The History of RSS Podcasting with Ben and Alberto - Part 2 - podcast episode cover

The History of RSS Podcasting with Ben and Alberto - Part 2

Dec 01, 202114 minEp. 2
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Episode description

In this second part of the History of RSS Podcasting, Ben Richardson and Alberto Betella will talk about why you should start podcasting RIGHT NOW. They will also talk about the future of podcasting and how it's slowly becoming relevant in the media space. Stay tuned!

Why is now the best time to start a Podcast?

[2:02]

The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago and now. So in starting a podcast, if you feel like you have something to say or can impart a little light into the world, that is a great time to start a podcast. A podcast is not for the person speaking. It's for the person listening. If you can impart something, and leave your digital mark on the world, then your time to start a podcast is right now.

[3:38]

Your third podcast might be your best podcast. Your 15th podcast might be your best podcast, or your first might be your best podcast. But you aren't going to get there if you have something to say by waiting. With RSS, you can get a free episode and upload it. Then tomorrow, if you don't like that episode or feel like you can edit it better and more briefly, you can swap it out. Once you've fine-tuned what your message is, go ahead and create your second episode.

[4:35]

Podcasting is easy to start, and it's cheap.

Why Diversity is important for Multiple Cultures to Start a Podcast

[5:36]

There's something different about all of us. There's also so much that is common among all of us. Podcasting is a great way to experience that. RSS celebrates diversity because we feel that everybody's voice has meaning and matters at the same time. Podcasting is also about the listener and your message having a chance to resonate with somebody else. Because of this, podcasting is a very powerful thing.

Growth of RSS

[8:58]

There's some commonality in RSS.com Podcasting's approach that makes Mexico and Latin America target-rich for us in the sense of growing podcasters, growing produced content, and fostering the economic models that exist down there. RSS has many initiatives and many technological opportunities as the platform continues to grow.

Future of Podcasting

[12:14]

People must understand that technological advancements are coming down through hosting providers or listening apps that will help change podcasting for the better. They're going to deliver richer content in a way that is more interactive. They're going to allow for greater flexibility from the hosts' perspective to get their message heard, understood, and monetize a podcast.

Learn more about RSS and its history: https://rss.com/blog/the-history-of-rss-podcasting/

Transcript

Why is now the best time to start a Podcast?

Hey everyone, Ashley here with RSS Podcasting. In the last episode, I chatted with Alberto Batella and Benjamin Richardson and they shared a brief history of how they formed the company. If you missed that episode, look for Podcasting 101 on RSS.com. In today's episode, we're talking about why now is the best time to start a podcast and we're continuing the conversation about why RSS is the best host to launch with. Yeah, I can definitely attest to the fact that RSS is very easy to use.

My podcasting journey began a long time ago and in 2019 is when I first started really getting into the thick of it, learning all about how podcasts work and things like that, listening to them. I tried several platforms. I have to tell you guys, I actually tried several platforms. The truth is RSS, like you guys have said, it is so easy compared with all the other ones that I've tried. It is the easiest to get your show up. You can start it in less than an hour.

What I mean by less than an hour is even from recording time, from recording and editing, you can have your show up in a matter of minutes. It's incredible how something that, yes, like you said, it sounds like there's a lot of complex code and a lot of difficulties in the background from people much smarter than me. Just the fact that within just a couple of minutes, faster than you can order your favorite drink at Starbucks, you can get your podcast online with RSS. Yeah, perfect.

It's not sponsored, hashtag not sponsored. In your opinion, we've talked a little bit about the fact that Ben, you were a political, was it consultant or advisor? Strategist. Okay, so we kind of touched on the fact that you've had some history in politics, but in your opinion, why is now the best time to start a podcast? I'd actually like to hear from both of you on this. Then we'll start with you. Yeah, you've probably heard that saying when's the best time to plant a tree.

The first answer is 20 years ago. The second answer is now. Why is now the best time to start a podcast? It's not if you don't have anything to say. It's not the best time to start a podcast. If you feel like everybody has said everything that's needed to be said, every opinion that's needed to be shared has been shared.

