The future of podcasting conferences. This is the future of
Speaker:podcasting, where we ponder what awaits the podcasters of
Speaker:today. From the school of podcasting,
Speaker:here's Dave Jackson. And from the audacity to podcast,
Speaker:here's Daniel j Lewis. Daniel, future of podcasting
Speaker:episode number 49, the future of
Speaker:podcasting conferences. I, I just came back
Speaker:from Podcast Movement in DC. The capital of podcasting?
Speaker:Yes. And, or as I like to call it, podcast summer
Speaker:camp is really what it felt like. It was, I had a
Speaker:great time. It was great to catch up with a lot of people, met some
Speaker:new people. And in general, it was a good time, a
Speaker:little different. They had all the sessions
Speaker:minus the keynotes were in this ginormous
Speaker:concrete room where all the vendors were. So the vendors were happy because
Speaker:everybody was in that room to get to the different stages.
Speaker:That's the good news. It was rather noisy, and people like to point
Speaker:out that there was no carpet. And that is true, and I was very, very
Speaker:happy to not be standing at a booth. Now Lipson did have carpet in
Speaker:their booth, but if I had to stand there all day on on concrete in
Speaker:a booth, my feet would be I'd wanna cut them off. So that was a
Speaker:little different. How they got around it, because it did make it noisy,
Speaker:is when you went to sessions, they had wireless headphones. And
Speaker:you could basically just grab a pair and stay in there all day, and then
Speaker:you would just click a button and it would go to different channels. And, eventually,
Speaker:you would hear the sound of your speaker, the person on
Speaker:stage, show up in your headphones. So that was kinda needed. It
Speaker:solved the problem of, hey. The audience isn't gonna be able to hear me. The
Speaker:side effect of that was, as a presenter, a, if you
Speaker:had a massive plosives going on, you had no
Speaker:idea. And I know I always try to make
Speaker:people giggle. And so when you kinda tell a joke or something funny, and
Speaker:you can't tell if it landed or not because you can't hear them, so that
Speaker:was a little different. That reminds me of the
Speaker:first podcast movement ever. It was Clinton from
Speaker:Comedy Forecast, got a few podcasters together, including myself, to do
Speaker:a comedy routine during one of the
Speaker:gatherings of the evenings. And so I got up there. I prepared
Speaker:this whole script and everything. It was hilarious, by the way. Thank you.
Speaker:I got to hear it before anybody else. And I was like, oh, Daniel's gonna
Speaker:kill with this. It was amazing. And then I felt
Speaker:I I mean, I could see a couple people laughing.
Speaker:I think you were one of them, and maybe someone else could hear me. But
Speaker:no one could hear me, which was just so much the
Speaker:metaphor of what podcasting is like, shouting in a noisy room, hoping that
Speaker:anybody will listen to you. But that's what it was like
Speaker:then for just that little thing. Yeah. That would
Speaker:be stressful to do a conference every session like
Speaker:that. I had the thought of, oh, why don't they do something like
Speaker:everyone pull out your smartphones, use your earbuds if you already have earbuds
Speaker:or use this thing that we provide to you and you could livestream it. But
Speaker:then you would have the delay because there would be the conversion to
Speaker:digital, the live streaming, the transmission through the Internet, all of that. So that
Speaker:wouldn't work. So their in person thing, it kind of surprises me
Speaker:that they would go with that as being less expensive
Speaker:than probably some other kind of acoustic treatment. Yeah. I
Speaker:just know when I was working with the New Media Expo,
Speaker:and we had a session coming up, and we had 4 speakers.
