创办与发展播客 | Chris Hutchins(All the Hacks、Wealthfront、Google)
Launching and growing a podcast | Chris Hutchins (All the Hacks, Wealthfront, Google)
Chris Hutchins: Yes, there are four million podcasts. However, there are only about 150,000 podcasts that have had 10 episodes and have published in the last 10 days. So the easiest way to be in that top 5% ish. I don’t know what the math there is. About 3%, 4% is to just stick to it. Like if you just do an episode a week for 10 weeks, you’re now in the top 4% of all podcasts that anyone has created.
Building a Successful Podcast
Lenny: Welcome to Lenny’s Podcast. I’m Lenny and my goal here is to help you get better at the craft of building and growing products. Today my guest is Chris Hutchins. Chris is not only a former product manager, founder and investor, he just this month went full-time on his podcast and the independent creator path. When I was looking for advice on how to build a podcast, Chris shared this awesome deck with a ton of great advice that he’s built throughout his journey, and so I thought it’d be fun to spend an episode talking about all the things that you should know about launching and growing a podcast. Chris’s podcast is called All the Hacks, covers all the ways to financially optimize your life, and it’s one of the biggest business podcasts in the world. Chris has also been on the Tim Ferris Show actually, interviewing Tim Ferris.
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Chris’s Career Journey
Chris Hutchins: Thanks for having me. I’m excited.
”Self-Driving Money” at Wealthfront
Lenny: This is going to be a pretty unique episode, I think. You’re a product manager and we’re going to talk about some of the things you’ve learned being a PM on some really killer products. But what I want to spend most of our time on is talking about how to launch a podcast. You’ve built one of the most popular, biggest business podcasts in just like a year and a half. You’ve taught me some stuff, you’ve helped other people with their podcast and so I just thought it’d be really helpful just to talk about just the skill of building a podcast and all the things you should know. How does that sound?
The Power of Intent
Chris Hutchins: Sounds great. You just did a episode about growing a newsletter business, which I was like, “This is awesome because I have a newsletter and I want it to be bigger.” And I think anyone that’s has knowledge to share. I talked to a PM yesterday who was like, “Oh, I’ve got all these product ideas. Maybe I’ll start a podcast.” So totally, this is fun.
The Podcasting Journey
Lenny: Awesome. That’s exactly how I’ve been thinking about it. First we did the newsletter and then podcast maybe the other things, I don’t know what’s left.
The Realities of Podcasting
Chris Hutchins: YouTube channel.
Time Investment Per Episode
Lenny: YouTube channel?
Editing Process and Tools
Chris Hutchins: [inaudible 00:04:44] I don’t know if you feel this way, but YouTube. I feel like just putting a podcast on YouTube isn’t enough, I need to learn the skills of YouTube.
My Podcast Launch Experience
Lenny: Yeah. All right. I got to get MrBeast on, that’s the next goal. To set a little foundation for folks, to give him a little sense of your background and some of the things you’ve done in your career. Can you just talk about some of the biggest things you’ve done in your career, which you’ve been up to and then what you’re up to now and also about your podcast?
Publishing Strategy and Rankings
Chris Hutchins: I’m kind of like a happenstance product person. I basically really liked startups, but I didn’t know what job I could have as a non-technical person. And I joined my first startup probably 10 years ago and was like, “I will do anything.” And they were like, “Do business development.” But it turns out we didn’t have anyone who also was doing products, so they were like, “What should we build that people will buy?” So I was like, “Well, I got to figure out how we turned this API we were building for location services into a product.” Left that to join other startup with a few people we co-founded, did the Jack-of-all-trades role at a startup and then quickly were acquired by Google about a year in, and I went through the interview process and they were like, “You’re a PM.” And I was like, “Oh, great, what does a PM do?”
I didn’t really totally know I’d never worked as a PM. Went through Google’s kind of like week of training and got thrown into it and I think I’ve now learned with a lot of time that being a PM is awesome. Being a PM at Google when we were working on Google Plus was not awesome. Transitioned pretty quickly over to Google Ventures, did venture capital for three years, left to start another company trying to make financial advice more affordable, more accessible. Grew that for about two, three years and we ended up selling that company to Wealthfront where I ran a new product strategy. I most recently just left that role after three years and started going full-time on All the Hacks, which is my effort to help everyone upgrade their life, their money, their travel. I’m the spreadsheet for everything, optimizer and do all this research to try to help people live better, happier, wealthier, healthier lives. And I have a podcast where we share all the hacks to do all of it.
