Have you ever considered being a guest on a podcast?
Jon Clayton:If not, you're missing out on a huge opportunity.
Jon Clayton:But how should you go about securing your first podcast interview?
Jon Clayton:And how could you be better prepared for it?
Jon Clayton:So when the host hits the record button, Your interview goes as
Jon Clayton:smoothly as possible, and you come across as an amazing podcast guest.
Jon Clayton:I'm joined by podcasting expert, Colleen gray, to guide you through nailing
Jon Clayton:your next podcast appearance on this episode of architecture business club.
Jon Clayton:The weekly podcast for solo and small firm architecture
Jon Clayton:practice owners, just like you.
Jon Clayton:You want to build a profitable future proof architecture business
Jon Clayton:that fits around their life.
Jon Clayton:I'm John Clayton, your host, if you're a small practice leader or
Jon Clayton:sole practitioner in architecture.
Jon Clayton:Struggling to find clarity or reach your goals.
Jon Clayton:Consider working with me.
Jon Clayton:I have a personalized one-to-one support through coaching consulting, mentoring.
Jon Clayton:This tailored approach helps you navigate your unique path to success.
Jon Clayton:Whether it's growing your practice, working fewer hours or building
Jon Clayton:your team, I've got you covered.
Jon Clayton:Just click the link in the show notes to book a call with me to
Jon Clayton:discuss your options or email John J O n@architecturebusinessclub.com.
Jon Clayton:For more information.
Jon Clayton:And let's discuss being an amazing podcast guest.
Jon Clayton:Colin Gray is a podcaster, speaker, PhD and founder of thepodcasthost.
Jon Clayton:com and Alitu.
Jon Clayton:Thepodcasthost.
Jon Clayton:com is a huge audio, video and written resource on how
Jon Clayton:to create a successful show.
Jon Clayton:Alitu.
Jon Clayton:com is a podcast maker tool designed to help you create your podcast in
Jon Clayton:the easiest way possible and with full creative control, including call
Jon Clayton:recording, audio clean up and more.
Jon Clayton:Audio editing, building your episode and hosting your show.
Jon Clayton:To access free courses and resources to get started in podcasting,
Jon Clayton:head over to thepodcasthost.
Jon Clayton:com forward slash start here.
Jon Clayton:Colin, welcome to Architecture Business Club.
Colin Gray:Hey, thanks for having me, John.
Colin Gray:Nice to be here.
Jon Clayton:Oh, it's a pleasure to have you here.
Jon Clayton:Colin, when you're not podcasting, you've got a ton of interests and
Jon Clayton:hobbies outside of work that I know.
Jon Clayton:Could you tell us a little bit about some of those hobbies?
Jon Clayton:I know cycling is one of your passions in particular, isn't it?
Colin Gray:Yeah, if the weather's, uh, if the weather's good or even
Colin Gray:if it's bad, to be honest, I get out on the bike, um, as much as I can.
Colin Gray:I like, uh, if it's nice, I'll get out on the road bike.
Colin Gray:Uh, I love kind of going around and seeing the parts of the Highlands, um, near where
Colin Gray:I live and if it's muddy and wet, mountain biking's better in the forest with
Colin Gray:the mud and the, the, uh, the wetness.
Colin Gray:So yeah, good fun either way.
Jon Clayton:Oh, that sounds awesome.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, and where you're situated up in Scotland, I mean, that's
Jon Clayton:a fantastic place in the world to be for the mountain biking.
Colin Gray:Yeah, really lucky actually.
Colin Gray:Yeah, it's great.
Colin Gray:Um, so yeah, plenty of places to go.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, down in Norfolk it's a bit flatter I'm afraid.
Jon Clayton:So, um, mountain biking and mountain walking is, uh, is not the best
Jon Clayton:hobby to have down in Norfolk.
Jon Clayton:It's flat as a pancake, um, so
Colin Gray:Oh, good for the, good for the road biking then.
Jon Clayton:Well, you say that, you know, but, um, because it is so flat, that even
Jon Clayton:road biking can, well, it can be quite tricky because of the, the winds coming
Jon Clayton:in across the, the plains, if you like.
Jon Clayton:So, uh, yeah, that's it can be, can be quite a challenge doing the road biking.
Jon Clayton:But yeah, I miss the mountains though.
Jon Clayton:I used to live in the Northwest and, um, go mountain hiking and things.
Jon Clayton:So, um, yeah, very, very envious of you being up in the Highlands.
Colin Gray:Yeah, it's good.
Colin Gray:It's good.
Colin Gray:Very lucky.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:So we're going to talk Being a podcast guest how how meta is this
Jon Clayton:I'm talking about this on a podcast.
Colin Gray:Absolutely.
Colin Gray:I feel, I feel pressure here as a guest trying to tell people how to be a guest.
Colin Gray:So I'll do my best to perform.
Jon Clayton:Oh There's no pressure it's fine.
Jon Clayton:We're all we're all friends here.
Jon Clayton:So why should Architects in particular, because this, the audience that we
Jon Clayton:have with the show, it's architects, architecture practice owners typically.
Jon Clayton:And I'd dare say a lot of them haven't, haven't been on a podcast.
Jon Clayton:They might listen to podcasts, but there's the vast majority of them probably haven't
Jon Clayton:even considered going on a podcast.
Jon Clayton:So why, why should they consider going on a podcast?
Colin Gray:Oh, there's a whole bunch of reasons, but I mean, the kind of core ones
Colin Gray:for anyone running a client based business really like architects or anything similar
Colin Gray:to that is that it's just really, it's one of the best ways out there to build.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:Authority and trust in your niche.
Colin Gray:So to get out there and really show who you are as a person, you know, you can get
Colin Gray:your brand out there as much as you like your, the name of your company, you know,
Colin Gray:your branding, all that kind of stuff.
Colin Gray:At the end of the day, we all know people buy from people and therefore they want
Colin Gray:to know the people behind this company, or at least they're even more likely to buy
Colin Gray:from a good brand if they know and like and trust those people behind the brand.
Colin Gray:So podcasting is such a good medium for that because it's an in depth medium,
Colin Gray:which means that you get to spend maybe like half an hour or an hour.
Colin Gray:with somebody in your ears, you know, you're in their ears talking through
Colin Gray:your expertise, sharing your views, showing like who you are, what your
Colin Gray:values are, all that kind of stuff.
Colin Gray:And it's also a really personal medium.
Colin Gray:So you get to spend all that time with them, but equally, it's quite
Colin Gray:easy to speak on a microphone.
Colin Gray:in a conversational way, just having a chat with the host of the podcast.
Colin Gray:And because of that, you come across as just a real person, just open and honest.
Colin Gray:And that combination of transparency, openness, honesty, combined with
Colin Gray:the length of time you spend with people, it just builds huge trust
Colin Gray:and huge kind of, um, authority.
Colin Gray:And it makes people really get to know you, to trust and much
Colin Gray:more likely to buy from you.
Colin Gray:As a result,
Jon Clayton:I couldn't agree more.
Jon Clayton:over the summer.
Jon Clayton:Huge fan of podcasts myself, also being a fellow podcaster.
Jon Clayton:Think the thing, particularly that thing you mentioned about building trust.
Jon Clayton:I think there was, um, there was a study that Google did a number of years ago.
Jon Clayton:And, um, it's a figure that's been bandied around quite a bit about the
Jon Clayton:amount of time that people need to have with you to, to build up that know, like,
Jon Clayton:and trust before they're ready to buy.
