#038: 5 Reasons Your Podcast Still Isn’t Making Money (and How to Fix It) - podcast episode cover

#038: 5 Reasons Your Podcast Still Isn’t Making Money (and How to Fix It)

Nov 18, 202415 minEp. 38
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Episode description

The past few months I’ve had multiple questions from podcasters that are trying to monetize their podcast, but it’s still not getting them anywhere. I can relate to this, it took me years to make money off my podcasts.

In this episode we’ll talk about five reasons you still aren’t making money with your podcast. How to fix it and what you need to know moving forward if you want your podcast to be a sustainable source of income for you and your brand.
 
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Transcript

Morgan Franklin

One of my biggest pet peeves in the podcasting community is how easy everyone wants you to think it is to make money. There's a really big name content creator that's launching a podcasting course right now, and I heard them telling their audience that podcasting was the reason they could stay at home, be a stay at home parent, and make multiple

seven figures. And while I don't doubt that this is true, I think they're telling the truth, I do doubt the ease at which they are trying to sell this course to you to achieve the same results. The past few months, I've had multiple questions from podcasters that are trying to monetize their podcast, but it just feels like it's not going anywhere. And you know what? I can relate to this. I really can it took me years to make money

off my podcast. In this episode, we're gonna talk about the five reasons you still aren't making money with your podcast, how to fix it, and what you need to know moving forward if you want your podcast to be a sustainable source of income for you and your brand. Hello and welcome to podcast for profit. My name is Morgan Franklin. I'm a Podcast Producer, strategist and educator. This podcast will help you create and grow a podcast that cuts through the noise of social media and speaks directly

to your target audience. If you're ready to create a podcast that will align you with the experts in your industry, position yourself as a trusted leader and create another source of revenue for your business, you're in the right place. The unknown is scary, and you know what? It's especially scary if you feel like you're constantly putting yourself out there, over and over and over and still not seeing any results. That's terrifying. I think about when I started my first podcast, and it

was a really vulnerable time for me. Specifically, starting a podcast is always very vulnerable. But I was changing my career completely. I was working with somebody that I had literally just met, and I felt overwhelmed every single day, I felt like I was constantly just swimming in the deep end of the unknown waters. And while, in the beginning, that was really fun and exciting, after a year, it started to feel really

exhausting. I was making progress on growing this podcast, but it really wasn't where I wanted it to be, and more importantly, to this conversation, it was nowhere near the objective we had put forward for it, that it would be a self sustaining entity, meaning that it would make as

much money as it spent. And I know I don't have to remind you of this, but the cost of podcasting adds up, especially if you're like us, and you are doing editing and equipment upgrades and you have bills to pay, it gets more expensive every month. And for us, we weren't getting any closer to making money on these podcasts. It was giving me so much

anxiety, and I knew that I had to figure this out. But to be honest with you, the pressure of trying to figure it out was making it almost impossible to take action and understand what I really needed to do. You know when that happens and you're in the paralysis of trying to make a decision, and you know that you have to start, but you don't know where or how. If I could go back and give myself some advice. These are the five things that I would tell myself to get out of my own way and

start making money with this podcast. One, what is the offer, whether that's selling ad slots on your podcast to advertisers trying to drive listeners to your email list to begin a sales funnel or selling directly from your podcast with your own products, you need to know what the offer is. What are you trying to sell, and how will the buyer buy? A lot of times we get so caught up in trying to be creative with our offer, that we forget the importance of having just a simple objective. So the

first question is, what is the offer? What are you trying to sell, and to whom? So let's say that you have a podcast about quilting, and I'm sorry that I always bring up this example about a podcast about quilting, I swear that I'm gonna move on from this, but let's say that your offer is going to be that you are selling a quilt pattern. You need a simple,

straightforward message and a clear offer. So let's say that the pattern is for Christmas and it's being featured on an episode about making quilts as gifts to give away for Christmas. Now I might say something like, if you have a list of people you want to make quilts for this Christmas, you need to check out my newest pattern made specifically to maximize your sewing time and get multiple quilts finished before Christmas. This pattern is printable. Semi customizable.

It's $35 The link is in the episode description, and the pattern is on my website. Enter website here. This is a very clear offer to a very specific audience, hopefully the exact same audience that's listening to your episode. You need an offer that is going to answer the questions before they are asked, tells the buyer what they're buying, why they should buy, and where to buy, to speaking to the target audience.

We just talked about this a minute ago, but speak directly to your target audience when you're selling from your podcast, try to speak to one specific person. This seems so simple, right? Like we know this. We know it's important to know who you're talking to, but do we really know? Are we really doing this when we pitch a product, or we're reading ad

copy from another company. Are we speaking to one listener, one specific type of listener, I can say for most of us, the answer to that question is no, and in full transparency, this is something that I struggled with for years when I started podcasting, and I still struggle with it, because I was scared. I was scared if I spoke directly to one member of the audience, I would alienate everybody else. And I think that we all get afraid of this, whether it's podcasting or running a

business. It's scary to feel like you're putting all your eggs in one basket for one specific listener or buyer. This is the advice that I get from my mentors every single time that I talk to them, especially today, especially when you're getting ads from every single direction and every angle. If you are not speaking directly to someone's problems or their goals or their aspirations or their desires, you're not speaking to anybody

