How to Produce Less&Grow Your Podcast More - a podcast by Mark Asquith, Rebel Base Media

from 2021-05-10T09:00

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Last week I authored a https://twitter.com/MrAsquith/status/1389995638406975493 (podcast growth thread on Twitter containing five things that I see podcasters doing wrong every day and quick ways to fix them).
Over the next five weeks, I'm going deeper into each of these problems to add more context, take a closer look at how to implement the fix and why I suggested each particular approach.
Cumulative downloads = the total number of downloads that your entire show has had for the month across all episodes. 
Aka"the biggest number".
The cumulative download number sounds really awesome when you say it out loud.
I do it myself if I'm in the pub (remember those?!) and someone asks how many people listen to my podcast. I'll reel off the monthly cumulative download number because I've had half a pint and it sounds good!
As a marketer and software company founder, the biggest number is the one you keep an eye on and tell your mates about, but it's not the one that you focus on.
In my business, I'm more interested in trial sign-ups, activation rates and churn rates because if those numbers are performing well, the"big"numbers (sales, total revenue) will increase naturally and frankly it's those supporting numbers that drive the big numbers up - without those, the big numbers don't exist.
As a podcaster, total downloads is our"big"number and it's the one that you see smattered all over sales pages for courses from gurus. Rightly so, of course, they have achieved those numbers but in doing that it's often implied that it's that number that matters day-to-day as a podcaster.
It's not.
The supporting numbers are much more important and the total downloads number is a nice to have figure. 
Sadly, many podcast gurus know how to launch a podcast but they don't usually know how to grow one. Often they have an audience already or they created an original idea that got early traction because of its audacity - all to be commended, but not always bought.
Which numbers should we be focusing on, then?This one: the number of downloads that any given episode gets within 28 days of release. 
The reasons are 1. sponsors want that number because 2. it's a pretty fair estimation of the number of true fans you have and the efficacy of your marketing.
With that in mind, the advice that many gurus dish out on how to grow your show being"produce more content"begins to waver a little. If we produce more, we get busier OR we get more automated.
Often, these two outcomes lead to our content being worse because we're focused too much on quantity versus quality and if we think even deeper on that, it could mean that our per episode download number decreases as our content gets worse.
We enter a cycle of diminishing returns and should focus on producing better content rather than more content to grow our audience of genuine fans.
I've spoken about this before and now that I've added some context, let me get to the fix.
Podcasting is a game of attention. 
First, we have to get it (more on that when we start to talk episode titles!) and then we have to keep it. 
The latter is arguably harder than the former because people change their habits based on their moods.
Sure, I may have a habit of listening to a podcast every time I get in the car, but my mood changes and my habit may be to listen to the one or two shows that I simply cannot miss before hunting for new audio content to satiate today's mood for comedy, or drama, or musical interviews for example.The only way to keep someone's attention in anything is to be so good at what you do and to give someone something that they simply can't do without, that you become one of those top few"must-listen"shows.
Automating and doing more episodes is not the way to achieve this. 
Producing significantly...

Further episodes of The Podcast Accelerator: How to Grow Your Podcast

Further podcasts by Mark Asquith, Rebel Base Media

Website of Mark Asquith, Rebel Base Media