Jon Clayton:And that was something like seven hours.
Jon Clayton:You think, well, that's a long time, isn't it?
Jon Clayton:But if.
Jon Clayton:You've been appearing on podcasts and you've been a guest and you share those
Jon Clayton:with people and they can they can build up You know a few hours quite quickly
Jon Clayton:if you've done a few podcast interviews, so it's definitely something Yeah,
Jon Clayton:something people should explore for sure
Colin Gray:Yeah, for sure.
Colin Gray:And if you're, if you're picking the right shows as well, you know, when
Colin Gray:somebody is starting to get into a topic, if they're a podcast listener, that's
Colin Gray:who we're aiming for here as getting on to podcast, uh, podcast as a guest.
Colin Gray:I know from my experience, what about yourself, john?
Colin Gray:Like if you get into something or you're interested in a project or something
Colin Gray:new, you just dive into like 5 or 10 different podcasts around that topic.
Colin Gray:So if you can manage to kind of blanket cover those 5 to
Colin Gray:10 podcasts in your niche.
Colin Gray:These people will hear you like again and again.
Colin Gray:And you'll build up that time without even having to run your own show.
Colin Gray:You can start to build that authority, that visibility
Colin Gray:really across a whole industry.
Colin Gray:It's just really useful.
Colin Gray:Have you, is that yourself, John, as well?
Colin Gray:Like you always end up subscribing to 20 new shows every time
Colin Gray:you get into something new.
Jon Clayton:Absolutely.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:It's one of the first, um, places that I go if I want to learn something new, then,
Jon Clayton:um, yeah, I head to my podcast player and, um, I'll be searching on there.
Jon Clayton:I've got a long list of, um, like a listening list, if you like,
Jon Clayton:of episodes to work through, um,
Colin Gray:I never finished my list.
Colin Gray:That's terrible.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, sometimes if I find a new one, I really enjoy it,
Jon Clayton:then I will kind of binge it for a while, and then I might set it to one
Jon Clayton:side and then come back to it later.
Jon Clayton:But yeah, there's just so much great content out there now.
Colin Gray:absolutely.
Colin Gray:Yeah,
Colin Gray:same.
Jon Clayton:if somebody was thinking about, well, this sounds pretty cool,
Jon Clayton:like maybe I could be a podcast guest, how should you pitch yourself to a
Jon Clayton:show as a potential podcast guest?
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:I mean, this is, this is worth talking back and forth cause
Colin Gray:you'll have lots of experience people asking to be guests as well.
Colin Gray:Wouldn't you, John, but.
Colin Gray:I find the way that I think about it is that they're, it's well worth
Colin Gray:spending or taking half, if you find you want to get into this, it's well
Colin Gray:worth spending half a day or even a day starting to plan out who you are
Colin Gray:as a guest and what you have to offer.
Colin Gray:And the way this breaks down for me is the biggest part is really.
Colin Gray:Picking out two or three things that you have a unique viewpoint on.
Colin Gray:So something really specific within your niche.
Colin Gray:So as an example, John, like some, you'll have had lots of people
Colin Gray:in architecture on your show.
Colin Gray:What's like a, what, what stands out to you as one of the most
Colin Gray:unique kind of points of view somebody has given you as a guest?
Colin Gray:Like, have you had anything like that?
Colin Gray:Anything surprising?
Jon Clayton:That's a great question.
Jon Clayton:We had.
Jon Clayton:an architect on recently and they'd they'd recently taken a huge change
Jon Clayton:in direction with their practice.
Jon Clayton:They actually closed their original practice and started up a new practice
Jon Clayton:and their ethos was all around specialization and collaboration.
Jon Clayton:So that was something that, um, I think a lot of people within
Jon Clayton:the industry aren't quite as.
Jon Clayton:keen to embrace, particularly the idea of collaborating.
Jon Clayton:I think really what we were talking about was with the specialization, just
Jon Clayton:kind of sticking to the bit that they do best and not feeling like they had
Jon Clayton:to do everything like a full service that they could just do perfectly.
Jon Clayton:Part of a project and they could work with another partner practice that
Jon Clayton:could help deliver the other part.
Jon Clayton:So that was something that was a little bit of a different viewpoint that I
Jon Clayton:think there's a lot of mileage in it because it's not, I don't think that's
Jon Clayton:that unusual outside in other industries.
Jon Clayton:But I think there's in architecture, a lot of people think that, oh, we were expected
Jon Clayton:that we just have to offer this all in one
Jon Clayton:thing.
Colin Gray:I love that.
Colin Gray:That's a really good example.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:So there's somebody who has really taken on something that other people
Colin Gray:would disagree with potentially.
Colin Gray:And that's when you know that you're onto something in terms
Colin Gray:of a way to pitch yourself.
Colin Gray:If it's something that you can speak about, you have experience and
Colin Gray:you can tell some stories around.
Colin Gray:And you can show how you've helped, uh, sort of build success with this approach.
Colin Gray:But then again, somebody else might say, Oh, no, I don't like that.
Colin Gray:I wouldn't do that.
Colin Gray:That is gold.
Colin Gray:So it's like anything that people get, that's different.
Colin Gray:That's what you call differentiation because you can be different.
Colin Gray:Like everyone, every architect will say like, we, uh, we
Colin Gray:provide great quality service.
Colin Gray:That's not differentiation because no one will disagree with that.
Colin Gray:But if it's something like, We don't do actually, we don't do the
Colin Gray:planning permission sides, we just do the drawings for you, you know, and
Colin Gray:other people will say, Oh, but we do.
Colin Gray:So it's the, it's the disagreement that suddenly makes it
Colin Gray:something that's quite unique.
Colin Gray:So yeah, I love that example.
Colin Gray:Um, so that's how you stand out to podcasts.
Colin Gray:You bring something that is just a little bit.
Colin Gray:Different some kind of different viewpoint.
Colin Gray:And I would say you can probably almost certainly think of two
Colin Gray:or three of these for yourself.
Colin Gray:If you're out there listening, like there'll be two or three things that
Colin Gray:you talk about that you maybe disagree with other people and you're in a
Colin Gray:friendly, you know, friendly disagreement with other people in your industry.
Colin Gray:And they're the things you want to talk about.
Colin Gray:So Note them down and then start to build it out, like build two or three sentences
Colin Gray:that really pitches how you have expertise in this and how it can help the audience.
Colin Gray:And that's where it finishes up.
Colin Gray:It starts with that unique viewpoint, but it finishes up
Colin Gray:with how this helps the audience.
Colin Gray:And that's how you get in front of podcast hosts, because if you can say
Colin Gray:like, here's something different that I talk about, you probably haven't
Colin Gray:had your show before, and here's how I think it'll benefit your audience.
Colin Gray:Those are the two parts that really hook people in.
Colin Gray:To get you on the show.
Colin Gray:And I find that when we were working with people who are creating new
Colin Gray:podcasts, who want to start promoting it as a guest, you can do that in
Colin Gray:half a day, even a couple of hours.
Colin Gray:If you can know yourself quite well, but half a day, a day at the
Colin Gray:very most, you can put together a really good pitch around that.
Colin Gray:Yeah,
Jon Clayton:that exercise that you've recommended people do, I mean, really
Jon Clayton:that could underpin, um, positioning themselves as a thought leader, that
Jon Clayton:they've, they've got something that they, it defies convention, that they
Jon Clayton:have a unique viewpoint on something that actually would not only be.
Jon Clayton:be really powerful in terms of a pitch to an industry podcast, but
Jon Clayton:also that's something that they could use as a basis for any other content.
