When I first started my journey within the podcasting world, I was lucky enough to meet a range of people who have gone on to become genuine friends.
Amongst those is one of the finest, most revered people within our industry, Dave Jackson, a friend, mentor-from-afar and Podcast Hall of Fame inductee who continues to help podcasters around the world every single day.
On this episode, Dave and I dig deep into the last two decades of the podcasting industry and speculate on what might happen over the next twenty years.
This episode's guest is the wonderful Dave Jackson :
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Hello there and
Mark:welcome to the Podcast Accelerator, this show that brings you some straight
Mark:talking actionable advice along with opinions that may not always be popular,
Mark:but that you probably need to hear and what a treat I've got for you today.
Mark:When I got into podcasting about a decade ago now, through my
Mark:love of DC comics, there were a few people that I got to know.
Mark:There were a few people that helped me along the way.
Mark:There were a few people that have been there.
Mark:Ever since.
Mark:And this person is each and every one of those, along with also being
Mark:an absolutely fantastic friend and an even better guitar player.
Mark:So I'm gonna go deep into the past of podcasting and we're gonna take a crystal
Mark:ball and we're gonna look ahead to the future of podcasting with my friend Mr.
Mark:Dave Jackson.
Mark:How are
Dave:you, mark?
Dave:I'm doing great.
Dave:Uh, happy to be here buddy.
Mark:Always a pleasure, mate.
Mark:Always a pleasure.
Mark:And we saw each other in London not so long ago for the podcast show.
Mark:How was the, the, the trip over to Old Blighty?
Mark:Was it all
Dave:right?
Dave:It was okay.
Dave:I kept, uh, I think on the way over was where I had a gorilla of a man.
Dave:He had to be some sort of professional, uh, you know, sports person.
Dave:And so I was on the aisle and I just had to the whole, the whole trip.
Dave:I'm leaning outside of my chair just to give this guy some room.
Dave:So, but, uh, all in all, it wasn't bad.
Mark:It's not like you came from Ireland either.
Mark:You didn't have a 40 minute flight mate, so I can sympathize with that one.
Mark:I've, I've been there flown coach and flown the red eye all over the
Mark:world in the name of podcasting.
Mark:And for anyone that doesn't know Dave, he's, he's a fantastic friend to not just
Mark:me, but to, to everyone in podcasting.
Mark:But, you know, he's forgotten things that I will probably never know.
Mark:And he's just, he's, he's, he's just one of those people that
Mark:you'll look forward to seeing.
Mark:So I'm not gonna do the thing at the end.
Mark:Which is, tell us where people can find you and all that stuff.
Mark:Let's do that now mate.
Mark:'cause I want as many people to, to just get to where you are as possible.
Mark:So what are you up to right now?
Mark:Anyone that knows, you, knows, but for those that might be new to
Mark:you, what are you up to now mate?
Mark:And where can we get ahold of some of that stuff?
Dave:Everything podcasting related.
Dave:Most of it is at, uh, school of podcasting.com.
Dave:That's kind of the, the flagship show.
Dave:I guess we could say.
Dave:What I do, podcasting is a sickness for me.
Dave:If you stand next to me for 20 minutes, I'll probably start another one.
Dave:And so I, I came up with a domain power of podcasting.com, which is kind of a
Dave:link tree kind of site that just has a link of all the different things I'm into.
Mark:I love it, mate.
Mark:I completely sympathize with that.
Mark:Every time, every time I get into something it's like I'm
Mark:gonna do a podcast about that.
Mark:And it might be, I've just found some new bread is, you
Mark:know, this isn't Bread's nice.
Mark:I'm gonna do a podcast about this bread.
Mark:This is cool.
Mark:And I know you're the same mate.
Mark:I know you are exactly the same.
Mark:That's it.
Mark:What, what is it, what is it about podcasting?
Mark:Like, you've been in this since 2005.
Mark:What do you think it's about podcasting that makes us like that because I feel.
Mark:Like certainly for me, I've been like that since I discovered podcasting.
Mark:And I, and I'm assuming you have too.
Mark:Like what is it about the medium that makes us like that?
Dave:I think the biggest thing for, I mean, you're a musician.
Dave:I'm a musician.
Dave:I remember growing up and thinking I'd be at a, a record store and I'm
Dave:like, man, is there any way we could ever get my band's music in here?
Dave:And there are all sorts of gatekeepers.
Dave:And with podcasting there isn't one.
Dave:I mean, the, the good news is anybody can start a podcast.
Dave:The bad news is anybody can start a podcast.
Dave:And so for me it's always interesting as I help people, 'cause first.
Dave:I gotta talk 'em into turning the microphone on.
Dave:They're, they're worried about the audience.
Dave:And I always say, eh, nobody's listening yet.
Dave:Don't, don't worry about it.
Dave:It's not a big deal.
Dave:You're not gonna look stupid.
Dave:It's not radio.
Dave:And then when they first launched and they get their, you know, 10 people, if you
Dave:count, your cousins are listening, and then all of a sudden it starts to grow.
Dave:And it's interesting 'cause first they were worried.
Dave:About starting and looking stupid, and then all of a sudden they're
Dave:like, oh wait, PE-people are, people are listening to this.
Dave:And I go, yeah, I, I kind of told you, you can grow an audience.
Dave:So I think part of it is not so much an egomaniac kind of way, but we all want
Dave:to get our voice out there and it's, you know, a pretty easy way to get there.
Dave:And for me, what, what really?
Dave:When I grabbed my flag and, and I planted it and said, oh, I, I, I claim podcasting.
Dave:This is, this is my new jam was I'm in the middle of nowhere Ohio, out
Dave:with some cows and a guy found my podcast from Nuremberg, Germany.
Dave:His name was Michael Van Lar, and he sent me a voicemail
Dave:and I was like, wait a minute.
Dave:There's, there's a guy on the other side of the planet that not only
Dave:found my show, 'cause this is in 2005.
Dave:And not only found my show, but he liked it and he sent me a voicemail
Dave:and I went, oh, oh wait, hold on.
Dave:I get this now.
Dave:This is global.
Dave:And that's, I think another, uh, big selling point.
Dave:The fact that you can reach everybody.
Mark:I love the accessibility idea of that.
Mark:The fact that you can talk about the thing that you love from the place that you
Mark:are and someone who is in the place, that they are in the place that they love, just
Mark:happens to love the same thing that you do and you make a connection around that.
Mark:And I've always been fascinated by.
Mark:By that as well.
Mark:And there's a real dopamine hit when you get that first listener
Mark:reaching out to you as well.
Mark:You know, when someone says that, I have heard what you have said.
Mark:And you know, even, even if you know, potentially contentiously, even if they
Mark:don't like it, someone's heard that.
Mark:And that's a real dopamine hit man.
Mark:So I, I completely get that.
Mark:And it's, it's fascinating to watch people flourish and their
Mark:attitudes change in their.
Mark:Almost their eyes light up when you catch up with them three
Mark:months in or six months in.
