0:13 hello and welcome to WP product talk the place where every week we interview an experienced WordPress product owner on 0:19 strategies tips experiences failures and triumphs of running successful and 0:24 thriving WordPress product businesses I am Zach cat founder of trusted login and gravity kit 0:30 and I'm Katie Keith CEO and co-founder at B two plugins and today's topic is podcasting 0:37 as a marketing tool for WordPress product businesses and this is a great topic 0:43 because it is a real marketing tool that you can use and yet a big proportion of 0:48 product owners aren't doing anything with it yet so let's talk about it yeah and to talk with us uh about this today 0:55 is our special guest Matt Maderos uh who is very well known in the WordPress Community as a expert podcaster so Matt 1:03 among other things but uh Matt please introduce yourself in your introduction 1:08 the only thing I resonate with is failures out of out of that list of Mak 1:15 here uh baderas uh podcasting about WordPress for quite some time uh but you can find me at gravity forms hosting the 1:23 breakdown podcast and often showing up on the YouTube channel in the form of a live stream uh and then the wp minute at 1:31 the wp minute.com amazing well thank you so much for coming on and we'd also like to give you 1:37 a special thank you for being one of the early supporters of WP product talk so 1:42 when it was first founded by Cromwell and Kim colan um you helped to 1:47 distribute it and we're by far the most important matth in the history of this podcast I think we can all agree so if 1:56 anybody's watching uh then feel free to leave your comments and we'd love to answer your questions about podcasting 2:03 for WordPress product owners when Cromwell asked me to about 2:09 podcasting he's like what how do I do this thing I'm like Cromwell listen just let me distribute it for you it's G to 2:15 be way he's like I want to use Twitter spaces Cromwell that's not how you do it so I helped him trying to just like get 2:20 this thing off the audio ground so it was a pleasure yeah and I heard Mullen WG at one point and I I uh on a podcast and I 2:27 was like Mullen W you got to talk to Matt uh Matt Matt Maduros is the Matt so yeah 2:36 so Katie why is this topic so important for WordPress product 2:42 owners well podcasting is growing more rapidly than most forms of communications media I Googled it and it 2:49 said it's projected to expand by more than five times more than where it already is by 2030 and yet a lot of 2:57 Wordpress Product Company owners like I said a minute ago aren't using it as a marketing channel um I'd say it's 3:04 particularly huge in the WordPress industry and I think Matt will be able to share some stats and information and 3:11 experiences about that later as well and there are lots of podcasts run by Community leaders Product Company owners 3:17 Service Company owners and so on but I haven't really seen anybody talking 3:22 about the impact of podcasting on product companies or whether it brings any concrete opportunities with on 3:30 investment so I'd love to learn more about that and help other people learn too so Matt why would you say it's such 3:37 an important topic specifically for Product Company owners yeah so for me it's it's I was 3:45 talking to Zach about this in the green room but podcasting is just uh another 3:51 medium for you know broadcasting one's message whether it's you're you know you're an indie Creator you're building 3:58 a plugin you're not building building uh a company maybe the size of barn 2 or gravity kit and you're you're out there 4:05 doing the build-in public thing um I gravitate towards podcasting 4:11 specifically because um I enjoy the audio experience as a consumer of 4:16 content audio is my favorite because I can do more stuff in the real world 4:21 while tuning in uh to a podcast I know not everyone could do that but I can so that's why I enjoy creating it and then 4:27 also as a Creator just enjoy the fact that it's a repurposable piece of content it could be turned into a blog 4:33 post it can be turned into tweets it's archivable right it's not this new agage social media Tik Tok Instagram stories 4:39 where these things just disappear I like to have a body of work at the end of the day um you know to to show all the 4:46 effort in uh in this in this channel but why product owners should leverage it is 4:53 for increasing that I think the maybe the proper term is that surface luck 4:58 area the biggest challenge with podcasting is everyone's favorite acronym Roi am I 5:06 getting customers from this is this thing working am I getting sales like like the rest of marketing 5:12 nearly impossible to attribute that unless you're like you know a massive audience and you can do a lot of code 5:18 tracking but it it increases that surface luck area of getting on another 5:24 podcast like this Katie much like yourself going on and guest uh 5:30 appearances broadcasting and spreading your message of bar 2 and how you've built the company supplementing what you 5:36 already do in the buildin public scene with Twitter and just being like really open and transparent about building the 5:41 business these are things that are going to get you that increased visibility that everyone uh is looking for at the 5:48 end of the day like when you're like why why aren't my sales going up sometimes it's just more eyeballs right we just 5:53 need more eyeballs on the website on the brand on the product and podcasting is a fantastic way to do it and it's also the 6:00 what I found to be the most um uh intimate or engaged audience uh 6:06 those that tune into you through audio maybe we'll talk about this later but 6:11 it's always not about the size of the audience but how engaged they are uh and folks who tune in week after week 6:18 listening to you on audio are generally those that are going to be the most engaged so if you only have a hundred people listening to your podcast but a 6:24 thousand people on YouTube those hundred who listen to audio are probably the ones that are that really care the most 6:30 about a brand so cultivating that Community