School of Podcasting's Big News with Podpage

The School of Podcasting has been acquired, and yes, that means changes are coming. But don’t panic! The essence of what we do is staying intact. We’re diving into the nitty-gritty of what this acquisition means for our loyal members and anyone thinking about joining.
New Free Tier
We’re adding a free tier, more courses, and even a way for you to connect with podcasting experts. This is all about making the podcasting journey smoother and more accessible for everyone.
Brenden and I have a vision for the future, and it’s about empowering you to take your podcasting game to the next level. If you’ve ever wanted to launch a podcast, or if you’re already knee-deep in it and looking for ways to monetize, we’ve got you covered. We’re building a community where you can learn, grow, and thrive, and I’m more excited than ever to be a part of your podcasting journey.
So, let’s get to work and see what we can do together!
My Favorite CRM
I'm not making this up. My favorite CRM is call "Less Annoying CRM. Its s a simple, no-frills customer relationship management tool built specifically for small businesses, solopreneurs, and anyone who feels overwhelmed by complex CRMs. It focuses on the essentials: tracking contacts, managing leads, organizing tasks, and keeping a clear sales pipeline (although I don't use the pipleline tool)
Takeaways:
- This week, we celebrated the acquisition of the School of Podcasting by PodPage, which is a huge deal.
- I went from living in my brother's basement after a divorce to running a successful podcasting business, talk about an upgrade.
- Relationships are key in podcasting; it's wild how many people you meet that can help you out.
- We’re excited to expand the School of Podcasting, bringing more courses and experts for everyone to learn from.
- This merger means more time and resources to create better content for our community, so stay tuned!
- Don't worry, if you’re already a member, nothing changes except for more value coming your way!
Links referenced in this episode:
- schoolofpodcasting.com
- podpage.com
- podnews.net
- Less Annoying CRM
- Last week's episode on Podcasting SEO
- PodSEO
Mentioned in this episode:
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Question of the Month
One of our favorite questions, "What are your top podcasting pet peeves? You know the things that make you press fast forward, delete, or maybe even unfollow... share your frustration with these tactics along with a little bit about your show and your website (so I can add a link in the show notes). You can upload a pre-recorded version or press record on the website. I need your answer by March 27th, 2026
Quit Thinking About It and START THAT PODCAST
If you have ever turned down the radio to hear your phone in the car, you know how to mix audio. If you have ever attached a photo to an email, you know how to upload an mp3 to a media host. Deleting text in Word is the same as delete audio in audacity. Yes, there is a learning curve but it's not as scary as you think. I'll be there the whole way, and you can join worry free with a 30 day money-back guarantee. Go to schoolofpodcasting.com/join
See Your Show On Podpage
If you host a podcast, your website should work as hard as your episodes do.At Podpage, we automatically create a beautiful, professional site for your show — complete with episode pages, transcripts, audio players, SEO optimization, and built-in tools to grow your audience.No design work. No plugins. No ongoing maintenance.In less than a minute, you can see exactly what your podcast would look like on Podpage.Go to podpage.com/preview and generate your free preview site now. (No Credit Card Required)See your show the way it should look.
00:00 - Untitled
00:27 - Untitled
00:28 - Big News
01:29 - Intro
02:07 - Because of My Podcast
02:29 - How Did This Happen?
06:03 - Competition Mindset
07:33 - Humble Brag Theater
08:27 - Got a Job In Podcasting
09:13 - Hired as a Consultant
11:26 - Message From Brenden
13:21 - The Big News
13:30 - How did This Happen/
16:43 - Join the School of Podcasting
17:46 - Podpage
18:34 - Deals Details: What Did They Buy?
20:49 - What if this Doesn't work?
22:12 - And Dave's Other Shows?
22:46 - A Solid Trust
23:27 - Future Experts
24:52 - The Vision
26:51 - Pricing Perks
28:20 - More Time on the SOP
28:53 - Differences Between Free and Paid
30:05 - Experimenting with Freemium
31:24 - WordPress Migration
31:57 - Courses are Now Visible
33:50 - The Future
35:52 - Dave's Retirement
36:44 - schoolofpodcasting.com/1028
37:38 - Question of the Month
38:33 - Podcasting Observations
38:50 - Relationship Software
40:13 - Join the School of Podcasting
Well, some big news this week, and that is the School of Podcasting has been acquired by PodPage.
Speaker AHooray.
Speaker AThank you, James Cridland from podnews.net but I was thinking about, how am I going to talk about this?
Speaker ABecause this.
Speaker ADoes this really give you any value?
Speaker AAnd I could just hear the listener
Speaker Bthinking, oh, great, another episode where Dave talks about Dave.
Speaker BUgh, seriously, it's like, enough about me.
Speaker BWhat do you think about me?
Speaker AAnd so I was like, what can we learn from this?
Speaker AAnd I was like, how did I get from a guy that was just divorced, just went through bankruptcy, living in his brother's house, to building a company that eventually got acquired?
Speaker AAnd then I saw it.
Speaker AThere was a kind of a theme that ran through the whole thing.
Speaker AAnd if I hadn't done it, none of this would have happened.
Speaker ASo, yes, we're going to walk down memory lane a little bit, but we've got some lessons to learn along the way.
Speaker AHit it, ladies.
