Josh Spector’s Post

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I teach experts how to use writing to grow their business.

Dear podcast hosts, When you interview an expert, please spend less time on their personal history and more time on their actual expertise. I want to learn how to do what they do, not what they did in kindergarten. Thanks. PS - It's OK if your podcast is 20 minutes shorter.

Josh Spector

I teach experts how to use writing to grow their business.

1y

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Louis Grenier

A recovering Frenchman who helps marketers stand the f*ck out | 1-to-1 Coaching | Sarcasm

1y

That's why Everyone Hates Podcast Hosts. And why I had to create a marketing podcast without the fluff 5 years ago.

Gavin Ingham

Progress is impossible without change.

1y

I'm gonna play DA on this one... All podcasts and all audiences are different. Some love longer podcasts that ramble and some prefer shorter. Some like to hear history, some don't. Some are okay with their podcast being 20m shorter, some aren't. If all podcasts were the same and of the same format, none would stand out. I'd argue that the more important thing is to know your audience, know what they want and know how you're going to attract them. :-).

🎙 Alastair McDermott

Podcast Host - The AI-Powered Thought Leader

1y

100% agree. I have 75 episodes and counting of The Recognized Authority podcast with no guest backstory question.

Christopher Lochhead🏴☠️🇮🇱

Friend to the different | Category Designer | 14X #1 author Play Bigger, 22 Laws of Category Design | Top 0.5% podcaster |

1y

1000% every podcast that starts with, "tell me about your background" makes a giant mistake. It's the host's job to set up the conversation & the guest - BEFORE the dialogue starts! 🏴☠️👊

Angela Rush RN, MSN, NI-BC

Clinical Informatics Nurse @ Healthcare IT | EHR Optimization

1y

Meh, everyone has an opinion. Personally, I like to hear details like this. Maybe not a specific point where “you knew you were a writer”, but how’d you get here? What obstacles have you encountered? What mistakes have you made? Were the people in your life supportive? This is just me, though. I love hearing details (and telling them, unfortunately for those who live with me 😊).

Jane Friedman

Reporting on the publishing industry

1y

Amen. As someone interviewed frequently on podcasts, I really really really dislike questions like "Tell me about when you first knew you were a writer" or "How did you fall in love with words?" or any question that seeks some kind of "origin story." There isn't one.

This is kind of a fine line. Personal history or personal life is nice when it is actually relevant and comes up ORGANICALLY within the conversation. This requires two things. A. a podcast host that knows how to interview. There are many who simply lack this skill. B. The podcast has someone who is responsible for researching the interview subject and becoming an expert on the subject expert. If those things are not done well is when the interview comes off awkward. Somewhat related to this but I wish I had a dollar for everytime someone interviews a woman at the executive level and asks the question about work/life balance. 🤦♀️ Please shut up already.

Nick Nichols

B2B Sales Copywriting & Messaging 📢B2B Branding/Positioning Packages 🆘Profile Makeovers 🚀B2B Strategy & Guidance 🧲B2B Lead Generation & Advice👨💼LinkedIn Marketing Advice & Guidance📚 See NickNichols.com

1y

What bugs me the most about certain "big name" podcasts (one in particular) is that they are "mutual admiration societies" where the host and the guest spend more time on back-patting than on substance. Another pet peeve: Don't tell me about someone who started 10+ years ago with an idea or concept that is not duplicatable or viable in 2022. Give us at least one nugget that is usable today.

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