Network whatever you want to call it um in my opinion is uh the most 6:37 important thing you can do with the dawn of AI and and and faceless Brands 6:43 right so when you were coming up with uh your concept for the gravity forums 6:49 breakdown podcast how do how do product owners how should product owners think of topics for their podcast or like what 6:57 their podcast should be about and focus on it's a good question so breakdown has 7:03 been one of actually the more challenging um podcasts that I've produced I've I've often taken the easy 7:11 route easy route with air quotes uh of doing an interview show find a guest 7:16 talk to them record it and maybe do a little bit of editing intro outro and you're 7:21 done where breakdown because we have and we'll talk about this too there's a lot 7:27 of competition in the WordPress space uh myself included right when if I 7:32 joined gravity forms and I was they're like hey they're hiring Matt he's going to run a podcast it's like I already listened to Matt on 7,000 other podcasts 7:39 I don't need to listen a lot of competition from Matt yeah yeah right like I don't need another WordPress 7:45 podcast specifically hosted by Matt um so I tried to turn I I am it's a variety 7:52 show where it's it's aimed at the gravity forms uh customer like here's 7:58 the updates first of all let me zoom out it's short forish 20 to 30 minutes tops 8:06 uh and twice month it only comes out TW every two weeks twice a month so it's not this you know I think what a lot of 8:14 product owners might do is they might fall into the Trap of like I gotta do this podcast thing everyone says do it weekly I was G to pump out content and 8:21 then you literally burn out and then you burn out of content and then you burn out your audience I so I immediately 8:27 went in saying we're not going to do it weekly we do it twice a month it'll be a variety show where it's at the top of 8:33 the show where you get the most listenership it's going to be the gravity forms stuff events updates uh 8:41 releases patches uh new add-ons released etc etc and then we'll go into a mix of 8:48 behind the scen two other segments behind the scenes at gravity forms interviewing somebody from the team 8:53 bring that human side out of the brand and because gravity form has been around 8:59 forever there's people that have worked at the company for over 10 years so there's a lot of uh folks from behind 9:06 the scenes that have been working with the community for for years and I want to bring that voice out and then 9:11 bringing in um folks from around the gravity forms ecosystem to talk about what they're doing with gravity forms 9:17 either as an end user or like yourself Zach as a certified developer or somebody creating and augmenting the 9:23 gravity form software so it's a variety show and it's been pretty challenging to just like keep that mix 9:29 creatively um and while I'm enjoying it and the folks that tune in enjoy it um 9:35 that's the way I approach it there's a you know you can go the the the interview route which is the standard 9:40 way of of doing it but as somebody's been doing it forever I wanted to push that boundary um but also be aware that 9:47 there's a lot of competition in the WordPress space so I have to do something different in order to make this stand out I think that answered 9:54 your question maybe yeah and you know that sounds like a lot of work and more 9:59 than probably what somebody who's just getting started for the first time with their podcast is probably going to take on um can you talk a little bit about 10:06 how much when you say have a podcast what does that entail how much work are 10:12 we looking at uh and you also mentioned repurposable content like can you talk 10:18 about that a little bit more as well yeah so I'll do what every coach says to 10:25 somebody joining the gym in January for the holiday season to your podcast coach 10:31 to your business coach is what's the goal um you know and what's the outcome that you're looking for and with 10:38 podcasting you just have to ask yourself what's your goal if it's just hey I want to grow our existing marketing audience 10:46 it's going to be pretty tough with a podcast right podcast takes takes time 10:52 um there's not this massive distribution Channel like YouTube or you know a silo 10:58 of cont content like Facebook or or Twitter algorithm it's it's very difficult it's rolling up your sleeves and and promoting yourself and doing 11:04 organic Outreach and organic content so it takes a while so you have to understand like what that goal is and 11:10 and what it means to you if it's like a creative Outlet perfect you know but don't be upset when you you start to 11:16 track numbers later on um and then when you start to get into it you want to do 11:23 it that you want to set it up so that you're creatively inspired and that you have some 11:31 understanding of your audience for example the typical 11:36 Business Online entrepreneur starts her podcast she starts interviewing people 12 episodes in she's run out of friends 11:43 there's no one else to talk to and now this thing becomes work right and you burned out those 12 friends in three 11:49 months because you were doing it weekly now you're like oh my God this is this is work I have to Now find other guests 11:57 um I have to critically think about the content and that effort depends back to 12:03 your goals it depends on what your goals are and the effort of editing is 12:09 tremendous right the more you can edit the more that you can spend time crafting that story arc show notes like 12:16 yourself I'm looking at my uh laptop on the right hand side you have an outline for this episode it's 12:23 fantastic like it's all all this work that goes into editing and and pre-production and post-production that 12:28 lot of people don't see very easy to hit record and ship it um and often the best route for folks to go because that's 12:34 where you learn so long way of getting to what's the effort that goes into behind all of this stuff really depends 12:41 on what those goals are I say get started get yourself a halfway decent microphone