Jon Clayton:Like if they wanted to position themselves as a thought leader in the industry,
Jon Clayton:that's got something to say, that's got some different ideas to share.
Jon Clayton:That would be awesome to also share that stuff on other platforms as well.
Jon Clayton:So really, really valuable exercise.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:In
Colin Gray:yeah, definitely.
Colin Gray:Definitely.
Jon Clayton:fact, I'm gonna add that to my, to-do list, Colin, because I
Jon Clayton:think I probably need to, um, drill down on that a bit more myself.
Colin Gray:It's, you know, and it takes nearly everyone can, and even
Colin Gray:if you've done it before, it's worth doing every six months or every year,
Colin Gray:at least because you come up with new things all the time, like things change
Colin Gray:trends in the industry, or even just the way you think, or your experience,
Colin Gray:like a lot of these unique viewpoints can come from the way you did something,
Colin Gray:whether it was deliberate or not.
Colin Gray:Maybe it was like completely messing something up.
Colin Gray:And trying something different as a result of that, and then that can create
Colin Gray:a unique approach because you say, this is something that a lot of people
Colin Gray:did do, but it didn't work for me and therefore I changed it in this way and
Colin Gray:so maybe that's going to work for you.
Colin Gray:So yeah, it's definitely worth reviewing on a regular basis.
Jon Clayton:Absolutely.
Jon Clayton:Just a final point, I guess, on the pitching, I mean, you, you
Jon Clayton:mentioned earlier about, you know, I must get a number of pitches
Jon Clayton:coming through to be on this show.
Jon Clayton:I, I do, I do get, um, pitches that come through and often they come through as
Jon Clayton:an email and most of them are terrible.
Jon Clayton:They're really, they're blatantly just a template email that's exactly the same
Jon Clayton:that's sent to every single podcast.
Jon Clayton:And they just swap out and say, Oh, I really loved this episode.
Jon Clayton:Copy paste, and I love the guests, you know, copy, paste, drop this in.
Jon Clayton:And often it's from agencies, but the.
Jon Clayton:architect or person has employed like a PR agency to help get them on podcasts.
Jon Clayton:And their pitches are terrible.
Jon Clayton:I had one just last week and there was, it was nothing to do.
Jon Clayton:Like, I mean, it was loosely somebody for the construction industry, but this is
Jon Clayton:a architecture podcast about business.
Jon Clayton:There was just no connection or correlation between what this show is
Jon Clayton:and what that get I mean the guests could have been Perfect fit for another
Jon Clayton:show, but they really hadn't done the research They hadn't gone to the trouble
Jon Clayton:to listen to the trailer or to to read some notes about the show or to To
Jon Clayton:even listen to an episode, you know, so
Colin Gray:yeah, that's it.
Colin Gray:It doesn't take much to stand out.
Colin Gray:Actually, there's, there's two sides, isn't it?
Colin Gray:The trouble is that many podcast hosts just ignore pitches altogether because
Colin Gray:they get so many of those crappy ones.
Colin Gray:So you have to find a way to make it stand out as something
Colin Gray:different from just a pitch.
Colin Gray:It has to be some proper personalization at the start, like actually giving them
Colin Gray:some feedback on a recent episode, a topic that they actually talked about.
Colin Gray:In the recent episode, as in you have to have actually listened to it, but
Colin Gray:I mean, you've got such a higher hit rate by doing that, that it's worth.
Colin Gray:I mean, you're probably listening to these shows anyway, because
Colin Gray:it's in your industry, most likely.
Colin Gray:So maybe there's 10 podcasts that you listen to in the architecture industry.
Colin Gray:So pick one that you're going to concentrate on for the next week.
Colin Gray:Listen to a couple of their episodes, pick out one or two things.
Colin Gray:That you can give them feedback on that.
Colin Gray:You can ask a question around and then say below that.
Colin Gray:By the way, I would love to contribute.
Colin Gray:Here's three things that I can talk about in a unique way.
Colin Gray:And here's the benefit that will give your audience that kind of
Colin Gray:thing can make a huge difference because it's so different from the.
Colin Gray:copy and paste pitches that you and I both get tons of.
Jon Clayton:yeah, yeah.
Jon Clayton:Don't do that guys.
Jon Clayton:Don't copy and paste.
Jon Clayton:Um, If there's anyone listening to this episode that thinks like, wow, I'd, I'd
Jon Clayton:love to be on the architecture business club podcast, I'm expecting some, some
Jon Clayton:good quality pitches now, um, after that advice that you've shared, Colin.
Jon Clayton:So, um, being interviewed on a podcast though, like if, if you do
Jon Clayton:pitch to go on a podcast and you are successful and you do manage to secure.
Jon Clayton:Uh, guest appearance on, on your, on a show, actually
Jon Clayton:being interviewed on a podcast.
Jon Clayton:It can feel nerve wracking if you've never done it before.
Jon Clayton:So what would you recommend we could do?
Jon Clayton:The things we could do in advance of the interview itself.
Jon Clayton:To be better prepared
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:There's no question, especially when you're on your first five or 10
Colin Gray:interviews or you've not just, you've just not done it that much before.
Colin Gray:It can be, can be a bit scary.
Colin Gray:The key is I think around this prep, it's actually that serves double duty.
Colin Gray:It gets you on the show.
Colin Gray:When you're doing all this prep around the uniqueness, your
Colin Gray:value, all that kind of stuff.
Colin Gray:But equally having done that prep makes you feel more prepared, which actually I
Colin Gray:find always settles the nerves of people, especially when they're in the early days,
Colin Gray:you can take it an extra step, though.
Colin Gray:Like one thing that I'll often recommend people do, and I still do these days
Colin Gray:even, um, is you tee up the host with actually some prep questions.
Colin Gray:Like, so for example, the normal thing is that as a guest, the
Colin Gray:host will send you questions.
Colin Gray:So you're going on a show, the host will say, well, here's
Colin Gray:10 things I want to ask you.
Colin Gray:And that's fine.
Colin Gray:That actually helps settle the nerves a bit.
Colin Gray:So if the host doesn't do that, by all means, you can get in touch
Colin Gray:and ask, like, what are the types of questions you want to ask me?
Colin Gray:But even if they don't, and you can also do as an extra separate prep is to
Colin Gray:send some of your own, like say here.
Colin Gray:So we've agreed to talk about this one unique viewpoint that I have.
Colin Gray:That's great.
Colin Gray:Here's four or five questions that I find really tee up.
Colin Gray:My best stories here.
Colin Gray:My best examples here.
Colin Gray:My best.
Colin Gray:You know how I can describe the frameworks, the workflows.
Colin Gray:Here's maybe three questions actually that walk me through.
Colin Gray:They help me walk you through the workflow and mean that I don't have
Colin Gray:to speak for five minutes on my own.
Colin Gray:You know, um, instead I can say a little bit and then you could ask this
Colin Gray:question and that jumps me into it and it will still sound quite natural.
Colin Gray:So I find.
Colin Gray:That little thing.
Colin Gray:So the prep in the first place around the topic itself makes a big difference.
Colin Gray:But then actually talking to the host back and forth and giving them
Colin Gray:a few tee up questions actually makes a big difference, too, because
Colin Gray:you're comfortable with those.
Colin Gray:There are things that you know exactly what's coming.
Colin Gray:You've got good answers to.
Colin Gray:And that can really set the nerves a fair bit too.