Speaker AThe School of Podcasting with Dave Jackson.
Speaker APodcasting since 2005.
Speaker AI'm your award winning hall of fame podcast coach, Dave Jackson.
Speaker AThanking you so much for tuning in.
Speaker AIf you are new to the show, welcome aboard.
Speaker AThis is where we help you plan, we help you launch, we help you grow.
Speaker AHey, if you want to monetize, we can even help you with that.
Speaker AThe website.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AHasn't changed.
Speaker AWe'll get in.
Speaker AThere's really not much that's changed, but there are a couple things, and I'm excited about it.
Speaker AAnd that website, of course.
Speaker ATell your friends.
Speaker ASchoolofpodcasting.com welcome to because of My Podcast,
Speaker Bwhere we spotlight the results people are achieving because of their podcast.
Speaker ASo, yeah, my.
Speaker ABecause of my podcast, my podcast got purchased along with my business.
Speaker ABut we're going to go back, way back here.
Speaker AAnd basically it boils down to the thing that I saw.
Speaker AThis wouldn't have happened unless this happened.
Speaker AOh, and this wouldn't happen, except, well, this happened and this happened, etc.
Speaker AAnd I was like, well, how did each of those things happen?
Speaker AAnd if you're an introvert, you're going to hate the answer.
Speaker ABut it comes down to relationships.
Speaker AAnd I realize for some people, hearing that word just makes you want to go.
Speaker ABut I often say one of the biggest benefits of a podcast is people you have no business talking to will come on your show.
Speaker AAnd so I thought about it.
Speaker AWhen I first started off in podcasting, like the early days, 2005, I connected with a guy named Marcus Couch.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause we both love hard Rock music.
Speaker AAnd Marcus was a guy that I believe I really connected at the very first podcast event.
Speaker ABack then, it was, I believe, the podcast portable media outlet, something like that.
Speaker ABut at that event, I met Marcus Couch.
Speaker AI met Paul Culligan.
Speaker AI remember Paul walking in with a bag of a box of books saying, you know, if we got a big enough audience, I think we could actually make some money at this podcast thing.
Speaker AAnd people wanted to throw us out.
Speaker AAnd I probably.
Speaker AI'm a little hazy on that because it's a while, but I think I met Rob Walsh there.
Speaker AIf he was there, that's probably.
Speaker AI've known Rob forever and.
Speaker ABut Marcus.
Speaker ASo there's.
Speaker AThere's.
Speaker AI'm growing my network.
Speaker AMarcus put in a good word for me at Pod show, which later would rebrand Amivio, which enabled me to work for and with the one and only inventor of podcasting, Adam Curry.
Speaker AHello, everybody.
Speaker BMy name's Adam Curry.
Speaker BThis is the Morning Announcements.
Speaker BEnjoy it in the morning.
Speaker AAnd so back then, this show was actually called the School of Podcasting's Morning Announcements.
Speaker AAnd that's where you learn the lesson, don't get cute with your name.
Speaker ABecause we were calling it the Morning Announcements.
Speaker AAnd then you had to explain, because you get it.
Speaker AIt's the school of podcasting.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo if you have to explain your name, you've picked a bad one.
Speaker AAnd so I was able to get on POD show, the first podcasting network, which later became Mevio.
Speaker AGot my first advertising spot from McDonald's.
Speaker AGot to get to know Callie Lewis, who is now Luria Petrucci, Keith and the girl Michael Butler, and as I said, Marcus Couch.
Speaker ABut meanwhile, things like Podcast Pickle.
Speaker ABack in the day, this was one of the first podcast directories, along with a thing called Podcast Alley.
Speaker AThis is all before Apple and maybe itunes had come along, but the owner of Podcast Pickle was a guy named Gary Leland.
Speaker AAnd then later, I don't know whose idea it was, we did a show still around, hasn't had an episode out in forever called Today in Podcasting.
Speaker AAnd who was it?
Speaker APeople I'd already met.
Speaker APaul Culligan, Kennedy, Gary Leland, and Rob Walsh.
Speaker AWe did that for a while, and then I took my podcast and I interviewed people like Rob from Libsyn.
Speaker AI got to know the owner of Spreaker, who has now launched Pod SEO.
Speaker AWe talked about that in last week's episode, links in the show notes.
Speaker AAnd I got to know the head of Blubrry, a phenomenal guy named Todd Cochran.
Speaker AI miss him a lot.
Speaker AAnd I met these guys at events, and they would come on my show.
Speaker AAnd again, I've said this before, when you do a solo show, you grow your influence, because right now, I'm just talking to you.
Speaker AAnd when you do an interview show, you grow your network.
Speaker ABut the thing that really kind of blew me away in the early days is there were, like, there was, you know, Marcus had the Hard rock show, and C.C.
Speaker Achapman had a, you know, pop show and this and that, and I had the podcast show.
Speaker AAnd then some guy named Cliff Ravenscraft came along, and I was like, how dare you?
Speaker AYou know, but really, that's kind of what I was thinking.
Speaker ABut then I listened to Cliff Sho and another guy named Daniel J. Lewis and Ray Ortega and David Hooper, and all these guys were talking about podcasting, and I was like, but that's my thing.
Speaker ABut they each had their own spin.
Speaker AAnd so after I thought, how dare you?