you could start the interview 12:47 route um but just just know that it becomes work eventually um and have a 12:54 plan for that and we could talk about that you know as well yeah you mention that um unlike a 13:01 YouTube channel or something you're very much having to do the marketing off your own back do you have any advice about 13:07 using the existing distribution channels for your podcast for example WP product 13:14 talk is broadcast automatically to various places which includes YouTube so people could find it in Search and also 13:21 things like apple podcasts do you think that makes a difference and are there any ways that you have in mind to get 13:27 the maximum exposure a new podcast when you bring up YouTube It's a d it's it's 13:33 like asking this audience like should I go with wordpress.org or 13:39 wordpress.com um you know or Wix uh versus WordPress because I won't go too 13:45 deep into this because I could talk about this forever I'm drawn to podcasting as much as I'm drawn to Wordpress because of the open- source 13:52 nature of podcasting is very much the same as as WordPress you have an RSS feed it's your content you can 13:58 distribute it anywhere where you want platforms like apple Spotify and Google are trying to do what they're trying to 14:03 do with our content is silo it into their environments right NE neither of 14:08 those platforms have really helped with distribution as much as YouTube is about 14:15 to so Google uh has recently killed off um Google podcasts uh the app the 14:23 ecosystem everything so Android phones a year from now won't have a a default 14:29 podcast app like they have now they're going to have YouTube music right that's where Google wants to go so YouTube is 14:36 now ingesting RSS feeds from creators so it's like oh cool I can uh distribute my 14:43 podcast on YouTube now and what it's going to do is take those audio episodes from let's say my transistor account and 14:49 put those audio files on YouTube it's just going to be audio they can tune into it uh with the YouTube music app 14:54 but we'll just show the static cover our image or if you have an episode image it'll show that image as the video 15:01 placeholder but all of the what's happening now in the in the ecosystem is everyone's looking at that and reading 15:07 the terms of service with Google and of course Google being Google is you can't have ads on it you know it's just like if you were uploading a YouTube video 15:13 You're behold into those same terms of service will they help you distribute it sure is it the biggest search engine 15:20 behind Google yes you know and it's it's going to help uh but proceed with caution when you start to give you know 15:27 your hard-earned content uh up to these platforms doesn't answer your question but how to push uh 15:34 folks to grow that audience is the typical content marketing wheel create the podcast create the blog post that 15:41 goes with it have a newsletter uh sign up so that folks can sign up for it and try to repurpose as much of that content 15:48 as possible creating audiograms putting out social posts there is no limit it's your time 15:55 right how much can you break this stuff down and spread it out over you know a 16:00 promotional period the promotional period is the most important part of all of this stuff and um it's often 16:06 overlooked because it's not as fun and creating the content is the most fun part uh but I'll be it the most 16:13 important it's why when you go to start an episode like if you're a podcast like if you're thinking about it 16:19 now do I want to do all this work do I want to do it in Seasons maybe 12 16:25 episodes is my season one and I'm going to release this once month and once a 16:30 month that week one that episode goes out for the next three weeks I'm going to be promoting this I'm going to write 16:36 a blog post about the episode I'm going to promote it for that second week week three is going to be all about social be 16:42 promoting it on social week four is all is going to be about audio clips video clips whatever you want to promote 16:48 getting ready for that next episode to be to be released um in the next month 16:54 there's a ton of podcasts available I just want to throw some data uh at you 17:00 if we go to podcas index. org which is like the open source alternative to 17:06 Apple there's 4.2 million podcasts in that index Apple probably has three 17:13 quarters of that over the last 90 days though 462,000 of those 4.2 million were 17:20 actually active so there's a lot of podcasts but not a lot of active 17:26 podcasts so while the number of 4.2 million can be scary you know you're looking at half a million in the last 90 17:34 days that were actually active updated changed modified Etc 30 days 340,000 so 17:40 the competition isn't that great in the in the audio space as it might be for 17:45 like YouTube or Tik Tok we have a user or not not a user a 17:51 listener uh who made as added a comment who says uh the Cadence issue has always 17:58 been for me twice a week Burns through content takes the pressure of the off the content length doing it once a month 18:04 it has to be perfect it feels like and contain everything uh where do you find uh 18:11 striking that balance how do you how do you like to break down episodes into bite-sized pieces and like uh talk talk 18:19 to me about some talk to us about some length like yeah yeah what's yeah yeah in a previous life I worked uh in the 18:26 audio and podcast industry helped a lot of folks start their podcasts the great thing about podcasting is there are no 18:32 rules the bad thing about podcasting is there's no rules uh and you can do it 18:37 however you want to do it so uh for example when I did when I launched the wp minute um you know I have a full-time 18:44 job I have I had a full-time job then three years ago I have a full-time job now and three young kids and I was like 18:50 I I want to launch something about WordPress news but I don't have the time for this so I'm just going to make it a five minute show who's going to stop 18:57 justify minut show that sounds easy Matt right just the five