If you’re ready to create a podcast that will align you with experts in your industry, position yourself as a trusted leader and create another source of revenue for your business you’re in the right place. Podcasts for Profit will help you create and grow a podcast that cuts through the noise of social media and speak directly to your target audience. Stop letting the algorithm determine your social marketing strategy. Stop letting trends dictate the kind of content you’re able to create. Hosted by expert podcast strategist, producer and educator: Morgan Franklin, Podcasts for Profit is your step-by-step guide to creating a podcast that will transform your business, opportunities and life.
Morgan Franklin: From this day
forward, I need you to start
thinking of your podcast as a
business, either a business of
its own or a subsidiary of a
business that you already have.
Because truthfully, having a
podcast is having a business. It
takes equipment skills, capital,
labor, production, research,
development, marketing, and
sales and everything a business
needs to grow and thrive a
podcast also needs so why
wouldn't we call it what it is?
I started my first podcast in
February of 2021. That podcast
didn't launch until three months
later in May of 2021. And we did
not make our first dollar on
that show until September of
2023. quick math for you. That
was two whole years later, as
the host of that show would tell
you and I will sadly agree with
him. We weren't making great
business decisions during those
two years. Since that time, I've
helped podcasts of my own and
podcasters all over the world
close over $200,000 in revenue
directly resulting from their
podcast. This episode is all
about how to find your first
podcast sponsor and some of the
tips tricks and mistakes I've
made along the way monetizing
podcasts. Hello, and welcome to
Podcasts for Profit. My name is
Morgan Franklin. I'm a podcast
producer, strategist, and
educator. This podcast will help
you create and grow a podcast
that cuts through the noise of
social media and speaks directly
to your target audience. If
you're ready to create a podcast
that will align you with the
experts in your industry,
position yourself as a trusted
leader and create another source
of revenue for your business,
you're in the right place.
Alright, so no matter what stage
of a business or a podcast that
you're in, the most important
thing is to know the purpose,
the vision, the mission behind
what we're doing, right? Why are
we doing this? Who are we doing
it for? What are our long term
goals and outcomes? What are the
short term steps that will bring
us to those long term goals and
outcomes? The first thing that I
want you to look at is the size
and engagement of your audience.
Notice I said size and
engagement, because there's
really no magic number. And I
really think that this gets to
some people before they even get
started. Have you ever caught
yourself saying or thinking any
of the following things. I'm
going to monetize when my
audience is bigger? When I have
more downloads all try to find
sponsors. I haven't had enough
episodes to start reaching out
to brands yet for sponsorship
deals, or generally anything
blaming the numbers of your
podcast for the reason you're
not trying to get sponsors yet.
I was working with a podcast I'd
say about a month ago that still
has not launched like at the
time that I am recording this
podcast that podcast has still
not launched. And it's this
person's first podcast. They
hired me to put together a deck
and some pitches for prospective
sponsors. And to help me
position the current brand they
have to sell advertisements on
this podcast. Did you hear that?
That's the sound of all the
excuses for you not reaching out
to potential sponsors or brands
because your podcast isn't big
enough flying right out the
window. Because here's the
thing, this podcaster is
pitching their podcast before
their first episode is even
live. Now, let me preface that
with saying that this person has
an established following already
with engaged followers. And
they're betting on those
followers that that engagement
will follow them to the podcast.
And that's a perfectly fine
strategy. I think we as
podcasters tend to underestimate
the power of our full online
presence when we're pitching to
brands, because we're so focused
on the downloads and the charts
and all the things that mean
something to us. But guess what
brands don't know crap about
podcasts like, I wish I could
scream that from the roof.
brands don't know anything about
podcasts, they really don't.
They're looking at what they can
understand. So if you're coming
to the table with, let's say
25,000 followers on LinkedIn,
and you're showing them your
download numbers, they're
probably going to be putting an
equal amount of weight on to
your highest converting social
media. So in this example, the
25,000 followers on LinkedIn,
because they actually can see
that with their own eyes and in
their marketing experience. They
know what that means. Like I
said earlier, your podcast is a
business and you need to think
like a business. If you're a
podcast or pitching to a brand
to work with them. You need to
understand your podcast is here
to provide value to another
business. That value in most
cases is going to be exposure
and brand awareness from your
podcast audience. So here comes
the next thing I want you to
work on. Knowing your target
audience. If you don't know the
people who are listening to your
podcast, you pretty much have
zero value to provide to a
potential sponsor. That's why
they're working with you. That's
why they're giving you money.
They want to know their message
is falling on ears of listeners
who are aligned with their
missions and polls have the
resources and accessibility to
purchase and will hopefully
convert into paying clients. So
I need you to have a rock solid
view of what your target
audience and listener
demographics are to share with
potential partners of this show.