Speaker AIt turns out these guys were the guys I was hanging out at events, and we would completely nerd out around podcasting.
Speaker AAnd so again, in 2013, I was approached by the one and only Ray Ortega as Google Hangouts on air.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AWelcome to the History Channel.
Speaker AIt had just rolled out, and he thought it would be cool if we took these really nerdy podcasting conversations between myself, Ray, and Daniel and do them in public.
Speaker ACall it the Podcasters Roundtable, because he really wanted to play with this live thing, and he was getting into video, and I got a lot of new subscribers from that show.
Speaker AHow did it work?
Speaker ANetworking and not treating your, quote, competition like your competition.
Speaker AI love those guys.
Speaker AI wish we could get that show to come back.
Speaker ASo that was 2013.
Speaker AIn 2014, then.
Speaker AThis is total humble brag theater.
Speaker ARick Calvert was running the New Media Expo, previously known as the Blog World and New Media Expo.
Speaker AAnd he called people like Libs and Spreaker and Blueberry, and he said, who should I get to fill this empty spot previously filled by my buddy Cliff Ravenscraft?
Speaker AAnd they needed a new head of podcasting to pick speakers and things for this event.
Speaker AThis was a huge event at the time, and all three of those companies, Libs and Spreaker and Bluberry, said the same thing.
Speaker AWhat do you think about Dave Jackson?
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause I'd had them on my show and because they listened to my show.
Speaker ARelationships and producing good content.
Speaker AAnd the cool thing about that was I got to interview all of the speakers, and I got to hire Pat Flynn as the keynote.
Speaker AIf we jump up to 2016, I lost my job as a software Trainer.
Speaker AAnd I called my now ex wife and I said, hey, I want to take the school of podcasting and do it as a full time gig.
Speaker AAnd then I could be on your health benefits and, hey, you make a boatload of money.
Speaker AYou've been doing nursing for 20 years.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd she said, which may be one of the reasons she's my ex wife.
Speaker ASo I wanted to get a job in podcasting.
Speaker ASo I looked at my relationships and I called my friend Rob Walsh.
Speaker AI said, buddy, this could get awkward.
Speaker AI got good news and bad news.
Speaker AAnd he said, oh, I'll take bad news for 100 Alex.
Speaker AAnd I said, I just lost my job.
Speaker AAnd he goes, oh, wow, what's the good news?
Speaker AAnd I said, I'm available to work for you.
Speaker AAnd so I went to work for Libsyn.
Speaker AIf we jump ahead four years, it's 2020.
Speaker AI'm working at Libsyn.
Speaker AAnd according to Brennan Mulligan, the CEO and founder of PodPage, he reached out to Daniel J. Lewis and Ray Ortega.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause he wanted to make a product and he needed to know what people wanted.
Speaker AHe built podpage the same way I recommend you build a podcast, find out what people want and give it to them.
Speaker AAnd both of my buddies, Daniel and Ray, said, look, if you really want to understand what podcasters want, the person you want to talk to is Dave Jackson.
Speaker ASo in 2020, I got hired as a podcast consultant by Brendan Mulligan to talk about this new idea, he said, called PodPage.
Speaker AAnd the very first thing I said when I met him was this.
Speaker ABut from, from what I've seen from your product, my first question is, do you have an affiliate program?
Speaker AAnd so it's been love at first sight ever since I first saw PodPage.
Speaker AAnd for four years I was telling everybody about PodPage.
Speaker AI was one of his top affiliates.
Speaker AI was slightly getting in trouble at Libsyn because at that point they owned a web hosting company called Pear Networks.
Speaker AAnd instead of driving people to Pear Networks, I would drive people to PodPage.
Speaker AAnd when they asked why, I simply said, it's better.
Speaker AAnd that was kind of it.
Speaker AThere's this thing called integrity.
Speaker AAnd I always say every podcaster starts with two things, no audience and integrity.
Speaker AAnd the goal is to get an audience without losing your integrity.
Speaker AAnd nothing against pear networks, but PodPage is made for podcasters and it was just better.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnd so four years goes by.
Speaker AI'm one of the top affiliates.
Speaker AI asked him, can I buy the domain tripod page and learn POD page.
Speaker AAnd I would give him an idea in some cases, like, that's great.
Speaker AAnd he would somehow wave this magic wand and it would just appear and it really got to this point.
Speaker AHere's another clip from that first meeting that we had.
Speaker AWhat doesn't it do, I guess, at this point?
Speaker AAnd so we would text back and forth, kind of keep in touch.
Speaker AAnd then one day Brendan sent me a video via text.
Speaker BHey, hope you're well.
Speaker BI'm here in Maryland on a farm, so very nice and peaceful.
Speaker BSo we've known each other now for four years and I feel like, you know, I've always really appreciated everything you've done contribution wise for PodPage externally.
Speaker BI think that we've talked about this for a second before, but I'm curious to see if you'd want to have a conversation about essentially coming over and working on podpage full time.
Speaker BAnd when I say full time, I mean, you know, your Libsyn full time kind of commitment.
Speaker AAnd then he rolled out a position that sounded like it was tailor made
Speaker Bfor me, basically community focused.
Speaker BAnd so that would mean doing the support.
Speaker BAnd it's kind of stuff you're already doing, which is why I feel like you'd be such a good fit.