Mark:So I get that, man, you must, you've helped thousands of
Mark:podcasters, haven't you?
Mark:Is that, is that a fairly common thing?
Mark:Is that, does that dopamine hit get everyone?
Dave:Yeah, and one of my favorite things to see, and I got
Dave:to see it kind of in the wild.
Dave:I was coaching somebody the other day on Zoom, and I'm helping them submit their
Dave:show to all the different directories.
Dave:And we submitted it to Spotify first, and then we went through the whole list and.
Dave:We're, we're getting everything done.
Dave:And I said, Hey, you know, it's, it's been probably a half hour.
Dave:I said, go back to Spotify and do a search for your show.
Dave:And he does.
Dave:And it was there and he clicked on it.
Dave:I go, look at you podcaster.
Dave:And just to watch his face like, holy cow, that's my stuff right there.
Dave:And it was so cool because I've taken people that have approached
Dave:me and said, I hate technology.
Dave:I'm never gonna be able to do that.
Dave:And then, you know, a month and a half later, they're in Apple and
Dave:all the other different places, and it is, it's a dopamine hit.
Dave:I'm, I remember, you know, I wrote a book and, and the first time
Dave:I saw it in Amazon, I was like, wait, that's, that's my stuff.
Dave:So it's, it's cool.
Dave:And I know I just had a guy come in from out of town, he's a listener and he said,
Dave:Hey, I would love to take you to lunch.
Dave:So I went to lunch with him and I've kind of known him.
Dave:He was a member of the school of podcasting.
Dave:And all he wanted to do, the biggest reason why he wanted to take me to lunch
Dave:is just, I, I call these because of my podcast stories where things that have
Dave:happened because he had a podcast and so he's a, a pastor and he's now kind of a, a
Dave:church consultant that led to him meeting the head of an agency and just, just
Dave:keep climbing up the, the giant pyramid.
Dave:And he ended up talking to like one of the top, top people of this big organization.
Dave:He goes, I never would've done any of that except I had a podcast.
Dave:And he goes, like it or not, he goes, your thumbprint's in there somewhere.
Dave:And it's, you don't realize that so many times you're just talking
Dave:into a microphone and you think nobody's listening, and then
Dave:somebody blows through town and says, oh wow, you changed my life.
Dave:And you're like, wait, what?
Dave:I mean I started in the basement of my brother's house.
Dave:I just got divorced.
Dave:My brother said, ah, come live with me for a while.
Dave:So I'm down by the water heater.
Dave:Hope in the furnace doesn't turn on.
Dave:You know, I never had any idea, this is where I was gonna end up.
Mark:That's the beauty of it, my friend and I, it, it's, I think everyone has
Mark:a story like that to different degrees and it's what's so beautiful about it.
Mark:I remember going to one of my first events, so I, I was,
Mark:I started podcast in 2013.
Mark:That was my first foray into it, and then got a bit more serious in
Mark:2014, um, and went to my first event at n MX in Vegas, which is where I
Mark:met you for the first time, I think.
Mark:And it was, That was a wild event.
Mark:'cause it was, it was at the Westgate, it was co-located with, what was it?
Mark:I can't remember.
Mark:The NAB show maybe.
Mark:And, uh, it was just this weirdly wild little event that that then disappeared.
Mark:But what really struck me about it was that I.
Mark:Every, everyone felt the same about podcasting and, and we all, like I used
Mark:to come from sort of a digital agency background and came from, like you said,
Mark:being in bands and being a musician and then come from, um, being like a
Mark:contract trainer and freelancing in every world that I was in prior to podcasting,
Mark:everyone was out to get you or the best, they were ambivalent that you existed
Mark:because, It, it, it didn't matter to them.
Mark:And what struck me so much about it was everyone was just so supportive.
Mark:Everyone wanted to see everyone else succeed.
Mark:I know we're gonna talk about the past and we're gonna talk about
Mark:the future and so on, but I.
Mark:That, that's what got me really hard to lean into it.
Mark:And, and, and I know that's sort of, I know that's what you support
Mark:people through, and I know you, you, you've experienced the same thing.
Mark:Does it feel the same today, especially after Covid and we've all
Mark:been locked, locked in a little bit.
Mark:Like what, what is that side of things like at the minute?
Dave:Yeah, it's, it's a little different, but it, I always say at the heart of
Dave:every good podcast is a servant, somebody who wants to serve their audience.
Dave:And so, Uh, with that, I think we all kind of wanna get the message
Dave:out, whatever it is, if we're talking about DC comics or, or whatever, we
Dave:wanna talk about those things we love.
Dave:And so that is just something, and, and again, the dopamine kick, we know what
Dave:it feels like when you have somebody that says, man, I love this show.
Dave:I, I swear you made this just for me.
Dave:And so we know what that feels like.
Dave:So when somebody comes along and goes, I'm, I'm trying to figure out should
Dave:I call it this or what microphone we're, oh, hold, let me help you
Dave:because we want you to feel like we do.
Dave:So there's that.
Dave:The biggest difference I remember in the very first podcast conference
Dave:was in California and myself and Paul Culligan looked at each other and
Dave:said, you know, if we actually got enough people listening to this thing,
Dave:We might be able to make some money.
Dave:And people looked at us like we were the devil.
Dave:They're like, it's my art man.
Dave:Why would I want to, you know?
Dave:And I was like, easy, easy.
Dave:So there is a definite monetization thing that's going on much now that that's
Dave:going on that's a little different.
Dave:And the, the big networks, 'cause in the early days we were all independents.
Dave:Now you walk in and there's the wondery and the, all the different
Dave:big networks and, and I don't really know that many people.
Dave:That are in the big networks.
Dave:I remember once I went to, uh, a thing in Brooklyn, New York, I
Dave:forget the name of the event, but it was very much all big networks.
Dave:And I remember I walked up to a guy and I said, oh, what do you doing podcasting?
Dave:And he goes, oh, I'm, I'm part of the storyboard.
Dave:I.
Dave:I like put the, and I was like, wait, what?
Dave:And I was like, I, you know, I write my notes down on a post-it note and put
Dave:it on my monitor and hit record, and they're writing out these, so it was
Dave:one of those where you listen to a show and there's like 18 people at the end.
Dave:That was kind of that thing.
Dave:So that's, that's something that has come along and we'll see if that continues.
Dave:You know, we keep hearing about people losing their jobs and podcasting,
Dave:and maybe it's the guy that you know, Did the storyboard and maybe, maybe
Dave:they figured out that maybe we don't need a guy doing the storyboard.
Dave:I don't, I don't know.
Dave:So it's, it's the same in many ways.
Dave:As it grows.
Dave:You know, the great thing about it, there are no rules.
Dave:So you can do whatever you want.
Dave:One of the things I love about your show, mark, is the fact that a, it's
Dave:your opinion and you know, the, shall we say, the mainstream, you know, if,
Dave:if everybody in podcasting is saying, oh, everybody go left, go left, go left.
Dave:I can turn on Mark Show.
