own the relationship with the listeners. So yeah, it's on them! Or is it? How do they know when the end of a series or a season has been reached? We have a tag for that, but not all podcast hosts support it. How can we get better at giving app makers more data? And what do app developers do on the vast majority of podcasts that don't have proscribed endings but just keep going? Recommend a new show too quickly and piss off a lot of podcasters. There isn't an easy answer. So what do you think we should do? ----- Sponsored by: https://evoterra.link/captivate (Captivate.fm, the world's only growth-oriented podcast hosting company) ----- Links ----- https://www.edisonresearch.com/the-infinite-dial-2022/ (Edison Research's Infinite Dial 2022 survey) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-MJy7w69EU (The moth joke) https://github.com/Podcastindex-org/podcast-namespace/issues/351 (Proposed podcast index namespace tag ) Got a podcasting service? https://podcastpontifications.com/about/sponsorship-information (Become a sponsor of Podcast Pontifications). Serious about podcasting? Join the https://evoterra.link/app (Advancing Podcasting Community) today! ----- https://podcastpontifications. (Podcast Pontifications) is a production of https://simpler.media (Simpler Media). New episodes are released weekly, providing ideas and questions every serious podcaster should be thinking about. It's created and hosted byhttps://twitter.com/evoterra ( Evo Terra. Follow him on Twitter) for more podcasting insights as they come. http://alliepress.ne (Allie Press) assists with the production and transcription of the show. If you received value from today's episode of Podcast Pontifications, return some of that! We call it https://PodcastPontifications.com/support (value-for-value) and there are many ways to show your support. Mentioned in this episode: Support For Abortion Rights While Americans overwhelmingly support the right of an individual to make their own decisions about abortion, unfortunately, that right is no longer protected everywhere in the U.S. The Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade on June 24th. Abortion is a basic healthcare need for the millions of people who can become pregnant. Everyone should have the freedom to decide what's best for themselves and their families, including when it comes to ending a pregnancy. This decision has dire consequences for individual health and safety, and could have harsh repercussions for other landmark decisions. Restricting access to comprehensive reproductive care, including abortion, threatens the health and independence of all Americans. Even if you live in a state where abortion rights are upheld, access to safe medical procedures shouldn't be determined by location, and it shouldn't be the privilege of a small few. You can help by donating to local abortion funds. To find out where to...
Podcast Strategies for Growing Your Business, Community, and Influence While Profiting
In this episode I bring you up to speed on some of the latest developments in the podcasting world. This includes Apple Follower metrics and rankings, why you should go for a more focused audience, Edison Research's Infinite Dial 2022, crowded podcast categories, understanding rankings, and why your audiograms aren't working. Apple Follower Metrics - https://podcasters.apple.com/3142-march-2022-creator-updates Apple Chart Rankings - https://podcasters.apple.com/support/3146-apple-podcasts-charts Infinite dial 2022 - https://tomwebster.media/what-to-do-when-the-line-stops-going-up/ https://www.edisonresearch.com/the-infinite-dial-2022/ Crowded Categories - https://blog.pacific-content.com/the-most-crowded-categories-in-apple-podcasts-april-2021-edition-273b3d59866e Apple Premium advice - https://podcasters.apple.com/support/2464-insights... Audiograms and TikTok - https://rephonic.com/blog/podcast-social-media https://blog.pacific-content.com/why-your-audiograms-arent-working-7043820c52a4 Annoyed Podcast Listeners - https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2022/may/20/the-guide-podcast-pet-peeves *** Brand You Funnels (first month free) - https://www.brandyoufunnels.com/getstarted?fpr=danny97 Asana Project Management (first month free) - https://asana.grsm.io/3z7jerh6p9mj *** Roadmap: https://dannyozment.com/roadmap Questions? https://www.speakpipe.com/podcaststrategies or email me at danny@emeraldcitypro.com *** Are you interested in starting or growing a podcast AND business with the support of my team and a community of experienced podcasters? Join my Podcaster Pod. You get... Full access to my 8-module podcasting course taking you from idea to launch and everything in between. Equipment and tech, Recording and publishing. Scripts and templates. Everything! Access to me, my team, and a group of experienced podcasters through a private Slack channel Monthly