minute show and in my head I was like oh this is going to 19:03 be great uh it's not going to take a lot of time and logistically it doesn't all the things around it take the time um 19:11 you know when I consulted when I used to consult folks podcasting a 40 your average 30 to 45 minute podcast could 19:18 take you eight hours like from start to finish like uh scheduling folks Outreach 19:24 research writing recording editing publishing promoting that's for one episode could be a total time of like 19:32 eight hours so are you prepared for that um so you can shape a podcast episode 19:37 length or your publishing Cadence however you see fit I think the most important part is that you stay 19:43 committed to um to whichever Cadence that that you that you launch with right 19:49 so if you're telling folks it's a five minute show every week you do five minutes every week if it's twice a month 19:55 like gravity forms then it's twice a month um and you'll get requests to say like you should do it less or in gravity 20:03 forms I get a lot of requests that I'd love this to be monthly or excuse me weekly where you're you know you're putting out more content so you know it 20:10 could go either way um but there are no rules and I think whatever satisfies 20:15 your ability your time slot available you can choose that but you know people would always when I was at my old gig it 20:21 was be like hey I see X comedian does uh three hour shows well you don't have to 20:28 do three hour shows you know you can if you have the time and you want to um but 20:33 it doesn't have to be that way five minutes three hours whatever fits for you creatively and and your audience part of what I feel is a risk 20:41 when deciding whether to start an podcast is not just am I going to remain 20:47 invested in releasing this on a Cadence but if I had my marketing person for 20:53 example work on it uh are they going to be around in two years to continue maintaining this and what happens if 20:59 there's a turnover that changes the the person in charge of the podcast uh is that a consideration that 21:07 businesses should think about it's a fantastic question so 21:12 um in the past I've purchased podcasts uh this at my old job purchased podcasts 21:19 uh as um branded content right so it's 21:24 uh purchase a show it's now branded by the company so say gravity kit buys a 21:30 podcast it's now owned by gravity kit and it's you know podcast name presented by gravity kit or how MailChimp does 21:37 this and businesses as well a lot of big Brands you know Whole Foods does this REI has like a ton of shows uh Ford 21:45 there's a lot of big brands that do you know audio um some that do it really bad some that do it really well and um you 21:51 know I think the audience is I think a audience doesn't get enough credit I 21:58 think a lot of folks will understand that maybe a host name change changes a new host um a new format to a show uh 22:07 it's really about communication at that level so if you were to change things even if you like hey I want to go from a 22:13 FIV Minute Podcast to a 30 minute podcast every week you just warm up the 22:18 audience and you know that you're going to lose a percentage of folks that that might not be interested but you warm them up to that like few years ago um I 22:28 remember sitting back and saying look I can't do this this mat report thing anymore too much time day job kids Etc 22:37 maybe somebody would want to buy the Matt report sounded good in my head 22:42 until I actually talked to people and they're like well what are we going to do about you yeah I actually looked at 22:49 that somebody sent it to me because we were looking at um acquiring something that was like impartial content but it 22:56 was all about you as you said so it just didn't fit for us to take it over yeah the particular the challenge was like I 23:02 was too close to the flame so I know how to do it as like a podcast producer and 23:08 you know run with it for exra x amount of years so it can be done and when you step back and you look at television 23:15 shows right and you look at directors changing writer writer uh writers changing on on the on the studio 23:22 whatever um cast of characters like you start to realize like oh it's it doesn't have to be this thing that's infinite 23:29 right and you start to realize why is there only 12 episodes in a season of my 23:34 favorite show I want more it's because it's a lot of work right and you start to realize that as a podcaster like 23:40 maybe seasons is the the secret trick to uh getting one ready for creating a 23:46 podcast because it gives you that moment to say I stop in the summer to take a break I can reset creatively as a 23:53 Creator like mentally I can reset and I can change the trajectory of season two 23:59 or season 15 whatever one you're on when I come back onto on the air and it gives 24:05 you that that break and I think what I was saying about I think the audience will will be able to handle that like I 24:11 think most people like if we all were consuming content someone's like hey I'm going to change this well you're either going to stick around or you're not and 24:17 you have to just kind of like prep yourself as the podcast creator for that but I think it can that reminds me of um 24:23 yast came on about six months ago to talk about branding and he was talking about how they had to do a project to 24:30 deify the company y um before it could be sold and actually that has kind of 24:36 worked hasn't it it is a driving um organization without him so I suppose 24:42 it's the same process yeah um but then the other option is like at WP product 24:47 or we have four rotating co-hosts it's not dependent on any one person even 24:52 Cromwell for example and so yeah Cromwell being the easiest to replace I 24:57 think in most Cas any mat really yeah yeah 25:02 yeah well it's interesting that you mentioned the Matt report and how much work that uh that was for you because um 25:10 we have a segment of the show called story time and I think I'd like to say 25:15 that uh I listened to the Matt report while I was developing gravity view uh 25:22 