Speaker:It was a panel, and we had 3 chairs. And so I called,
Speaker:the guy that was running it. I'm like, hey. We need another chair. And he
Speaker:goes, are you sure? And I'm like, well, yeah. We don't want
Speaker:this person that came here to talk to have to stand. And he's like,
Speaker:oh, alright. And so it was in Vegas. We
Speaker:had to have a union worker bring over a chair, and it cost us
Speaker:$300 to have somebody move the chair. And I've heard
Speaker:Dan Franks talk about podcast movement because, you know, there'll be times
Speaker:when they'll have free coffee. Know, there's like a coffee station or whatever,
Speaker:and it's insane numbers of 1,000 of dollars
Speaker:for free coffee. Because when you've got 2,000 people drinking
Speaker:coffee and they've all went out the night before to some Iheart
Speaker:party, there's a lot of coffee the next morning. And there's the
Speaker:markup too for the event. It always costs more to have
Speaker:the food brought to the event. Yeah. But it's it's kind of
Speaker:a catch 22 in a way because this particular one
Speaker:I've always seen podcast evolutions as like the one
Speaker:where the big networks go and, you know, they do,
Speaker:upfronts where, hey. Here's what, you know, this particular
Speaker:advertising agency can bring, and here are the really popular shows that you wanna
Speaker:advertise on. They do that kind of stuff, and there are a lot of meetings
Speaker:at that. And Podcast Movement was supposed to be kind of for
Speaker:the independent podcaster, and they were definitely
Speaker:there, but not in the numbers, you know, like in the
Speaker:past. And some people said, well, it was during the week,
Speaker:so you had to take off work if you had a job. Other people
Speaker:mentioned that not only did you have to take off from your job, but it
Speaker:was the 1st week of school for many people. So that might have kept people
Speaker:away. And so, consequently, there were a fair number of
Speaker:people that were from, you know, for lack of better phrase,
Speaker:industry, where I remember the last two sessions. I didn't get to go to them,
Speaker:but I really wanted to hear them. One was, like, how to
Speaker:record a podcast in today's modern situation or whatever it
Speaker:was. And everyone on the panel was from radio. And I was like, oh,
Speaker:this is a different point of view. I'd really love to hear this. And there
Speaker:was another one that was, again, kind of ad agency kind
Speaker:of panels. And that's fine. I mean, that's a that's one little bubble part of
Speaker:podcasting. But it seemed like the industry people had kinda
Speaker:snuck into what used to be the indie podcast.
Speaker:I'm not sure why people weren't there before, but you it was at the
Speaker:Gaylord Hotel. And if you've ever been in a Gaylord, it is a
Speaker:small city under one roof. It's amazing. They're
Speaker:I mean, it's just you see it. You're like, I can't believe this. However, those
Speaker:are not cheap even though Podcast Movement always negotiates
Speaker:to get a a cheaper price. But when they're normally,
Speaker:whatever, $300, and they get them down to 2.50 a night, that
Speaker:adds up real quick. And I don't remember what the price was for a room.
Speaker:But by having that Gaylord, then you do get the industry people in
Speaker:because they're used to you know, they're big shot smarty pants, so they they need
Speaker:a big they're not gonna stay at the Holiday Inn or the Motel 6. So
Speaker:it's kind of a catch 22. You need those people because those are also, in
Speaker:many cases, your advertisers that will have their logo on the
Speaker:front page, so you need that. But on the other hand, if you have them
Speaker:in these really giant hotels, well, then maybe the average
Speaker:podcaster can't afford it, especially if he has to take a week off
Speaker:from work to pay for it. So it's it's just tricky how you do
Speaker:it. You know, smaller venues, smaller hotels, from from what I
Speaker:understand, and you can talk to this because I know you did a a Cincinnati
Speaker:event. It sounds like doing a small event
Speaker:is almost the same amount of work as doing a big event.
Speaker:It's just a big event has more risk involved because you've got more hotel rooms
Speaker:that you've paid for and things like that? Actually, I would say no.
Speaker:It's probably not because well, it depends
Speaker:on the level of quality that you want to attain.
Speaker:I did Podcamp Cincinnati. I did most of the work on that.
Speaker:I had some volunteers helping with a few things here and there, especially day
Speaker:of, like, for setting up and checking in and all of that stuff.
Speaker:But organizing it, scheduling it, all of that
Speaker:stuff, that was pretty much all me. You remember how tired I
Speaker:was. But bringing up Podcamp, that's a
Speaker:blast from the past. And the whole reason why we're talking about this in
Speaker:light of podcast movement, and we were planning to talk about this
Speaker:anyway before podcast movement now that we just had a podcast movement,
Speaker:the timing is still relevant. I thought of how it's
Speaker:interesting to see the well, not rise and fall. It's not
Speaker:like that but do imagine that on a graph, like the rise and fall on
Speaker:a graph, but I'm not saying that the rise and fall of conferences
Speaker:but of the type of conferences that we've had
Speaker:where in the beginning of podcasting, it was all of
Speaker:these small conferences. We had Podcamps
Speaker:all over the place. Now are there any Podcamps, like,
Speaker:actually called Podcamps at all? I haven't heard of 1 in a while.
