373. Debunking the Myth: “It’s Not Hurting Their Podcast” - podcast episode cover

373. Debunking the Myth: “It’s Not Hurting Their Podcast”

Apr 12, 20235 minEp. 373
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Episode description

Some podcasters think everything a successful podcaster does directly contributes to their success and not holding them back. But that's false!

Transcript

Have you ever thought or heard "it's not hurting their podcast"? Here's why that's a myth, misconception, and a bad excuse. Thank you for joining me for The Audacity to Podcast. I'm Daniel J. Lewis. I hear this excuse a lot in podcasting. Whether it's to defend or oppose, some podcasters seem to think that everything a successful podcaster does is directly contributing to their success and nothing is costing them profit. P-R-O-F-I-T. Popularity, Relationships,

Opportunities, Fun, Income, or Tangibles. It usually sounds like this. XYZ does or doesn't do this thing and it's not hurting their podcast. Where XYZ is usually Joe Rogan or some other highly popular, highly successful podcaster. You can fill in the blank with whatever podcaster you're thinking of right now. While this might seem like a logical justification, it's based on several assumptions and it

can't actually be tested or validated. Unless we have a parallel universe for split testing (like in Amazon's The Peripheral), or unless we have a time machine, or unless we can interview every person everywhere with an honest and 100% response rate or unless we're omniscient like God, we can't really know what is negatively affecting a successful podcast. Maybe that

audience would be bigger if that podcaster did or didn't do that thing. Maybe their sponsorship or licensing payments would be more significant if they did or didn't do that thing. If that thing is actually negatively affecting their show, you can't actually know that? Can you monitor a parallel universe where the only difference is that podcasting thing? Can you travel back in time to have him or her do or not do that thing and then

re-measure the results from the present? Can you interview every person everywhere in the world to collect data on whether that thing is affecting the person's relationship with that podcast? Are you God? In case you're wondering, the answer to all of these questions is no. So instead of assuming successful podcasters are infallible, which is what this excuse is essentially doing, I suggest approaching every idea with critical thinking and a focus

on your audience. Even if something does contribute to someone else's success, it doesn't mean it will give you the same success. Think about how many "on fire" podcasts there have been that interviewed entrepreneurs. How many of those podcasters got anywhere near the success John Lee Dumas has. How many of those podcasts are even still active? There will always be outliers, too. Marc Maron's show contains excessive profanity. That doesn't

mean yours should. Dan Carlin's Hardcore History publishes completely inconsistently. That doesn't mean you should be inconsistent. No Agenda releases two three-hour or longer episodes every week with multiple long donation segments. That doesn't mean you should do the same. Plenty of highly popular podcasts focus on controversial moral and political issues from any side you can imagine. That doesn't mean you should include a tangent

about those issues in your podcast. And on and on and on. Some of these podcasters found success despite some of the things they're doing or not doing. Not because of those things. The key to successful podcasting is what works for you, your show, and your audience. And just like real love, I think your podcasting focus should be on serving your ideal audience more than serving yourself or anyone else.

Yes, this was a very short episode, but nonetheless, I hope that this has given you some of the guts and taught you a new perspective on some of the tools so that you can go start and grow your own podcast for passion and profit. And if this episode has helped you and you think it would help someone else, please share it at theaudacitytopodcast.com/nothurting. I'm Daniel J. Lewis from theaudacitytopodcast.com. Thanks for listening. [MUSIC PLAYING]

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