Speaker BLike, you know, I'm already asking if you'd be interested in like, right.
Speaker BDoing our demo videos for us and you know, stuff like that.
Speaker BLike I just doing that, doing like a podcast about websites.
Speaker BAnd so I know you're doing a lot of the stuff sort of with the angle of driving affiliate sales.
Speaker BSo I'm curious to see if you would just be interested in doing it to drive POD Page growth.
Speaker ASo one of the things he said really caught my attention because when I was working at Libsyn, I wasn't really allowed to mention the School of Podcasting a whole lot.
Speaker AAnd Brendan said this.
Speaker BYou really value the flexibility and being able to keep pushing forward with School of Podcasting.
Speaker BThere'd be no conflict there.
Speaker BWe could talk about ways we could integrate it in a way to be able to drive customers to School of Podcasting.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhich really caught my eye.
Speaker AAnd so I've been.
Speaker AIt's hard to believe I've been at PodPage for two years now and that has led to this.
Speaker BWe announced yesterday that PodPage has acquired the School of Podcasting.
Speaker BWe are incredibly excited to sort of partner with Dave on this next leg of the school podcasting journey.
Speaker AAt the end of 2025, we were doing kind of our yearly wrap up and Brennan, it's kind of funny said, you know, it seems like everybody knows you.
Speaker AAgain, relationships.
Speaker AAnd I'm also here to say, no, not everybody knows me, but why isn't the school of podcasting bigger?
Speaker AAnd I said, well, I make part time income from a part time job.
Speaker AI work seven to midnight, a couple nights a week, and a little bit on the weekends, and I make, you know, part time money.
Speaker AAnd I think that made him go, hmm.
Speaker AAnd so it's a great marriage in the fact that PodPage is still an amazing product.
Speaker AAnd I know you're gonna say it's because you work there, but I've now proven I've loved this product really, since it was love at first sight.
Speaker AAnd the one thing that people leave PodPage for, like, what's the big reason?
Speaker AWhat's the one thing?
Speaker AAnd it's very simple.
Speaker AIt has nothing to do with PodPage.
Speaker AIt's just they quit podcasting probably because of one of those really selfish things called babies.
Speaker AThe arch nemesis of podcasters.
Speaker ABut that's our biggest.
Speaker AWe do an exit survey and it's like, yeah, I'm not podcasting anymore.
Speaker ASo we're hoping that the school of podcasting can help some of these people keep podcasting.
Speaker AAnd so again, relationships.
Speaker AAnd if you're an introvert, you gotta just pull yourself out.
Speaker AI've told this story before.
Speaker AWhen I was 16, I was fired from my first job because I was too shy.
Speaker AAnd a teacher of mine said, act the way you want to be and you will be the way you act.
Speaker AAnd I am still deep, deep, deep, deep down, still a little shy, but not as introverted as I, as I was.
Speaker AAnd I'm just here to tell you, how do you get better at it?
Speaker AYou just have to do it.
Speaker AI remember once I was at an event and I went there looking to find people that needed podcasts.
Speaker AAnd I went to.
Speaker AI was speaking at this event and I went to a dinner that was all speakers.
Speaker AWell, hello.
Speaker AEvery one of those people needed a podcast.
Speaker AAnd yet there I was.
Speaker AI couldn't have been any further away from the group and.
Speaker AAnd I just kind of mentally kind of grabbed myself and was like, hey, look, you idiot, the opportunity is right here in front of you for about the next 20 minutes.
Speaker AAnd I just kind of mentally put my finger under my collar and just said, come on, you get over there.
Speaker AAnd I just, instead of thinking, oh, all these people, I picked one person.
Speaker AIt was a blonde female.
Speaker AAnd no, not that kind of thought here.
Speaker AI just was like, look, she's close.
Speaker AGo talk to her.
Speaker AAnd I just went over and I'm like, what brings you to the show?
Speaker AKind of thing?
Speaker AAnd got the conversation going.
Speaker AAnd the more you do that, the better you get at it.
Speaker AAnd nobody has punched me in the face yet.
Speaker ANow, if you want the nitty gritty of the actual deal, and what does it mean for members of the School of Podcasting, and what does it mean to you if you're not a member of the School of Podcasting?
Speaker AWe're going to talk about that right after this.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AWe did a town hall, and I'll have a link to that out@schoolofpodcasting.com 1028 but School of Podcasting member, and I love her to death.
Speaker AHer show is called Nosy af and she's very, very curious, which makes her a great podcaster.
Speaker AAnd she asked, all right, so what did Brendan buy?
Speaker BPodPage bought everything.
Speaker BBought the IP and the name and all that stuff.
Speaker BAnd when I presented Dave with options, I said, there's a couple different options.
Speaker BAnd all of them had a here's what we'll buy the IP for, and then here's a Rev share of going forward.
Speaker BThe question about equity, I mean, we get this as a different Q and A startup equity tends to be.
Speaker BIt seems like it's going to be a great idea, and very few times does it end up being a good idea because of just the way equity waterfalls work.
Speaker BAnd I don't ever intend to sell the company, so the equity would never turn into anything.
Speaker BSo instead of thinking about equity, I presented David the option of actual rev share.
Speaker BAnd the Rev share is very much is tied to.
Speaker BSpecifically tied to the School of Podcasting because I didn't want decisions made with PodPage or expenses with PodPage or anything muddying this work.
