This episode contains chapters so you can more easily and quickly skip to
Speaker:the parts that are relevant for you.
Speaker:Every podcaster right now feels like they're being told.
Speaker:You need to do video.
Speaker:Well, look, I've just come back from the independent podcast awards where I was
Speaker:a head judge and I got to meet a bunch of indie creators who were finalists
Speaker:in the category that I was judging.
Speaker:And in this episode, I'm gonna relive with you the experience of
Speaker:watching the penny drop in real time.
Speaker:When we unpack together exactly what investing in video really asks of you
Speaker:and what it really returns to you, spoiler alert if you are an opportunist
Speaker:video bro, stop this content right now.
Speaker:You're gonna get triggered
Speaker:So look, today I am breaking down for you the myth, the reality, and the what
Speaker:to dos instead, while you are saving yourself thousands of hours and cash.
Speaker:Plus, I'll tell you why I still publish a video version of this and why I'm not
Speaker:being a massive hypocrite by doing that.
Speaker:Here's the pitch people are hearing all the time, mostly on LinkedIn,
Speaker:but on other platforms as well.
Speaker:Well, look, technically that's true.
Speaker:YouTube is searchable, but searchable isn't the same as getting found
Speaker:between you and the audience.
Speaker:Sits an algorithm.
Speaker:Ruthless watch time, mathematics.
Speaker:Click through rates on thumbnails, retention data and curves.
Speaker:End screen journeys, title and description, optimizations,
Speaker:chapters and comment strategy.
Speaker:Yeah, that's a thing you don't treat YouTube as its own beast entirely with its
Speaker:own editing standards and best practices.
Speaker:You will not be seeing that magic spike you were promised by the gurus.
Speaker:See, the thing is the audio side has just as much discovery opportunity.
Speaker:You've got search bars inside Apple Podcasts and Spotify, and your titles,
Speaker:descriptions, episode summaries, keywords, they all matter there just as much.
Speaker:if your episode's called episode 14, a chat with Jamie.
Speaker:Look, you're invisible everywhere, no matter what you're doing.
Speaker:So at the awards I chatted with a particular indie host who just won for
Speaker:a beautifully crafted lifestyle show.
Speaker:Look, the show up.
Speaker:It's called Floating Space.
Speaker:Hosted by Katie who is just magnificent with the sound design, immersive sound
Speaker:design, very much an audio experience.
Speaker:And she'd been told at some point as every indie podcast creator is
Speaker:told, Hey, you should do video.
Speaker:When I said, look Katie, your show is an audio.
Speaker:First work of art video isn't gonna suddenly 10 x your audience, no
Speaker:matter what these gurus are saying.
Speaker:I told her that I've seen business shows sink cash into video with little
Speaker:to no benefit over being audio only, and she just like stared blankly at me.
Speaker:Are you joking?
Speaker:It clashed with everything the YouTube gurus had been telling her, and that's
Speaker:the shock that most indies feel.
Speaker:They assume video equals bigger audience, but unless you invest time, practice
Speaker:and consistent YouTube optimizations, you'll likely split your energy and
Speaker:dilute your audio, which is the very thing that your listeners actually love.
Speaker:That's what they want.
Speaker:Primarily.
Speaker:They don't care that you are also doing a video version of this because
Speaker:they're probably not watching it.
Speaker:Yeah, I can hear what you're saying.
Speaker:Il, you publish video too.
Speaker:And you may even be watching this right now if you are on YouTube.
Speaker:Here's the deal.
Speaker:Yeah, I do.
Speaker:and here's why that's not hypocrisy.
Speaker:Access preference.
Speaker:Look, some people only consume via YouTube.
Speaker:I want a presence there so that those people can still hear this show.
Speaker:Because I know what I'm doing with the recording process, getting
Speaker:video and audio at the same time, I know how to do that so it doesn't
Speaker:impinge on the audio experience.
Speaker:And if I didn't know how to do that, this would be a podcast with a YouTube version
Speaker:that's just a static image and a waveform animation, just like every other lazy
Speaker:podcaster that the gurus love to shame.