Colin Gray:Um, and I suppose beyond that, do you ever do things like, uh, you know, vocal
Colin Gray:warmups or, uh, you know, just some deep breathing or anything before a show?
Colin Gray:John, do you ever take any of those kind of more general, you know,
Colin Gray:mindfulness, wellness type approaches?
Jon Clayton:a little bit.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:I mean, I wouldn't say like I go through like a whole breathing
Jon Clayton:routine or anything, but I usually just make sure that, um, first
Jon Clayton:I'll do, um, sort out the tech.
Jon Clayton:So often I'll like restart my computer, make sure there's no
Jon Clayton:updates going on in the backgrounds.
Jon Clayton:And then I'll get set up and logged into the software that we use nice and early.
Jon Clayton:I always have a glass of water uh, to hands in case I need to,
Jon Clayton:um, clear my throat or anything.
Jon Clayton:And, um, I do usually, um, we always plan questions in advance, so we
Jon Clayton:always make sure that we, we know what the topic is going to be and that we
Jon Clayton:send questions to the guests as well to make it as easy as possible for
Jon Clayton:them to show up and for them to feel relaxed and comfortable on the day.
Jon Clayton:particularly if it is somebody that hasn't been a podcast guest before.
Jon Clayton:But yeah, I'll do, I'll do a few, take a few deep breaths and maybe do a few do re
Jon Clayton:mi fa so la ti s or whatever, you know.
Colin Gray:Yeah, totally.
Colin Gray:Yeah, it's, it's a lot of people think of it as a bit kind of woo
Colin Gray:woo or whatever, but it's becoming more, more mainstream nowadays.
Colin Gray:Meditation, breathing exercises, that kind of stuff, isn't it?
Colin Gray:And it does make a difference.
Colin Gray:If you just take 10 sort of mindful breaths, just, you know, breathe
Colin Gray:in slowly, breathe out slowly and just concentrate on your breath.
Colin Gray:Like you would, if you were meditating on something, it really
Colin Gray:does like lower your blood pressure a bit, ease some of that tension.
Colin Gray:So that can make a big difference.
Colin Gray:But do you know, I will comment though, you, you did this really
Colin Gray:nicely as well, John, like you do have a really good prep process.
Colin Gray:So we obviously chatted before the show, uh, we talked through the
Colin Gray:topic, we went into something unique.
Colin Gray:So the fact that, you know, a lot of the time people expect me to
Colin Gray:just say, do I just podcasting?
Colin Gray:And I'm like, All right, but it's, there's quite a lot in there.
Colin Gray:This isn't going to be any kind of unique viewpoint.
Colin Gray:Do you want to kind of dig into one particular place?
Colin Gray:And it's usually me leading that as a guest, but you didn't, you,
Colin Gray:you were like straight away.
Colin Gray:Okay.
Colin Gray:So like what, what like really specific thing can we dig into?
Colin Gray:And we ended up on this topic around guesting.
Colin Gray:And then we dug into like a few questions and you were talking, both of us
Colin Gray:together, we're talking about a few good questions, a progress for the episode.
Colin Gray:And that took us, you know, 20 minutes.
Colin Gray:Wasn't that long?
Colin Gray:And then sent them through afterwards.
Colin Gray:So I had this list of questions in front of me and I just
Colin Gray:took 10 minutes beforehand.
Colin Gray:Um, even as somebody who like speaks at this stuff all the time, I still
Colin Gray:took 10 minutes beforehand because I had these questions to just note
Colin Gray:down a couple of things I want to make sure I covered on each one.
Colin Gray:And all of that like just makes you so prepared that
Colin Gray:it's almost hard to be nervous.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, it just makes so much difference.
Jon Clayton:I think that, um, one of the things that you mentioned there, which I wish I'd
Jon Clayton:thought of, Several months ago, I've, I've been a guest on a number of other
Jon Clayton:podcasts and sometimes the preparation was better on some than others, but,
Jon Clayton:um, this with benefit of hindsight, had I thought with some of those shows that
Jon Clayton:weren't proactive about sharing questions in advance, if I'd have just sort of
Jon Clayton:taken that initiative and said, well, look, We're going to talk about this
Jon Clayton:topic, but here's a few questions that, would nicely lead in and nicely lead into
Jon Clayton:this topic and make sure that we cover these points and so we can have it so
Jon Clayton:it's conversational, because otherwise, sometimes you can get caught off guard
Jon Clayton:as a podcast guest that that you might have agreed that there's a particular
Jon Clayton:topic you're going to talk about, but then you can get a question that's
Jon Clayton:got thrown in there that can sometimes just catch you a little off guard.
Jon Clayton:so much.
Jon Clayton:And occasionally I've come off the back of those interviews and just thought, Oh, I
Jon Clayton:could have answered that question better.
Jon Clayton:Like if I, if I knew, if I knew that the question was going to be
Jon Clayton:asked in advance, I would have had a little bit of time to think about it.
Jon Clayton:And I would have read through those questions before the recording.
Jon Clayton:And I would have responded and given a much better answer, which is then
Jon Clayton:better for the listeners, because at the end of the day, this is,
Jon Clayton:it's about the listeners, isn't it?
Jon Clayton:We want to make sure that the content is is right for them and is resonating with
Jon Clayton:them and worth tuning in and subscribing.
Colin Gray:totally.
Colin Gray:I mean, it's, you know, you're going to invest probably an hour into the
Colin Gray:interview, even if it's a half hour interview, there'll be a bit of
Colin Gray:like start time, end time, whatever.
Colin Gray:So it's going to be like an hour of your time.
Colin Gray:So you can, you can so much amplify the impact that episode will have
Colin Gray:by just investing even as much as, even as little as half an hour,
Colin Gray:I would suggest even an hour.
Colin Gray:Just in thinking about those questions ahead of time, sending them through.
Colin Gray:The funny thing is like we, the person that's hosting the podcast will be
Colin Gray:an expert in that general topic.
Colin Gray:I'm sure usually a person hosting a podcast on something, they'll
Colin Gray:know a lot about that topic, but it's your unique viewpoint.
Colin Gray:They're getting you on because you know more about something particular
Colin Gray:in that topic or about your experience.
Colin Gray:So why let them You know, if I let them create the questions or lead
Colin Gray:the flow of the episode when it's not their expertise, when it's not their
Colin Gray:experience, when it's not their story.
Colin Gray:So that's why it's kind of funny why a lot of interview shows, even when
Colin Gray:some of these are really, I mean, when somebody is a really good interviewer,
Colin Gray:they can tend to follow those rabbit holes, holes much more effectively.
Colin Gray:But even a good interviewer can still take an interview off track and, and
Colin Gray:still miss like great little questions, great little avenues to attack.
Colin Gray:'cause it's not their area.
Colin Gray:So yeah, you, you, it's your responsibility to make sure this
Colin Gray:interview goes as well as it possibly can.
Colin Gray:And I really don't think it takes that much prep around it.
Colin Gray:Just as we've talked about just those questions, just those unique
Colin Gray:view points makes such a difference.
Jon Clayton:I've shared that I've had a couple of experiences at being
Jon Clayton:a guest that Could have been better.
Jon Clayton:They weren't, they weren't a disaster.
Jon Clayton:They could, but they could have been better.
Jon Clayton:Have you had, have you had any experiences like that yourself, Colin?
Jon Clayton:Have you had any, um, times when you've been a guest where you
Jon Clayton:thought, Oh, that was, that was a disaster or that didn't go very well?
Jon Clayton:Remember.