and while I was creating gravity view with Louise um we it was an inspiration 25:27 to to me uh as uh listening to back episodes and just hearing all these wonderful WordPress people interviews 25:35 and uh not knowing uh you personally at at the time uh your voice became 25:42 synonymous with WordPress professionalism so uh I thank you for for doing the Matt report and kind of 25:49 spurring me on and it was mid July in 2014 I was listening to episode after episode while I was developing and 25:55 working on it and uh and here we are all together so uh thanks for thanks for the 26:03 inspiration and that's uh that's kind of the power of podcasting as a voice in in 26:10 someone's ear saying you can do this too or here's how to do this and that's part 26:15 of why uh mados uh you're here today uh but also 26:21 Cromwell uh that's part of why Cromwell started this podcast is because he 26:26 wanted to have that ation and help people uh who were just starting out their product businesses to to make that 26:33 leap so uh podcasts are powerful and uh I think that's one of the reasons why 26:40 it's an important topic that that people consider as a marketing uh 26:45 Avenue Bob dun do you oh sorry oh please I was gonna say I've Bob dun has said 26:52 that you know because uh at one point I encourage him to do a podcast be get poly hack from gomberg times that said 26:59 that I was a catalyst to podcasting uh Carrie Dills when she was on the airwav said it and all that has really framed 27:06 for me is that somewhere in a word Camp these folks were sitting around a table and looked at me and said well if that 27:13 guy can do it I can do it too right so that's how I have received this but 27:19 thanks for your rewards of encouragement and Matt do you have a a 27:24 story about podcasting in your life for professional career yeah so uh real 27:31 quick like the the Genesis of the Matt report was uh when I was starting my studio at the time um locally to me is 27:39 close to me as Providence Rhode Island and we had a really active word camp with some pretty Heavy Hitters uh Jake 27:45 Goldman Jay trip Jesse fredman Jeff ginsky John D Roes uh myself uh it was 27:52 there was a lot of folks that are really prominent in the WordPress space today that used to be all local here and when 27:57 I started the agency I saw how fast like Jake Goldman was building his business and that I was like how do I how do I do 28:04 that too how do I get all these big WordPress clients and this is you know years and years ago um before before he 28:12 even started tenup it was just on the cusp of starting tup and um I just noticed and and saw really early on how 28:19 powerful the connecting with the community is whether it's WordPress or you know whatever other community you 28:24 might be a part of online or in real life um creating the podcast was was able but 28:31 that's what opened up the door that surface luck area to connect with other agencies um you know Brad and Lisa from 28:38 webdev when I met them and you know they were taking on big clients at the time and they're like hey do you want these 28:43 smaller clients I'm like yes I do like I don't you know I don't have a pipeline like you all do I'll take your uh I'll 28:50 take your smaller clients that you don't want and that's what helped build the business in the early days and then 28:55 leverage the podcast later on on to um land bigger clients so it was a sales 29:01 tool you know later on once we built up the portfolio and the body of work um 29:06 you know and podcasting as long as you don't give up uh it can really open the 29:12 doors to tons of opportunity um that's impossible for me to track but uh it's a 29:18 it's a fantastic surface luck area uh tool I don't know where I heard that 29:23 phrase but I should look it up at yeah what is surface luck I think surface luck the way that I Define it is h a lot 29:30 of us um get lucky in business and there's no way to there's no blueprint 29:38 to get lucky so you just uh create a larger surface area that hopefully you 29:45 can get lucky somewhere around here right and uh podcasting allows you to do that folks are listening to it you're 29:51 guest uh your guest hosting you're publishing others and I think a lot of people the 29:57 the secret to the dirty secret to podcasting that a lot of people won't 30:03 admit is even if you don't listen to someone's podcast and you know they're a 30:08 podcaster you automatically like like you know the effort that goes into it so you're like oh she's a 30:15 podcaster and I trust her on that topic even if I don't listen to a podcast because I knowth automatically she's an 30:22 authority automatically 100 100 episodes in I trust you you're still doing it you haven't given up you got you're you're 30:28 in come on in you know and and that's the thing with with podcasting that's amazing and and that happened locally I 30:33 used to run a local podcast um and at the co-working space that I was in I was 30:39 like two episodes in walked into a coffee shop um around here somewhere and somebody's like oh you're that you're 30:44 the guy that I listen to on that podcast and I'm like you're and in my head I'm like you're listening to the mat report 30:49 like I'm like oh yeah you like WordPress and they're like what WordPress like no like you do the South Coast FM podcast 30:56 I'm like how did that happen like how did that happen so fast um it was just 31:03 that they saw me at the work at the uh co-working space and someone said that I 31:08 did a podcast or they were like oh yeah you're that podcast guy like wow you don't even listen do 31:14 you and Katy how about you uh what's your what's your personal experience with podcasting and as a marketing 31:22 tool well my story links in with something that we haven't covered yet so 31:28 far we've talked a lot about starting your own podcast but my podcasting story 31:33 began and continues largely by being a guest on other people's podcasts so I 31:39 think I started doing this maybe after probably might have been as recent as word camp in Porto last year and there 31:47 was a talk on the power of podcasting and