Lenny: Amazing. While we’re on the podcast, we’re going to dig into this stuff more. Where can folks, find it. It’s called All the Hacks.
Podcast Rankings and Publishing Strategy
Chris Hutchins: Anywhere you listen to podcasts right now, search All the Hacks, you can find it at allthehacks.com. I’d be surprised if someone listening to this is more of a newsletter reader than a podcaster, but allthehacks.com/email is the newsletter too.
Offering a Unique Perspective
Lenny: Oh, newsletter. I love it. All right, coming back to your last gig at Wealthfront, from what I understand your title was New product Strategy and Andy Rachleff, who was the CEO for a while, kind of legendary figure. He co-founded Benchmark. He’s just like this brain that… I listen to him every time I hear him on a podcast. He basically pulled you into Wealthfront and specifically wanted you to focus on figuring out new business ideas, new business lines, new product lines within Wealthfront. Is that right?
Becoming Someone’s Favorite Podcast
Chris Hutchins: Yeah, so we had an engineer at the time who came up with this idea called Self-Driving Money. I was like, “Gosh, what if you could automate and optimize your entire financial life and you didn’t have to rely on human financial advisors?” And we heard from our customers forever that they pay us to not talk to someone, our demographic doesn’t want a bunch of humans in the mix. And so we had this idea but we didn’t really know what it was. So Andy was like, “Gosh, you’ve been spending time thinking about financial planning and software and as an entrepreneur, could you come in and help us build Self-Driving Money?”
And I was like, “What is it?” They’re like, “Well, we got a bunch of ideas from an algorithmic standpoint about how to do it.” But, “What exactly is it?” So it was thrown into, “Let’s do a bunch of customer research, let’s talk to a lot of people and let’s try to come up with as audacious of an idea as we could for how you fulfill the promise of automating and optimizing someone’s entire financial life to the point that they don’t have to think about their finances on a daily basis and they know the right things are happening.”
Choosing Podcast Topics
Lenny: When I think Self-Driving Money, I’m picturing money just driving around, like a Tesla. Money meets Tesla.
From Parenting to All the Hacks
Chris Hutchins: Yeah, the vision I had was what are the core pieces of financial life that are stressful? It’s like, “I got to move money, I got to contribute to these different accounts. I want to make sure I have enough to pay my bills.” And so what we ended up with was a product called Autopilot that would monitor your core banking account, whether it was a checking account at Wealthfront or not at Wealthfront or whether it was an account at Wealthfront. And we would say, “Let’s make sure we leave a certain amount of money.” And you could tell us that much. And then we would say, “Great.” Now we had basically a series of things to fulfill with any excess. It was like, “Let’s make sure you keep this much as a three-month emergency fund, max out your Roth IRA. Let’s make sure you max out your 529 for your kids and let’s put the rest in your kind of taxable just brokerage account.” And we would just periodically say, “Oh, you got extra money, let’s sweep it over and do what we need to do with it so you don’t have to think about it.”
Choosing Podcast Topics
Lenny: Can you talk about the impact this had on the company and also just how long of a endeavor this was within Wealthfront?
Chris Hutchins: It was a quick endeavor to try to start talking to people. This was just throw in the mix. I have a very poor sense of time, but let’s say somewhere between six and 12 months maybe before we put something really in front of someone that could execute on all the features, there was a lot of prototype UI testing. I think Andy, he’s legendary. If anyone listening to this, wants to learn about product market fit, Andy is your guy. I believe he coined the term, he teaches the class at Stanford. And the lesson was really find something people are reaching over the table want, and make sure you have that validation. And so we were putting things in front of people, clickable, full prototypes, and I remember we got to one where someone was like, “Can I go get my husband? I need to show him this.”