Speaker:It's kind of funny because it does remind me the reason
Speaker:podcast movement came to be is because
Speaker:of the New Media Expo had blogging. They had
Speaker:video. They had podcasting. I forget what else.
Speaker:But it was all these different genres of content creation under one
Speaker:umbrella. I have a picture. It's me, Dan, Jared, and
Speaker:Rob Walsh. And we kinda were all going, wouldn't this be
Speaker:cool if it was just podcasting? Because back then, when
Speaker:you were a podcaster, you weren't really because, again, video was really
Speaker:expensive and insane to even get into. So, that's kind of where
Speaker:podcast movement was born on. What if we just talked about podcasting?
Speaker:And now that podcasting is so big, you do have kind of the
Speaker:smaller podcast or hyper niche, and then you have the
Speaker:big shows with the big budgets. And in some cases, it's not that they're
Speaker:celebrities. They just end up being celebrities because they got so
Speaker:popular. And I think that's something that may be a little
Speaker:different is like, we didn't see the girl
Speaker:from caller daddy. We didn't see like, we saw the guy from,
Speaker:Diary of a CEO. He was a keynote, but you didn't see him after that.
Speaker:He came in, did his keynote, was you know? Now he might have been someplace,
Speaker:but I didn't see him. And not that it's really fractured.
Speaker:It's just there are different people on different levels, and that should
Speaker:be a good thing if we can get the people that have found
Speaker:some success to, you know, share with the people who are just starting, that would
Speaker:be awesome. And I think that shows the growth and maturity of the
Speaker:industry, where in the early days, it was like, hey. Are
Speaker:there any other podcasters out there? Let's try to see
Speaker:if enough of us exist or can travel to the
Speaker:same place to maybe share a space with another
Speaker:conference. You know, there might be a podcasting session
Speaker:at a conference. There might be a podcasting track at a couple of
Speaker:conferences, like New Media Expo or Social Media Marketing World, these,
Speaker:like, social media or new media style conferences, and then
Speaker:podcast movement was born. And at the same time, there were
Speaker:smaller podcasting conferences. But what it feels like is happening is
Speaker:we started with these small independent
Speaker:regional conferences, then we grew up
Speaker:into the big national and international conferences.
Speaker:And it feels like now we're getting back into the small
Speaker:again because some of the things that you said and some of the things I've
Speaker:heard from other people who have attended some of these conferences is they
Speaker:often feel like there's no one like them. Like, I
Speaker:know one person who attended one of these big conferences. He
Speaker:has a podcast that he does just for fun. He does make some money from
Speaker:it, but he does it just for fun. And he went to a conference, and
Speaker:he said, I'm never going to a conference again because it's
Speaker:all about how do you make money, how do you build a business, how
Speaker:do you and I feel like maybe he just went to some of the wrong
Speaker:sessions, but that there was that perception.
Speaker:And he wanted to go just to hang out with other podcasters
Speaker:and have the conversations or learn about things like, hey. What do you do
Speaker:when you feel like you have nothing to podcast about? What do you do
Speaker:when you feel like your audience doesn't love you anymore? What do you do when
Speaker:these things or do you ever run into these struggles? And
Speaker:I see now while these big conferences will continue and I
Speaker:think definitely should because it's good to have industry
Speaker:level events where industry level stuff can
Speaker:happen. And indie podcasters can go to that kind of thing.
Speaker:And certainly, I think, have a space there and deserve to still be
Speaker:able to speak there as well. That's where you can hear cool announcements. Like
Speaker:it was during podcast movement that Apple announced
Speaker:the new Apple Podcasts on the web. It's not an Android
Speaker:app, but at this point, maybe that won't actually happen. But it does work
Speaker:on Android now. So that kind of thing, that happened, it
Speaker:seems, timed that specifically to happen during Podcast
Speaker:Movement. And lots of these big companies have the meetings at Podcast
Speaker:Movement or these other really large podcasting conferences.