Dave:And he'd be like, ah, it's crap.
Dave:Listen to you.
Dave:Go to the right.
Dave:And you know, and I love the fact that you get a different opinion and you
Dave:go, I've never thought about that.
Dave:So that's, I, I think when we started podcasting was like
Dave:a big, giant middle finger.
Dave:The, the radio in the US is horrendous.
Dave:It's the same 17 songs.
Dave:I love ac, C D, C, I never want to hear a single song Off
Dave:A Back and Black ever again.
Dave:It's just been played to death, followed by 30% commercials,
Dave:30%, and it's just ridiculous.
Dave:So we were all, Hey, you know what?
Dave:We're not all gonna talk about this.
Dave:And weather on the tens, not all nine yards.
Dave:All right, everybody.
Dave:'cause nobody talks like that.
Dave:I think that was one of the big things that, that really kicked off podcasting.
Dave:It's like, wow, these, these people sound real and they're not, you know,
Dave:it's not binky in the Wiz or whoever.
Dave:It's, it's real.
Mark:Yeah, I understand that.
Mark:I appreciate the kind words as well.
Mark:And it's, it's, uh, it's, it is always been interesting for me because I've
Mark:found podcasting as a way of, um, what's the best way to articulate it?
Mark:Like, fitting in.
Mark:I, I, I've never fit in, like I've been, you know, I've been in bands, I've played
Mark:around, I've, I've always created things.
Mark:Um, But you know, I'm a really big A D h D brain.
Mark:I'm a really big sort of, I'm a strategic thinker and I've never, I've never
Mark:fit in because of those two things.
Mark:I, I tend to see things ever so slightly differently.
Mark:And podcasting.
Mark:When I started creating content, it was, it was sort of weird 'cause
Mark:it was never in the, never, the intent was never to be contrarian.
Mark:It was more just, just the way I sometimes see things.
Mark:And I think one of the big things for me that podcasting
Mark:has allowed is almost for me to.
Mark:Give myself some sort of self therapy.
Mark:Like genuinely if I'm struggling with something, especially at work or if I'm
Mark:struggling with something in the industry or if I'm struggling with something.
Mark:Um, for example, you know, we got acquired, we became part of global
Mark:18 months ago, nearly were two years ago now, which, which has been great.
Mark:It's a fantastic move.
Mark:And the the team are wonderful.
Mark:And, and you, we, we had a tour around Global's offices.
Mark:You've seen what it's like, um, But for a year, it took me a little bit of figuring
Mark:out, like, why couldn't I create content?
Mark:And it was, 'cause I was a little bit burnt out for the
Mark:last 10 years of doing it.
Mark:And I was a little bit, I didn't really know what I wanted to say anymore.
Mark:I, I, and it took me a year to sort of figure that out.
Mark:But when I started this show back up, it was genuinely like therapy again.
Mark:It was, it was, it was the release of, right.
Mark:Okay.
Mark:Actually, here's a way for me to say the things that I need to say without.
Mark:Anyone really caring, and I know it sounds bizarre and a bit flippant to say
Mark:that, but honestly, like you either like the shows or you don't like the shows.
Mark:If I start a show about the new bread that I found at the store and I love it,
Mark:it doesn't matter whether someone likes it or not, I'm sort of doing it for me
Mark:and that's why we run Star Wars shows and we are on golf shows and you run
Mark:shows about the things that you'll have.
Mark:Do you think there's.
Mark:Because of the way that podcasting seems to have, have split, you know, we've got
Mark:podcasting, the media, so the networks, we've got the big brands, we've got
Mark:everything from programmatic advertising right through to people building
Mark:networks for, for mass IP players.
Mark:You know, and then you've got us, you've got the people that do
Mark:it because, because we love it.
Mark:What, what do you say to those people who, who, who approach things like
Mark:we do, we do it and we want to do it because we love it, but we're
Mark:now worried that podcasting is.
Mark:Quote, unquote, too big.
Mark:There are too many podcasts.
Mark:You know, if we believe the media, if we believe the hype, that podcasting's too
Mark:big, someone knocks on your door, Dave, I wanna do this thing, but I'm worried.
Mark:Is there any room for me?
Mark:Like, what's your answer
Dave:to that?
Dave:Well, think about this.
Dave:If, uh, there's a junior high kid and he's a pretty good quarterback, He thinks I'll
Dave:never be Tom Brady, so I'm just gonna quit or think about all the authors every year.
Dave:I mean, every year in the book industry, there are 27 different books about how
Dave:to lose weight that probably are saying the exact same thing that somebody else
Dave:has said many, many, many, many times.
Dave:And if you look at, uh, the news, if you turn on the news at night, wherever
Dave:you are, you probably got at least four or five stations that are talking
Dave:about everything that happened today.
Dave:Well, why do we have five?
Dave:Why do we have five stations talking about what happened today?
Dave:Because some people like this person.
Dave:The, what I did watch, I don't watch hardly any news anymore,
Dave:but when I did, I watched this one channel, and I'll be completely
Dave:just, you know, a, a, a pig here.
Dave:Uh, the, the reporter was hot.
Dave:She was absolutely stunningly beautiful, and that's why I wanted that channel.
Dave:But, so we have different reasons why we do different things, and so the person
Dave:that goes, well, who's gonna listen to me?
Dave:It's saturated number one.
Dave:There are a lot of podcasts.
Dave:If you hear there's like 4 million podcasts, which is true, but only
Dave:maybe a couple hundred thousand are actually producing podcasts.
Dave:There are a lot of people that start off and they're on a free media host,
Dave:and they do maybe three episodes.
Dave:They figure out that, oh, to make this good, it's gonna take a little more
Dave:effort than just talking into my phone.
Dave:And they quit.
Dave:Well, if it's on a free media host, it stays there forever,
Dave:until they, you know, pull it down.
Dave:And so I always say, if you look and you go, oh, there's so
Dave:many podcasts about my niche.
Dave:I'm like, go dig one step a little deeper.
Dave:See when the last time they put out an episode and you're gonna
Dave:see a lot of them were like, 2020, because that was like pandemic time.
Dave:Everybody's bored.
Dave:Let's start a podcast.
Dave:So, uh, you know, and you're.
Dave:You know, you never know what's gonna happen.
Dave:I always say when people, I have people like, Hey, I'm
Dave:gonna do a podcast about this.
Dave:Do you think people would listen?
Dave:And I'm like, that's like coming to me going, Hey, I'm
Dave:gonna mix these ingredients.
Dave:Do you think if I put these into an oven and bake them, they'd be good?
Dave:I'm like, there's only one way to tell.
Dave:You know, do it and taste it.
Dave:Go, yeah, this is actually pretty good, but you can't, you know,
Dave:there are best practices that you can talk about, but in the end, if
Dave:you wanna see if it's gonna work or not, you gotta put out the podcast.