Q&A calls with me and the other Podcaster Pod members. Quarterly Expert Calls Access to me and my network –– meaning I will introduce you to other influencers and people who can help you where it makes sense. Consider joining my new membership site for $47/month. Go to https://dannyozment.com/pod Use code JOINPODPOD to get a 1-month free trial. *** Are you building an email list for your business or personal brand? If so, then you need ConvertKit. I use ConvertKit for my list and so do most of our clients. For $29/month, ConvertKit's Creator Plan manages up to 1,000 subscribers Provides unlimited landing pages & forms Sends email broadcasts Provides the ability to Sell digital products & subscriptions Has super fast Email support AND MOST IMPORTANTLY... Gives you Free migration from another tool AND Automated funnels & sequences Get a free 14-day trial of the Creator Plan by visiting https://dannyozment.com/convertkit *** Do you have a website for your business or personal brand or are you building one? If so, then you need WPX hosting. I use WPX for all of my sites and so do many of our clients. For $25/month, WPX's Business Plan gives you Hosting for 5 Websites 10 GB Storage 100 GB Bandwidth Free SSL certificates The WPX Cloud Content Delivery Network They average around 30 second support response time 24/7/365 around the world Provide free unlimited site migration from any host to WPX, usually completed within 24 hours And they are fast because they never overload servers with hosting accounts, unlike so-called 'cheap' hosting which crumbles under any traffic load Sign up for the WPX Business Plan by visiting https://dannyozment.com/wpx *** My Recommended Resources - https://dannyozment.com/resources
Today's solo episode is the first in a two-part series about the lessons I've learned as a course creator. I launched The Healthcasters course back in 2015, and it just passed the $300K revenue mark. Those results are far more than I could have ever imagined! Join me for today's session where I'll cover the first five of my ten lessons learned. Lessons learned as a course creator: Decide between a skyscraper or a strip mall model for your online business. This concept comes from Nathan Barry, the CEO of ConvertKit. Find out more from his appearance on thehttps://www.creativeelements.fm/nathan-barry/ ( Creative Elements podcast) hosted by Jay Clouse. A strip mall model offers multiple products that diversity your income, while a skyscraper model features a single, scalable flagship product. I started STC with a strip mall model, but I've decided to move to a skyscraper model and use my mastermind as my single product. Focus on one marketing channel instead of jumping around to several. Find the sweet spot where you enjoy hanging out and where your ideal audience can be found. Check outhttps://www.edisonresearch.com/the-infinite-dial/ ( Infinite Dial) for free analytics on social media trends. Think about going from a “rented audience” to an “owned audience” as you seek to build your email list. Less is more when it comes to course content. Teach content that gives a concrete roadmap to help your students get from point A to point B. Be a niche of one. I definitely didn't do this very well in trying to reach too wide of a variety of healthcare providers with my first course. I know better now! Don't stress over your gear initially. Start simple. I recommendhttps://www.loom.com/ ( Loom) for recording and the Rode VideoMic NTG, which is an affordable mic with quality sound. You can save for future equipment upgrades by setting aside a small percentage of your income over time. Mentioned in this episode: Ready to create your own course? Download the FREE Online Course Guide! Learn how to create and market your own online course in Melvin's unique online course guide. Download the FREE online course guide today! https://selling-the-couch.captivate.fm/onlinecourseguide (Online Course Guide )
Doug and Kirk take a look at how people listen to music today, with lots of statistics. Help support The Next Track by making regular donations via Patreon. We're ad-free and self-sustaining so your support is what keeps us going. Thanks! Support The Next Track (https://www.patreon.com/thenexttrack). Show notes: The Infinite Dial 2021 (http://www.edisonresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/The-Infinite-Dial-2021.pdf) The Dial (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dial) Eve Weather (https://amzn.to/3j61pUR) Sonos Arc (https://amzn.to/3ubTfAs) Welcombe Radio (http://www.welcomberadio.co.uk) Podcasting Pocket Guide (https://amzn.to/3r2avWU) Our next tracks: Brad Mehldau: Jacob's Ladder (https://amzn.to/35IW7eI) The Faces: Ooh La La (https://amzn.to/3jaemwP) If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/the-next-track/id1116242606) or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.