Jon Clayton:Don't forget to download the architecture business, blueprint the
Jon Clayton:step by step formula to freedom for architects, architecture, technologists,
Jon Clayton:and architecture designers.
Jon Clayton:You can grab the blueprint without any charge@architecturebusinessclub.com
Jon Clayton:forward slash blueprint.
Jon Clayton:And if you enjoy this episode, then please leave a five star review or
Jon Clayton:rating wherever you listen to podcasts.
Jon Clayton:Now, back to the show.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:Oh, definitely.
Colin Gray:I mean, I've had some, I've had some bad interviews.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:I mean, some through my fault, not their host's fault either, but , I
Colin Gray:mean, the things that always stand out to me, the ones that always
Colin Gray:stand out to me are when the, the.
Colin Gray:The host is really, it almost seems like they're not even
Colin Gray:listening to the questions.
Colin Gray:They're not, sorry, the answers, I should say.
Colin Gray:They're not even listening to my answers.
Colin Gray:They'll just say, yep, yep, great.
Colin Gray:And then ask someone else entirely different.
Colin Gray:Often, you know, you're, you're good at this, John.
Colin Gray:I've had lots of experience in this as well.
Colin Gray:So I feel comfortable in asking you a question back, things like that.
Colin Gray:As a guest, it's a real kind of superpower actually to turn it into a conversation
Colin Gray:as opposed to just a Like a one way thing.
Colin Gray:So asking you something back, it's actually, it creates a better chemistry.
Colin Gray:It creates a better back and forth.
Colin Gray:And there's so much of that is kind of like, I've asked questions back to hosts
Colin Gray:before, and it's really put them off.
Colin Gray:Um, like taking them off guard and like completely flustered them.
Colin Gray:And to be fair, that's probably partly my fault back then, because
Colin Gray:that was in the early days.
Colin Gray:I wouldn't warn that I might do that.
Colin Gray:So, yeah, there's been stuff like that where, um.
Colin Gray:You know, people are so formulaic.
Colin Gray:They'll have their seven questions in front of them and they're not going
Colin Gray:to deviate from them in any way.
Colin Gray:Uh, so it's just, it just takes away so much of the spontaneity, the dynamism,
Colin Gray:the conversation, the chemistry.
Colin Gray:That's what people come to podcasting for.
Colin Gray:You know, I would read a blog post if I just wanted seven
Colin Gray:questions, seven straight answers, but I want a conversation.
Colin Gray:I want experience.
Colin Gray:I want stories.
Colin Gray:I want all of that stuff.
Colin Gray:So yeah, it's funny.
Jon Clayton:Happens to the best of us, I guess.
Jon Clayton:we've shared and discussed some, some great ideas there for how people
Jon Clayton:can be better prepared in advance.
Jon Clayton:Do you have any other thoughts for the day of the recording itself?
Jon Clayton:There's a couple of things that you mentioned there that, you know, you
Jon Clayton:asked if I did as a host, things like breathing exercises, that sort of thing.
Jon Clayton:Is there any other recommendations that you have for someone as a guest
Jon Clayton:for the actual time of the recording?
Colin Gray:yeah, yeah.
Colin Gray:I do think it's really worthwhile doing a wee vocal warm up at least, even
Colin Gray:if it's just a few tongue twisters.
Colin Gray:Like just say some of your favourite tongue twisters like Peter Pepper picked
Colin Gray:a peck of pickled peppers, I could say.
Colin Gray:I didn't practice that well enough, but you know, just a few
Colin Gray:of them makes a big difference.
Colin Gray:And there's a, I don't know if there's an official name for it, but I call it
Colin Gray:the fire engine warm up as well, where you just, you close your mouth and
Colin Gray:you hum and you just go up and down.
Colin Gray:So it's like, and
Colin Gray:I find that may just do that for about a minute.
Colin Gray:It makes a huge difference to how warm your vocal cords are at the
Colin Gray:whole range and gives you so much more range in your voice actually.
Colin Gray:So you sound far less monotone, you sound far more up and down and all that stuff.
Colin Gray:It makes a big difference.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:So those actually, they really are worthwhile doing.
Colin Gray:Um, and, and the other thing you mentioned as well, John, like the tech,
Colin Gray:like don't, Turn up and say, I've got an interview at one, so I can just open
Colin Gray:up my computer at three minutes to one and just hit the link and go just, it'll
Colin Gray:go wrong like two thirds of the time.
Colin Gray:It does for me, even with John, you and I had some technical issues
Colin Gray:because of my computer set up, even though I do interviews like this, like
Colin Gray:all the time, it's still messed up.
Colin Gray:Um, and we started five minutes late, so I'm not following my own
Colin Gray:advice here, but open that interview link at least five minutes early and
Colin Gray:make sure your cameras set up here.
Colin Gray:Make sure you're on the right microphone.
Colin Gray:Make sure it's all quiet around you.
Colin Gray:Things like that makes a huge difference to
Jon Clayton:Absolutely.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, totally agree with those recommendations.
Jon Clayton:Something that I started doing as well is when we send the email,
Jon Clayton:like the confirmation emails through about the guest booking,
Jon Clayton:we send an email to the guest.
Jon Clayton:Also including a link for instructions of how to use the recording software.
Jon Clayton:So we use, currently use StreamYard.
Jon Clayton:So if you haven't used it before, It's a great idea to just, in advance, to just
Jon Clayton:log on to the website, check it out, and familiarize yourself with it a little bit.
Jon Clayton:And, uh, I mean, the tech isn't that complicated.
Jon Clayton:I mean, we're talking microphone, headphones, but if you're not
Jon Clayton:familiar with the software, uh, And things do go wrong.
Jon Clayton:I mean, I you mentioned your tech issue today.
Jon Clayton:I had one too.
Jon Clayton:My computer like decided to do an update beforehand.
Jon Clayton:And then when I log back in again, my mic had stopped working.
Jon Clayton:So, you know, these these things happen to all of us.
Colin Gray:Yeah,
Jon Clayton:yeah, I think the key there's allowing enough time, isn't it?
Jon Clayton:Just, Not turning up sort of two minutes before and expecting
Jon Clayton:it all to go perfectly.
Colin Gray:that's exactly a 5 minutes minimum.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:So we get, we've been invited to a show.
Jon Clayton:We prepare for the interview.
Jon Clayton:We turn up in good time on the day of the recording.
Jon Clayton:The recording goes absolutely amazingly.
Jon Clayton:So what then?
Jon Clayton:Like after, after the recording goes live for a guest, I mean,
Jon Clayton:is that it for a or would you recommend that there's things that.
Jon Clayton:as a guest that you could do to help leverage this great opportunity
Jon Clayton:that you've been given, you know, once the podcast has been published?
Colin Gray:Yeah, yeah, definitely.
Colin Gray:There's a, there's a couple of things going to this, I think, John, I think it's
Colin Gray:the, it's, it's how much effort you put into promoting that show for the host.
Colin Gray:So like actually putting a lot of your kind of marketing and
Colin Gray:growth equity into promoting that episode and we can jump into that.
Colin Gray:But there's also the fact that it's a resource that you can use as well.
Colin Gray:So you can ask the host.
Colin Gray:So on the first that it used to be, you know, it was in
Colin Gray:the early days of podcasting.
Colin Gray:It was one of the best ways to grow your show.
Colin Gray:It's actually to go and get it.
Colin Gray:It was either to go and guest on other shows and therefore you can talk about
Colin Gray:your podcast or the opposite way around.
