If youโre 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 youโre 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 youโre 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: I want to make
you one promise in this episode,
and it is that this isn't a
political episode. It is an
episode about politics. I know
that there are a lot of raw
feelings right now, and you know
that is rightfully so. I said
this before in previous
episodes, but discussing my own
political opinion is not
relevant in any way to this
podcast. However, in the wake of
the results of the 2024
election, I think that it would
be foolish to discount the
significance that podcasting
played in this election and in
politics. Moving forward in this
episode, we're going to dissect
the use of podcasts by both
candidates talk about what
worked, what didn't, and how we
can use the lessons of both
campaigns to grow our own
podcasts and shape our brands
through podcasting. Hello and
welcome to podcast 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. I want to provide
you this information as unbiased
and fairly as possible, because
not only am I a volunteer
election worker, but also I'm
someone that believes in the
will of the people through our
vote, we all have an equal
voice, and I respect that right,
no matter what party is being
discussed, whether you're
satisfied or dissatisfied with
the results of this election, it
is clear that one candidate was
using podcasts to share their
message and reach new audiences
in a way that we have never seen
before in a political race, and
this was never clearer to me
than on the actual election day.
On Tuesday, as I said, I work as
a volunteer election worker, and
this is my fourth presidential
election, working at the polls.
Like every year, people are
excited. Election day is such an
exciting day, and you would be
hard pressed to find anyone at
the polls on election day that
is not excited to be there. And
you know, I was having a
conversation before the polls
opened, with a fellow volunteer
that was there, and we were just
talking. She asked me what I
did. I said that I was a Podcast
Producer, and before she could
even take a breath to ask me
anything else, she just says, Oh
my gosh, my son just turned 18.
He's voting for the first time,
and he's listened to every
single podcast episode with
Donald Trump. He loves podcasts,
and I was intrigued to hear
this, because, you know, you're
thinking about first time
voters, the youth vote rallied
by podcasts with Donald Trump.
Just really interesting. The
candidate that would technically
be our oldest candidate ever
elected as president at the time
of his inauguration, was
reaching Gen Z voters through
podcasting like How was that
possible? Right? Well, let's
take a look. So here's a list of
every podcast that Donald Trump
guested on during his campaign
for president during the 2024
election, and I'm gonna go in
chronological order, because
there are quite a few of them,
from June 2024 to october 2024
with just a brief summary of
topics covered and the length of
that episode. First is impulsive
with Logan Paul in June of 2024
So Donald Trump made his
podcasting debut with Logan
Paul, who is a social media
influencer and professional
wrestler, on the impulsive
podcast, and during this
episode, he discussed topics
like AI and even how he uses AI
in his own speech. Writing this
interview was 53 minutes long,
fast forwarding two months
later, guesting on the this past
weekend with Theo von podcast in
August of 2024 they're kind of
talking about a little bit more
personal topics, like Donald
Trump's decision to abstain from
alcohol and smoking, and how his
life of sobriety has been
influenced by his brothers Fred
struggles, who died of substance
abuse at only 42 this episode
was about one hour long. Next in
September of 2024 Donald Trump
was featured on the LEX Friedman
podcast where he discussed his
views on things like medical
marijuana losing the 2020
election. China, Joe Rogan and a
variety of other very current
topics. This episode was one
hour and three minutes long in
early October 2024 Donald Trump
goes on the flagrant podcast
with Andrew Schultz, where he
talks about abortion and
reiterating his stance the
decisions on abortion rights
should be left to the states.
This episode was about an hour
and 30 minutes long. On october
14, full send podcast host
Donald Trump for a discussion on
Elon Musk world war three. His
message to first time voters and
if he's going to be on the Joe
Rogan podcast or not, which I
thought was pretty interesting.
