|
|
|
COMMUNICATION IN EVERYDAY LIFE Assertiveness skills Body language Communicating with your children Conversation skills Difficult People Emotional Maturity Enhancing your marriage Family Life Interpersonal relationships Speaking skills Writing skills BUSINESS COMMUNICATION Business ethics Business etiquette Business writing Communication in the workplace Cross-cultural communication Conflict resolution Creative thinking Crisis management Customer relations Effective meetings Job-hunting skills Management strategies Marketing communication Negotiating skills Networking in business Presentation skills Team building Technology and communication Telephone marketing
|
work > featureThe Business Benefits to PodcastingBy Michelle V. Rafter If you think starting a business podcast will make you rich, Sallie Goetsch has bad news for you. “There are a lot of reasons to podcast, but instant millionaire status isn’t one of them,” says Goetsch, proprietor of The Podcast Asylum, a San Francisco podcast producer. People who hit the jackpot from podcasting alone are few and far between. Instead, aim to use podcasting as part of an overall marketing strategy. Podcasts are great for establishing expertise or connecting with prospective clients. “There’s something very intimate about having people hear you through the earbuds of their iPod,” Goetsch says. “To be able to let people feel like they know you and trust you is an important step toward getting them to spend money on your product or service.” As business podcasting takes off, so do options for creating, hosting, and promoting the recordings, according to Goetsch and other pros. You can put together hardware and software to produce your own. Or if you or your company would rather not be bothered, you can hire a producer to do the work without breaking the bank. Creating Your Podcast
Once you’ve got a podcast episode in the can, you need a place to host it. Although you can use an existing blog or Web site, a podcast specialist such as Liberated Syndication -- LibSyn for short -- offers useful features for a limited cost. For as little as $5 a month, you get 100 MB on LibSyn’s server, an RSS feed, statistics to measure listenership, and a basic blog. If you want a finished product with a little more pizzazz, hire a production company to do the heavy lifting. Producers will write scripts, mix sound, find a hosting service, and submit episodes to podcast directories. Podcast Asylum sells a small-business starter package for $1,100 that covers scripting and recording of three to four podcasts and submitting them to podcast directories. Peter Brusso, a podcasting producer in Anaheim, Calif., who works with lawyers and other sole proprietors, charges $1,000 for an hour-long podcast with similar extras. When your podcast is up, list it on a popular podcast directory, such as iTunes, Podcast Alley, Blubrry, or Podcast Pickle. Listing is free, but you’ll have to go through each directory’s registration process to do it. More Podcasting Tips Here’s a checklist of dos and don’ts:
Ultimately, podcasting is about bringing attention to yourself and your business, says Van Orden. It might not be a direct line to the bank, but it can help you build a relationship with listeners and trust in the market. “Sales and marketing will be easier, and the money will follow,” he says. Michelle V. Rafter is a journalist based in Portland, Ore. She has spent more than 20 years writing about business and technology for magazines, newspapers, wire services, and Web sites.
GOG giving away free PC gaming classicsIf you are one of those people who think nothing in this world is free, it's time to pay a visit to the Web site for GOG, which stands for Good Ol' Games Read More |