Speaker BAnd so we've actually, we're accounting for the school podcasting revenue and expenses totally separately.
Speaker BAnd then we're.
Speaker BWe have a profit share at the end of the year, and we will both be making the decisions on the expenses.
Speaker BSo it's kind of like a company running within a company that won't be touched by any of the expenses outside the company it doesn't have.
Speaker BDave's salary isn't actually part of the expenses for the school podcasting.
Speaker BAnd so the goal is the more we can grow the school podcasting, like Dave just continues to generate revenue or profit off of it.
Speaker BAnd after looking at spending time doing like, the analysis of the school podcasting is like financial books.
Speaker BI think it'll end up the entity itself will be more profitable because a lot of the expenses can just get absorbed into PodPage.
Speaker BThe point is that it was important to me that, like, as the school podcasting grew, his compensation for it still grew.
Speaker BAnd I think it would actually end up being better than if it was independent.
Speaker AAnd that's one of the things I get.
Speaker AI am now being guided by someone who's had multiple business and they've done well, but people have asked, well, what if it doesn't go well?
Speaker AAnd we actually have a lot of things in our paperwork that talk about that.
Speaker AAnd then Brendan on the roundtable mentioned this.
Speaker BI have bought businesses before where, like a year in, it didn't go as well as I was hoping.
Speaker BAs the new owner, I was like, oh, this business isn't.
Speaker BIsn't growing like I thought it would when I added more resources or the person who started it and I are misaligned.
Speaker BAnd then there's this whole thing, like, I put all this money into it.
Speaker BI can't just give it back to the person.
Speaker BBut I also don't really want to run it.
Speaker BShould I shut it down?
Speaker BShould I try to sell?
Speaker BIt's like, it's a little bit of a mess.
Speaker BSo Dave and I actually started with that conversation and, you know, assuming that nothing in the world goes crazy, even with AI and everything that's happening, basically what we said is the goal of this merger is that school Podcasting can help PodPage and PodPage can help school podcasting grow.
Speaker BAnd so it was kind of like, I forget, I think we said, we'll do a check in after one year and two years.
Speaker BAnd it was like, if after a couple years school podcasting hasn't grown, nothing's really different there.
Speaker BIt hasn't really helped podpage, like, if a strategy doesn't work, as long as there's some sort of balance on investment made and revenue, which there should be, we can just unwind it.
Speaker BBecause the goal here wasn't to, like, take something of Dave's and then make it.
Speaker BIt was just to, like, I want to put a lot of time and effort into it.
Speaker BAnd so this was the structure that we came up with.
Speaker AAnd what about ask the podcast coach, your podcast consultant, and all the other podcasts that Dave does?
Speaker BDave is a kind of a tricky person when it comes to both hiring and doing a deal like this because he has so many podcasts and they're all kind of related.
Speaker BWhen I first hired Dave for Pod Page, a lot of people ask me, well, was there anything in his Employment agreement about the school podcasting, because what if he does an episode on the school podcasting about a competitor or WordPress or.
Speaker BAnd if.
Speaker BWhen I've joined larger corporations before, usually when you join a big corporation, they basically say, you can't.
Speaker BYou have to stop doing all this other stuff because you work here now.
Speaker AAnd one of the things I loved when I first joined PodPage is I explained to Brennan that I do group coaching at noon.
Speaker AThat's why it's called Lunch with Dave.
Speaker AAnd I said, hey, can I expand that from 30 minutes to an hour?
Speaker AAnd he's like, sure.
Speaker AAnd we both trust each other because he knows that for every hour that I might be, even though technically it's my lunch hour, there are plenty of times I'm answering podpage tickets at 10:30 at night, because I always check before I go to bed.
Speaker ASo there's a lot of trust there.
Speaker AAnd that really helped the deal go fairly smooth once we got through the awkwardness of explaining.
Speaker AWhat exactly are you buying?
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnd so what is going to change at the school of podcasting?
Speaker BOne question I always ask Dave is like, you're.
Speaker BYou're a one.
Speaker BYou're one man.
Speaker BHow are you going to like.
Speaker BWhen I think of school podcasting, I think, like, tons of courses.
Speaker BHow do you handle doing all that?
Speaker BHave you ever thought about having other people do instruction?
Speaker BBecause I see just as like a person outside of this sort of educational world.
Speaker BI was like, all these people running courses and all this.
Speaker BLike, everyone's trying to, like, launch their own set of courses, generally about different stuff.
Speaker BLike, have you ever thought about inviting other people to publish on the school podcasting their own course?
Speaker BAnd we're going to start experimenting with that by having more than just Dave teaching?
Speaker BBecause Dave might go on.
Speaker BHe does some great deep dives into software, but it might be even better to have the people who created the software do the deep dives into their software in a way that obviously would be promotional because they're promoting their own thing, but hopefully educational.
Speaker BThat's a balance that we want to strike.
Speaker BAnd then also just people who are, you know, like, there's certain people who are the best podcast lawyers.
Speaker BSo when you think about what you should know, podcast, as far as a podcast are about, like, how to set up, you know, your entity or anything you're going to do around law, instead of Dave and I trying to, like, figure that out, let's have the people come on who know it the best.