Who are your listeners? Where do
they live? What are their age?
What is their gender? Roughly?
What's their income and career
demographic? Why did they listen
to your podcast? And what are
the other podcasts that they
listened to. So some of this
information you'll be able to
find on your podcast hosting
website, and some of it you'll
be able to find on Apple
podcasts connect and Spotify for
podcasters. If you haven't set
those accounts up, I encourage
you to do so immediately.
Because really, those will give
you the individual demographics
that your hosting website
probably can't. Some of this
information will come from the
knowledge that you have of your
show and who you're making it
for. One of the hardest things
about podcasting, in my
experience, and pitching a
podcast to sponsors is the
inconsistent information we have
to share. But my best advice to
you is to do some internal
reporting for yourself, compare
it against the information you
can find on Spotify, Apple
podcasts, your own hosting
website and go from there. The
last thing before we start
talking about pitches is to
evaluate how much time money and
resources it's taking you right
now to make this podcast, I'm
gonna go back another time to
your podcast being a business,
but you need to have a profit
and loss. And you need to know
what these partnerships or
sponsorships need to look like
from a financial perspective,
that is actually going to make
sense for your show. So the
first thing we're going to do is
something that I would guess a
lot of podcasters probably
haven't done, but is a critical
part of business. And that is
adding up all your monthly
expenses. I'm just making these
numbers up. But to give you a
better idea, I've tried to go
and look at how much these
things actually cost so that
together we can kind of figure
out okay, what are we spending
on this podcast every month. So
let's say you have Adobe
Creative Suite, that's $60 a
month, your podcast hosting is
$20 a month, you hire a part
time audio engineer at $80 An
episode and you have four
episodes a month, so that's 320
a month, your equipment spend
out over the year, so that's
broken up is $66 a month. So
that's keeping up with buying
new microphones and equipment
when you need it. And you know,
when randomly your headphones
die, it's replacing that and
doing those different things
throughout the year, you pay for
chat GPT plus, that's $20 a
month to help you write blogs
and episode descriptions. You
have Riverside for virtual
interviews, that's $15 a month.
And for your transcript and
editing, you have D script and
that's $24 a month. Okay, so
let's talk about you personally
and the time and effort that you
are investing into this with
your own sweat equity. Let's say
that you're putting in 20 hours
every month into outlining,
writing, recording, doing pre
and post production, and you're
gonna give yourself a very
modest, let's say $20 an hour
for the value of your time.
That'd be $400 a month. When we
add that all together, that's
925 a month, which if we're
rounding it up is about $12,000
a year reasonably to run your
podcast. So why are we talking
about all this? Why are we doing
this? Is it to stress you out
about how much it costs to run a
podcast? No, it's to help you
realize that even a small scale
podcast operation has
reoccurring expenses, you have
expenses to making a podcast is
not free content, even though
there are some people that will
try to treat it like that. And
that's why I'm trying to break
this down so that you can really
see your podcast, even without
any listeners is worth something
because it takes money to make,
which leads me into our next
segment of the episode crafting
the pitch. Before we make a
pitch, we need to take what
we've collected about our
audience size and engagement and
target audience and monthly
expenses, and lay it all out in
a pricing guide to send to
potential partners. This is
where some podcasters start to
fall apart. But it truly is all
in the data that we've already
collected. So don't worry, you
shouldn't have to guess what a
partnership with your podcast
should cost. It's all there
already. So if you're totally
new to this world, I want to
walk you through a few of the
different options that were
normally selling for podcast
advertisements. And the most
popular for brands is normally
an ala carte option or pick your
own of pre roll mid roll or post
roll or they buy the whole
episode. So let me kind of
explain what this is. These ads
are respectively so pre roll is
going to be before your episode
starts. So when you first turn
it on, you click play and that
ad plays and you usually skip
through it. That is your pre
roll ad. mid roll is going to be
halfway through the episode.
Post roll is at the end of the
episode after the episode
finishes. Typically these ads
range anywhere from 30 seconds
to two minutes with one to two
ads per slot. So for example,
you might have one two minute ad
in the pre roll Before the
episode to one minute ads in the
mid roll in the middle of your
episode, and to 32nd ads in the
post roll after the episode
finishes. When it comes to
placement and permanence of ads,
you have two different options.
Normally, this ad can either be
baked in, and that's the
terminology that we use for when
it's going to be forever part of
the recording. Or you can have
dynamic ads. Those are temporary
ads that sponsors pay for for a
given time slot. So let's say
they buy all your pre roll for
the next month, every single
podcast for the next month.
We'll start with that sponsors
ad, no matter the episode, but
after that month, that ad goes
away. So to recap, baked in is
part of your total podcast mix
and will never leave that
specific episode. It is
permanent. And dynamic podcast
ads are temporary and only last
a certain amount of time and
usually span all episodes.