three telling the listener how to buy. I could make an entire podcast episode on this, and maybe I will, but you need to have a clear path to buying. What do I mean when I say that? I mean you need links in every episode description, telling people where to go. Make it so crystal clear where your listener needs to go to buy the thing that you are talking

about. One of the hardest parts about selling on a podcast is that people are usually listening while they're doing something else, and they're not fully engaged with their phone, like they're not looking at their phone. If that makes sense, this is a problem for us, because if we're telling people to go onto this website or look at something in the episode description, or generally pointing them away from just listening to this podcast they are not even looking in the

first place. So what do we need to do this is where follow up pieces of content are going to be critical to the financial success of your podcast. So let's run through this scenario from earlier. Let's say that you have that quilt pattern that you're telling your listeners where to go, and you link it in the episode description. Perfect. People might shop from the episode description. They might I mean, that happens, but what if you also sent it in an email as the same day that you

released that episode? You had it on an Instagram story. You talked about it on Tiktok. You feature it on LinkedIn with information about your episode. What if it was also mentioned at least three times in the blog post that you create on your website that corresponds with this episode with the links? Yes, that is what's going to sell the product that you are talking about on your podcast. And I know that I say this on every episode, but listeners and buyers need eight to 12 touch

points to buy. And if you were just giving them that one on your podcast, good luck. That is very, very difficult. Think about the last time that you just saw something one time and then you went to buy it. And another thing is, please, please check your links. Make sure that you have links everywhere. There should never be a time that your listener is wondering how to buy

what you're selling. It's funny to me, because so many of the podcasters that I do audits for the majority of you are doing a much better job of promoting and linking your guests, then you are your own products, in your own business, in your own podcast. We can't just be showing up for our guests. We have to show up for ourselves as well. Four call to action. You need a call to action. You talking about what you do or what your product is or just loosely throwing something out

there that is not enough. You giving away free information isn't enough. You need to give me the offer, but also tell me why I need to buy it today. And this can look like a lot of different things. I think that we a lot of times, think about just limited. Time discounts as being a call to action, whereas, I'd argue, if you're looking for first time buyers or people that would be purchasing from you for the first time, you don't have to focus on having a discount code. It cheapens the brand. And

then they'll think that you do this all the time. Pick two to four times a year that you want to run coupons and the rest of the year, find calls to action that are driven by the person that will be purchasing. And let me explain, for example, going back to our Christmas quilt pattern, I could say something about how you can complete one pattern per week, and if you want to get four done by Christmas, you need to start today. Let it correlate to the objective of what you are

selling. And what do I mean by that? That sounds so confusing. For example, a call to action that I might use on an Instagram template for podcasters might be something like buy this before you make your next Instagram post. If you want to convert followers into listeners, don't be afraid to sell with your solution. Sell with the outcome of your product. That is such a powerful call to action. Five, clarify your goals and desired outcomes. If you don't know where you're going, any road

will get you there. This is probably the scariest one, because it will involve you sitting down and being honest with yourself and where you are. Do you want to make $50,000 through your podcast next year? Okay, great. That's doable. That is so doable, but it's impossible without a plan. It's impossible without everything we've talked about in this episode. You need smart goals. And if you've never heard of this, SMART goals are specific, measurable, achievable, relevant

and time bound. You need to know what you're trying to achieve to make a plan to achieve it. And that sounds simple enough, right? That sounds like something we can do, and it absolutely is. My best advice for you, is to write everything down on paper. Write down how many episodes you'll have next year. So let's say, for example, that you have an episode every week. That's going to be 52 episodes next year. Let's go with the example from earlier that you want to make $50,000 in

the next year. That's about $1,000 per episode. Then from there, we're going to break down how we can make this money. Do we have ads or partnerships? Do we have any kind of affiliate codes or promotional offers? What kind of products are we selling? What does our business offer? And is there any other option to make money, like Patreon or a subscriber only component to your podcast, when we break it down and we have

this $1,000 per episode goal, how can we get it there? And not only how can we get it there, but how can we keep it there and be consistently bringing in $1,000 per episode? Because, okay, it's great if we can just do it one time, but our final objective is that we do it every single week. So what do we need to do to make this happen consistently? Knowledge is power. Knowledge is going to give you the confidence that you need to achieve every single goal that you are totally

capable of. The unknown is what is scary. I said that in the beginning of this episode because I wanted to bring you here. I wanted to bring you to the place where you aren't in the unknown, where you have the keys, where you have the knowledge, where you have the power to take control of your podcast and making money from your podcast. If you're interested in working one on one with me, you can book an hour strategy session on my website. It will be linked in the episode

description. Or you can email me at Morgan, at morganfranklin dot media. I also have a template store with my most used customizable templates, including the podcast media kit that I have used to secure more than six figures in sponsorships that link will be in the episode description or visit podcasts with an S for profit.com and as always, I can't wait to listen to your podcast. Hey, thank you so much for joining me on this episode. If you enjoyed the podcast and you'd like to hear

more episodes like this one. Go ahead and subscribe to the show. New episodes air every Monday morning. And if you've found this episode valuable and you want to help other business owners and podcasters, will you leave me a five star review. It helps the show rank higher in the charts, and brings more entrepreneurs the information they need to start making money on their podcast.

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