Speaker:Into parting with their hard earned.
Speaker:Also, experimentation is my jam.
Speaker:My growth plan is audio First, Video is a bolt on.
Speaker:It's not something I'm looking at to grow the show and honestly, my YouTube
Speaker:views, they're not great 'cause I'm not running a full YouTube machine.
Speaker:I'm not doing bespoke edits, thumbnail, factories, hook first, scripting,
Speaker:community comments, all that stuff.
Speaker:I do put some effort in and I've studied the best practices, but to be
Speaker:honest, when it comes to my own staff.
Speaker:Investing an extra four hours per week just for maybe an additional 25 views.
Speaker:It doesn't feel worth it to me.
Speaker:And that's kind of my point.
Speaker:If you don't go all in, don't expect all in results.
Speaker:you've been feeling video pressure and you are breathing a little bit easier now.
Speaker:Well, good news, first of all.
Speaker:Here are your immediate next steps to leverage this breathing
Speaker:room that I've just gifted you.
Speaker:Option one, better than nothing.
Speaker:YouTube presence.
Speaker:So export what they call an audiogram.
Speaker:That is your artwork and a waveform and chapter markers.
Speaker:It's better than not being there, and you can easily make these in
Speaker:either headliner or in D script.
Speaker:Upload to YouTube with a clear search friendly title.
Speaker:In other words.
Speaker:Present the problem, the benefit, and the main keyword.
Speaker:Put in a proper description with key phrases and links, timestamps, and
Speaker:end screens pointing to a playlist.
Speaker:Accept that this is mainly for access, not discovery.
Speaker:So in other words, you're ticking a box to be nice and audience friendly.
Speaker:For some of those that might be harder of hearing, and it's not to
Speaker:inflate your ego or your results.
Speaker:Option two, skip the video element entirely and grow faster
Speaker:in audio, which is probably my recommended route for most indies.
Speaker:Fix your episode titles this week.
Speaker:Make them searchable and specific.
Speaker:In other words, how to or YX fails, or seven ways to achieve X. This
Speaker:is the language that your listener types at 11:00 PM Maybe not the
Speaker:specific numbers, but the how tos.
Speaker:Also tighten your intro.
Speaker:Earn the attention in the first seven to 15 seconds.
Speaker:Give a clear promise and then deliver on it.
Speaker:It's amazing how many podcasters are not doing that.
Speaker:Also, upgrade your show page, SEO.
Speaker:In other words, the stuff that Apple podcasts and
Speaker:Spotify B browsers are seeing.
Speaker:And on your main website, you do have a main website, right?
Speaker:You need a main website.
Speaker:Make sure your core keyword appears in the title first paragraph.
Speaker:At least one of the H twos in your episode description.
Speaker:Above all this, what you can do is you can get to the head of the queue with
Speaker:a podcast improvement audit to identify where you are losing listeners, what's
Speaker:unfindable and what you should fix First, I'll give you a priority list
Speaker:so you stop guessing and start growing.
Speaker:If you fancy booking onto this, go to pod mastery.co/light.
Speaker:That's LITE, pod mastery.co/l ITE.
Speaker:Here's the bottom line.
Speaker:It's not worth trading hours of video grind for a handful of
Speaker:distracted viewers that are probably not gonna be loyal to you anyway.
Speaker:They're just looking for that specific content.
Speaker:So make your audio so good that people are recommending
Speaker:it and you're growing that way.
Speaker:So recently I played around with D Script's, AI translation, dubbing.
Speaker:I ran a recent episode through its test, a Spanish dub of this show.
Speaker:I was left feeling like none of it was that great, honestly.
Speaker:Yeah, it's clever tech.
Speaker:In an ideal world, it would be a nice to have, but it's not ready for publication.
Speaker:Here are some of the issues that I found.
Speaker:Lip sync Drift.
Speaker:Yeah, the Bruce Lee effect.
Speaker:It's very primitive, this text still.