Speaker BAnd yes, if a great podcast lawyer is teaching you about what you need to do, and then you need help.
Speaker BYou're probably going to reach out to the podcast lawyer.
Speaker BSo it's hopefully going to be good for them, but the education will be good for the community, and so that's something we're going to try.
Speaker ASo what's the overall vision for the school of podcasting?
Speaker BMy vision is for school podcasting as, like, the person who came today and said, hey, let's, let's make this bigger is relatively simple.
Speaker BIt's just, it should be where anyone who wants to learn anything about podcasting signs up.
Speaker BThere's not really a lot of nuance to it.
Speaker BLike, if you're a pretty big podcaster and you're trying to, and you've got a good audience now you're trying to figure out monetization, it should be super valuable to you because you can log in and you can read all kinds of stuff about monetization.
Speaker BYou can take courses, you can take courses from experts.
Speaker BYou can connect with other people at your level.
Speaker AAnd so when I heard that vision, I was like, that's my vision.
Speaker BIf you're just thinking about podcasting for the first time, and you woke up thinking, I think I want to do this podcast.
Speaker BCome in as a free user, get some basic information about if this is something you want to do.
Speaker BAnd then if you're serious, you sign up and your hand is held through the process of launching a podcast in those first steps.
Speaker BSo the more people who can come in with their expertise, I think the better.
Speaker BAnd so we've got to figure out the right way to both make sure that the education quality is consistent and also, you know, give, give enough a framework for people to teach.
Speaker BBut I think that it'll be, it'll be really cool to have a more centralized knowledge base for sort of all podcaster education.
Speaker BThe thing about PodPage over the last six years is I go to these conferences and I see Dave's old company, Libsyn, when he used to work for Libsyn, there are all these hosts that are all friends with each other, but at the end of the day, they're.
Speaker BThey're all competing for the same customer.
Speaker BAnd so, yes, everyone's friends, but at the same time.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, Libsyn would love a Buzzsprout customer to come over.
Speaker BA Buzzsprout would love a Captivate customer to come over.
Speaker BWell, PodPage has always been like, no one else really does websites, not really at these conferences.
Speaker BIt's just I, and I work with everyone so I've got this Switzerland approach of being like, yeah, I'm friends with everyone and I think school podcasting should be as neutral.
Speaker BIt's just a neutral platform for podcasters to come and hopefully we can serve as many people as possible.
Speaker AAnd I love that attitude because I've always been Switzerland.
Speaker AEven when I worked for Libsyn, I was friends with people at Captivate and Buzzsprout and Blueberry, and Brendan has come up with some pricing perks.
Speaker BThis is going to be a little bumpy because I'm still working on the way to do this, so it's easy.
Speaker BBut my end goal for this will be if you were paid a paid member of PodPage and you are a paid member of School of Podcasting, you will get an automatic discount on your school podcasting membership.
Speaker BAnd if you go to our blog and read about it and we have it in our support center, like how the discount, depending on what tier you're on, what your discount's gonna be, Obviously, like, people who Pay more for PodPage should get a bigger discount on school podcasting, but it's gonna be automatically applied so there's no coupon.
Speaker BSo no one who's like, just hasn't heard about this misses out.
Speaker BWhen the school podcasting goes to bill you, whenever the regular billing period is or when you go to sign up, it will do an automatic check to podpage and say, is this email address a paying member of PodPage?
Speaker BIf it is, then it'll automatically apply a coupon so you don't have to do anything.
Speaker BAnd if you've been a long standing member of Cool Podcasting, you've just been paying, you just get billed.
Speaker BYou should, starting soon see your bill just automatically reduced if you are a paying member of PodPage.
Speaker BSo that's how it's going to work.
Speaker BWe're still making sure that it's, it's consistent the way that the invoices are created and stuff.
Speaker BWe're still making sure that everything is done at the right time.
Speaker BIf you're paying for both, we really appreciate you supporting both services.
Speaker BAnd so we want to make sure to give a discount.
Speaker BSo the next time you get a bill after, now that it's public, check if there's a discount.
Speaker BIf there's not, obviously just write Dave.
Speaker BWe can make the adjustment and more importantly, figure out where the bug is.
Speaker AAnd so now that the School of podcasting is going to be part of my day job, this is how Brendan sees it.
Speaker BSo I said to Dave, I was like, I'M kind of thinking you're probably 80, 20 as far as the time you're spending on PodPage and School of Podcasting right now in your working time.
Speaker BSo 80% of your time is on PodPage 20.
Speaker BI was like, by the end of the year, I would like to flip that.
Speaker BAnd so you're spending 20% of your time on PodPage and 80% on School of Podcasting.
Speaker BThat's my goal.
Speaker BAnd the way that I want to do that is try to figure out any of the areas of PodPage that are taking more time than they should and try to help with that.
Speaker AAnd so for current members of the School of Podcasting, they're like, has anything changed?
Speaker AAnd the answer is no.
Speaker AWe added a free tier.
Speaker ANow the free tier gets access to a couple courses, one that is before you start the road to podcast success.
Speaker AAnd of course there's a free podpage course and then you get access to some of the community called general Podcasting.
Speaker ABut there are also things like the SOP episodes.
Speaker AThere is a special ask the Team section.
Speaker AThere are event replays.