Mark:It's like anything, you know, if I wanna play guitar, you know, you and I
Mark:have, have, have, have drunkenly shared stages together in Florida a few times,
Mark:and I, if I, if, if, if I want to start learning to play bass and I want to get
Mark:up on that stage and play stand by me, or I wanna play a journey song, or I
Mark:wanna play whatever it is I wanna play.
Mark:The first thing I've gotta do is get up, make sure the guitar's got some
Mark:strings on it, stick a strap on, get it over my shoulder, and just hit the
Mark:thing with something to make a sound.
Mark:And it might sound good, it might sound bad, but I've got to
Mark:start somewhere with that one.
Mark:A lot of people, certainly over the last five or six years
Mark:have thrown out that phrase.
Mark:It's never been easier to start a podcast.
Mark:And you alluded to it earlier, you know, one of the upsides of
Mark:podcasting is everyone can start one.
Mark:One of the downsides is everyone can start one.
Mark:With, with the change in technology, the availability of cheaper,
Mark:higher quality microphones, the availability of online software, the
Mark:availability of different hosting platforms and different web platforms
Mark:and ai, this, that and the other.
Mark:What, what do you see that landscape as being like at the minute?
Mark:The, the number one, the ease of starting a podcast, and then number two, the
Mark:ease of starting a quality podcast.
Mark:What does that feel like today?
Dave:Oh, man.
Dave:Compared to 2005, I was actually, I, I hadn't even discovered WordPress
Dave:yet, so I was making my website in Dreamweaver, and then I used a software
Dave:called Feed for All to make my feed.
Dave:It was an absolute nightmare.
Dave:So that's definitely easier now you just upload your file to your media host.
Dave:They give you a feed that's done.
Dave:There are tools like the VO caster from Focus, right where you press
Dave:and hold down a button and it sets your recording level for you.
Dave:I just saw there's a Zoom F three that now, and let's get our geek on records
Dave:and 32 bit floating, which means basically it's really hard to make bad audio.
Dave:Uh, so things are definitely getting easier.
Dave:That's the beauty of it because.
Dave:Man, the early days of podcasting things just sounded horrendous.
Dave:And if we can get people to only use the phone as a last resort, and
Dave:if you are recording on your phone, get that microphone by your mouth.
Dave:Don't do the whole put it on speaker and stick it on the desk.
Dave:That's not gonna work.
Dave:But it's, it is so much easier to do that.
Dave:And I've, I've had people that, you know, we get 'em into Apple
Dave:and Spotify, et cetera, and they're like, okay, what's the next thing?
Dave:And I go, well, now it's just make great episodes.
Dave:Promote it, and that's really it.
Dave:Just repeat over and over and over the, you mentioned things like ai.
Dave:That's gonna be a fun one to watch because when it's, when I'm having it write
Dave:stuff, and I usually don't use what it writes for me, I let it write something
Dave:and I go, oh, that's where I should go.
Dave:And then I go off and write it.
Dave:I use it as almost like a brainstorming.
Dave:Tool because I know so many people are saying, oh, people are gonna have chat,
Dave:g p t, write a script and then I'm gonna throw it into revoice her and have it
Dave:voice it and put it out and automate it.
Dave:So you know, it'll find content, record it post.
Dave:I'm like, yeah, and that's gonna be awful.
Dave:The, the one thing that AI can't do, I was listening to an episode, uh, Adam A.
Dave:Adams does a show, I think it's Grow Your Podcast.
Dave:If I remember right, I had to met up with him a little bit.
Dave:He's a nice guy.
Dave:But he did an episode that basically he said, I'm just gonna kind of
Dave:go a little bit on a tangent.
Dave:And he'd had a kind of a hard year and he, he kept losing friends.
Dave:And he goes, all I wanna say today is car diem.
Dave:Seize the day.
Dave:We don't know how many days we have left.
Dave:And you know, don't, don't go to your grave with your podcast in
Dave:you get it out there, you know?
Dave:And I was like, chat g p t can't do that.
Dave:Because it was very emotional and it was based on his in, you know, his
Dave:influences and things that had happened.
Dave:And I'm like, chat G B T can't do that.
Dave:And so I'm not sold that AI is gonna be the savior of making
Dave:content going forward in the future.
Dave:I mean, it's, on one hand it's as bad as it's ever gonna be
Dave:right now 'cause it's brand new.
Dave:But I, I think the human side of podcasting is a what attracts people.
Dave:They're either gonna like you or they're gonna, or they're gonna love you.
Dave:I have a, a friend of mine, Daniel J.
Dave:Lewis is who is very much a deep dive, just the facts kind of guy.
Dave:That's the way he is.
Dave:And I'm a little more looser, a little more goofy.
Dave:And we're both very good friends and we have both had I.
Dave:A, a listener say, Hey, I, I tried to listen to your friend show,
Dave:but, uh, you know, in my case that that guy's just all over the place.
Dave:He's like a campaign for a D H D and I've had other people go, yeah, try to
Dave:listen to Daniel, man, that guy's dry.
Dave:And so you put it out there and you're gonna attract the people that
Dave:like you and the people that don't.
Dave:That's fine.
Dave:There are other 4 million podcasts to go listen to that aren't this one.
Dave:It is
Mark:funny, isn't it?
Mark:The, the, that alludes to, to the, the kind of question earlier as well.
Mark:It goes back to that a little bit in, in sofar as you know.
Mark:What would you say to someone that, that, that is thinking about starting a show but
Mark:is worried there are too many around you?
Mark:And I can say the same thing in different ways and have different
Mark:opinions and all the, the life experience that we've got leads to
Mark:that opinion and, and I think that is the beauty of any kind of creation.
Mark:You know, whether it's blogging, Whether it is, whether it's YouTube, whether
Mark:it's, it's, it's, it's audio recording and, and putting it out as a podcast.
Mark:You took me back there with Dreamweaver mate.
Mark:I was using that as well when it was Macromedia.
Mark:I remember before Adobe even bought it, and I was doing the same, I
Mark:was coding websites, using tables.
Mark:You know, c s s had not taken a hold.
Mark:We were, you know, we were, wow.
Mark:We were going, all, all the styling was in line, if there was any styling at all.
Mark:And it was building r s s feeds for, for, for blogs and.
Mark:Man, like the halon days of, uh, of, of the web 1.0 timeframe.
Mark:And it was fascinating.
Mark:But that, that sort of leads me onto technology.
Mark:'cause we talked about AI and we talked about Dreamweaver.
Mark:All right.
Mark:I think it's pretty rare that they're gonna come up again in the
Mark:same conversation, but the Yeah, we probably got tick in a box there.
Mark:Mentioned Dreamweaver and AI in the same sentence.
Mark:But the, so AI is fascinating to me, and, and, and there's a.
Mark:Even if we don't think about ai, right?
Mark:The tech of podcasting is something that I talk to.
Mark:Uh, this might, I, I'm gonna, I'm gonna avoid try and avoid this going into
Mark:rant mode, but there's a lot of, there's a lot of rubbish out there, right?
Mark:So we're in the hosting game, all right?
Mark:You work over, at, over at Lipson.
