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This episode of the All New Sounding Podcasting Insights

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may well shock you. Not because it's gonna be

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particularly controversial, but because it's going to be

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talking about something which runs counter

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to the very thing that my business, Podnos

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Podcasting, actually makes money from when

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clients work with us. And that is

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strategy. And why I think that many

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podcasters don't actually need a new

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strategy. They just need better feedback.

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And when I'm talking about feedback, I'm not talking about the polite kind,

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you know, not notes about pacing or transitions

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or whether the audio sounds great. What they

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actually need is someone to tell them that uncomfortable

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truth about what it feels like to listen.

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Because here's the thing. A lot of podcasts aren't

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actually bad. They're just

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massively forgettable. You know, they're competent,

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they're structured, they're fine. And

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fine is the most dangerous place that a podcast can be.

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Fine is mediocrity. Fine is getting

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caught in that trap of just publishing content

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for publishing content's sake. It's about

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ticking off the task from your calendar, week in,

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week out. Oh, look, it's Wednesday

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podcast recording day. You see, from the

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very beginning, the energy you're carrying into that is off.

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And the listener will definitely pick up on that lacking energy.

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Without the energy, you don't have the strong opening. And when I'm

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talking about a strong opening, I'm not just talking about the tone.

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I'm talking about answering the question every

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listener is silently asking you in the first

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30 seconds of your episode.

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Why should I care right now? I

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mean, scripts can help with clarity. For sure, they can, but

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connection comes from delivery, from sounding like a human

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who actually believes the thing that they're saying.

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I'm not going to be a hypocrite about this. Of course, transitions, how you

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place your ads, the pacing, the

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strategically placed silences, all of that does matter,

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but none of it compensates for a lack of point of view.

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So when people say they want feedback on their podcast, what

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they usually mean is, tell me how I can polish this.

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What they should actually be asking you is, well,

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is this actually earning someone's time? I'm going to ask you

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now, is this podcast in the various

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formats that I've tried with it, is

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it worth your time? I'm not changing

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formats because the show doesn't work. Believe me, the show works.

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I have the listeners that are in my stats. I look at Apple

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podcasts and I see how many followers it's got. I look at Spotify

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less. So there's as someone very helpfully pointed out on

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LinkedIn the other day. But the thing is,

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I want this to resonate with you. I want this to make impact on

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you. I want your podcasting life

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to feel a difference from what I am publishing

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for your ears through this channel.

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Is this show earning your time? Because growth

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doesn't usually come from doing more or doing differently.

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It comes from being braver about what already exists.

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It comes from taking what you've done, literally

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screwing it up into a ball and throwing it in the bin.

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And that's kind of what I've done with this podcast. Right now. You'll hear the

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difference in the format. And so I want your feedback to

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this. Most people never get that feedback.

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I'm hoping I'll get it from you. Because

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to come back to my opening point, most podcasters

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don't need a new strategy. They need better feedback.

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And not the polite kind. Thanks so much for listening

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to this episode of Podcasting Insights. I've been Neil

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Velio the Podmaster, and I'm thanking you for your

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time listening this week. If you think anybody else would

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find it useful, do. Please feel free to share it with them. And if you

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haven't yet, follow the show in your favorite

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podcast app.