And then I created this thing, which I’m sure is not that new, but I would start pretending that the product existed in the interviews. Only to find out, at the end, people was like, “Oh, it’s not out yet.” And they’re like, “What I want to use…” You could really feel the like, “No, no, no, no, this has to be out. I want to start using it.” So we found this thing that a small number of people were very excited about and we knew that a product, this was going to be a high risk bet because people don’t automate their financial lives today. People drive to go pick up fast food and if you could with a push of a button, bring it to their house, you’re making a thing that they do much more efficient. Right now, well, technically they do this manually, but trusting software to do it is something that we knew would be a higher risk bet.
And I think the takeaway, I would say the impact on the company was not as high as we had wanted in that it didn’t become this wild top of funnel. I think it’s similar to Tesla’s autopilot. It’s like nobody goes and says, “I just want to buy this car because of this feature.” I’m sure some people do, but once you’re in the ecosystem, it had huge impact on making it easier for people to start saving more, making it easier for people to be more confident in their finances and just automate all that behavior. So I would say the letdown was, it wasn’t the big, huge top of funnel thing where people are like, “Oh, this is all I’ve ever wanted.” Even though if you interview people and you’re like, “Gosh, would you like a product that could just automate all this stuff?” They’re like, “Yes, I would love it.”
And then you hand it to them and you’re like, “Do you want to use this thing?” And they’re like, “Well.” It’s very hard to test that. And so what we found was it was a win in terms of it. It moved a lot of metrics for saving more money, increasing contributions and that kind of stuff, but it didn’t become this growth channel, which Andy would say product market fit is exponential organic growth. So I would say by that metric, we didn’t have product market fit, but as a tool to make a system of products so much better. We have the cash account with all the checking features, we have an investing account, we have retirement accounts. So this really brought it all together and that was super valuable.
Getting Your First Listeners
Lenny: Awesome. So here’s my big question. What have you learned? You spent a lot of time thinking about big bets, big innovations, working within a company to come up with something totally new. What have you learned about how to approach that within a larger company? How do I successfully innovate? How to think about launching big bets, how to structure teams, anything along those lines?
Cross-Promotion and Content Swaps
Chris Hutchins: I’ve learned a few things and I think some of them I’ve learned came naturally being a founder before being a PM. But you think that customer research is all you need to build a product at a company, but figuring out how to create excitement internally and get buy-in from other teams because they’re the ones that are going to build it. They’re the ones that are going to help market. It’s all a team effort. Sometimes you get caught up, at least I found, as a PM of like, “Oh, we got the customer insights, we did the testing. It’s all positive.” And then you show the ratings you got from sub survey or the engagement or some clips and that’s not the end of it. The end is creating this compelling vision for what you’re building. And then the thing I learned from being a founder is, gosh, you have to state your vision and your mission and why you’re here, every all-hands.
It seems so crazy because it’s core to you why we would build this, what it’s purposes, why it’s amazing. But as a founder, I was like every week I was like, “Hey everybody, before we get started, this is the mission we’re on, this is why we’re doing it. This is the thing we’re doing in the world.” And as a PM sometimes you’re like, “Well, I told people three weeks ago and I put it in that email that I sent out to everyone and it was in the top of the PRD, so why hasn’t everyone understood why this product exists?” And I realized very quickly that, that same thing is true. So if you want to make a big bet, if you want to make a big impactful product, you have to bring people along with you. And your ability to speak publicly, persuade people, build influence within the company. Those things are all as important as your ability to identify a user need and build a product that solves it.
Lenny: Awesome. This reminds me a lot of Airbnb, where the founders, all-hands share the vision and the strategy that they came up with that year. Every single all-hands. And it’s always like, “Yeah. Yeah, we know. We know.” But to your point, it’s so powerful and important.
Gary Vaynerchuk’s Community Strategy
Chris Hutchins: And some people don’t know. Some people we’re not paying attention that one all-hands, we’re kind of missed it out, skip all-hands. Often there’s just, you need everyone to be able to in… And this is a little segue to podcasting and we’ll come back to it, but I start my show with saying, “Hello and welcome to another episode of All the Hacks, the show about upgrading your life, money and travel.” Because I just want everyone to know this is exactly what this show’s about, so when their friend asks them a question, they’re like, “This is exactly what it is.” And the same thing is true about a company’s mission, a product, vision, anything you want everyone to really understand it, be able to talk about it succinctly and just have a very cohesive narrative in their head. That’s a really big one. I think the other one is just understanding the customer, not just by talking to them, but just being in the mix, playing with all the products.