But if you do feel like you have something to say, if you do feel like your opinion matters, if you do feel like you might be able to impart a little light into the world, a little hope, a little reminder, then now is a great time to start a podcast. You can affect other people. I mean, at the end of the day, a podcast is not for the person speaking, it's for the person listening.

And if you are able to impart something and leave it digitally on your digital mark on the world for the remainder of time that there's electricity on the planet, then your time to start a podcast is right now. So yeah, I mean, I don't think anybody's going to lose opportunities if they start a podcast in a week or in a year.

And certainly people's interior inside voices change just as much as their their their, you know, we talk about, I don't know, I don't want to get into psychology, but the ego, the super ego, the id, all those have voices that change over time.

Your third or 15th or even your first podcast might be the best

So your third podcast might be your best, your best podcast, your 15th podcast might be your best podcast or your first might be your best podcast. But you're you aren't going to get there if you have something to say by waiting. Just you could, you know, with us, you can get a free episode and upload it. And then tomorrow, if you don't like that episode or you feel like you can edit it better and more succinctly or write a new script, you can just swap it out. There's your first episode again.

And then once you've really fine tuned what your message is, then go ahead and create your second episode. And if you're if it's an educational podcast, you'll get a big discount. So yeah, that's anyway, that's probably a long winded answer for saying, yeah, right now is a great time to start if you have something to say. But remember who your listener is going to be and how you can impact them. And I think it's a very powerful sort of proposition regarding why now again, it's not necessarily

Podcasting is easy, and cheap to start

now from someone that was, you know, that got acquainted with these with podcasting back in 2005, 2006, then was the time to start, you know. But I just think that now the two factors, one mentioned by Ben, a lot of people have things to say, whether it is, you know, a chat with friends or some powerful message from that is very important for from for to to to share. But at the same time, podcasting is almost commoditized, meaning it's easy to to to to start it. It's cheap.

So now it's a perfect moment just because it's simple. And so there's no there's no effort there. There's really the friction is small. And that's why now everyone is that's it's up in the past two years, we've seen a climax in the industry of people that want to create a show and to put their voices out there.

Diversity is so important in podcasting

RSS believes in diversity and podcasting. Why do you guys think it is so important for multiple cultures to start a podcast? Well, I think the the question kind of comes from a perspective of that there's something different about us. And I think that is absolutely true. There's also so much that is common among us. And podcasting is a great way to experience that. So we do celebrate diversity. We we feel like everybody's voice has meaning and matters at the same time.

Like I said earlier, podcasting is also about the listener and where it where your message resonates with somebody else is where there's true impact. So you as a diverse speaker resonating with somebody else on the planet because they have a similarity to you, regardless of how diverse that similarity might be, how unique that similarity might be is a very, very powerful thing.

So we celebrate diversity in the fact that it can impact people who feel alone, feel marginalized, feel left out because they aren't because everybody feels marginalized. Everybody feels left out. Everybody feels alone at some point in their life. And as you can as you as a podcaster can touch that one person that's listening, it matters a lot to that that individual. So that for me is what the essence of diversity is. It's not it's it's not a function of there being something different.

It's there being something common and finding that commonality in unexpected places is a very powerful thing. And I would like to add that it also comes naturally for us because our team is is in sparse in two continents, five different countries. Eighty percent of our team speaks three languages or more. So naturally we are used to to interact with people from other culture, other languages.

And I think it was a very straightforward and clear next step to us to read for us actually to to to focus on language diversity, for example, Spanish speaking podcasting, but also broadening broadening the horizon to to to new languages. It definitely makes me want to learn some more languages every time I hear you guys talk about how many languages you speak. I want to learn more. You know, you talked about how it brings so many cultures together and how you can have an impact.

And one of my favorite podcasters, Shane Sam's of the Flip Lifestyle podcast, he I'm probably going to mess up the exact wording, but he talks about how everything you do is like throwing a pebble in the water and the ripple effect that it can have.

