The best, most important things in life take time and careful planning. College. Planning a wedding. World travel. Launching a business. None of these milestones are split-second decisions. You do your research. You make notes. You consult experts.
So it goes without saying that when you want something to succeed, you start with a plan.
Not all of the 5 million podcasts available today have undergone this critical thinking (which is probably why so many have “podfaded”). But those that continually capture attention and listenership started with a strategy and continually refine that plan over time.
At Casted, podcast and video strategy is built out of purpose, goals, audience, and theme. Before you hit record, consider these crucial areas of podcast planning and create your brand's podcast marketing strategy.
Why did you start your podcast? (No, really, why?) It’s ok if you don’t have an answer right away, but before you start down the path of recording and production, it’s important to understand how your show will differ from the hundreds of thousands of other podcasts out there.
We like to call this your podcast WHY. To help you define yours, consider these three foundational questions:
For us, The Casted Podcast exists to:
Grabbing a microphone and setting off into unchartered territory may be exciting, but it’s not sustainable without achieving brand goals. How will you know when your podcast has succeeded? How will you pay your team?
“You can’t pay your employees with downloads,” podcaster and marketing extraordinaire Jay Baer says. “Look at your spike in SEO; look at your spike in people mentioning the show to your customer success team.” You have to know what your brand plans to achieve with a B2B show. It's one of the main determiners of whether you should do a podcast in the first place.
Your podcast goals should be whatever makes the most sense for your brand and your podcast content strategy. The important thing is to choose KPIs that best align with your goals and then paying close attention to these metrics once you’re up and running. At Casted, we recommend using metrics that matter and go beyond just downloads, like:
Audience Building Metrics
Audience Growth Metrics
Audience Engagement Metrics
Pipeline and Conversion Metrics
The thing about creating a show is that you have to have an audience to sustain it. No audience, no show.
Audience too small? The “bigger is better” mentality isn’t necessarily warranted in podcasting. The important thing is attracting an audience that is laser-focused on and hungry for the content you produce.
Audience too big? Consider breaking your show into more podcasts with tailored content for niche audiences. It takes more work (and it’s not the answer for every company), but the payoff for your brand could be huge.
Lastly, don’t try to make your podcast into something it’s not: every other podcast. Embrace your uniqueness and whatever will attract and keep your audience. Take it from Tom Webster, SVP of marketing and strategy for Edison Research — what works for one show doesn’t always work for another.
"The number one thing that I would like them to take away is to get out of their heads a little bit and really think audience first," Tom says. "And every choice that you make and every decision, every aspect of content that you decide to put in or leave out of your show, really make it an audience-first decision and not a company-first decision, because people will smell that. That's not what people are looking for. So if you genuinely make audience-focused decisions, if everything is on the side of the audience, then you can do no wrong as far as I'm concerned. But that also means learning more about your audience. And I think it can be a dangerous thing for a company to start a podcast and not know enough about its audience before they really start going into it."
You may have come up with your podcast’s theme before anything else. Perhaps it was even what led to your “aha!” moment to even start a podcast. But building an effective podcast strategy means digging deeper to unpack your theme and develop the best ongoing content for your show. The best podcasting marketing plans account for the following :
Answering these questions will not only help you hone your theme, but allow you to start developing individual episode content and inviting the right guests.
Once it’s time to get that guest list going, make a list of possibilities who fall within these three buckets:
Jeremy Donovan and the team that makes the Hey Salespeople podcast stick to a strict set of guiding principles when inviting guests onto the show. Here’s how they dug in at their show’s onset:
"We spent some time defining what the value prop is," Jeremy explains. "And we defined who are we trying to target, why are we targeting those people, and what do we want them to learn. So that was a big definition. And we also had guiding principles of things that we wanted to do and would not do. So, like one of our guiding principles is that we try to avoid consultants and sort of pundents and authors, with a few notable exceptions. We really wanted to interview practitioners. So it's by practitioners for practitioners."
Our incredible friends and podcast guests demonstrate every day that the best shows require teamwork, collaboration, and (above all) careful planning. Sure, those plans may change over time, but establishing what you want your show to stand for and how you’ll do it will set you up for a longer and more fruitful future.
We’ve talked a lot about strategy recently, and it’s for good reason. We want you to succeed. We want your show to catch on. That’s why we’ve developed the industry’s first podcasting platform for B2B brands. After you’ve done your homework in developing your show’s strategy, give us a call to help you squeeze more out of your content for better engagement and measurable results. Let’s talk!