Something I asked a few of my colleagues before this, “What are things that I’ve particularly done well?” And they were just like, “Gosh, I feel like you understand what’s happening outside of the walls of our business better than a lot of people.” And maybe that’s talking to a lot of other people who are founders talking to a lot of other people, starting companies, going to read all the comments on new financial products on Product Hunt. Really just trying to understand people beyond just customer research. And so that was another thing that I think… As a founder, you’re always looking for product market fits, you’re always trying to learn. Sometimes at a company it’s really easy to get caught up in the research you’ve already done and the customers you’ve already talked to and you forget to kind of step outside and go talk to other people and see what other people are doing. And I’d say don’t get caught up in what competitors are building and try to feature parody them, but just understanding the space outside of the walls of your business.
Leveraging Platform Distribution Engines
Lenny: One thing I’ll add to your point about reminding people of the strategy and the vision is if you can also help them understand how their team and project connects up through that, create kind of a little tree of, “Here’s all the teams, what they’re doing. Here’s all connects to the pillars of focus and themes and then here’s how it connects to the North Star metric and or vision mission. “That kind of adds another wrinkle of like, “Oh, wow. I get it. I get why this team’s important.”
Danny Miranda’s In-Person Recording Strategy
Chris Hutchins: There’s a great analogy, I’m sure if I send a link you could put in the show notes or something about a football team. And it’s like the GM’s goal is to sell out the tickets and win the conference championship and it actually tiers it down. It’s like, “Well, there’s a defensive line coordinator.” I’m not even that big of a sports person, but it’s like the defensive line coordinator’s job is just one specific thing, but they kind of explain how it all levels up to this one North Star metric for the company or two in that case. And I think that’s just so important and when you’re talking to people at your company with your colleagues, it’s not just what it does. It’s like, “This product will automate people’s money movement so they don’t have to move their money and it happens automatically.” And that’s cool, but it’s equally as important to remind everyone, “And then they don’t have to worry about their money every week and then they don’t have to worry that their contributions might leave them without enough money in their checking account to pay their rent.”
There’s these two components of it which are, what does it do, but what’s the feeling you want someone to have? And that gets into product vision versus just the product feature set. And whenever we’ve written product visions statements about things we’re building, it’s like, “Imagine a world where someone can feel this way about their money.” And it’s like, “And then this thing will do that.” That’s the product strategy. It’s how you execute on it. And so Reforge has this awesome product strategy kind of product vision roadmap that levels them all up, which I really like as a another resource.
Lenny: The Reforge. I just recorded another podcast this morning actually, and what you just said reminded me of it, where a lot of people focus too much on features and not enough on benefits. And the stuff you’re talking about is just like, “Think about what are the benefits of the person.” Versus, “Here’s feature one, feature two, feature three.”
Appearing on Other Podcasts
Chris Hutchins: The last little skill, and I know you, you’ve talked about this, but I think it’s something that I was fortunate enough to not care about. Which I think is, when you focus too much at a company about like, “Ooh, I want the promotion” you get caught up in this world where you’re like, “If I want the promotion, I need to do what my boss wants.” And I had this fortunate benefit of… Like my last job, I was the CEO. I didn’t care about my title, I didn’t care about leveling up. I came in and I was like, “I want to continue trying to execute on this vision of this thing that I wanted to do.” What that actually meant was my only metric I cared about was impact and trying to build a product that would work. And I think in any job in any company, it turns out you think that doing what your boss wants is actually what’s going to get you promoted.
But the people that I’ve had work for me or I’ve worked alongside that seem to always be the outperformers, are always the people that are just solely focused on having the most impact on the company. I think the thing I learned, which I thanks to Andy Rachleff for teaching me this is when you push so hard for your ideas and you have really strong beliefs, you have to also make sure you state your intent. Because sometimes people think you’re acting out of self-interest. I’d be like, “Oh, we should delete this feature and build this crazy thing. It’s going to be amazing.” And people are like, “Oh, Chris just thinks his idea is better than everyone.”