Speaker:So you did find that there were some parts where the AI couldn't match
Speaker:what was being said with the video.
Speaker:So you had a lot of kind of enter the dragon style or you want to
Speaker:fight, fight me kind of stuff.
Speaker:A lot of the key frames were ignored as well, so my music bed absolutely
Speaker:drowned my voice in places.
Speaker:Also worth mentioning, it's bloody expensive to do.
Speaker:Eats all your credits, you're gonna find it's gonna eat up your
Speaker:monthly budget within one episode.
Speaker:Oh, and it took an age to render.
Speaker:Here's what I do instead.
Speaker:Translate your transcript properly.
Speaker:Publish it as a localized blog post with an embedded audio player, and
Speaker:then use that to reach other languages while keeping your quality intact.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:This is the part of the show where we feature your questions,
Speaker:and this week's email is from.
Speaker:Layla, I wanna say in Auckland, New Zealand.
Speaker:Neil, I binged your episodes recently and found the episode on Crafting Stronger
Speaker:podcast intros using the plot idea.
Speaker:I'm rewriting my old cold opens now, but how do I know if the
Speaker:new intros are actually working?
Speaker:Two checks you can do.
Speaker:Look at your retention curve.
Speaker:So look at your hosting analytics within the platforms IE Apple Podcasts,
Speaker:Spotify for creators, Amazon Music Dashboard, and anywhere else that you
Speaker:are going into that granular data to find out what's happening in platform.
Speaker:Find out what your most popular platforms are, first of all, and then go into them.
Speaker:Then look at the first 60 to 120 seconds of the episode and
Speaker:see what the graph is doing.
Speaker:If drop off decreases compared to your prior episodes, then
Speaker:your new intro is doing its job.
Speaker:Here's a qualitative signal you can look for if you are building an email
Speaker:list on your podcast, and you know that there are three listeners that
Speaker:listen to most of your episodes, send them an email asking them what the
Speaker:promise that you made in your first 10 seconds of a specific episode was.
Speaker:If they paraphrase that promise relatively quickly, you've nailed your clarity.
Speaker:By the way, if you haven't heard that episode, it's back in
Speaker:the archive on pod mastery.co.
Speaker:Go for the Power of Plot for great podcast intros, and there's a helpful companion
Speaker:download as well at pod mastery.co/intros.
Speaker:Worth a listen if your openings feel a little bit on the flabby side.
Speaker:Okay, so let's wrap up then what we've talked about in this episode.
Speaker:And here's your one week plan.
Speaker:We wanna make sure that we are leveraging the extra time that
Speaker:we've got from deciding not to put a heavily focused YouTube version
Speaker:of our podcast out into the world.
Speaker:So here's what you can do instead, rename the next two episodes that you
Speaker:publish with problem benefit titles.
Speaker:Rerecord or tighten your cold opens to deliver a strong promise in 10 to
Speaker:15 seconds, refresh your show notes.
Speaker:Primary keyword up top.
Speaker:Give one clear call to action.
Speaker:In your episode description optional, make an audiogram for YouTube so you
Speaker:can get access to those other audiences.
Speaker:That's if you want the box ticked without the time sink.
Speaker:And first and foremost, book a podcast improvement audit.
Speaker:If all this sounds really complicated and you want a precise, sorted
Speaker:roadmap just those fixes that are gonna move the needle for you,
Speaker:because this is a deal, podcasting doesn't have a discovery problem.
Speaker:Your ideal audience is just around the corner for you.
Speaker:Most shows just have a creator not able to leverage existing
Speaker:platforms properly in order to get found problem and a focus problem.
Speaker:If the idea of video has been distracting you, you're officially off the hook now.
Speaker:Thanks so much for getting involved with this.
Speaker:I'm Neil Lio, the pod master.
Speaker:Go make something worth looking for.
Speaker:If this episode helped you share it with another indie podcaster that you
Speaker:know who's been probably freaking out because they've been told that they
Speaker:should do video Until the next episode.
Speaker:Good luck in your journey towards attaining pod mastery.
Speaker:I.