This episode was 38 minutes
long. Next Bus him with the boys
in mid October of 2024 Trump
appears on bus him with the
boys, which is a podcast by the
media company Barstool Sports,
where, during the interview, he
discussed his motivations for
entering politics, including his
concerns about border security
and trade deals. This episode
was two hours and 15 minutes
long. On october 17, Donald
Trump joins PBD podcast with
Patrick bet David On this
episode, he discusses domestic
enemies and expresses his own
concerns for Kamala Harris
political stances. This episode
is one hour and 26 minutes long.
On october 21 Donald Trump talks
pro wrestling an election with
six feet under with Mark
Calloway, aka the undertaker.
He's famously the most tenured
wrestler in WWE history. And
lastly, I'm sorry, I know this
list is long, of course, the now
infamous episode of The Joe
Rogan experience in late October
2024 Donald Trump appeared on
Joe Rogan's podcast, engaging in
a wide variety of discussions
that included topics like Robert
E Lee's military strategy and
speculation about life on Mars.
This episode was two minutes shy
of being three hours long. And
the totally crazy thing to think
about is combined for all of
these episodes, these podcasters
have delivered a watch total of
over 50 million views on YouTube
alone. So that's not even
podcast downloads in the
traditional way that we think of
them. That's not streams, that's
not anything else, that's just
views on YouTube. And that is
absolutely insane to me, and
this might be obvious from their
introductions, but all of the
hosts are male and carry a
consistently male centered
audience. And while I've
listened to clips from all these
podcasters, I do not claim to be
fully equipped to speak on their
audiences any more than just to
say, I do believe they are
targeted at young to middle aged
men, and they are doing an
excellent job like it is all
executed flawlessly. Also, I
want to acknowledge that there
were many other live Twitch
events and streaming and radio
shows, and I did not include
them here. I was trying to keep
it strictly podcast oriented,
but Donald Trump was staying
very busy on podcasts and
streaming circuits. No one can
say he was not putting in the
time there on podcasts, because
Absolutely he was. So let's take
a look at Kamala Harris and how
the Harris campaign use
podcasting to help share their
message and draw in those voters
that might not have known the
vice president very well up
until this point, on september
30, Kamala Harris joined Alex
Cooper on call her daddy, which
is Spotify, second most popular
podcast in the United States and
also has about 1 million
subscribers on YouTube. During
this episode, Kamala Harris
spoke about the grit that it
takes for a woman to seek public
office, the toughness that her
mother instilled in her, and the
importance of reproductive
rights in this election. This
episode was roughly 40 minutes
long again, airing on september
30, Kamala Harris joined all the
smoke with NBA champions Steven
Jackson and Matt Barnes to
discuss the Harris plan to boost
the economy and her perspective
on America's progress on social
justice. Next on october 28
Kamala Harris joined Brene Brown
on unlocking us with Brene Brown
for conversation on the strength
and fragility of democracy, the
power of strong coalitions, and
how to commit to justice and
fairness that can both ground us
and drive action. That interview
was one hour long and a lot like
Donald Trump, Kamala Harris did
appear on a variety of radio
shows and other media like The
Howard Stern Show, the Steve
Harvey Morning Show and The
Breakfast Club. When we look at
the overall listener audience of
the Harris features, it shows a
much more diverse story than
Donald Trump and where he was
featured. But. But a far less
consistent one. And again, I've
listened to clips from the
podcasts, and I do not claim to
know the full analysis of their
audience, but when I'm looking
at these three podcasts
specifically, and we see their
target audiences are young
women, young to middle aged men
and middle aged women, you're
casting a wide net, but not
really driving home the message
to any specific person. Here's
my perspective on why podcasting
really worked for Donald Trump
in this election cycle, and it
didn't for Kamala Harris. What
do I always say about
podcasting? Know your audience,
know your audience. Both these
candidates do know their
audience, but they are speaking
to them in totally different
ways. And in all fairness,
Kamala Harris had a much broader
area to cover, seeing as the
country was just getting to know
her in about 100 days, that's a
lot of work to do. That's a lot
of people to speak to. However,
it does not mean that your
message is reaching the targeted
audience. In the upcoming weeks
and months, you're going to hear
a lot about the significance of
paid, owned and earned media,
and for the reasons that I've
discussed in this episode, let's
take a look at each one of these
and talk about what they really
mean, let's start with paid
media. You pay for it, so that
can be anything from a Facebook
ad to a billboard, anything you
pay for that is getting your
message out there. Next is owned
media. And owned media is
anything that you create, for
example, a Tiktok video that you
made, or a blog post, you wrote
your own podcast, any content or
media that you create and post
and own yourself is owned media.