I came out of that not particularly 31:52 confident enough to start my own uh but thinking I should go on other people's podcast because that's a built-in 31:58 audience to spread the word and raise awareness and so on and so um I TK one 32:05 of my marketing team to research different WordPress podcasts and 32:10 basically invited myself on some and um people are generally happy to hear from you they're always looking for guests so 32:17 it's um not difficult to get onto different um podcast and there's so many that whatever you do in WordPress 32:24 there'll be something that somebody else is doing that they be happy to have you as a guest um in your specialism so I 32:30 started off by doing that and then um I now co-host two podcasts both of which I 32:36 was invited on I've never shown any initiative in this personally but um just by accepting these things um it's 32:43 good and it's been a really great learning experience I have no idea of 32:49 the ROI as a product company person um that's impossible to measure because 32:55 particularly the two podcasts that I do there's this one and there's also the a 33:00 do the woo one that I do with Marcus betet who added a comment earlier both of which are about helping people with 33:07 WordPress businesses which are not our Target markets as a product company so 33:12 it's relatively unlikely to generate sales and is hard to measure so I'm sure 33:19 it kind of helps with authority with other product companies it might help with things like collaborations or 33:25 something like that people might be more to work with my company as a result but 33:30 I very much doubt it has much or any impact in direct sales but then with the 33:35 gravity forms one for example that you do Matt then that's very different because that's aimed at your customers 33:42 so maybe people should think a bit more widely than me about what podcast they do and who their target audience is but 33:49 I'm enjoying what I'm doing and I'm learning every week I get actionable ideas on things I can Implement in my 33:56 own business so that's a good experience regardless of whether it generates sales 34:02 directly yeah I I from the you know the business from the 34:07 business side of it like if you're if you're a person who doesn't do much Social you don't do YouTube Instagram 34:14 you don't do podcasting I think if if you're going to do one of those and you want to kind of break into a space uh or 34:21 a market uh appearing on a podcast is a fantastic way um to go about it and it's 34:28 just about like I said before it's about being uh being yourself connecting with other humans and sharing those stories 34:35 right so long as the that's what the host of that podcast is looking for um and you have like some value you can 34:40 bring to that host and Their audience it's a it's a fantastic way and I think more people should be you know uh 34:48 thinking about it like you did Katie and and thinking about doing it well right like not just doing it uh for the sake 34:56 of doing it dust off off their hands and like move on but like actually care about what they're doing because they're sharing the story with 100 people 10,000 35:03 people a million people depends on the size of the audience and U it's just it is a fantastic way and it's about just 35:09 like broadcasting and telling that story why you got into business in the first place right like when you're building websites back in the day and the most 35:16 critical page with your client was the about page and they looked at you and they said I don't know what to write and you're looking at them like it's the 35:22 about page it's about you like you have to write it you know I don't know why I do this why did you get into business like tell that story like what what's 35:29 what's happening here right you know um these are critical components uh the humanity side The Experience side before 35:36 like the robots just do it all for us soon so what about and I whenever I 35:44 think about podcasts for our customers you know there's there's so many things that we could do uh that gravity forms 35:51 uh podcast already is doing and doing probably better than we would uh so what 35:57 do you suggest for things like a change log type of podcast where we talk about the new features and is that does that 36:04 bring enough value like what is the lowest bar for creating interesting 36:10 content for people that that doesn't require you know Reinventing some sort 36:15 of format that or creating some sort of format that is interesting Beyond like I 36:20 want to know I want to converse about all our new features more than we do in our change log and in a different format 36:27 than our blog posts would a podcast be a good way for to do that for example I 36:33 think what you'll find is if if you can build a workflow that isn't like taking 36:39 up all your time to do something like that you should absolutely do it and absolutely test it um knowing the fact 36:46 that and just look at it objectively say how many of my customers are actually going to want this 36:52 content and try it test it survey against it 36:58 right so if I think it's uh so I'm using gravity kit to survey um gravity forms and and gravity kit to display survey 37:05 results for the breakdown podcasts form with 3m. wtfs survey and um I survey 37:13 that I survey the audience I say how where do we fall in your uh podcast 37:19 priority like do you listen to the breakdown podcast in your top top three 37:24 top five top 10 like where do I where do I land and what's the quality of this so 37:29 um I think if you can get folks to tune in a certain percentage like if you can 37:34 look at it and say this percentage of people tune into this real intimate long form change log 37:40 discussion and can you do something with that audience like when you email them and have a conversation with them when 37:46 you release a new episode do they respond back are they taking a survey and telling you that they like this or 37:52 not like how actionable is that audience and that's the that's the measuring stick for me when you're 37:58 trying to do something that's like really