And so he taught me, he’s like, “It would go a long way before you said that, you said, “Hey guys, I’ve got some crazy ideas, but before I say them, I just want you to know that all I care about is that the company is successful. And I think this idea will make the company successful. And that’s why I’m so excited about it. I don’t need to own it. I don’t care who owns it, I’m just really excited about it."" And when you state your intent, you give people a little bit of ease in thinking you know what it might be. And even though I’m sure half the people listening work at a company where their culture is like assume best intent is one of the pillars, it’s still our nature to assume that if someone’s shooting down an idea we have that maybe it’s out of their own self-interest.
And I’ve learned that when you have crazy ideas and when you’re pushing back against a lot of people, if you can make sure you constantly remind them why you’re doing it and what you care about, it goes a lot further than if you just kind of come in there with sharp elbows and try to push for crazy things.
The Podcast Tech Stack
Lenny: Reminds me, I think Andy is the person who on a podcast once said that every year he picks like a, “We’re going to bet the company on this idea.” Kind of project, is that?
Download Goals and Charts
Chris Hutchins: I would say we’ve done that a few times. I think the thing that I always told people that I wanted to work on is like, “I want to work on a project that if successful makes everything we do as a company today feel like it’s not that important because we did something that was 10 times bigger than everything we’re doing today. And what we’re doing now is just 10% of the company.” Those are the kind of crazy ideas I like to work on. They’re very hard sometimes you’re like, “Ooh, I’ve got one.” And then it just doesn’t work. Sometimes you do one and it takes a turn. But I think that when companies find those things, they’re so powerful. But if you don’t have the buy-in for management that that’s your goal… Andy, he always talks about slugging average, not batting average. He’s like, “I don’t care if you hit the ball every time. If one in 10 times you hit a home run that’s better than someone who hits it every three out of 10 times but gets out a lot.”
He thought about that and the balance. He’s written a lot internally about the balance between working on iterative improvements to current features and then taking big bets and trying to find the balance amongst it all. But I think he does believe there is always exploration necessary for taking big bets and trying to take swings that could have outsized impact. You got to balance it because you’re often wrong. And I think that’s something that I was like, “That’s the thing I want to work on.” As someone who is kind of running a company, when you get to go to a big company and you’re like, “Now I can solely focus just on this big product bet. I don’t have to worry about hiring and recruiting and all these other things.” So that was fun.
Listener Retention and Ad Skips
Lenny: Speaking of being solely focused on something, let’s talk about the podcast. So this is kind of the new thing that you’re going to be focused on full-time. You just left Wealthfront and you launched the podcast maybe a year and a half ago, correct me if I’m wrong, by a year and a half ago. The podcast is Top 30, top 40 business podcast. It’s probably gone a lot of higher at some points. And so there’s a bunch of questions I want to ask about just how you launched this thing and built this thing. But broadly, what did I miss about the [inaudible 00:22:18] framing of the podcast?
Chris Hutchins: Oh, yeah. That’s it. It’s about 18 months old. Been doing, gosh, probably about almost 100 episodes, not quite there. Weekly show and I went on parental leave part of the last 18 months and I tried to balance family and just grinding on this and it’s been a passion project on the side and I’m very excited to see all the different kind of legs and tentacles that the brand and the content can have.
Final Advice on Podcast Operations
Lenny: What kind of benefits and good things have come out of having a podcast and launching a podcast or running a podcast?
Promoting Your Podcast Everywhere
Chris Hutchins: I think we all run into people and you’re like, “Gosh, this person’s really smart. I wish that I could just pick their brain for an hour.” And sometimes you could just email them, be like, “Hey, could we schedule some time in a month and we could just chat?” But that sometimes just feels like a weird thing to ask. The podcast gives you this great platform, you’re like, “Well, I have a podcast. And so I would love to invite you on and help you amplify your message and spend an hour trying to understand everything about topic X, Y, Z.” And sometimes it’s really nerdy and nuanced and sometimes it’s broad, but being able to have a reason. I think one of my first episodes was with a guy named Morgan Housel who wrote a book called Psychology of Money. I read the book, I was like, “This is a great book. I have so many questions.”