Speaker ASo if you can't come to the events, there's replays, there are questions about courses, there's an AI community, an analytics community, a monetization community.
Speaker ASo all those, you get the general one.
Speaker ABut if you want all of the community, then you would become a paid.
Speaker AAnd then likewise, there is coaching that I always talk about on this show that you get access to me.
Speaker AAnd so that is part of the paid plan.
Speaker ASo it's really kind of gears for people that want to come in and chime in with the community, get their feet wet, get into podcasting.
Speaker AI was looking today, there's some things on my YouTube channel.
Speaker ASo it's things I've already said for free in public.
Speaker AI'm going to add those to the free course.
Speaker AAnd that's for me, one of the things that I'm kind of excited about.
Speaker AI've never really done the freemium.
Speaker AAnd freemium is a different model because if you don't have valuable things in the free well, then why would they upgrade?
Speaker ABecause this stuff isn't very good.
Speaker AAnd, and then likewise, if you add too much stuff to the free well, then why do I need to upgrade?
Speaker ABecause everything I need is on the free section.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo it's a little different than the 14 day trial on PodPage, because on that particular trial you get access to everything, but it's for a limited time.
Speaker ANow if we flip that around, you can be a free member for as Long as you want, but you're not going to have access to everything.
Speaker ASo that's how that works.
Speaker AAnd, and again, if you're a current member, I keep saying nothing changes, but the one thing that's going to change is I'm now going to have more time to make more videos and grow the community and bring in some experts.
Speaker ASo things are going to change, but in terms of access to the content, as a paid member, you get access to everything.
Speaker BWe're just funneling everyone into joining the school of podcasting as a free member.
Speaker BAnd if they want the additional time with Dave, all the coaching, all the courses they can, they can go over.
Speaker BBut if they just want sort of a place to ask some questions in a chat, just like they're doing on Facebook, we have that in the school podcasting.
Speaker ASo there is one big change.
Speaker BOne thing we did as part of this, I don't know if anyone noticed, was we moved to school podcasting.com from a 10 year old WordPress installation over to PodPage and then we added some cool functionality.
Speaker BSo I, we would have, this would have never happened if we didn't do this deal.
Speaker BBut the first thing that we did was we needed to get the content over.
Speaker BSo in PodPage, we built an entire WordPress migration tool, which now we can offer to other podcasters who want to come to PodPage from WordPress.
Speaker BThat's just a tool that like we needed to build for this and now we get to offer it to a bunch of other podcasters.
Speaker BSo that's really cool.
Speaker AAnd the beauty of having a different set of eyes look at your stuff is you find things like this.
Speaker BAnyone who wanted to read about any of Dave's courses, there was nowhere online that you could actually look in details about them.
Speaker BYou had to join the school of podcasting on Heartbeat to look to see the description of the courses.
Speaker BA horrible way of discovering the content.
Speaker BAnd for some reason all of the platforms, Heartbeat and Circle and all, they just, they don't have publicly available pages, which means Google can't access them, which means if you're searching for a course on podcasting, Dave's courses would never, ever, ever, ever, ever show up because they're not public.
Speaker AAnd the beauty of having a Brendan Mulligan on your team is, is he then just comes up with a solution.
Speaker BWhen we moved it over to podpage, what's cool is now I built an integration with Heartbeat, which is the platform that it runs on.
Speaker BAnd so now if you go to schoolpodcasting.com courses, you see the whole course catalog, you get to read about it, you get to see all the lessons.
Speaker BGoogle gets to see that.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker BBut we can share that link with other people.
Speaker ABut now you get to go and
Speaker Byou get to see all the courses, which is cool.
Speaker BAnd that we're adding an events page.
Speaker BSo all the events that we're putting inside the school podcasting will be publicly.
Speaker BYou can see the list now, you can't join all of them, but you can see what's going on.
Speaker BAnd then I'm working with the Heartbeat team now on a reverse integration where anytime school podcasting episode is published to PodPage, we'll actually also publish it into a channel within the school of Podcasting, Heartbeat again, that will be a feature that anyone can use as a Heartbeat community.
Speaker BSo it's been cool because one of PodPages biggest, I'd say, constraints or limitations has been podcasters grow beyond just podcasting and they have their own community and it's on Circle or Heartbeat or Mighty Networks.
Speaker BAnd by working with Dave internally on this, we're able to sort of be like, okay, let's build these features for school podcasting that then get everyone on PodPage can enjoy.
Speaker BSo there's things we're going to release in the next couple months.
Speaker ASo I'm very excited to have additional resources and now additional time to work on the school of podcasting.
Speaker AAnd this is what we see for the future.
Speaker BThis is the start.
Speaker BAnd you know, I don't think we mentioned it, but there's no change to pricing and the goal will be, you know, by the end of the year.
Speaker BI think I saved, I sent Dave a little bit of an overwhelming list, but I was like, okay, I looked at your courses, but what if we did this and you know, the framework was you've got a bunch of courses, but what if we thought of this as like, if you were to build an actual physical school to educate podcasters and they were to go through a curriculum, what would that curriculum look like and what would the different cohorts be?
Speaker BAnd I think it ended up being like 60 courses and it's a little much, but.
Speaker BBut the courses are very targeted.
Speaker BSo like the courses are intended sort of the way that we had, we started designing it was these courses would be like mini courses.