pushing the boundaries of like your not so normal marketing channels is 38:04 if if they can take action if this audience is taking action that you're talking to that's a good measuring stick 38:10 um in my opinion because I don't know out of your customers if 50 people listen to that but you're getting 50 38:16 emails every time you you send this episode out that's fantastic because people are really connected to this and 38:22 those are going to be your biggest fans for you know for the podcast I would also say and I have plans for 38:28 this I I won't divulge them entirely here ju but it doesn't have I mean it 38:36 doesn't have to be like the content doesn't have to be the product right not 38:41 to say that yours isn't and probably wouldn't because I know you you push the boundaries of creativity with marketing 38:46 too but it doesn't have to be like here's the updates of gravity forms God I hope this audience wants this right 38:52 and you know I fall into that too like as a marketing channel you look at it you say but I need to get this message 38:58 out yes but I'm going to put it up against two unique segments that I think are really interesting for the for the 39:05 audience but it doesn't have to even be about you know about the product itself 39:12 like Chris badget could probably do a podcast on hiking dog sled racing right 39:19 I would listen to that yeah right brought to you by lifter element I would listen to a podcast of him just walking from his house to his office which is 39:27 probably only like 50 yards but I would just like the thoughts that that goes through that kid's head when he's walking from the house to that office 39:33 must be tremendous the shovels snow and everything yeah and I don't even yeah I 39:38 I think he walks out of the house seven feet of snow and he doesn't even shovel it he just pretends he's on the side of 39:44 a mountain and he just like every day is an adventure Walking 50 yards to his 39:50 house animals food all kinds of 39:55 stuff so we haven't really defined what a podcast is and the reason I say that is 40:02 because my thought in response to Zach's question about the change log side of things is maybe more of like a live Q&A 40:11 or something with customers might be more what the customer would want where because with podcasts you can engage but 40:19 it's not necessarily the direct point of it whereas maybe customers would want a more interactive session but then that a 40:26 podcast what is a podcast what's the difference well again welcome to the 40:32 podcast industry very similar to do you capitalize the p in 40:37 WordPress uh that that's that is not under disput that's what this question is so there's a lot of folks that would 40:44 argue that any form of content that can be turned into audio so you know a 40:50 standard YouTube video or a recording of a webinar um or if you can listen to it 40:55 on any platform more more specifically so technically the way that I perceive a 41:00 podcast is the audio that's distributed through an RSS feed that is openly distributed 41:08 in other words you can tune into it where wherever you want however you want so long as it accepts an RSS feed and 41:15 you can search for it follow it and hit play and listen to it the other argument 41:20 is well a YouTube like YouTubers right especially these days everyone says oh I 41:25 have a on YouTube but it's actually a video show and there's no RSS feed right there's you can't search for it and find 41:32 it but they call it a podcast because they're talking interview style but on 41:37 video only available on YouTube to me that's not a podcast I'm not offended 41:44 that you didn't capitalize the P um but to me it's not something that I can take 41:50 with me on the go and listen to it on any device right it's just a YouTube 41:55 video um so that's the challenge so for me anyway a podcast as long as it's being 42:01 distributed over RSS I can subscribe to it anywhere I don't really care about like the content but technically is that 42:08 portable and can I find it anywhere um it's an advantage for both The Listener 42:14 and the Creator to be openly distributed and what's your opinion I there was I did a search for WordPress podcasts uh 42:21 last year or two years ago forget about it yeah well there was a podcast that 42:26 was uh taking blog articles and having an AI read them out loud uh is that a 42:34 podcast man it is a podcast technically it's a podcast not a 42:39 very entertaining podcast but a podcast um I thought you were GNA start talking about like the phrase WordPress podcast 42:45 because it's literally impossible to like Google doesn't know what to do with that Google doesn't know because Google 42:51 says oh you want to start a podcast on WordPress no I want to listen to a podcast about why would you want to do 42:57 that well because it's a multi-billion dollar industry and one of the most important pieces of Open Source software 43:02 in the world that's why um but yeah I mean you know I don't really judge the I 43:08 there was a time where I didn't care uh that folks called their YouTube channel 43:14 a podcast as long as it was as long as they felt like they were creating 43:19 something and connecting with an audience but the deeper I got into it and I saw just like the industry 43:24 perspective of content ownership and what big platforms will do like n i I 43:29 sort of rolled back and I said you know what you have to attach it to an RSS feed like it has to be open uh openly 43:36 published or else like what's the point of all this 43:42 stuff yeah um that's really interesting it's almost like a philosophical definition of what is a podcast um with 43:50 a bit of Technology it has to be on RSS But ultimately it's a philosophical definition you've given there yeah I 43:57 mean you know without Cromwell here I won't go too deep into the uh tin foil hat conspiracies but my God what if the 44:04 internet actually uplifted the RSS spec years ago what would that have done to 44:10 all of our content uh in distribution across social uh our blog posts our 44:15 audio like if each person could have their own RSS feed