Speaker:Those should definitely continue, and I recommend podcasters make their
Speaker:way to one of these big conferences at some point. Yeah. That
Speaker:is a key point because they did have that podcast movement
Speaker:one evening. I didn't go to the opening kind of networking event. I was
Speaker:at a, I was actually at NPR watching a tiny desk concert, which
Speaker:was great fun. And that's because of my podcast story because I
Speaker:knew somebody who won tickets. But, anyway, I think it was, like, the 3rd
Speaker:night. They just had they had these big huge hallways, and they
Speaker:just set up a table and put a sign. It was like, this is the
Speaker:Christian podcaster meetup. This is the I own a
Speaker:studio, meetup. There was one for nonprofits,
Speaker:one for and so it was kind of fun to just go down the hallway
Speaker:and just network with people. And that really is, I think, one of the biggest
Speaker:benefits. So you you do kind of get that, is there anybody here like
Speaker:me? And that's, I think, one of the biggest benefits because
Speaker:sometimes we just feel like we're the only person in the world that's, you know,
Speaker:talking about this subject. So when you find somebody else, you're like, oh my gosh.
Speaker:I'm not weird. There is somebody who still likes this. Well
Speaker:and that's where I see this new movement of
Speaker:conferences happening that now we're getting back
Speaker:into the small conferences, but not small like they were in the early
Speaker:days where it was just any podcasters wanted to get together with any podcasters.
Speaker:Now I see those niche podcast conferences happening.
Speaker:Like, the Spark Christian Media Conference for Christian
Speaker:podcasters. There are other podcasting conferences
Speaker:for other niches. And that's what I would love to
Speaker:see more of in the future is, hey. How about we have
Speaker:a podcasting conference all about sports
Speaker:podcasting? And that's it. Every session is something
Speaker:about sports podcasting. It might be only a 1 or 2 day
Speaker:conference. It might have only 1 or 2 tracks. That is
Speaker:okay. When you niche down to something like that, in fact, you
Speaker:might only want a single track
Speaker:because if it's already niche, it's very possible everyone who's
Speaker:coming wants to attend every session in that niche
Speaker:because they are tightly involved in that niche. Yeah. In the early days
Speaker:of Podfest, I think they considered the second one. I
Speaker:considered the first one. But it was in Florida. It was
Speaker:next to a Ramada Inn that was okay. It wasn't super
Speaker:fancy. And it was one room. There's one room for it.
Speaker:And I remember the vendors were on the walls, the back
Speaker:walls, and then there were tables in the middle, and then you had a
Speaker:stage. And everybody got to get the exact
Speaker:same information, and then there'd be a break. And we'd all go out in the
Speaker:hallway or whatever and talk about what we just saw. And then
Speaker:after, you know, the break's over, you'd go back in. Same thing for,
Speaker:Joe Pardo used to do I I think he now calls it Indy
Speaker:PodCon. Back then, it was called, Mid Atlantic
Speaker:something, and that was one of my favorite conferences ever. He
Speaker:always called it Philly, but it wasn't. I don't know where it was, but it
Speaker:it was, you know, outside of Philly, And there was a Wawa, which is just
Speaker:an oversized gas station. And if you went across the street, there was
Speaker:a Wendy's, and it was in a Holiday Inn. And between
Speaker:I don't mind Holiday Inn. Get more value based than that?
Speaker:Yeah. And because, really, all we did at the Holiday
Speaker:Inn, number 1, it was nice that where the
Speaker:a water at the Gaylord was $9 for a
Speaker:bottle of water. And at the Holiday Inn, you know,
Speaker:a beer was maybe $3. And this is probably 10 years ago.
Speaker:And if you you know, like I said, if you wanna go crazy, you could
Speaker:go to Wendy's across the street. But I remember by the end of that and
Speaker:there were probably I'd say a 100 to a 120 at that
Speaker:one. And by the end of I think you got
Speaker:there in the middle of the day, like, on a Friday evening. We had a
Speaker:little meet and greet. There might have been, like, a opening ceremony, and then it
Speaker:was almost all Saturday, and then everybody went home on Sunday. So it was really
Speaker:almost a one day kinda thing. And by the end of it, you
Speaker:had met everyone there. And I met some of those people
Speaker:at Podcast Movement. Like, I hadn't talked to them in a long time. It was
Speaker:great because, one guy's name is Raff, and he does a
Speaker:served podcast. It's all about helping people in the
Speaker:military transition back into just being a civilian. And
Speaker:when he told me about all the stories he had, and it's just not as
Speaker:easy as it sounds, I I stayed up probably till 2 or
Speaker:3 in the morning talking to him at that conference going, you gotta launch
Speaker:this thing. Because every time he'd say something, I'm like, that was episode 1. Why
Speaker:aren't you releasing these? And so you do build
Speaker:relationships with that. And I think even Joe brought in
Speaker:food. That was the other thing. He didn't really charge a whole lot, but, you
Speaker:know, you have to be careful because you do kinda get what you pay for.
