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The Long Story with Simon Owens

Latest episodes

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Jan 18, 2024 • 31min

Will Spotify's audiobook streaming be good for authors?

Sign up for my newsletter: https://simonowens.substack.com/   It’s been nearly five years since Spotify announced it would diversify its audio offerings beyond music streaming, and while it spent most of that time building its podcast capabilities, it made no secret that it eventually wanted to get into audiobooks.   Then in 2022 it made its first move into the industry by acquiring an audiobooks distributor called Findaway. Later that year, it launched the ability to purchase audiobooks through spotify. And then finally in late 2023 it rolled out audiobook streaming as part of its paid subscription.   There’s been one group that’s watched these developments closely: audiobook authors. They’re understandably nervous about how Spotify’s bundled offering will affect their own income, and many are deeply skeptical of the company’s intentions.   So will Spotify’s audiobook streaming be good for authors? That’s a question I put to Jane Friedman, the writer behind the publishing industry newsletter The Hot Sheet. She walked me through the current landscape of digital audiobook sales and explained how Spotify’s revenue sharing arrangement works.  
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Jan 17, 2024 • 44min

How Gabe Fleisher built Wake Up To Politics, a daily newsletter with over 50,000 subscribers

Gabe Fleisher, started Wake Up To Politics when he was only 9 years old and now a senior at Georgetown. He talks about his motivation, monetization strategies, and future plans for the newsletter. Also discusses the appeal of a daily email newsletter, incorporating original reporting, interactions with media executives, driving donations, and continuing the publication full-time.
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Jan 12, 2024 • 42min

The biggest difference between the Creator Economy and traditional media

The podcast covers topics such as the difference between creator-led companies and traditional media outlets, non-traditional media business models, launching a media business in 2024, the inefficiency of traditional PR and advertising, creating engaging editorial content, balancing freelance writing and newsletters, the involvement of sponsors and blurring lines in the event space, and building momentum in the Creator Economy.
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Jan 5, 2024 • 35min

Will Buzzfeed file for bankruptcy in 2024?

It’s been a bad few years for Buzzfeed. After a disastrous IPO in 2022, it’s faced a tanking stock price, declining revenue, and a shutdown of its news division.    But things only look to get worse in 2024. As Adweek’s Mark Stenberg reports, BuzzFeed faces a fiscal cliff where it’s in danger of being delisted from the NASDAQ stock exchange, which then would trigger a required payment on its debt. Such an event would be disastrous for the company’s future.   I recently interviewed Mark about the dangers of the fiscal cliff and how likely it is to happen. We also discussed all the mistakes BuzzFeed made that led it up to this position.  
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Jan 4, 2024 • 39min

How Kelsey Ogletree built Pitchcraft, a membership community for PR pros

Kelsey Ogletree, freelance travel writer and founder of Pitchcraft, discusses how she built a membership community for PR pros. Topics include adapting to the travel industry during the pandemic, the concept of press trips, selling out paid workshops, and creating a membership community for PR pros and freelance writers.
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Dec 5, 2023 • 42min

How Ash Read built Living Cozy, a product review site monetized with ecommerce

Ash Read didn’t launch a review website about household products because of some lifelong interest in home decor; instead, his interest came about simply because he was moving into a new house and needed to furnish it.   While it was easy to search for products listed on retailers like Amazon and Walmart, he realized that there wasn’t a good directory for the direct-to-consumer goods that are sold directly through a company’s website. So he created a database of direct-to-consumer companies and published it to the web. The audience feedback was so strong that he decided to build out an entire website dedicated to covering and reviewing D2C home products.   Ash launched Living Cozy in 2020, and over the next few years he scaled the site to over 350,000 monthly pageviews. What started out as simple product curation soon led to an in-depth review process and him hiring a network of freelance writers to review items like sofas and beds.    How did Ash manage to break into such a saturated market category that was already dominated by much larger websites? In an interview, we talked about his introduction to direct-to-consumer products, his clever use of search keywords, and how he coordinated the shipment of large pieces of furniture to reviewers all over the world.  
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Nov 16, 2023 • 49min

How Dylan Bowman built Freetrail, a media outlet for trail runners

For most of his career as professional ultra marathoner, Dylan Bowman didn’t have much of an online presence, but in 2019, he suddenly found himself with a lot of time on his hands after he broke his left ankle and had to take a year off from racing. That year, he launched a podcast where he interviewed his fellow pro runners, and it pretty quickly became a huge hit.   It didn’t take long for Bowman to realize that the podcast provided a huge opportunity for his post-racing career, so in late 2020 he and a co-founder launched Free Trail, a media outlet that operates a podcast network, a YouTube channel, and even its own ultramarathon races.   In an interview, Dylan walked me through how he built the company, his monetization strategy, and why it represents the future of sports media.  
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Sep 4, 2023 • 55min

How B2B publisher Skift scaled its business by diversifying its revenue streams

In 2011, Rafat Ali launched Skift, a B2B publisher that covers the travel industry. At first, Skift was mainly monetized with advertising, but Rafat quickly realized that scaling a B2B niche outlet required a diverse set of business models that included memberships, research, events, and advertising. He also acquired multiple other media outlets that operated in adjacent industries. In an interview, Rafat walked us through this journey and explained how he managed to simplify the company’s value proposition while embracing the complexity of multiple revenue models. We also spoke to Walter Frick, who ran the membership program for business publisher Quartz for nearly three years. He answered our questions about what motivates readers to convert into subscribers and what he learned when Quartz made the radical decision to completely remove its website paywall.
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Aug 22, 2023 • 59min

How Starter Story ditched recurring payments and built a $1.5 million information product

Patrick Walls, founder of Starter Story, discusses his transition from selling advertising to offering one-time payments for permanent access to his content archives, helping him achieve $1.5 million in annual revenue. Bradley Hope shares insights on funding and adapting narrative projects across multiple formats. The podcast explores Starter Story's evolution, revenue diversification, and the success of mid-roll ads. It also delves into the costs of producing a narrative podcast and the challenges of optioning intellectual property in the film industry.
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Jul 25, 2023 • 47min

How Casey Keirnan built A.M. Hoops, a basketball YouTube channel with over 400,000 subscribers

It used to be if you wanted to break into broadcast media you first had to start small – by getting a job as a correspondent at a local news station and then working your way up to bigger and bigger markets.   That’s the career trajectory that Casey Keirnan followed. He started out covering high school sports in small towns and then eventually landed a job at CBS Interactive, which was trying to create an ESPN competitor for OTT streaming. But after only two years on the job, Casey’s contract wasn’t renewed, and he feared he would have to go back to local news.   But then he launched A.M. Hoops, an NBA-focused YouTube channel that ended up being so successful that he replaced his previous salary within a few months. Today, it boasts over 400,000 subscribers and 264 million channel views.   In our interview, Casey told me about his slow climb in local news, why he struggled at his CBS job, and what inspired him to strike off on his own to start a YouTube channel.  

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