Reflections on a Podcasting Career - podcast episode cover

Reflections on a Podcasting Career

Dec 11, 20246 minEp. 474
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Episode description

Tom Webster shares some pearls of wisdom from twenty years in the oyster of podcasting. 
  • Written and narrated by Tom Webster
  • Audio edited by Newton Schottelkotte
  • Hosted by Spreaker
Sounds Profitable: Narrated Articles is a production of Sounds Profitable. For more information, visit soundsprofitable.com.

Transcript

Hey, this is Tom Webster for Sounds Profitable, Wednesday, December 11th, 2024. Reflections on a podcasting career. Before we get into that, though, today at 2 o'clock p.m., if you're listening to this on Wednesday, December 11th, Libsyn and Sounds Profitable will present the True Crime Podcast Listener Landscape Report.

or the TCP LLR for short. The results of this new report challenge commonly held assumptions about brand suitability and listener demographics in the true crime genre. Registration is free and the clock is ticking. So please. Register today with the link in the show notes. Well, I got some great personal news this week. I was named to the Podcasting Hall of Fame after nearly 20 years in the pod trenches.

I'll be honored along with 10 other notable podcasters in Orlando at PodFest next month, where I'll be introduced by another Hall of Famer, Dave Jackson, who is also in the Human Being Hall of Fame, by the way, if you don't know Dave. Now, I've got years ahead of me in this business, but nearing the two-decade mark in podcasting and receiving this honor was a bit of a cause for reflection for me. You see, all of this was really part of a plan.

And I've been working that plan pretty much from the beginning. I thought I'd share this not so evil plan with you because I think it's actually pretty solid career advice. When I started in podcasting, it wasn't a business by any stretch. I wanted to work in the field because I was already working with the radio industry and to me everything was going to go to on-demand as soon as it was technically friction-free for the user. However, I also wanted to make money.

And podcasting was pretty profit resistant at the time. So what do you do when your passion plants you in a field where you can't make a living? Well, I think you have three options. Number one. You can keep watering your own plant in your spare time in the hopes that it will grow. Number two, you can help other people water their plants. And number three, you can work on the garden.

I chose to work on the garden. If you are a creator and you struggle with how you're going to make a living in the field that you want to be in, I think a solid thing to ask yourself is, how can I create the space? that will make it possible to earn a living in the future. What can you do now that could help future you and future others actually make viable careers in the field you're passionate about?

At the time, my hammer was research and everything was a nail, but I also knew that the space would not be monetizable if we couldn't count it properly. So I worked on counting it properly with my former colleagues at Edison. And to this day... And where those objections are real...

to pass on that knowledge as well to make things better. So if the market for your passions doesn't exist, what can you do to create that market? How can you develop what you love, not just into a paycheck, but a future? Well, this year saw a lot of layoffs in the media business, and some people will exit media entirely because of it. If you were impacted by layoffs, your first priority is to support your family.

it's also a good time to think about the garden you'd rather live in and how you can give that a little water and light as well. Now, I've been very lucky in podcasting, and I'm certainly not trying to paint myself as a selfless saint. Like I said, I wanted to make money in podcasting, and this was my 20-year evil plot to get there. But I truly do want to help people build careers in this space, because I never want this space to go away. When I retire...

I want to do little more than lay around and listen to podcasts because I love audio storytelling and I always have. I want podcasts to be there for me when that day comes. And Brian, it's not soon. Today, when my son, Sam, tells people at college what his dad does for a living, he tells them he's big in podcasting, which is not what he used to say. And his friends don't laugh, or at least he keeps that from me. I don't want people to laugh.

when we tell them that we're podcasters i've told this story before i flew to toronto the month that i joined sounds profitable and committed to podcasting full-time and when i told the global entry customs officer that i was a podcaster he was taken aback and and you use global entry well i want us all to use global entry actually i don't the lines would be terrible don't don't use global entry see i'm not that nice

I'll close by saying that making the Hall of Fame is important to me. It's important because the Hall of Fame is important and the ambies is important and anything we can do to increase the visibility of podcasting is important. both for your careers and for the careers of our children. I'm grateful for anyone who ever showed up to watch me show pie charts, and I'm grateful to our more than 180 partners who make all of this possible.

I'm very grateful to my wife, Tamsen, who didn't flinch when I told her I was steering into podcasting full-time. And I'm grateful to my business partner, Brian, who keeps me off the streets, largely. And most of all, I'm grateful to the storytellers. You've kept me company all of my life. Thanks again for listening to this article, Reflections on a Podcasting Career. This episode is hosted on Spreaker, and I'll see you next week. I'm Tom Webster.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.