And it's just amazing to me how with podcasting, like you said, you can just when you throw that that pebble in the water, the ripple effect that you can have, you don't even know what you could possibly cause as your ripple effect, but just the way that you can touch people with just with just your voice and the content that you can create from that voice. It's just it's a wonderful time to be in podcasting and everybody should start one. I agree.

Now, I know we're kind of getting low on time here, but I'm kind of curious, what do you guys see for the future of podcasting? Wow, there is so much that we have planned, some of it top secret.

The plan to grow RSS

But we are I guess publicly announced intentions and plans are to expand into Latin America to help create, foster and grow the podcasting space in Spanish speaking markets, because there's there's really a need there. It's it's it's not saturated in the United States or in English speaking markets, but that's where podcasting basically started. And so now it's time to move out to a broader.

If I spoke Chinese, I would be, you know, pursuing this in China, although I'm sure it's fairly well developed there. If I spoke Hindi or one of the 26 other languages of India, we'd be we'd be, you know, working with the folks there as well.

But there's some commonality in our in our approaches that makes Mexico and Latin America very target rich for us in the sense of growing podcasters, growing our our produced content as well and fostering kind of the the economic models that exist down there. So we we have some advertising initiatives that we're working on. We have some partnerships that are very exciting that we'll be announcing at some point in the future.

And then we've got some technological things that, you know, Alberto and I prior to this call, we're discussing a patent that we're filing in a couple of days. And we've got some technological opportunities as this medium grows for really kind of taking it into new and amazing sort of places. So we're working on so many different things. It's hard to keep up with all the things we're working on, but it's super exciting. Yeah, perhaps just to add to the strategy we are pursuing for the future.

Also an overview in terms of technology. Well, it's very exciting. The future is very exciting. We have smart speakers. We have smart cars, smart watches. We have technologies in terms of content distribution, which are cutting edge. For example, decentralized distribution with IPFS, interplanetary file system. Very interesting topic. We have value for value, which is a shift in paradigm in how content creators are going to monetize, right?

Rather than the subscription model, which everyone is pursuing right now, right? We have Spotify, we have Apple. The idea is that you pay for what you consume. So this is a shift that we may see in the broader media industry. So what we can tell is that for the next couple of years, we will not get bored. We always say that Ben and I, we will not get bored. We have so many things and it's going to be very exciting. Yeah, agreed. That's awesome.

And since the industry is changing so quickly, I mean, who knows where podcasting is going to be in a few years, but we know it'll still be here. That's the exciting part is that if you start today, grow your tree. Grow your tree already. Yeah. Well, is there anything that I know, like I said, I know you guys are wrapped on time, but is there anything that we didn't actually get to cover that you really want to make sure is in this?

The future of podcasting

Well, I mean, also, I think it's what you talked about Alberto is so what you talked about I think is so important that people understand is that there are technological advancements coming down through the hosting providers or through the listening apps that are going to help change podcasting for the better. They're going to deliver richer content. They're going to deliver it in a way that is more interactive.

They're going to allow for greater flexibility from the hosting, the host's perspective for getting their message heard and understood and for monetizing their podcast if that's something that's important to them. We know that that's important to about 60% of podcasters, a little bit less. And so that's a voice that we keep conscious that we need to listen to is how do people pursue this hobby or this business or this project in a way that can be self-sustaining.

And the Podcasting 2.0 RSS feed changes are critical in that for keeping it a free and open platform for everybody and not just relegating it to these silos that creep into our life. Hey everyone, Ashley here again and I just wanted to thank you for listening to our two-part episode on the history of RSS.com. We hope you'll consider hosting your show with us. You can get started for free at RSS.com.

Be sure to tune into our next episode where we'll sit down with Kate Erickson of Entrepreneurs on Fire to talk about systems and processes. Until next time, you can learn more about how to launch and grow your show at RSS.com backslash blog. Thanks for tuning in.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
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