Speaker:But that was an amazing event. And I think,
Speaker:if I remember right, I think Blueberry, Libsyn, you know, some of the
Speaker:hosts did help sponsor it because, again, it it's
Speaker:there's a lot of time put into it, plus you wanna market it and
Speaker:things like that. So that that's my favorite time. And what's kind of,
Speaker:I I don't wanna say sad because I'm with you. We need big conferences. It's
Speaker:nice when we get everyone together. But the minute we have
Speaker:a really good small event, people are like, this is amazing. And it
Speaker:makes sense because you're like, I want everyone to experience this great
Speaker:thing that I just went through. But the problem is when you make it ginormous,
Speaker:now you've got to find a hotel that will hold you. I was at one
Speaker:conference, and it was the last day, and people are starting to check out.
Speaker:And the guy's going over his bill, and he's like, well, I paid for a
Speaker:resort fee that I never used. He's like, I was in was
Speaker:in the conference, and he was just going through the bill. And he's like, why
Speaker:do they have these things at such large hotels? And I was
Speaker:like, because there are thousands of us now. You can't do
Speaker:3,000 people at the Holiday Inn. There's there's not that many
Speaker:rooms. So the bigger the hotel, the bigger the price,
Speaker:the bigger the risk if they're buying a bunch of, rooms in advance. So it
Speaker:is kinda tricky when it gets bigger, and, it's a lot of
Speaker:work. And you think about what can you really fit into
Speaker:the big conferences anymore because you can't really have
Speaker:just a full day of a sports podcasting
Speaker:track or a TV after show podcasting
Speaker:track or a Christian podcaster track or, you know, all
Speaker:of these things. There's just not the space for that. And besides that, there
Speaker:are all of these other things happening at the same time at a large conference
Speaker:like that. So that's where I see the future of these
Speaker:podcasting conferences is going to become niche
Speaker:again as we'll have the small events
Speaker:of a couple dozen or a few dozen people, and that can be totally okay.
Speaker:Like, you and I also went to that event that David Hooper hosted
Speaker:in Nashville several years ago. And
Speaker:there, he he brought in Little Caesar's Pizza for everyone. It was
Speaker:at a place where we could have fountain drinks there that we could
Speaker:easily have during the breaks or anything like that to have with the pizza.
Speaker:And that was great. I made some great connections there too. And, also,
Speaker:when it's small like that, it truly does become a
Speaker:more intimate connection because you can get the audience
Speaker:involved much more. And that's what they did in that
Speaker:small one day conference. They got the audience involved.
Speaker:They got them up on stage doing certain things,
Speaker:workshopping certain ideas. You can do that a lot more with
Speaker:a smaller thing. So if you listening right now
Speaker:have been thinking, I really wish we could have a track
Speaker:about this at Podcast Movement or Podfest.
Speaker:Maybe you could do that yourself. Have a conference in your
Speaker:area. Find a local conference room or meeting
Speaker:space that's big enough, that's close enough to food, maybe close enough to
Speaker:some inexpensive hotels. And that could be far less expensive
Speaker:for people to attend if they want to. You
Speaker:wouldn't get the big name celebrities, probably
Speaker:not, unless one of them lives nearby and podcasts about that
Speaker:thing or is in that niche. But do you really need
Speaker:that? I think it's these smaller things
Speaker:that might interest podcasters a bit more sometimes
Speaker:to go to, not on a recurring basis, but to be able to
Speaker:try more and more of them. I could see maybe
Speaker:presenting at something like a TV show or
Speaker:movie fan podcast conference where it's all about how to podcast
Speaker:about TV shows and movies. I could present a session there and I could
Speaker:if I was still hosting a podcast about a TV show, I'd love to network
Speaker:with other people also podcasting about TV shows.
Speaker:We've seen Christian podcast conferences. I wasn't able to make
Speaker:it to the latest one. I really, really regretted that. I really
Speaker:wanted to be there. I just couldn't make it happen, But that
Speaker:can be a thing too. And, like, speaking also of in that Christian
Speaker:realm, I went to National Religious Broadcasters
Speaker:Convention, an RB show in Nashville earlier in
Speaker:2024, and I got to speak there on podcasting. And
Speaker:that is religious broadcasters. It's mostly the
Speaker:big broadcasting corporations and
Speaker:ministries there. But I was surprised
Speaker:that there were even some smaller podcasters, some
Speaker:independent people looking around, talking to vendors,
Speaker:going to some of the sessions. A lot of stuff didn't really apply to them.