Lastly, is earned media. Earned
media is the trickiest, but I
would argue the most important
media for gaining consumer or
voter trust in the digital age.
People are smart. They don't
trust ads. Yeah, they don't
trust ads anywhere, and they
don't trust you. Audiences are
very wary, and do you blame
them? This is why earned media
is so important, and whether you
like it or not, Donald Trump did
a spectacular job of
capitalizing on earned media.
I've heard some speculation
around that his youngest son,
Barron Trump, is a big fan of
podcasting, and some of the
podcasts that he went on, but
regardless, he knew who his
audience was, and he was able to
use that earned media that he
got to speak directly to this
audience. Donald Trump is
amazing at this and he has been
for most of his life, and
whether it's magazines or TV or
any kind of media that he can
shape and mold to his narrative,
he is very hands on with the
media. Does he hate them? Yeah,
most of the time, but also it is
his secret weapon, because he
can use that earned media to
accomplish the things that he is
trying to do. Looking at the
Harris campaign and how Kamala
Harris used podcasting, I'm not
100% sure it was used in the
best way, even for the small
amount that she utilized the
platform. If I could give some
constructive criticism and my
own thoughts, it would be this,
get in character, get in the
environment. When I watched the
caller daddy interview, it was
unlike any of the other episodes
of that podcast that I had ever
watched, but not necessarily in
a good way. It felt very
buttoned up, which I'm not
saying is a bad thing. I'm not
saying that if your podcast is
buttoned up, that that's bad.
I'm saying that it wasn't the
call her daddy brand. It felt
very disingenuous to the
experience of listening or
watching that particular
podcast. And I know that they
were hosting the Vice President
of the United States, right? You
got to be a little bit more
professional, but maybe it was
either that that was the wrong
show for Kamala Harris, or her
team should have worked with the
podcast to create a little bit
more laid back environment for
everyone. It felt forced, in a
way, and especially for this to
be one of the only long form
pieces of media that the Kamala
Harris campaign put out that
wasn't a prime time interview, I
think it could have been
optimized to yield better
results. All right, so we've
covered the good and the bad. I
am grateful to these campaigns
for using podcasting as part of
their election strategy. I think
that was incredibly smart. I
made this joke on Tiktok last
week that sometimes, as a
podcaster, that podcasting can
feel like the coolest and lamest
thing about you. And I think
that is really true. What I want
you to take away from this
episode. Code an election is
that podcasting is legitimate.
As cliche as it might be for me
to say people don't trust media.
People trust people. People
trust connections. And no matter
how many millions or billions a
campaign spends on ads, it can't
create the same connection as
sitting down with another person
and talking about how you really
feel, what's really going on.
How do we as a country actually
get through this? Whether you
have a podcast that you want to
make more attractive to high
profile guests, or you're a
podcaster that wants to be
featured on other podcasts as a
guest, I'd be happy to help you
create the strategy and help you
win in whatever you are doing.
I'll have a link for my hourly
consulting in the episode
descriptions. You can also reach
out to me at Morgan, at
morganfranklin dot media. So
that's Morgan at morganfranklin
dot media. I also have my
digital product shop. Those are
templates that I have created
that I use every day as a
podcaster, that I use for my
podcasting clients that will be
linked below, or you can go to
podcastforprofit.com 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
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