But like what I’m I going to od? Randomly email this person I don’t know and say, “Hey, I loved your book. Can I just ask you questions for 45 minutes?” I would never do that. But I randomly emailed him and said, “Hey, we’ve never met. But I have a podcast.” I don’t even think it had launched, “It’s launching next week, but I’m really excited about it. Could I pick your brain?” And he was like, “Sure.” So I would say the biggest thing is it just gives you a platform to explore your curiosities on things provided that you can really focus the thing that you talk about on one vertical, niche, something so that people learn what it’s about. Because the hardest part about podcast growth is there’s like four million podcasts and you’ve got to find a way to stand out in a sea of many podcasts.
Lenny: Let’s actually talk about that. I was going to ask you about that. There’s like four million you said, that seems right. It’s probably a four million launched to date. Also, if you’re someone that’s thinking about, “Should I do a podcast? Should I not do a podcast?” Do you have any advice for just signs that this might be a worthwhile endeavor with your time versus signs you probably should not do this, do not even-
Experimenting with Podcast Formats
Chris Hutchins: I’ll give you two perspectives. So one is, yes, there are four million podcasts. However, there are only about 150,000 podcasts that have had 10 episodes and have published in the last 10 days. So the easiest way to be in that top, I don’t know, 5% ish. I don’t know what the math there is, about %3, 4%, is to just stick to it. If you just do an episode a week, for 10 weeks, you’re now in the top 4% of all podcasts that anyone has created. Now, that doesn’t mean you’re in the top 4% of the 150 active podcasts. So what I would say to that is… I mean, maybe you have a massive platform already, in which case just go start the podcast. But if you don’t already have a massive platform, it is unlikely statistically, that this thing is going to work. So absolutely, do not start the podcast if you wouldn’t do it for free, making no amount of money in perpetuity or as long as you want to experiment with.
That’s one thing I’ll throw out there is you are most likely going to start a podcast and it will not take off and be wildly successful. However, I’ve met plenty of people who have hundreds of listeners and hundreds of episodes and they stuck at it because they truly loved the thing. If you don’t know if you love the thing, it’s very easy, which is what I did to say, “I’m going to have one season of eight episodes.” And I committed to record eight interviews and put eight interviews out in the world. That was it all I committed to myself. And I said, “If that doesn’t work, then I will be fine and say, “Here is season one and there’s just not a season two.” And I would be okay with it.” So you can commit to see if you like it before you do it, but chances are, and you might have found something similar when you started creating content, it’s like for the first six, nine months, there’s no revenue coming in.
It’s a lot more work than it seems. Everyone I know that has no podcast and goes to having a podcast, they’re like, “Oh my gosh, I thought this was just once, one hour a week, I just talked to somebody.” It’s like, “Now, I have to prepare for it. I got to write up show notes, I got to make sure it’s edited properly, I got to recruit people. Turns out you reach out to 10 people, two reply, one is willing to schedule this week.” There’s just a lot that goes into it. So I’d say only do it if you’re excited to do it, even if five people are on the other end.
Don’t Create a Job You Hate
Lenny: Talking about the time investment, how long does it take you per episode, hours-wise? And then how long did it take you to kind of prep launch?
Chris Hutchins: And this has evolved a bit as the podcast has generated enough revenue to hire other people. But in general, I would probably spend, depending on how well I knew the topic or the person, anywhere from two to 10 hours preparing for an interview. If someone wrote a book at the beginning I was like, I got to read the whole book, I got to take notes. Then I was like, “Well, if I read the whole book and take notes, then I kind of know everything. So I’m going to read a few chapters.” I wanted to listen to everyone on different interviews. Some people are really hard, some people have only talked about one topic and you want to get them on another topic. I interviewed Carrie Walsh Jennings, who’s a three time gold medalist at the Olympics for beach volleyball. And I listened to every interview she’d ever done because only 3% of each interview was about not volleyball stuff.