Mark:Our friends, Rob Elsie and Brad and Laurie and yourself and, and
Mark:some fantastic people over there.
Mark:Highly, highly recommended Libsyn for, for years and, and what a fantastic team.
Mark:And obviously we work on Captivate and it's.
Mark:I've always been a fan of collaboration ever since I got in the industry.
Mark:You know, my goal has been to, to to, to, um, be friends with
Mark:people and all ships rise.
Mark:And, and that's why I never see anyone as competition.
Mark:And I, I, I think that's why everyone's such good friends.
Mark:But I'm seeing recently that there's a lot of technology companies that
Mark:are doing things with quote unquote ai and they're putting things like the
Mark:podcasting 2.0 stuff and they're doing like half baked implementations of it.
Mark:And, and, and, and whatever else, just to get a tick on a feature list
Mark:and, and, and just almost do a little bit of every piece of buzzword just
Mark:so that they can use it in marketing.
Mark:And the reason that I say that is because it's, it's the, it's the stepping stone to
Mark:the, the next set of, of logic, which is technology and podcasting has been great.
Mark:But every time I see someone say, we've created this AI tool
Mark:that's gonna do magic clips for you, which is great, that's cool.
Mark:And we're gonna allow social sharing.
Mark:And all I do is think of clamor.
Mark:You know, we've been there, we've done it, and I think,
Mark:and it happens again and again.
Mark:Okay.
Mark:We're gonna build a network.
Mark:It's gonna be a sports vertical, and it's gonna be an app.
Mark:It's gonna be the Netflix of podcasting, just in the sports vertical.
Mark:And I'm like, all right.
Mark:You mean like Spotify or Apple Podcast is, you know, so there's a lot of repeated
Mark:stuff and people pick upon buzzwords and they try to use those buzzword buzzwords
Mark:to elevate themselves within the industry.
Mark:Does that, is that just me being the grumpy guy in podcasting?
Mark:Or is there any logic and any reason to just slow down as a podcaster?
Mark:Don't worry too much about the trends and just focus on distributing good content.
Mark:Like where, where's your head on that one?
Mark:Because it's like, it frustrates me a lot.
Dave:Yeah, it does.
Dave:I had, 'cause what happens is I had a guy in in at the London Show that's like,
Dave:oh, well you're just an old podcaster.
Dave:And I'm like, well no.
Dave:I've been around and I've seen it.
Dave:I know there's something now about, it's an app.
Dave:It's like cherry picking or something.
Dave:Cherries, I forget what it is, but it's clamor.
Dave:It's clamor with an absolutely new name.
Dave:And I just said, go Google clamor.
Dave:I go this, this has been tried.
Dave:I'm not here saying it's not gonna work.
Dave:I'm just letting you know the history that this has been tried.
Dave:It failed.
Dave:And if I have another person that come up and says, Hey, I've, I've got
Dave:a tool, it's gonna solve this, the discoverability problem, and podcasting.
Dave:And I go, podcasting doesn't have a discoverability problem.
Dave:And I got into an argument once and somebody said, well, I.
Dave:There's no, uh, oh, I forget what it was, but discoverability.
Dave:And I said, okay, explain that.
Dave:And they said, well, that's where, you know, some sort of algorithm, watches what
Dave:you do and, and, and learns what you like, and then recommends things that you like.
Dave:And I go, oh, I have that.
Dave:I go, it's not artificial intelligence, it's actual intelligence.
Dave:They're called friends and they go, oh, you like that one thing?
Dave:You should listen to this podcast.
Dave:And if a friend recommends it, I'm gonna go listen to it.
Dave:And.
Dave:It's just one of those things where you know you have to market your show.
Dave:Um, I was talking with Gary Art.
Dave:He does a show called Everything Everywhere, super popular show, and
Dave:he's just knocking it outta the park.
Dave:Well, he pays for marketing.
Dave:I.
Dave:He said, well, think about it.
Dave:He goes, the, the second Avengers movie now, I think they're like three
Dave:or four, but you know, the, there was the one where everybody didn't
Dave:end so well and then there was the follow-up and we're all waiting to
Dave:see, oh, what happened to so-and-so Who's gonna make it and who didn't?
Dave:It's this giant cliffhanger and they, they spent $200 million promoting a
Dave:movie that everybody was waiting to see.
Dave:Now that went on to make like 2 billion with a B, but they
Dave:still had a marketing budget.
Dave:And so I'm with you on that.
Dave:When I hear, oh, it's this, the, you know, this is gonna solve
Dave:discoverability by placing a, uh, promo of your show at the very, very,
Dave:very, very end of somebody else's show.
Dave:And I go, okay, that might be a trickle, but I don't think
Dave:that's gonna be the giant fire hose that you're painting it as.
Dave:Well,
Mark:and that's the, I think that's the funny thing, man.
Mark:The, the, the, the, the trickles turn into tributaries and each one of those leads
Mark:into a river, and that river is marketing.
Mark:And it's, you're absolutely right.
Mark:There is no one way to do it.
Mark:And I, I often say this on this show, it's, you know, people will, you see
Mark:all the time in the, in the Facebook groups, how do I grow my podcast?
Mark:It's the number one question.
Mark:And I always think to myself, right, okay, let's swap the word podcast
Mark:out for anything else, right?
Mark:How do I grow my band?
Mark:You do gigs until you cannot move your arms.
Mark:How do I grow my business?
Mark:You go out and make sure that everyone knows what you do and where to find
Mark:you, how to find you, and then you let them know that you will do a good job.
Mark:Right?
Mark:If I'm a plumber, that's all I do and it's, that's why, you know.
Mark:Old podcasters.
Mark:It was like my old dad, the electrician, he's still getting work 'cause he's the,
Mark:he is the old guy that has been there for a long time doing the marketing.
Mark:And it's quite a flippant thing from, from certainly from my side
Mark:to just say, go and learn marketing.
Mark:'cause there are so many facets to that one.
Mark:But to me there is, there is, there will never be one single way to grow.
Mark:Or to do anything with success.
Mark:It's a range of things, and that's why the marketing mix exists.
Mark:It's not, that's not made up, you know?
Dave:Well, and, and the thing that I think, and I'm just pulling this
Dave:number outta my butt, I'm gonna say 90% of podcasters don't do the
Dave:one thing that every business does.
Dave:If I'm opening a restaurant.
Dave:I'm not going to open a restaurant with food that's never been tasted.
Dave:I want somebody to eat this and go, Ew, it needs more salt.
Dave:Or this, can we, what's that?
Dave:And, and I get it.
Dave:I totally understand why people do this.
Dave:You just spent 15 hours making a 15 minute podcast because you're
Dave:going through the learning curve and I just want it out there.
Dave:I just want to, but you need to stop.
Dave:I mean, Ron Howard is a super famous director, actor.
Dave:He's won a gazillion awards and before a movie goes live.
Dave:He sits in a theater with the audience because he knows when they're supposed
Dave:to laugh and cry and shriek or whatever, and he goes, if it's not getting the
Dave:reaction that I'm looking for, he goes, we need to go back and edit because
Dave:I want this people to, to cry here.