Speaker:I'm glad that they got value from my session, which was about how to start
Speaker:a podcast. But it was that same kind of thing where the indies were in
Speaker:this space where they could get some value from it but
Speaker:not the whole thing. The whole thing was too big for them. But
Speaker:they still got to be inspired. They got to see some of
Speaker:these people speak. They got to meet some of these people,
Speaker:these, quote, celebrities, unquote, that they might not have ever
Speaker:gotten the chance to see, meet, listen to, or anything like
Speaker:that because it was a big event. But then
Speaker:at the small events, you get to have the conversations, the connections
Speaker:that you don't get at the bigger things. So I feel like the
Speaker:future is going to become small again
Speaker:in size, but also more focused
Speaker:with the niches of these different conferences. And even
Speaker:especially with stuff now like what we're doing in podcasting 2.0,
Speaker:like the streaming satoshis and all of that, the value for value and
Speaker:boostergrams and all of that. Imagine a conference, a
Speaker:whole conference that could work like that. We recently had that music
Speaker:festival where it was all value for value for the music festival. Imagine a
Speaker:conference like that where you could get in maybe
Speaker:for free. Maybe there's a small ticket charge just to
Speaker:cover certain expenses or something. But then maybe, like, you
Speaker:distribute your satoshis or whatever currency it is
Speaker:to the sessions you go to, or maybe they're automatically distributed
Speaker:to wherever you go. Like, when you check-in on the app into a certain
Speaker:session, then automatically your, whatever, 100,000
Speaker:satoshis goes to that speaker. And then for your next session, your
Speaker:100,000 satoshis goes to them or whatever the value is. 10,100,
Speaker:whatever that thing is. But that could be a really neat idea of
Speaker:building a conference like that. I think it should still be niche
Speaker:enough to attract that kind of audience that could do that kind of
Speaker:thing. Like, a Bitcoin conference would obviously work with something like
Speaker:that. But a cryptocurrency podcasters
Speaker:conference, perfect for something like that because already everyone
Speaker:going there knows cryptocurrency. They're familiar with
Speaker:that exchange, and it's just a little bit more of a stretch
Speaker:for them to do that. So the perspective, I think,
Speaker:is being opened up by what Podcasting 2.0 is showing
Speaker:is possible to do. Even just with an RSS
Speaker:feed that we've discovered, like with the value block and things that you can do
Speaker:and wallet switching and all of this kind of stuff. You could do that
Speaker:same thing in a conference. But even without that technical
Speaker:aspect, I want to see more
Speaker:smaller, local, niche podcasting
Speaker:conferences, whatever the topic is.
Speaker:Because you might get one session on that subject at a big
Speaker:conference, but you could have a whole conference about that one thing.
Speaker:Yeah. And the other thing about that is what
Speaker:if you say, well, I've I've booked this place. It holds
Speaker:a 150 people, and then we sell out of tickets.
Speaker:That's when I'm like, well, that's proof of concept. Now you can raise your
Speaker:your ticket price a little bit and do it more maybe do 2 a year
Speaker:instead of 1. I would much rather go to a conference
Speaker:where everything you see is like, oh, this is exactly what I need. I know
Speaker:Steve Stewart has done that at Podfest. They have a whole
Speaker:track for editors, and they do try to make tracks. It's usually like
Speaker:beginner, intermediate, monetization,
Speaker:promotion. So they kinda try to niche down. But to have not only
Speaker:to say now, hey. I want to do a a podcast
Speaker:event for authors so we can talk about how to promote your
Speaker:book and how to podcast and value for value for authors or
Speaker:whatever. It's like, wow. These guys are talking exactly, you know, what I came here
Speaker:to hear. So that would be, be interesting.
Speaker:And I know you mentioned Podcamps. Podcamp was a really small
Speaker:gathering. Well, it was intimate. And it was usually
Speaker:I think in some cases, it was, like, at a library. I don't know. I
Speaker:only went to 1, and they had it in a very small theater on
Speaker:a college campus. And the whole point was you'd have I
Speaker:think anybody could speak, but you had to kind of register ahead of time.