Speaker BThey would be able to be consumable in like a 30 minute chunk or an hour long chunk.
Speaker BSo it's not like a long course, which means at your lunch break or whenever, if you just want to sit down, be like, I just need to be schooled on affiliate marketing for my podcast.
Speaker BCool.
Speaker BGo and take the course.
Speaker BYou're done.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause you, like, look at all these course platforms and the completion rates really low.
Speaker BWell, the completion rate's low because these courses are really long.
Speaker BAnd so instead of having, like, a everything about pod monetization course, maybe we just need five or six courses with specific things to learn.
Speaker BSo the hope is by the end of the year, we have a really, really awesome curriculum that spans the whole podcast lifestyle that has very short, very actionable pieces of advice for each different thing.
Speaker BAnd so we're hoping, like, the actual.
Speaker BThe recorded courses end up being really, really special by the end of the year.
Speaker BObviously not today.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThis is the beginning of a journey.
Speaker BAnd then we'll be rolling out, like, the event schedule, like a more regular, like Dave said, more events that we can do on a monthly basis.
Speaker BSo you'll have more access to Dave, more access to just getting information at, like, live events and webinars.
Speaker BWe want to add a lot to it.
Speaker BWe're not going to change the pricing, but we want to make what you're paying for a lot more valuable if we can.
Speaker BAnd then obviously, more access to Dave.
Speaker AAnd I believe that answers the most common questions that we got.
Speaker ADuring the town hall, I did have somebody ask, are you going to retire?
Speaker AAre you not going to teach podcasting anymore?
Speaker AAnd I want to play a clip from a documentary called the Messengers, a podcast documentary.
Speaker AAnd this is me.
Speaker AAnd this is how they closed the movie.
Speaker AMy grandma lived to be 95.
Speaker AShe was born in 1899.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AAnd the one day she said that and I was on the account, she goes, well, honey, I was born in 1899.
Speaker AI'm like, Whoa, grandma, you're older than dirt.
Speaker AAnd in her age, she saw things go from horse and buggy to the space shuttle.
Speaker ASo I want to be that guy that looks back and when we're consuming podcasts in our head through the chip or whatever is going on at the time, and go, yeah, I remember when there was no itunes and when there was no Google and kind of be able to hopefully help people eliminate some of the headaches and things like that, I'll still be doing that.
Speaker AMy wife asked me, when are you going to stop podcasting?
Speaker AI said, the day you bury me.
Speaker AAnd I'll have a link to everything out@schoolofpodcasting.com 1028.
Speaker ASo if you want to preview what your site would look like on PodPage, I'll have a link to that I'll have a link to join the school of Podcasting.
Speaker AAnd thanks to everyone who sent out the well wishes.
Speaker AI deeply appreciate it.
Speaker AWe do have some work to do to kind of clean up some old stuff as we make room for the new stuff.
Speaker ASo for all of you that are like, I'm going to suggest me as an expert, that's fine, but that may not be coming for a bit, but we'll see.
Speaker AThere's a lot of it that we're like, well, let's try this and let's try that.
Speaker ASo I'm excited that, like I said, I started after filing bankruptcy and divorce in 2004, lived in my brother's basement in 2005 to now be doing the school of podcasting and of course, podpage as my day job.
Speaker AI couldn't be happier.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AWe started off talking about relationships and I just thought I would throw this in here.
Speaker AMy favorite tool.
Speaker AIt's a whopping $15 a month, which is cheap for this kind of product, is a CRM.
Speaker ANow that stands for, you know, customer Relation Manager.
Speaker ABut I and a lot of these really get into sales funnels and things like this.
Speaker AAnd this has that feature.
Speaker ABut I really like it as a way to a set reminders to reach out and, you know, just touch base with someone as well as I can put notes in there.
Speaker AIt's really cool.
Speaker AIt's really.
Speaker AThat's what I use it for is, hey, I, you know, need to follow up with someone about such and such or whatever.
Speaker AAnd this is the actual name of the tool, Less Annoying CRM.
Speaker AI'll put a link to it because there is an affiliate program.
Speaker ABut I'm here to tell you I use this one because I love it.
Speaker AI've used it for years.
Speaker AIt works with Zapier.
Speaker ASo if you wanted to, like in my case, when somebody signs up, it automatically adds them to my Less annoying CRM.
Speaker ASo it's a great tool and it's a great way to keep up with your relationships.
Speaker AI'm here to tell you, yes, it's great to have technology and great content and that all is definitely still part of the deal.
Speaker ABut relationships that I planted came back and bloomed years later.
Speaker ASo thank you so much for listening.
Speaker AIf you want to join the school of podcasting, go out to schoolofpodcasting.com start.
Speaker AYou'll see the options there.
Speaker AYou might have to click change to see the different options if you're looking for the free version, but you might as well just start with the paid because there is a 30 day money back guarantee.
Speaker ASo if you're worried about that, you don't have to be worried.
Speaker AI'm Dave Jackson.
Speaker AI help podcasters.
Speaker AIt's what I do.
Speaker ABeen doing it for over 20 years and until next week, take care.
Speaker AGod bless.
Speaker AClass is dismissed.
Speaker AIf you like the show, please share it with a friend.
Speaker AIf you like the show, pretty, pretty please share it with a friend right now and then one day over these those D. Yeah.