Dave:And they're, they're laughing.
Dave:Instead, there's something really, really wrong.
Dave:I.
Dave:And we ask our mom, and mom says, oh honey, it's, look at you.
Dave:You're so professional.
Dave:Look at you with the microphone.
Dave:And she sends you off to, and now I'm gonna go spend money on marketing because
Dave:you know, Dave said that one guy did well.
Dave:Yeah.
Dave:But is your podcast getting the reaction you wanted to?
Dave:And because of you, mark, you'd said you need to go learn marketing.
Dave:So I bought a Dan Kennedy.
Dave:'cause I've heard about Dan Kennedy from every single person.
Dave:And he, he asked the question, and I think most podcasters don't, which is,
Dave:why should someone listen to your podcast?
Dave:What, what's gonna make you different?
Dave:How are you delivering value?
Dave:And I get it.
Dave:Look, if you just want to talk about.
Dave:Whatever in the basement.
Dave:I, I love, you know, tennis, I'm gonna do a tennis podcast and
Dave:I just wanna talk about tennis.
Dave:Okay, that's fine.
Dave:But if the goal was to grow it and maybe later even monetize
Dave:it, It's gotta be a good product.
Dave:And I'm not sure everybody does that.
Dave:I mean, I just went through this, I redid my sales page and brought in a coach
Dave:and they said, oh, this is good this.
Dave:Ooh.
Dave:And I was talking about features, but I wasn't talking about benefits and I was
Dave:just way too close to my own material.
Dave:And I went, oh, you know what?
Dave:That's absolutely right.
Dave:And so, you know, when you talk about marketing and growing your show, I think
Dave:a lot of people are trying to grow a show that's not really connecting the
Dave:way they think it is with their audience.
Dave:I.
Mark:I wholly agree with that, and I, I, I think so many people are so
Mark:close to the thing that they love because they love it, because, you
Mark:know, podcasting we said right at the beginning, it's the thing that allows
Mark:us to talk about the thing that we love.
Mark:So, and we, and we never, I'm in a band and I, I, you know, someone says, you're
Mark:gonna, you're gonna go and tour, or you're gonna do X, Y, and Z and you're gonna
Mark:do all these gigs, and that's amazing.
Mark:It feels good.
Mark:If someone says, I dunno if how big McFly are out in, in the us but in the
Mark:uk if you are McFly, you've done your time, but you've gotta make two albums
Mark:that are really poppy and you'll, you'll do well off them, but they're probably
Mark:not the thing that you want to do.
Mark:But after that, you can make what you want.
Mark:You're gonna probably do it, and it's one of those things where
Mark:it'll feel uncomfortable, but the, the fact of the matter is the music
Mark:that you make and the brand that you put out there is the product.
Mark:And once people like that product, you've got latitude to introduce new things.
Mark:It's like the successful restaurant.
Mark:Okay, here's a preview night.
Mark:We're thinking about bringing some Asian infusions into this menu.
Mark:Let's just do one preview.
Mark:Now, we're not gonna change the whole menu, but we understand the
Mark:menu is a product, and I agree that a lot of podcasters don't
Mark:necessarily think like that.
Mark:I've, I've, I've always been, weirdly, I.
Mark:I don't wanna s Yeah, probably lucky just because I, I've, I've been in, I've been
Mark:working for myself since I was like 21, 22 years old, just through a D H D necessity.
Mark:It was like, better work for myself, otherwise I'm gonna
Mark:get fired three times a year.
Mark:So it was, which was, that's my twenties mate.
Mark:That was my twenties.
Mark:So I've always been able to sort of say, Okay, with your podcast,
Mark:why don't we approach this, for example, like a tech startup.
Mark:You know, if, if I do something at Captivate, I want to test it.
Mark:You know, if I bring out membership and tipping functionality, it's not, I'm not
Mark:just testing the technicalities of it.
Mark:I'm testing, does anyone actually want this?
Mark:So, we'll, you know, we'll, we'll devise some tests and that might be
Mark:going out and speaking to people.
Mark:It might be going out and testing, uh, you know, whatever the user flow
Mark:and, and, and, and x, Y, and Z and going through and making sure that
Mark:they actually want the thing that we're going to build as a podcaster.
Mark:Like you said, we just let go.
Mark:We just let go.
Mark:And if that's me wanting to do that for that cell therapy, that's cool.
Mark:But as you say, if it's gonna be a product, There does come a point
Mark:where we do what you've just said.
Mark:We, we, we tighten up, we think about things a little more, which leads me
Mark:to, to, to the next train of thought, which is I'm a busy kind of podcaster.
Mark:Okay?
Mark:So I'm, I'm someone that is on the cusp of great numbers.
Mark:I know it's a good show.
Mark:I know it is a show that people respond to.
Mark:I get feedback from people.
Mark:Um, I'm on what I feel to be the cusp of making.
Mark:Money and good money from this.
Mark:Maybe covering a car payment, maybe even covering a mortgage payment and being
Mark:able to go four days a week in my day job.
Mark:That's where I am.
Mark:I can't seem to get it over the line.
Mark:What, what do you tend to see as someone that's done this since 2005?
Mark:What are the things that people are too loose on that will stop them?
Mark:Turn it into that thing that they want it to be.
Dave:Yeah, the, the one that always really makes me scratch my head, and
Dave:this is again, in podcasting, like you mentioned, you have a lot of little garden
Dave:hoses that fill up a river, and so, but I will see people like, I'm trying to
Dave:grow my audience and I'll go and look.
Dave:And they're in Spotify, but they're not in Apple.
Dave:Or maybe they're in both, but there are another like 10 directories
Dave:that you could list your show in.
Dave:And I was like, you know, if you, in the US we have Halloween and, and you
Dave:dress up your kids in weird costumes and they go out and get candy and usually
Dave:it's anybody with their front porch light on, they have candy and that kid
Dave:doesn't look at the street and go, well, alright, so everybody has their light on.
Dave:I might go to this one and, and Nah, not that one.
Dave:Not that one.
Dave:And then no, they want candy.
Dave:So they go to every single house and they get candy and every podcaster's
Dave:like, I want more downloads.
Dave:And you're like, okay, here, here are all these directories that
Dave:have their lights on and have thousands of people that love audio.
Dave:And you're like, nah, I don't need those.
Dave:iHeartRadio.
Dave:Never heard of it.
Dave:Amazon.
Dave:Nah, maybe I'm like, list your show everywhere.
Dave:So there's that.
Dave:And then you get into, I see, uh, I know there was a database of newsletters
Dave:and again, Not a horrible strategy.
Dave:If there's a niche that you know, this is a bunch of people that raise cows
Dave:and you have a podcast about raising cows, okay, it might make sense to
Dave:advertise in that newsletter, but we know those people like to read and you're
Dave:looking for people who like to listen.
Dave:And so that's where trying to find other shows like yours that you can
Dave:either be a guest on or you know, sponsor them or things like that.