Colin Gray:Like if you go, if you get guests in, those guests will hopefully
Colin Gray:promote that episode of your podcast to their whole audience.
Colin Gray:And it's kind of died away a bit.
Colin Gray:Like people have become so almost professional.
Colin Gray:Guests that they go on too many shows that they just can't promote
Colin Gray:them very effectively anymore.
Colin Gray:They either promote too many of them or they just don't do it
Colin Gray:anymore because it's too much work.
Colin Gray:So if you actually, if this is your early days of guesting on a podcast,
Colin Gray:take advantage of the fact that you can make yourself stand out as a guest by
Colin Gray:actually putting a bit of work into it.
Colin Gray:Into making sure that episode succeeds.
Colin Gray:So if you have a, an email list, if you have your social channels, if you
Colin Gray:have a website, a YouTube channel, your own podcast, then if you put a
Colin Gray:bit of work into making sure that that podcast episode is the most listened
Colin Gray:to episode of the last few months.
Colin Gray:for that host.
Colin Gray:That stands out.
Colin Gray:They'll see that in their stats.
Colin Gray:They'll see that you've sent a bunch of listeners to that episode
Colin Gray:and it may really got some new people listening to their show.
Colin Gray:And that stands out.
Colin Gray:The benefits there are a couple of things.
Colin Gray:First, you've got a friend for life.
Colin Gray:This person will help you as much as you want in future.
Colin Gray:But equally, they'll then recommend you.
Colin Gray:to other podcasts as a guest.
Colin Gray:And this is one of the best things, like podcasters know podcasters.
Colin Gray:John, it's a big part of how you and I know each other.
Colin Gray:So that person will then recommend you, you can say to them, by the
Colin Gray:way, any other podcasts, you know, that might benefit from this kind
Colin Gray:of topic that I'm talking about.
Colin Gray:And that podcaster will go, Oh, of course, because you helped me grow my show.
Colin Gray:So I have no problem recommending you to go on other shows.
Colin Gray:So he'll then give you an email intro for, you know, two or three other podcasts
Colin Gray:that he knows that's on the same topic.
Colin Gray:So yeah, I think that works really nicely as a first one.
Colin Gray:Like these days, John, do you get a lot of people of your guests, like
Colin Gray:helping to promote the episodes quite well, or did you find that
Colin Gray:experience that kind of died off a bit?
Jon Clayton:It's, it's mixed, I would say.
Jon Clayton:Um, I mean, we're 40 something episodes in, I think, um, around about that,
Jon Clayton:and Most of the time, like we do create some promotional materials and
Jon Clayton:resources for every episode and I will share those, but the main platform
Jon Clayton:that I'm on online is LinkedIn.
Jon Clayton:So I usually share a few posts, screenshots, maybe some short form
Jon Clayton:videos like reels, that sort of thing.
Jon Clayton:And we do share those with the guests as well, so they get all of those
Jon Clayton:assets that they can also share.
Jon Clayton:I would say probably.
Jon Clayton:75 to 80 percent of the guests don't, don't do anything with it.
Jon Clayton:And then there's sort of 20, 25 percent of the guests so far have been like on it.
Jon Clayton:They've, they've planned it out in their social media.
Jon Clayton:They've been sharing the reels on Instagram and Instagram stories
Jon Clayton:and, and putting posts on LinkedIn.
Jon Clayton:And I'm, I don't take that for granted.
Jon Clayton:I'm obviously.
Jon Clayton:They are helping themselves, but I think it's the ones that have an appreciation
Jon Clayton:for, for, for the opportunity that stands before them and understands marketing.
Jon Clayton:I think those, those guests tend to be the ones that have been keener
Jon Clayton:to, um, to share, to share stuff, you know, and to, to plan it out.
Jon Clayton:Um,
Colin Gray:that kind of tallies with my experience, like a one in five for sure.
Colin Gray:Yeah, and that'll make a bigger effort.
Colin Gray:But those people stand out then, don't they?
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:yeah, they do.
Colin Gray:Yeah,
Colin Gray:the other side to me is the reuse of that content to something
Colin Gray:that a lot of guests do not do.
Colin Gray:Like john, we're talking here about being a podcast guest, potentially, you know,
Colin Gray:even ahead of starting your own podcast.
Colin Gray:It's a way of getting in front of new audiences without having
Colin Gray:to go to the effort of starting your own pod and growing your own
Colin Gray:audience, all that kind of stuff.
Colin Gray:But these episodes that you go on, usually, normally the guest, the host,
Colin Gray:sorry, will be absolutely delighted.
Colin Gray:Um, if you reuse a lot of that content and post it out there on your own
Colin Gray:channels because it still showcases their content still showcases their channel.
Colin Gray:It's worth asking just in case, but you can take that episode.
Colin Gray:You can ask the host.
Colin Gray:Like, can I get a copy of the video for that?
Colin Gray:The audio for that?
Colin Gray:I'll try and put it out on some of my own channels.
Colin Gray:Almost always they'll jump at that.
Colin Gray:And then you can use that episode in all sorts of different ways that
Colin Gray:you can cut out your own clips.
Colin Gray:Like you're talking about doing that, John, for your own promotion.
Colin Gray:But as I guessed, I might have different clips that I really enjoyed and and
Colin Gray:might want to send to my audience.
Colin Gray:You can post the whole thing, maybe on your YouTube channel, take out
Colin Gray:segments, you know, you can use it in all sorts of different ways.
Colin Gray:And again, That's that builds a bit more relationship with the host again,
Colin Gray:because, because, like I said, you are still promoting their show at the end
Colin Gray:of the day, but you're giving yourself tons of content equity, tons of content
Colin Gray:to work with that helps you engage your own audience and really start to
Colin Gray:grow that in your own channels too.
Jon Clayton:that's a great suggestion.
Jon Clayton:Another thing that I, uh, that guests can do often the, well, depending on the
Jon Clayton:hosting platform, often there'll be like a little podcast episode player that you
Jon Clayton:can grab a piece of code and very easily you can embed that on your own website.
Jon Clayton:So they could even.
Jon Clayton:Take that piece of code and that podcast on a blog on their own website,
Jon Clayton:or they could, um, sometimes people will put together, say, like a Spotify
Jon Clayton:playlist of the different episodes that they've been a guest on, and then
Jon Clayton:they can share that with their, their prospects and their own audience.
Jon Clayton:So there's, there's all sorts of things that we can do with this content.
Jon Clayton:So,
Colin Gray:Yeah, yeah.
Colin Gray:Do you know one thing I did, which actually worked really nicely
Colin Gray:for me for the, at the time I did it was my about me page.
Colin Gray:You know, when you're, especially if you're running a client business
Colin Gray:or something like that, you write up your about me page, but you
Colin Gray:can make it a bit personable.
Colin Gray:You could even record a video or an audio yourself.
Colin Gray:The by far the best resource I found that talked about me and showcased who I was
Colin Gray:and my experience and stories and stuff was one of the best interviews I'd been
Colin Gray:on that just talked about my background.
Colin Gray:There was a, um, a guy I got to know in podcasting really
Colin Gray:well who interviewed me once.
Colin Gray:He was a really top class interviewer and he just dug into all sorts of stuff.
Colin Gray:Behind the scenes, like about, you know, my experience, where, why I'd got to
Colin Gray:where I'd got to all that kind of stuff.
Colin Gray:And I used that on my about me page.
Colin Gray:I embedded his episode onto my site.