for everything like 44:20 would we need these Twitter algorithms and these Facebook ad Network you know like 44:26 that RSS is really important uh for Distributing any content in my opinion 44:32 uh a WordPress blog post or a podcast feed um because without that technology 44:37 like you know I don't know imagine if Kindle Kindle books were like RSS readers you 44:45 know like it was a newspaper but um everyone had their own RSS feed and you could openly distribute 44:51 that the ad me on mastadon 44:57 activity Pub yeah yeah come come toting so uh I think now is a good time 45:05 for the best advice for new product owners on uh using podcasting as a marketing tool Matt I'd love to like can 45:12 you distill all that you've shared with us uh today into like what's your best advice yeah if you're jumping into it 45:20 and you're a little paranoid you're a little stressed out you don't know where to start you don't have to spend crazy 45:26 money um on Hardware which is uh always like the easy thing to do oh I get to 45:32 buy shiny new things and go on Amazon best part of anything that's the best part of anything right it like satisfies 45:37 you in that moment um but then you're like what do I do with this stuff you don't need to spend a lot of money I go 45:43 with the 50 to70 um I don't have it next to me right now uh but ATR 2100 uh or the Samsung 45:51 q2u microphone very easy the most important part after you get your microphone is good microphone etiquette 45:57 getting the microphone as close to the source of audio uh as possible and then when you start creatively thinking about 46:04 the show and this like that advice is advice for whether you're going to start 46:09 a podcast or be on a podcast very important um and then creatively if 46:15 you're like okay I'm a little overwhelmed don't have a lot of time think about your show in a season think 46:21 about 12 episodes think about releasing it once a month to get yourself started and then think about the promotion that 46:27 goes along with every single episode you're going to you're going to be like ah this is I feel like I need to create 46:33 more and it just like the exercises just creating that audio it doesn't have to be once a month get the audience primed 46:41 uh and promote around that and create all of that accessory or repurpose content around it the blog post the 46:47 newsletter the social and you'll start to see this is a lot of work um and it 46:52 can be fulfilling and it can be very useful even at once a month month so that's how I would think about it think about it in Seasons you don't have to 46:58 stretch it out for a year it could be six months but just know that there's an end point it's when you keep it at 47:05 infinum Infinity when you don't stop and you feel like you're on this hamster wheel like oh my God how am I going to 47:10 tell the audience I don't want to do this anymore or that I want to just take a break um going in with seasons in mind 47:17 and having a beginning and an end and maybe a story arc around that is probably the best uh piece of advice 47:24 that that I can that I can give yeah and for my advice uh I am so 47:31 pleased to be on this podcast which used to be a YouTube channel and now we actually have an RSS feed so we are 47:37 officially a podcast uh recently recently yes um is to see if you can 47:43 join an existing podcast podcasts are hard people need uh help to put them 47:49 together and they might welcome you as a podcast co-host or uh as a frequent 47:55 guest um that might be a good way to dip your toes um and my secondary advice is uh 48:02 consider alternatives if you're going to be so regimented and so disciplined with 48:07 your time and effort that you're spending on a marketing channel uh just imagine how much you could get done if 48:14 you were blogging that regularly or if you were that active on social media so 48:19 podcasts are amazing and a very intimate and Powerful media uh medium but uh 48:25 there are other Alternatives and maybe that amount of work could be better spent elsewhere if you're a new product 48:31 owner yeah that's fair um mine would be to think about um what you enjoy and 48:37 where your audience are so if you would really love to have your own podcast and you would also enjoy all the peripheral 48:44 task like marketing it then by all means start one um otherwise then maybe think 48:51 about going on a guest on relevant ones that you found your AUD audience are listening to you don't have to do your 48:58 own and then you can tap into existing audiences and learn a lot and hopefully 49:03 meet some cool people on the podcast um I can't um say the number of people I've 49:09 met on podcasts and then at word camps it's really interesting to have that prior communication with people in the 49:15 community so going on other people's podcasts is a good way to meet people as well as getting your message out 49:22 there that's a great Point uh well that's a wrap for this 49:27 episode uh Matt Maderos thank you so much for joining us where can people find you online where can people listen 49:34 to you more gravity forms.com breakdown uh to tune in to the breakdown 49:40 podcast twice a month and uh the wp minute.com 49:45 uh is where you want to go for your favorite five minutes of Wordpress and breaking news today um breaking content. 49:54 is a limited podcast series that I'm doing with Brian Castle go to Breaking 49:59 content. it's a limited series Brian and I only have so much time we're going to dive into the content marketing side of 50:06 uh what I'm building and what he's building that's awesome thanks for thanks for sharing today uh breaking 50:13 news everybody um so be be sure to follow Matt and uh for our next show 50:18 next week we're going to be discussing how to increase software sales by switching from product videos to process 50:25 videos with a special guest Kevin giri and special thanks to post status 50:31 for being our green room if you're enjoying these shows then do us a favor and hit like subscribe share it with 50:37 your friends mention it in your newsletters and most of all we hope to see you next week 50:43 bye