Dave:'cause you really want to go to where your audience is and your audiences.
Dave:Primarily listening to podcasts and the thing that drives me bonkers,
Dave:'cause I get about four a day, is, hello, I found your show and I love it.
Dave:So right there, I'm like, okay, my name's Dave.
Dave:Not that I'm an egomaniac, but it's pretty easy to find.
Dave:I say it at the beginning of every episode and when you say, I love your
Dave:show, I have about five, which one?
Dave:So I know right there.
Dave:I'm just gonna get a bunch of spam.
Dave:And then it's all about the guest.
Dave:And I always tell people, if you want to be a guest on another show,
Dave:make it all about their audience and how you can serve their audience.
Dave:Again, good podcasters are serving their audience and explain to the the host how
Dave:you can help them serve their audience.
Dave:Oh, I, I heard you talk about topic A.
Dave:I'm also in this field.
Dave:Have you've ever talked about topic B and go that route.
Dave:So when you can get your show in front of other listeners,
Dave:that right now seems to be.
Dave:You know, whether you're doing paid advertising and some of that gets
Dave:really expensive, so be careful if your podcast isn't used as a
Dave:marketing tool to bring in more money.
Dave:You're kind of just lighting your money on fire.
Dave:It's gonna be hard to get that back.
Dave:So, uh, you know, but, you know, getting your show in front of other listeners
Dave:seems to be the way right now that, that people are growing their show.
Mark:It's fascinating that, that people often.
Mark:We'll start a podcast and they'll, you know, they'll say, well,
Mark:okay, I've started my, my show.
Mark:I've got two or three episodes out there and it's not growing.
Mark:And when can I monetize?
Mark:When can I make money?
Mark:And what always amazes me is that I, if I say, if I walk in, I've got a,
Mark:I'm on a startup accelerator, okay?
Mark:I've got a new startup business and I register my limited company here in the
Mark:uk and I get some business cards done.
Mark:I get some flyers or some leaflets done and I don't really do anything else.
Mark:I just walk in there on that startup accelerator and I say,
Mark:well, I've got the business.
Mark:I've got these flyers.
Mark:Why is it not making any money?
Mark:I'm gonna get sort of laughed out of the building.
Mark:I.
Mark:Because I'm expecting a 40 hour a week job to deliver a 40 hour a
Mark:week salary, but I'm only putting in one hour or two hours per week.
Mark:And for me, the expectations with so many people are that you can start
Mark:a podcast and you can make money.
Mark:Right away.
Mark:Where the hell has that come from, man?
Mark:Like, why if I start playing golf, I, I don't wanna make money.
Mark:Uh, just if I start playing guitar, don't wanna make money.
Mark:If I do a YouTube channel, I don't wanna make money.
Mark:If I write a blog, I'm not thinking about making money.
Mark:Why do you think it is that podcasting suddenly people are
Mark:just saying, I start a show.
Mark:I should be making money.
Mark:Where's that come from?
Dave:I, the easy money is the part I'm with you that scratches my head.
Dave:I think part of it is the, the kind of span of time we went through where Spotify
Dave:was just spending money, like it was, you know, uh, free basically, you know, 200
Dave:million to Joe Rogan and things like that.
Dave:So I think that's part of it.
Dave:And I also think.
Dave:Some of it is, uh, we'll, we'll call them gurus.
Dave:The people that sell hope for three easy payments.
Dave:You know, I can change your life.
Dave:Just give me, you know, $300, three easy payments, yada, yada, yada.
Dave:And, and they say things that you like.
Dave:Think about it.
Dave:Uh, and I know you guys have different singing, uh, contests.
Dave:In the UK we have American Idol.
Dave:Anybody tell me who the season six American Idol winner was?
Dave:So you can get tons of exposure, but if you haven't put in the reps and not that
Dave:those people aren't un, they're not, you know, they're obviously talented, they
Dave:won, but it takes more than exposure.
Dave:It's about a relationship that you build with your audience.
Dave:And I, I know I've mentioned the.
Dave:I did a book on uh, uh, podcast monetization and I asked people, how
Dave:long did it take you to really, you know, generate some, some decent income?
Dave:And it was somewhere between two and three years leaning much more towards three.
Dave:Nobody wants to hear that.
Dave:They want to hear.
Dave:And you know, I had somebody the other day and they have about 60 downloads
Dave:an episode now that's three classrooms.
Dave:You know, my background's in teaching.
Dave:That's half a hallway.
Dave:That's pretty good.
Dave:Those people could be listening to satellite radio or playing
Dave:Xbox or all these other things.
Dave:But what nobody says is 5% or less are gonna take action If you
Dave:have something to sell and you're like, oh, that can't be real.
Dave:But I'm here to tell you, I, if you keep your ear open for it, anytime
Dave:I go to a podcast event and they're talking about monetization, if somebody
Dave:brings up like, how many, how much of your audience can you expect to.
Dave:To actually, you know, go for a premium, uh, effort and it's around 3%.
Dave:When I listen to, uh, when I talk to the people from Teachable,
Dave:that's a, a training platform, they said 2% and Radio Labs a really,
Dave:really popular science podcast.
Dave:And one time they were doing.
Dave:Kind of a uh, a fundraiser like, Hey, we know you like the show.
Dave:Thanks so much.
Dave:We appreciate your po your support.
Dave:There are millions of listeners and for that we're eternally grateful.
Dave:Uh, we're just trying to get up to 1% of you Contr.
Dave:And I was like, wait, radio Lab.
Dave:'cause if you're in a room and you say the word radio lab and there's a fan of the
Dave:show, they could be like 15 feet from you.
Dave:They hear Radiolab, they're going, oh my God, I love that show.
Dave:It's crazy that they have these rabid fans and they were trying to get up to 1%.
Dave:So I don't think most people talk about that.
Dave:'cause it's hard to sell your life-changing podcasting
Dave:course for three easy payments.
Dave:When you say, oh, by the way, it's kind of hard.
Dave:I.
Dave:Not everybody's gonna buy.
Dave:And it's not 50%, it's not 20%, it's 10%.
Dave:But you build the trust like I trust you, mark, because I know your background.
Dave:I know you've got a lot of marketing in your background, and I just love
Dave:the way you think and I love your sense of humor and things like that.
Dave:So if Mark says, you know what you need to do, you need to go learn marketing.
Dave:I'm like, you know what?
Dave:That's right.
Dave:My background's in teaching.
Dave:I need more marketing chops.
Dave:So that's where that really is the power.
Dave:Again, it's the relationship.
Dave:So, but I don't know, I, you know, the poor music industry, everybody
Dave:thinks music is free and you know, every musician's truly starving.
Dave:Now there are, I, I just, there's a musician I watch on YouTube and she
Dave:said, I'm not putting my music on Spotify, because if you buy my CD
Dave:for like $9, And I, it was something ridiculous, like 38,000 plays.
Dave:She goes, one CD is worth like a gazillion different plays.
