Warning – warning – warning. There’s a rant ahead! And it has to do with NOT killing your podcast growth curve!

I have seen this same mistake on podcaster’s websites over and over and over now, so I plead with you… listen to this episode, learn from this episode, and NEVER do this stinkin stupid thing again.

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Main Points : 1 Way You Could Be Killing Your Podcast Growth Curve

  • [1:26] What I’ve discovered while tooling around the Apple Podcasts website
  • [2:15] It’s INSANE to send people to Apple Podcasts (iTunes) to listen to your show
  • [3:59] You’ve created tons of goodies. Why send your audience AWAY from them?
  • [6:21] There are ways you can tell Google that you have GREAT resources – sending people away from your site is NOT ONE OF THEM!
  • [9:09] How you may be telling Google NOT to send people to your website
  • [11:02] How you can apply this lesson right now.

Apple Podcasts - send people there to kill your podcast growth curve

So I spend a lot of time in the Apple Podcasts directory. You know, that place that used to be called iTunes but now is called Apple Podcasts?

And what am I DOING in the Apple Podcasts directory?

Honestly, I’m looking for clients, for people who are producing great content and want a great production partner to take the podcast time suck off their hands so they can do better things with their time.

One of the things I experience while in the directory is that I usually click the little link that says website, right there next to their podcast listing, and I’ll go to visit the website. I want to check them out and see their show. Who knows? Maybe there’s a way we can work together.

Here’s the problem – the way people are killing their own podcast growth curve. Ready?

Podcasters often put a really cool looking show notes page up for particular episode. I go there. I scroll up and down, up and down up, and down that page trying to find a stinkin’ web player so I can actually hear what their podcast sounds like.

And do you know what I find?

Don't kill your podcast growth curve by sending people to appleI find that silly little piece of artwork that says “Listen on Apple Podcasts” and that’s the only way they have for me to listen to their show. I have to go OFF their site to listen on somebody else’s platform.

It’s one of the dumbest things I’ve ever seen and in this episode of Podcastification I walk through 3 important reasons you should not be doing that on your show notes pages.

That’s my rant and I’m sticking to it.

#1 REASON: You’re forcing people to listen to your podcast in a way many are unable to listen

Android users can't listen on Apple Podcasts

Not everybody has an Apple phone. GASP!

It’s true. What’s my point?

There are many, many, many people, who will not be able to listen to your podcast at all if you send them to Apple Podcasts to listen. Why? Because they don’t have the Apple app on their phone that you’re trying to send them to.

OK, what if they are on a computer? It could be a very similar issue.

If they don’t have the iTunes software installed, they’re going to be sent to a webpage that has NO players on it at all. So they’ll either get frustrated and turn away (most likely) or they’ll get frustrated and turn away.

Hmmmmmm.

In short, people using android phones are not going to be able to listen to your show simply by clicking on that Apple Podcasts logo.

So don’t send them there in the first place!

OK, OK – if you want to include the logo on the page and you want the logo to link to Apple Podcasts, go ahead. But don’t make that the only way someone can listen to your show when they come to your shows notes page. It’s ridiculous because you’re not making it easy for your listener to actually be a listener.

Does that make sense?

#2 REASON: You’ve got lots of good goodies on your website – and you’re sending people away.

Your podcast growth curve depends on your goodies

On purpose.

Time after time after time when people land on your show notes page.

You’re sending people away from all the goodies you’ve created for them to see. Listen now, this is important. If your goal as a podcaster is to get your target audience listening to your show and becoming familiar with you as a resource around your topic, that’s EXACTLY what you should be doing. But if you send them away from your site, that’s not going to happen. They’re not gonna to get to get to see all the cool goodies you have for them.

They’ve not had the opportunity to see things you’ve got – like books, and courses, and consulting, and things like that, the things that you offer that you’re actually wanting them to get from you.

May I say this bluntly? You need to keep those people on your website if at all possible – and the best way to do that is to include actual web player from your media host – NOT by sending them to Apple Podcasts.

And it’s not that hard to insert that player.

For example on Libsyn, a player code is provided to you for every episode. You just click a little green button and it opens a window, and there’s the code.

  • You copy it
  • You go to your WordPress website or even your Wix website or your Squarespace site
  • You go into the code section where you want that player to appear and you paste in that code.

Walah! You have a clickable web player right there on your page.

And don’t worry, all those plays count as downloads in your stats.

REASON #3: You get to tell Google you’ve got great resources when you DON’T send people to Apple Podcasts

Here’s a little fact about the way Google search works.

The longer people stay on your web page after coming there from doing a Google search, the more Google thinks your particular page was a great answer to the question they were searching for. It’s that simple.

Let me give you a scenario:

Jimmy John - don't send him away and kill your podcast growth curve

Say Jimmy John is searching for something about social media marketing and he finds an episode of your podcast through searching Google, that IS about social media marketing.

Okay, he comes to your web page and right there on your page is your great episode title. your great art work, your great podcast player and he decides to click the play button. He’s gonna to stay on that page at least for a while as he listens to the beginning of that episode to see if it is going to answer the question has has about social media marketing.

You’ve got Jimmy John on your page – so to speak – as a captive audience for at least a little while.

Naturally, that means you’ve got to be making great audio content that draws him in right away and makes him appreciate what it is you have to share, but that’s kind of beside the point here.

The real point is this: As that searcher is on your webpage – Google is tracking him and is saying, “Hey, Jimmy John searched for “social media marketing.” Jimmy John found this page and now Jimmy John is staying on that page for two minutes, three minutes, five minutes, seven minutes, however long he listens.

Google’s algorithm is making some digital assumptions based on Jimmy John’s behavior while he’s on your page – the biggest assumption being that your page is a good resource for people who are searching for the topic of social media marketing.

And you know what’s going to happen then?

The next time someone searches for social media marketing, your particular show notes page that Jimmy John found is going to be pushed higher in the search for those people to find. That’s just the way the search algorithms work at this point in time.

And for that reason alone, you want to make sure you’re not sending people off your page – because that does exactly the opposite.

Let me give you that same scenario again in reverse:

  • Say Jimmy John searches for “social media marketing.”
  • Say he finds your web page.
  • Say he scrolls through the web page like I do day after day and can’t find a web player but he only finds a piece of artwork that says, “Go listen on Apple Podcasts” and he clicks on that artwork.

Within 10 to 15 seconds Jimmy John has come to your page and immediately bounced off your page.

What do you think Google thinks in its digital mind?

It thinks, “This was not a good resource for people searching for the term “social media marketing.” And so it’s actually going to diminish your ranking in Google search.

Do you see what’s happening?

You are killing your own podcast growth curve. Don’t do it.

killing your podcast growth curve

How to stop killing your podcast growth curve.

Now that you know the mistake, it’s time to do something about it. This is just one of those ways we make a mistake periodically, not even thinking it through in terms of the impact it’s going to have, based on the knowledge we already have.

Make changes.

Get rid of that artwork or the links to Apple Podcasts. Or if you absolutely have to have it, ensure that people who land on your page can STAY on your page, by having a player right there for them to use.

Look at your show notes pages and see if there’s anything you’re doing that is keeping people from staying on your page longer – and FIX IT!

Rant over.

  • www.Libsyn.com – get up to 1 ½ months of hosting free by using the code “PFT” (affiliate)

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