254: 8 Lessons Learned from 8+ Years of Podcasting (Pivot Crossover)
Dec 29, 2023
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The podcast discusses 8 lessons learned from over 8 years of podcasting, including riding out dips and plateaus, focusing on meaningful metrics, the 51-49 concept of taking action, and not comparing oneself to others.
Embrace dips and plateaus by finding ways to reignite passion and strive for high-quality guests and topics.
Focus on meaningful metrics beyond download numbers and don't compare yourself to others.
Deep dives
Eight Lessons Learned from Eight Years of Podcasting
Over the course of eight years and about two million downloads, the Pivot Podcast has seen its ups and downs. Host Jenny Blake shares eight lessons that have kept her motivated and running the show. Lesson one is to embrace the inevitable dips and plateaus, asking yourself, 'How can I fall in love with this again?' Lesson two focuses on reconnecting with more meaningful metrics than just download numbers. Lesson three is about maintaining a 51-49 mindset, taking one tiny step forward even when fear and doubt arise. Lesson four emphasizes the importance of staying focused on your own journey, ignoring comparisons and competition. Lesson five highlights the value of keeping up with new software and being open to change. Lesson six encourages hiring help to avoid becoming the bottleneck in the creative process. Lesson seven advises going your own way and not succumbing to every shiny trend or "should" in the podcasting world. Finally, lesson eight urges continuous experimentation to keep the show fresh and exciting. Through these lessons, Blake reminds herself and her listeners that the value and joy derived from the podcast go beyond metrics and external validation.
The Evolution and Impact of the Pivot Podcast
The Pivot Podcast celebrates its eighth birthday, tracing its humble beginnings and the growth it has experienced over the years. Host Jenny Blake recounts how the podcast started as a side project and eventually became her favorite thing to do on a day-to-day basis. Despite not reaching the number one career show status, Blake expresses gratitude for the connections and value she has gained from producing the show. She shares anecdotes about interviewing guests and the impact that these conversations have had on her and her listeners. Blake acknowledges the challenges and doubts she has faced along the way but chooses to see the podcast as a labor of love and a source of personal growth and inspiration.
Lessons in Motivation and Persistence for Long-Term Creative Projects
Jenny Blake, host of the Pivot Podcast, reflects on eight years of podcasting and shares insights that have kept her motivated throughout the journey. She advises embracing the inevitable dips and plateaus that come with any creative project and finding ways to reignite passion and enthusiasm. Blake emphasizes the importance of reconnecting with the deeper meaningful metrics beyond mere numbers and downloads. She also encourages maintaining a 51-49 mindset, pushing through fear and doubt with small steps forward. Other lessons include focusing on personal progress rather than comparisons with others, keeping up with new software to improve processes, hiring help to avoid burnout and bottlenecks, embracing experimentation, and going against the grain of popular trends to preserve the joy and unique flavor of the podcast.
Staying Motivated and Finding Joy in Long-Term Podcasting
Jenny Blake, the host of the Pivot Podcast, shares valuable insights and experiences from her eight-year journey as a podcaster. She reflects on the highs and lows, acknowledging the challenges and doubts that have arisen along the way. Despite not achieving chart-topping success, Blake recognizes the value and joy she receives from the podcast. She emphasizes the need to fall in love with podcasting again during dips and plateaus, redefine meaningful metrics beyond download numbers, embrace fear and take small steps forward, focus on personal progress rather than comparisons with others, keep up with evolving software, hire help to avoid overwhelm, stay true to one's own vision rather than succumbing to trends, and consistently experiment to keep the show fresh. Through these lessons, Blake celebrates the transformative power of podcasting and the joy derived from creating meaningful content.
Today is a crossover episode from the Pivot podcast celebrating eight lessons learned from over eight years of podcasting.
The Free Time podcast is now approaching its third birthday—I launched it on March 21, 2021—a year prior to the book coming out. I encourage you to grab your copy if you haven’t already, or even better—🎁 give the gift of free time to a loved one in your life for 2024!
As we start to plan the year ahead, I hope that you can apply some of these pointers to the creative projects that you're working on. Happy New Year, and I'll see you on the other side!
🌟 8 Key Takeaways
Ride out the inevitable dips and plateaus: Ask, how can I fall in love with this again? Keep the bar high—strive for jump-out-of-the-chair-with-glee-to-record level of guests and topics.
(Re)connect with the even more meaningful metrics: Don’t obsess over download numbers or charts. They can be instructive, but they don’t have to be the one-and-only indicator of whether or not to continue.
51/49: My antidote to inexplicable nerves and overthinking: 49% fear and anxiety, 51% take one small step forward. Just tip the scale toward action by two percent.
Eyes on your own paper: Don’t get lost in what other people are doing or how fast they are going. Remind yourself what’s in it for you, regardless of what “the competition” is up to. There may even be downstream benefits of having others in the same space.
Keep up with new software, don’t worry too much about sunk costs: While you want to avoid chasing shiny software objects, don’t be afraid to jump from one lily pad to the next when it improves your systems and process.
Hire help! To truly achieve consistency escape velocity, hire a team so that someone else owns the outcome and you can show up and do what only you can do.
Go your own way: Be aware of diminishing returns on shiny shoulds that, if you were to chase them, would stop you from doing the creative thing you enjoy altogether.
Keep experimenting—one might say pivoting! There is no there there. The project will evolve alongside you, even when you lose steam for a little bit. You will always find a new way forward. And if you’re so stuck you truly can’t see straight, it’s okay to call it quits too.