Dave:And she says, so consequently, if you're a true fan of my music, I've
Dave:made the packaging special and you know, come buy my actual physical cd.
Dave:And I was like, well, good on you sister.
Dave:Bucking the system.
Mark:Creativity is, has always been one of those things that's
Mark:so difficult to, to, to monetize.
Mark:You look at.
Mark:You know, you and I come from that, from that musical background, and you, you,
Mark:the, the amount of gigs that you have to do to, to earn the first hundred bucks.
Mark:And then to go from a hundred bucks a night band to a 500 and to a thousand,
Mark:and then to actually supporting people.
Mark:And I mean, it's, it's not a dissimilar journey, is it?
Mark:It's like you say,
Dave:it's the reps.
Dave:Well, and, and when people go, can you make a living in podcasting?
Dave:You go, absolutely.
Dave:Can you make a living as a musician?
Dave:I.
Dave:Or an athlete, or an author, or an actor.
Dave:'cause we're in the entertainment business, like it or not.
Dave:And so sure you can, but there are a lot of really, really
Dave:talented musicians in Nashville.
Dave:You know, tendon bar, you know, it's, it's not a automatic thing.
Dave:I, I've seen people, they'll, they'll hear me say that three year thing
Dave:and then they'll do a, a podcast that may or may not be growing a whole
Dave:lot and they're like, I've already been doing it for three years.
Dave:I'm ready to make money.
Dave:And I'm like, No, no, no.
Dave:It's three years to grow enough.
Dave:It's not based on time.
Dave:I mean, otherwise I should have a Grammy.
Dave:I've been playing the guitar since I was 12, so, you know, it's not time-based.
Dave:It's the size of the audience and the more niche you are, then you might
Dave:get away with a smaller audience.
Dave:Uh, I think one of my favorite.
Dave:Just examples of a niche podcast.
Dave:There's a guy that does the chameleon breeder and he makes cages for chameleons.
Dave:So he's actually making a decent amount of cash, but he
Dave:doesn't have a ton of downloads.
Dave:Well, yeah, but the people that listen to that are exactly who he's trying to reach.
Dave:So it, it varies on that, but it's, it's not based on time.
Dave:It's based on growing the audience, and that's the part that's not always easy.
Mark:That's a great example.
Mark:That's a great example.
Mark:And it, it, it's, you have to become so many other things.
Mark:When you get to that stage as well, you have to become the startup founder, the
Mark:business person, the bookkeeper, the marketer, the sales executive, the, the,
Mark:the, the, the administration assistant.
Mark:So there's a heck of a lot that goes into that.
Mark:Now, my friend, I'm gonna have to put a pin in it in just a second.
Mark:I could talk to you forever and I think we should absolutely jump back
Mark:on and talk a little bit more about the future of podcasting because I
Mark:think there's another hour in that.
Mark:So I, I, I think we should actually book a bit of a follow up on that one.
Mark:Just to wrap up and to give people a bit of a taster, what are you worried about?
Mark:Podcasting.
Mark:We're 20 years in.
Mark:What's the, what are the things that are on
Dave:your mind?
Dave:The thing that makes me worried is, look, advertising is definitely
Dave:a way to monetize your podcast.
Dave:If you have enough downloads, and we just talked about the niche, but what
Dave:I'm hearing are there are companies now that Mark, you remember that one
Dave:time, and I'm just making this up.
Dave:You remember that one time you got pulled over, you got a ticket.
Dave:And, uh, as the police that gave you the ticket was driving away,
Dave:you gave him the big middle finger.
Dave:Well, well, somebody took a picture of that, and I know you were only
Dave:18 at the time, but guess what?
Dave:Because of that, you're now seen as anti-police and consequently you are
Dave:not viable for advertising because of something you did forever ago.
Dave:There are companies, and I'm not making it up, that are doing that and they
Dave:explain, I was listening to a show about advertising and it, it was this company
Dave:explaining what they do and they have like 20 different services that they use
Dave:to go and research, not just the podcast.
Dave:But the podcaster, so if you wore a shirt that was maybe not
Dave:something, you know, whatever.
Dave:And I was like, who, who wants to step into a position where
Dave:you're just gonna get scrutinized?
Dave:So I'm worried about advertising.
Dave:I, I've listened to some popular podcasts and I've busted out the stopwatch and it's
Dave:30% and I'm like, look, radio's at 30%.
Dave:One of the reasons podcasting was so popular in the beginning
Dave:was 'cause it wasn't radio.
Dave:So I'm worried that.
Dave:Some of us want to turn it back into radio, and I'm like, no,
Dave:let's, let's avoid that, shall we?
Mark:People get comfortable with what they're comfortable with.
Mark:That's, that's a sad fact.
Mark:And I think when money starts changing hands, people rely on what they know,
Mark:which can stifle, I don't like the word innovation 'cause I think it's
Mark:overused, but it can stifle genuine.
Mark:Innovation.
Mark:Alright my friend, listen, I will stick a pin in it right there.
Mark:I think we should do a follow up 'cause we could talk forever and I'd love to get
Mark:even more into the future of podcasting.
Mark:But I want to, I wanna ask where are you gonna be in person?
Mark:'cause I think everyone in podcasting, I.
Mark:To be honest, I think everyone outside of podcasting should meet Dave Jackson.
Mark:So where, where are you headed mate?
Mark:Where, what events are you at
Dave:next?
Dave:I'm gonna be in Denver, uh, at Podcast Movement.
Dave:I'm going to be at an Arkansas podcast, uh, event.
Dave:I just got that yesterday.
Dave:I'm gonna be speaking at Indie podcast.
Dave:That's Joe Pardo's thing in New Jersey.
Dave:Uh, and I'm gonna be in New York at a, and this is sad 'cause I
Dave:don't remember the name of it.
Dave:It's a Christian thing that just came up as well.
Dave:If you wanna see where I'm at, just go to school at podcasting.com/where
Dave:and I'll have my schedule there.
Dave:Is Joe's event in the same
Mark:place?
Dave:It's in a different place.
Dave:He moved it and it's not the, and I love that event, by the way.
Mark:I love that event too.
Mark:That was my staple event for ages, man.
Mark:I used to fly into Jersey just for that event.
Mark:I used to love it.
Mark:Ask Jess Cook Forman about the chicken bus.
Mark:Next time you speak to a, I got from, I got from New York City to Joe's event
Mark:on a bus that I shared with chickens.
Mark:Someone did me a dirty there mate, I'll tell you that.
Mark:I think so, right?
Mark:That is enough of that chat.
Mark:Go and find Dave Jackson anywhere you can find him.
Mark:He's an absolutely wonderful person and an absolute, absolute friend
Mark:to everyone in podcasting and a mighty talent within our industry.
Mark:So Dave, thank you so much my friend, and to you the ever
Mark:present, beautiful listener.
Mark:Keep on doing what you do, keep sharing your voice 'cause remember, it
Mark:does matter to those who follow you.
Mark:Keep doing it and I'll see you on the next run.