Colin Gray:Um, it showcased his podcast for anyone who was interested, but equally
Colin Gray:it gave an insight into who I am and how I work and all that kind of stuff
Colin Gray:that there's no way I could have kind of drawn that out just by myself.
Colin Gray:It took somebody else doing it to get that.
Jon Clayton:oh, that's a brilliant idea.
Jon Clayton:I love that.
Jon Clayton:So, if somebody wanted to start their own podcast, what would
Jon Clayton:be your top recommendations?
Colin Gray:The recommendations are always very simple and they are centered around
Colin Gray:that exact word as well about keeping it simple as in a podcast is all about.
Colin Gray:the content you put out.
Colin Gray:It's all about the words you say, your ideas, your viewpoints, your
Colin Gray:personality, all of those things.
Colin Gray:It's not in any way about the gear, the software, the publishing
Colin Gray:strategies, all that kind of stuff.
Colin Gray:It's solely about the content.
Colin Gray:Once you've mastered the content, once you're starting to create the best
Colin Gray:possible content you can, once you understand your audience back to front,
Colin Gray:their questions, their wants, their needs, their pains, you can create
Colin Gray:content that really engages people.
Colin Gray:Then by all means, you can optimize by getting better microphones, better
Colin Gray:mixers, better software, thinking about publishing all that kind of stuff.
Colin Gray:But in the early days, the first 10, 20 episodes, it's all about that content.
Colin Gray:So on that basis, Pick a microphone and just plug it into your
Colin Gray:computer and forget about it.
Colin Gray:Uh, just choose a USB one.
Colin Gray:I think you've got the exact same one as me in front of you there, John,
Colin Gray:which is the, the RØDE Podcaster.
Colin Gray:Is that right?
Colin Gray:Yep.
Colin Gray:So the RØDE Podcaster, great choice, hundred something pounds.
Colin Gray:So high ish budget, but it just plugs in and then you forget about it.
Colin Gray:Um, the Samsung Q2U is a great.
Colin Gray:Lower budget still sounds great as well and then just record into one
Colin Gray:of the various platforms out there that help you automate a lot of it.
Colin Gray:So StreamYard does a fair bit.
Colin Gray:It does the video and the audio you've got.
Colin Gray:I mean, Alitu is our software platform.
Colin Gray:Alitu does recording, but also does the cleanup.
Colin Gray:So we automate like the noise reduction, leveling, all of that kind of stuff
Colin Gray:designed really to help people just concentrate on the content.
Colin Gray:But there's loads, there's other options out there.
Colin Gray:So there are a couple of options, but there's loads of them.
Colin Gray:But try and just find one simple platform that does as much of that
Colin Gray:technical automation as you can, and then just concentrate on the content.
Colin Gray:And I often suggest the first 10 episodes, once you've got that gear and
Colin Gray:software set up, and by the way, sorry, John, I'll just a quick plug as well.
Colin Gray:Like that link you said at the start, the thepodcasthost.
Colin Gray:com forward slash start here has Two different things, one email course
Colin Gray:and one page, both totally free, which will guide you through all of the, like
Colin Gray:the simplest gear and software setups.
Colin Gray:So go over to that one if you, if you want to just get the
Colin Gray:detail on what these things are.
Colin Gray:But in terms of the mindset, the thing I often talk about is.
Colin Gray:Going with a, almost a live recording mindset for your first
Colin Gray:10 episodes, if not way more.
Colin Gray:And what I mean by that is forget about editing, forget about retakes,
Colin Gray:forget about any of that stuff.
Colin Gray:Pretend that as soon as you hit the recording button that you're live on air
Colin Gray:on a radio station and you just go for it.
Colin Gray:There's a few things that comes into this.
Colin Gray:First of all, is it gives you, it takes away that crutch of editing.
Colin Gray:Um, so that you actually get better really fast because you listen
Colin Gray:back, you hear some of your crutch words, your ums and your ahs, and
Colin Gray:everyone's got them in the early days.
Colin Gray:So don't worry about that.
Colin Gray:Um, so it helps you improve your speaking style really quickly in the early days.
Colin Gray:And the second and the most important part is it takes away the most time consuming,
Colin Gray:annoying, um, podcast killing process that we of your early days, which is editing.
Colin Gray:Like that is just what kills so many podcasts is they'll record their first
Colin Gray:episode and then they'll end up spending eight hours desperately trying to cut out
Colin Gray:every little um and every little uh and every little mistake and every little trip
Colin Gray:over the tongue and it's just not needed.
Colin Gray:One of the great things about as we've mentioned a few times is how
Colin Gray:open, how honest, how human they are.
Colin Gray:And all of these things are human.
Colin Gray:If you take out too much of that stuff, you're sanitizing it and taking
Colin Gray:away quite a lot of your humanity.
Colin Gray:A lot of what makes people connect with you is the fact that you're a
Colin Gray:flawed, real human being that does trip over your tongue every now and again.
Colin Gray:And you do say ums and ahs every now and again, although You can't go too far
Colin Gray:in them and you want to improve them.
Colin Gray:But does that make sense, Sean?
Colin Gray:In terms of, I often say that, like commit to that in your first 10 episodes
Colin Gray:and it makes things so much easier.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, that totally makes sense.
Jon Clayton:And that's it's great advice.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, keep it simple.
Jon Clayton:Don't overthink it I think often I think particularly with podcasting one of
Jon Clayton:the things that trips people up is the tech then they'll they'll overthink it
Jon Clayton:and spend weeks trying to decide which microphone to buy and which software to
Jon Clayton:use and You can always change it later it's better to just pick whatever is the
Jon Clayton:simplest solution to just get started.
Colin Gray:Yeah, it's a really good point about just getting started too because
Colin Gray:that is where, you know, like I mentioned the content is where the value is.
Colin Gray:The content is what makes a success or a failure and there's the only
Colin Gray:way to get good at creating that content, whether it's the planning
Colin Gray:of that content, the how you speak to your audience, that just your simple
Colin Gray:speaking skills, all that kind of stuff.
Colin Gray:The only way to get great at all of those things is to do it
Colin Gray:There's no like, there's no way to learn that ahead of time.
Colin Gray:It's just you have to actually do it.
Colin Gray:And therefore the earlier, the earliest you can buy a microphone and just start
Colin Gray:speaking into a microphone, just start planning episodes, just start thinking up
Colin Gray:topics and playing with what style, what format, what format you want to go with.
Colin Gray:type of angle you want to take on your show, the earliest you can start
Colin Gray:playing with that the better, because that's what makes a great show.
Colin Gray:So yeah, just pick something and hit record and get out there.
Jon Clayton:It's great advice.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, absolutely.
Jon Clayton:So, Colin, what would be, what would be the main thing that
Jon Clayton:you'd like the listeners to take away from our conversation today?
Colin Gray:I think the main thing is around the thing that so few
Colin Gray:guests do, which is that prep really.
Colin Gray:It's just to, you know, Go away.
Colin Gray:If you really think this is something that can work for you.
Colin Gray:And I think in a client type based business like architecture,
Colin Gray:I think it's so it's even more powerful than in most places.
Colin Gray:So I think it should work for just about anyone listening is going to
Colin Gray:spend even a couple of hours just thinking like, what do I talk about?
Colin Gray:Like what?
Colin Gray:What are my views on architecture?
Colin Gray:What could I offer?
Colin Gray:That's relatively unique.
Colin Gray:And that may be a little bit scary at first.