Alright, so the last thing is
pricing. What should your
podcast pricing be? I can tell
you what Google will say. But
what does Google know? I can
tell you one thing. Google
doesn't know anything about you,
or your podcast, or what you
bring to the table. And to be
fair, neither do I. But you know
who does you you have to be your
own advocate and you have to be
the one doing the math both
literally and figuratively, to
figure out what is best for your
podcast. Just like in business,
the only person who is going to
be putting you first is
yourself. And if you give
someone else the keys to drive,
they will. Alright, so I'm going
off my example from earlier of a
podcast that costs roughly
$1,000 per month to
operationalize. Let's say you
want to have a profit of $500
per month. In addition to that
$1,000 of operating expense,
that's a total of $1,500. If you
have four episodes per month, or
one every week, that breaks down
to 375 per episode you'd need to
make from ads with sponsors. To
give you some context here, pre
roll or the ads that come before
the episode are normally the
second most expensive. mid roll
ads, the ones that play in the
middle of the episode are going
to be the most expensive and
typically the longest and post
roll ads, the ones that play at
the end of the episode will be
the shortest and the least
expensive. So with all that in
mind, if we're looking to make
375 An episode, I might price it
at 130 for the pre roll 165 for
the mid roll, and 80 for the
post roll. This is of course
completely dependent on your
audience behaviors, how your
episodes are laid out, and the
value you're bringing to the
sponsor. For example, I have a
podcast that I produce that
always has a special question at
the end of the episode, which
makes our post roll ads worth
more than another podcast that
just ends the episode in a
casual way. So keep in mind your
own podcast and also what your
sponsor is looking for from this
ad. So once you have a good idea
of your ad structure along with
everything that we've talked
about before, it's time to start
putting together your pitch deck
and your PDF to send out to
sponsors. This can be as simple
or as elaborate as you want it
to be truly my best advice is to
provide the information in a way
that will quickly show potential
sponsors the core values of your
podcast in an easily digestible
way. You need to include who
they'd be aligning with through
your audience, your digital
reach your podcast, monthly
downloads, and your average
individual episode, download
rate, why you think they should
partner with you and of course,
your pricing, you can quickly
put together a pricing guide in
Canva, or lay it out in a Word
document. Like I said, this can
be as involved as you want it to
be. But remember showing the
potential sponsor what value
they will be getting as a
partner of yours is the ultimate
objective. All right, so it's
the time we've all been waiting
for. It's time to start pitching
your podcast. Podcasting is a
relatively new medium for
advertising, but a gift
something most other social
medias can't. And I believe
that's a true personal
connection. That is really the
magic of podcast partnerships.
When you're partnering with a
podcast, you're speaking through
the host, a host that a lot of
the time this listener has spent
dozens, possibly hundreds or
1000s of hours listening to.
That being said, it's critical
for you to look for brands and
companies that are aligned with
your podcast. They're aligned
with your listeners. They're
aligned with you as a host.
Start by reaching out to the
products that you already use in
love and that maybe you've
already talked about on your
podcast for free. Don't be
afraid of getting ghosted. I
know this is scary. You are
going to get ghosted, you are
going to hear no, it's just
going to happen. And it's not
personal. Again, this is just
business in the beginning And
I'd suggest for you to reach out
to 10 brands slash companies per
week. Ideally, you're going to
do this via email to send your
pricing PDF and all that
information. But sometimes you
have to reach out to people via
DM. And that's okay. But in my
opinion, try to get out of their
direct messages as quickly as
possible. If you're dealing with
a brand, I'd say, hey, is there
someone in your partnerships
team that I can talk to? Is
there someone in your marketing
team I can talk to, like I said,
sometimes you can't find these
email addresses just by
Googling, sometimes you can, It
just all depends on how often
they usually do partnerships. If
they're open to people pitching
them or not, you might have to
put in a little bit of extra
work for this. But just
remember, this is really all
just a numbers game. And it is
going to take some time and
patience on your end, very, very
few podcasters are ever just
offered sponsorships out of the
blue. Normally, people aren't
just knocking down your door to
give you advertising dollars.
Make sure that you're keeping
track of who you're reaching out
to. I just make a quick Excel
spreadsheet or something in
Google Drive with the name of
the company who you reached out
to the day that you reached out
to them and the day that you
followed up. Also, you need to
be following up at least one
time. That way you can keep
things organized and make sure
that you're hitting that goal of
reaching out to 10 people per
week. Just remember, your
podcast is a business. And
businesses take time to grow and
make money. It takes most
businesses 18 to 24 months to
break even so give yourself some
grace. Keep trying. Keep going.
And as always, I can't wait to
listen to your podcast. Hey,
thank you so much for joining me
on this episode. If you enjoyed
the podcast and you'd like to
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