Peas in a Podcast
Spread the word about your business with this new medium.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2005/july/78264.html
With a computer, mic and broadband connection, you can produce
an infomercial or broadcast and distribute it through aggregators,
such as Ipodder and FeedDemon, or web-based directories such as Podcast Alley.
These podcasts are sent via topic-specific feeds to subscribers,
who can download them to their digital music players or
computers.
Twenty-two million American adults have MP3 players or iPods,
according to a recent Pew Internet and American Life poll--a vast
potential audience. Chris McIntyre, founder of Podcast Alley in
Nashville, Tennessee, has seen double- to triple-digit growth over
just a few months in the number of podcasts being produced and the
number of people listening to them. "One of the most popular
podcasts has about 28,000 subscribers from my site alone,"
says McIntyre.
Steve Rubel, vice president of client services at CooperKatz
& Co., a New York City marketing communications and PR firm,
publishes a blog about persuasive technology (www.micropersuasion.com). He says entrepreneurs may
find value in creating their own broadcasts, and sees multiple
marketing opportunities in podcasting, including:
- Sponsoring a popular podcast, much like a company might sponsor
a radio broadcast
- Using giveaways, contests and other promos that have proven
effective in traditional broadcast media
- Incorporating short ads within podcast feeds, which would be
visible as the program downloads
Since podcast culture eschews overt commercialism, Rubel
advises, "I certainly wouldn't put jingles or 30-second
spots as podcasts by themselves." But he adds that good
content attracts listeners.
Will it replace blogging? No way, says Rubel. "Radio
didn't replace newspapers. There's no shortage of interest
in text."
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