Colin Gray:Often when I'm working with people on that, like they think, well, I
Colin Gray:don't know what is unique, like, I'm not sure what, but generally if you
Colin Gray:start thinking through it and spend that time and think through the last
Colin Gray:few conversations you had with some colleagues, like You What were some things
Colin Gray:that they found interesting or dug into?
Colin Gray:Or what were some things you disagreed with them potentially on?
Colin Gray:Or, you know, what do you hear in the media in your area that aren't
Colin Gray:necessarily your viewpoints that you can give another, another sort of angle on?
Colin Gray:Those kind of things are gold.
Colin Gray:So putting that prep in, taking that first step of spending those two hours,
Colin Gray:that could give you the confidence you need to really start to reach out to
Colin Gray:some shows and get some appearances.
Jon Clayton:That's brilliant.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, I think, um, Yeah, absolutely.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, the idea of kind of doing that prep work is so important and,
Jon Clayton:um, yeah, having, because I think when you're thinking about, Oh,
Jon Clayton:well, what have I got to talk about that's different to anybody else?
Jon Clayton:We all have stuff that's different, like they'll have as a architect,
Jon Clayton:they'll have processes that they do, ways that they work with their clients.
Jon Clayton:There'll be all sorts of things that will be different to other practices.
Jon Clayton:They might not realize it, but if they kind of take some time to just
Jon Clayton:think about it, that I'm sure that they'll uncover all sorts of gold
Jon Clayton:there that they can talk about.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:Often.
Colin Gray:Often it can come from those mistakes.
Colin Gray:Often it can come from things that went wrong.
Colin Gray:So like if you had a bad experience with a client by accident sometime, then what did
Colin Gray:you develop to stop that happening again?
Colin Gray:And often that is something that is unique to yourself.
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:For sure.
Jon Clayton:Oh, that's, that's a brilliant one.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:I mean, in terms of, um, stories, I mean, people love stories.
Jon Clayton:Like if you've got good stories that you can share that, and
Jon Clayton:particularly when things haven't gone so well, or you made a mistake or
Jon Clayton:something,
Colin Gray:love a disaster.
Jon Clayton:love a disaster, but if you can sort of share that
Jon Clayton:and share a bit of vulnerability, like, look, Hey, we're not perfect.
Jon Clayton:Like we made a mistake here, but this is what we learned from it.
Jon Clayton:I mean, that's makes really good content.
Jon Clayton:Absolutely.
Jon Clayton:So was there anything else you wanted to add about the topic that we, we haven't
Jon Clayton:already covered in the conversation?
Colin Gray:No, I mean, like, like we said, John, we, we planned this out quite
Colin Gray:nicely ahead of time, which I hope is a lesson for potential guests out there too.
Colin Gray:So now we've covered everything I think we wanted to.
Jon Clayton:Awesome.
Jon Clayton:Well, um, I just have one last question I'd like to ask, and this is
Jon Clayton:something I ask of all of the guests.
Jon Clayton:I love to travel and to discover new places, and I just wondered if you
Jon Clayton:could tell me one of your favourite places and what you love about it?
Colin Gray:Oh, good question.
Colin Gray:Uh, yeah.
Colin Gray:Same.
Colin Gray:Actually.
Colin Gray:I love to travel.
Colin Gray:Um, As well, find new places too.
Colin Gray:Often to my detriment, I'll, uh, I'll sacrifice going to old places
Colin Gray:that I love just for the sake of going somewhere new and then it won't
Colin Gray:live up to what I hope sometimes.
Colin Gray:But hey, that's part of life, isn't it?
Colin Gray:One place I am really fond of, and we do go back to again and again,
Colin Gray:actually, is the northwest of Spain.
Colin Gray:So a lot of people don't really go to that part of Spain, but Galicia, it's called,
Colin Gray:up in the northwest, just above Portugal.
Colin Gray:And it's a cooler part of Spain, so you can go over the summer.
Colin Gray:Um, my wife actually has a relative, an uncle, that moved up there, married
Colin Gray:a Spanish lady and lives up there.
Colin Gray:Well, actually lives in a few different places, but they summer
Colin Gray:up there because it's cooler than the place they live normally.
Colin Gray:Like it usually gets 40 degrees and dry heat where they live normally.
Colin Gray:So they go up there in the summer.
Colin Gray:And it's just such a beautiful place.
Colin Gray:It's, it's quiet.
Colin Gray:It's not very touristy.
Colin Gray:It's got lovely beaches, great surf on that side of the coast as well.
Colin Gray:Um, and the food, I just love Spanish food.
Colin Gray:It's so good.
Colin Gray:It's so kind of fresh and wholesome.
Colin Gray:And, um, yeah, I always love spending a week there with my family, maybe
Colin Gray:once every couple of years, at least.
Jon Clayton:Oh, that sounds fantastic, yeah.
Jon Clayton:I, um, I've, I've had, well, I would lose count.
Jon Clayton:I had lots of childhood holidays in mainland Spain and, um, yeah, yeah.
Jon Clayton:So we've, we've had a lot of, got a lot of memories from Spanish holidays.
Jon Clayton:And more recently my family and I have had, we've had a few
Jon Clayton:holidays over in Mallorca that we've really enjoyed as well.
Jon Clayton:We've got a place that we'd like to go back to time and again.
Jon Clayton:So the foods, yeah, the food's absolutely amazing.
Jon Clayton:Isn't it?
Colin Gray:Oh, yeah.
Colin Gray:So much.
Jon Clayton:Mmm.
Jon Clayton:Well, Colleen, thank you so much for being a guest on the
Jon Clayton:show and sharing your expertise.
Jon Clayton:Could you remind everybody of the link so that they can access those
Jon Clayton:courses and resources about podcasting?
Colin Gray:Yeah.
Colin Gray:Thanks, John.
Colin Gray:It's been great to come on.
Colin Gray:Really appreciate you inviting me.
Colin Gray:Um, so, yeah, if anyone wants, we've got a, We've got a seven day
Colin Gray:email course around starting a show.
Colin Gray:We've got a seven day course around growing a show.
Colin Gray:So even if you already have one, it might be worth a look.
Colin Gray:And we've got a couple of different guides to beginning to getting started.
Colin Gray:It's all totally free.
Colin Gray:So you go over to thepodcasthost.
Colin Gray:com forward slash start here.
Colin Gray:That's thepodcasthost.
Colin Gray:com forward slash start here.
Jon Clayton:Awesome.
Jon Clayton:And if anyone would like to reach out and connect with you online, where
Jon Clayton:would be the best place to do that?
Colin Gray:I'm saying that you actually linked in as about the only social
Colin Gray:media I use these days and even that is relatively sparingly, but if you
Colin Gray:connect with me over there, I'll see it eventually and be able to get back to you.
Colin Gray:But do you know what?
Colin Gray:Actually, I shouldn't say that the best place to actually
Colin Gray:get me is in our community.
Colin Gray:So that link that start here link actually is a front page of our community, a
Colin Gray:private community for podcasters or people want to guest on podcasts.
Colin Gray:We've got space in there for that, and I'm in there quite a lot.
Colin Gray:So if you actually have any good questions or want to, um, you know,
Colin Gray:follow up on any of this stuff by all means, join the community and
Colin Gray:you can fire me a message in there.
Jon Clayton:Oh, that's awesome.
Jon Clayton:Well, thanks again, Colleen.
Colin Gray:Cool.
Colin Gray:Thanks, John.
Jon Clayton:Next time I'm joined by Robert Wood burn park to talk
Jon Clayton:about communications in architecture.
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Jon Clayton:Running your architecture business.
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