Speaker:I think I could be it's been a a while. And then you
Speaker:were encouraged that if somebody started talking and you're like, this isn't for
Speaker:me, you're allowed to just get up and leave, vote with your feet, and go
Speaker:find another room. And so I went to podcamp.org. Do
Speaker:not go there. It hurts your eyes. It's it's a pod it's a
Speaker:page from, I don't know,
Speaker:1998, maybe. I don't know. It's it's bad. It's a old weird looking
Speaker:Wiki. I know Chris is it Chris Brogan was the guy that started those
Speaker:back in the day? So maybe we need to, reach out to
Speaker:Chris and go, hey. Let's dust off podcasts. Because they were a lot of
Speaker:fun. It took a little organization. How long do you think
Speaker:somebody needs to promote it to get people to show up?
Speaker:Probably 3 to 6 months from the Yeah. The 3
Speaker:to 6 month region could be just saying this is going to
Speaker:happen on this date, location, and schedule pending.
Speaker:But, like, with the Podcamp, a lot can happen last
Speaker:minute. It fits into this idea of unconference
Speaker:comes really from a bar camp was a different idea of
Speaker:programmers getting together and some people just getting up and doing
Speaker:a session, some people just sitting together and programming together, and some people
Speaker:having conversations in the hallways. That's where this kind of unconference
Speaker:idea comes in where, yes, there might be a schedule, but there are
Speaker:also blanks that anyone is welcome to fill in that blank. And I've
Speaker:seen that happen a couple of times before where someone just says, hey. I'm
Speaker:gonna do a session about this. Anyone who's interested, come down to this
Speaker:room and join me for this session. And they get a few
Speaker:people show up, connections made, lots of fun had.
Speaker:When it's smaller, it doesn't have to be big.
Speaker:I know that sounds like or super profound
Speaker:maybe. But what I mean by that is you go to podcast
Speaker:movement, and you see they've got these huge
Speaker:props on the stage. And many of them
Speaker:are branded specifically to that
Speaker:conference at that location. So it's not like
Speaker:it's the same podcast movement prop year after year. Well, they did
Speaker:have a prop like that for a while. I don't think they're using it anymore.
Speaker:But the branding was specific. They've got
Speaker:screens all over the place, big fancy lights, all of this stuff.
Speaker:You know, it's a whole show really, just the conference
Speaker:itself. A smaller conference doesn't have to be that
Speaker:big. A smaller conference can be a
Speaker:projector on a screen, And that's your stage.
Speaker:It can be smaller. Some of these conferences might even be
Speaker:the possibility of having a conference so small that you don't even need
Speaker:a sound system. Although, I always recommend a sound system and
Speaker:always record whatever you do at a conference, record it.
Speaker:But there's so much potential in these smaller
Speaker:niches. I know the default is gonna be like, well,
Speaker:wouldn't it just be easier if you did it online? And sure. But
Speaker:I think we can all agree it's not the same. Yeah. And I was trying
Speaker:to figure out why I identified it. It's because
Speaker:when you go to these conferences, you end up making memories.
Speaker:Mhmm. Whether whatever you do even if it's just hanging out in a
Speaker:hotel lobby, chat with those 4 guys. I remember it was
Speaker:me, Todd Cochran, and oh, I can't remember. But there were, like, 3
Speaker:guys. But I remember we were all being super vulnerable. And I was like,
Speaker:man, if this is being recorded but we're all able to kinda let our guard
Speaker:down and and really talk about it. And like this last time, I went
Speaker:to a a tiny desk concert at NPR. I got to see the
Speaker:Clydesdales with, my buddy, Bruce. I went to lunch with
Speaker:Monica Rivera. You know? And these are things that you just can't do
Speaker:online. It's you know, you can do the little networking sessions, and let's all do
Speaker:an icebreaker. And there's nothing wrong with that, by the way. That's better than nothing.
Speaker:But I was trying to figure out, like, what's the difference between networking
Speaker:online and networking in person? I'm like, I think there's just something about
Speaker:shaking somebody's hand, giving somebody a a hug, or whatever it is. It's
Speaker:that personal it's just another form of communication, I guess, that
Speaker:just makes it, I think, a little deeper. Yeah. And I think of how
Speaker:many conferences, online conferences, and summits that I've
Speaker:registered for. Do you know how many I have actually attended
Speaker:to the level of engagement that I would have attended a live
Speaker:conference? Take a guess. 1?
Speaker:0. Okay. And I've paid for some of
Speaker:them too. And I think it's so much is mindset
Speaker:of some people might think, oh, I can watch this or I can,
Speaker:quote, attend, unquote, this while I'm doing other things.
