Next podcasting project is a go!

I just got notice via email that my next podcasting project is a go! I will be recording a live literary event and then packaging that event into individual podcasts to be used as content and promotional material for the client’s web site.

The event occurs the second week of June, so I am already working on logistics, planning, etc. The technology side will be pretty simple, as I am only doing audio for this project, but I am going to have 2 recorders capturing everything as “belt and suspenders” protection to insure, as much as i can, a usable raw audio at the end of the night.

I am looking forward to this project, as it is great chance to stretch my podcasting wings, while also getting paid.

Watch this space for more information as the project develops!

Book: The Long Tail by Chris Anderson

You have probably heard of the term, The Long Tail if you have any interest in new media at all. This important book laid out the concept of “Why the Future of Business is Selling Less of More.” I have been meaning to read it for myself, after hearing others quote from it and use it to reinforce their thoughts on new media. I finally had a chance to pick it up from the library this week and read it in about 5-6 days,

I think you need to read this book instead of reading my half-baked summary of its contents. There is much to get you thinking and plenty of support for starting your own “long tail” projects.

The Producer Mentality

Douglas E. Welch
cip@welchwrite.com 

Every day I meet a lot of different people, from a lot of different industries, but due to the fact that my wife is a television writer and I live in Los Angeles, I am especially surrounded by entertainment-minded people.

Whenever I start talking podcasting with these folks, they inevitably turn to discussions of finding a network, pitching a show and having someone pay them to make the show. While that might have worked in the old world, although none too well, in today’s environment, you don’t pitch a show and wait for someone else to say they like it…you produce it.

That’s right, everyone is now, or at least should be, a producer of their own content. We have spent years being directed by agents, managers, directors and producers, currying their favor in the slim hope that they might cast us in their latest show, hire us to write their script or produce our heartfelt project. That world is quickly dying.

The limiting factor of distribution has finally been broken. This should be obvious when videos on YouTube are being watched by hundreds of thousands of people and podcasts have listenerships of tens of thousands. For the first time ever, you are able to produce your show and deliver it to the screens of millions of people, not just in America, but around the world. You don’t have to have your project approved by a TV network, radio conglomerate or movie studio. You gather your money, your equipment and your utmost creativity and make it happen.

Sure, if your creation garners enough attention, the big media might come calling, but this shouldn’t be your end goal. Increasingly, as Internet distribution models continue to open up and money start to flow into these new media options, you might find you can make more money without the network and studios of today. Even better, you will retain more control over your content and retain more of the income derived from it. There is no need to pay the middleman anymore, unless they are truly providing a service.

So, now is the time for everyone to start thinking like a producer. What would you “love” to create? Who would like to hear it, see it, read it? How can you reach out to them? How much will it cost?

These days, the costs involved in spreading your message are rapidly approaching zero. Days, months and years spent gathering financial backing are much less of an issue in new media than traditional media. Using today’s technology, you can produce high-quality audio and video productions for a fraction of what the equipment alone would have cost your only 5 years ago.

My message? You need to get the producer mentality and start creating your own content. Now, I realize that not everyone wants to become a producer. That’s fine, but you, at the very least, will need to partner up with someone who does have the producer mentality. Waiting on agents, managers and the traditional gatekeepers is no longer required and certainly not in your best interest.

What’s your next production?

Add your comments and questions using the Comments link below.