Speaker:And then you just forget or you get distracted or you don't make the
Speaker:time for it. Whereas if you're going somewhere, you're taking time off
Speaker:maybe, but you're present physically and much
Speaker:more mentally because you're present physically. So here's the
Speaker:question to you, Dave, the challenge. When are we going to
Speaker:do the future of podcasting conference?
Speaker:Well, that is a good question. You could do something like that. We could have
Speaker:a one day conference where every session during the
Speaker:day, it's a single track conference. Every session is
Speaker:something about preparing your podcast for the future. Now a lot of
Speaker:that would be stuff like podcasting 2 point
Speaker:o things. Some of it could be things about upgrading
Speaker:certain podcasting technology, like maybe really talking about why
Speaker:you need to replace your old live music
Speaker:mixer with something like a Rodecaster Pro or whatever the newest
Speaker:technology is. Or it could be certain conceptual
Speaker:things, like how to prepare your podcast
Speaker:for your death or how to cancel proof your podcast
Speaker:or certain things like that that are all focused on the future of
Speaker:podcasting as a whole as well as the future of your
Speaker:podcast and how to ensure the future of your podcast and
Speaker:leverage these new things to make your podcast better.
Speaker:We could do that in a one day conference, maybe even a 2 day conference.
Speaker:Don't nail us down on it, anybody. But Yeah. Definitely, something like
Speaker:that could happen. Columbus, Ohio is halfway between my house and your
Speaker:house now. Thinking that. Yeah. Know, that would be crazy if we
Speaker:did that because that is also where we supposedly met.
Speaker:Yes. I think so. A long time ago. Yeah. That would be
Speaker:interesting. Just an example and, again, it's kind of always
Speaker:weird when you quote no agenda because their audience is
Speaker:huge, but they have people doing meetups. Their
Speaker:audience has their own little, like, gatherings. It's it's not so much a
Speaker:conference, but it's that, again, physical connection of seeing people eye
Speaker:to eye. And they're usually at a restaurant, so they're eating food together, and
Speaker:it just builds that bond. And, you know, it doesn't have to be
Speaker:super crazy. I used to do the Northeast Ohio podcasters meetup,
Speaker:and we met, it was really cool, at a local radio station. And so
Speaker:they let us use kind of their conference room, and and that was cool. But
Speaker:then when COVID hit, we moved online, and
Speaker:then we got really used to doing it online because we weren't
Speaker:eating food. It was just basically hanging out and leaving, and so we didn't really
Speaker:lose anything by going to, online. But, yeah, the wheels are
Speaker:turning in my head. Since you looked at this loony old man.
Speaker:Exactly. Alright, Daniel. Well, we've been gone a little
Speaker:bit, while I was out and about. Have we received any Boostagrams?
Speaker:We got a bunch of streaming Satoshis and a couple of Boostagrams from
Speaker:Sam and CreativityFound. So thank you so much for sending
Speaker:those, and make sure that you're using a podcast app that can
Speaker:send value back. So think about what value you got from this
Speaker:podcast. Consider sending that back through a podcasting 2.0
Speaker:app. And if you want to make some money, I have an
Speaker:opportunity for you that Dave has given me permission to share. I have
Speaker:revamped the Podgagment affiliate program. So even if you
Speaker:don't use Podgagment yourself to engage your audience and grow your podcast, which I
Speaker:think you should, but you can recommend it to other podcasters
Speaker:and earn some nice commissions from it and even some
Speaker:other cool things that can happen by being an affiliate. If you're interested in that,
Speaker:I'd love to have you as an affiliate. Dave is an affiliate, and
Speaker:he promotes it. He gets paid too. I love sending Dave money every month. I'd
Speaker:love to send you money every month too. You can check it out over at
Speaker:podgagement.com/affiliates.
Speaker:And the link will be in the show notes. And I think that'll do it
Speaker:for, this episode of the future of podcasting. If you
Speaker:know someone who's been thinking about maybe creating a a
Speaker:some sort of event or is just interested in
Speaker:podcasting 2.0 and the future of podcasting, go to that share button
Speaker:and send it on over to them. We would greatly appreciate that. Or just tell
Speaker:them to go to future of podcasting.net. But that is gonna do
Speaker:it. This one is in the books. Keep boosting. Keep podcasting. And
Speaker:maybe start your own podcast conference or 2.