And I was like, “Well, I don’t want to talk about volleyball, I want to talk about performance and how you can train.” She won a gold medal while she was pregnant. This is a serious level of physical and mental preparedness that I wanted to dig into. So that’s one big piece of it. After it’s done, then it really depends on the style of show. If you have this NPR style editing where it’s very narrative driven, it could take you a long time to go through the editing. For me with interview style, I think it takes me about an hour to go back and listen to it at a little, speed up pace. And then go in and be like, “Ah, this thing wasn’t worth keeping in. Or I mean, we had to repeat something and let’s cut that out, or this person stumbled on their words.”
Fortunately there’s some amazing software. Now I use a piece of software called Descript, which basically imports all the audio, transcribes it to, let’s call it like 95% accuracy. And then you can edit the podcast like you would edit a Google Doc. It’s crazy. You’re just like, “Oh, let’s delete all the ums, control F, um. Ignore all ums.” And then you listen through it and you’re like, “Oh, that um, was really necessary, let’s put it back in.” And little edits like that. But that tool makes the editing process really easy. From the get-go, I had an audio engineer who would actually mix and master and add in the music and that kind of stuff.
So I would say each guest is probably at least 10 hours plus probably two or three hours of coordination and outreach to three or four people that you reach out to in order to get the one. Now I’ve since, hired someone who helps do a little bit of research. So they might go listen to two or three episodes, read a couple chapters of book and put up some notes with links to those various places. So I can then take that and take my time from 10 hours to three hours.
Lightning Round Questions
Lenny: I’ll share my experience briefly. It’s a little different, which is really interesting to hear your experience. So I launched the complete opposite of your advice, which is I just launched big with like, “I will do this forever. This is my new thing. I have 40 guests lined up, here’s who they’re going to be.” And I think it’s partly because I already went through that initial period of uncertainty, whether I can keep this up with a newsletter, which you said eight to nine months. Which is exactly how long it took me to do the newsletter every week to get to a point where I’m like, “Yes, I can keep this up for years. Let’s start adding a paid plan.” So I think I was just more confident that I can keep at it.
And then I actually planned to monetize from the beginning. I think partly again, because I had the newsletter already. And I will say, so I don’t edit that myself. I have a production group that is a game changer. So you can save a lot of time and I don’t know if you’ve gone to a producer or anything, but I feel like most people eventually do.
TV and Movie Recommendations
Chris Hutchins: I’ve now switched to someone who went back, listened to the first 20 or 30 episodes and said, “Oh, I get what you like to cut out of a conversation.” And I’ll end and say, “Hey, take that 90-minute conversation. And I think there’s probably 20 minutes to cut out.” And they do a very good job of getting pretty close.
Lenny: Awesome.
Three Personal Finance Tips
Chris Hutchins: To the point that some episodes I’m just like, I don’t even look at it.
Lenny: Yeah.
Chris Hutchins: It’s just recorded and done.
Lenny: Yeah.
Chris Hutchins: When it comes to launch, I would say one of my suggestions is to get a few things in the bag. Line up… You don’t want to launch and then be scrambling. So I tend to think launching with two or three episodes, either all at once or in a week is a really valuable strategy. You talked about in the intro, you’re like, “Sometimes it’s been a higher ranked, but top 30.” I think I’ve been top 100 in the business category all the way to top five in the business category, maybe top 10 and just all the way in between.
And the reason for that is that the ranking charts are all driven by different variables than you would imagine. They’re driven a lot by momentum of new subscribers, at least on the Apple charts than actual downloads. So I have a friend who launched a podcast and had a huge following on social media and so out the gate was able to garner a ridiculous number of new subscribers to the point that she was the number two podcast overall, all podcasts in the world.
Lenny: Holy shit.
Chris Hutchins: It is crazy for a week or two, a woman named Erika Colberg, she has a podcast called Erika Talk.
Lenny: Oh, yeah.
Chris Hutchins: But it’s not number two anymore because it’s so driven on the momentum of how often you can get new subscribers. She’s still in the top 100 of business podcasts, but to get to the number two spot overall, it’s all about number of new followers per hour. And if you can get a ton of traffic early on, you can drive that. And I will say the value of you doing that is now you’ve got this screenshot of like, “Look, I was top 10.” And by the way, she did the same thing I did. The moment I was top 10, the second I was in top 10, I immediately took all those guests that were on my dream list and I was like, “Hey, I’ve got a top 10 podcast. Go look at it right now and see that it’s in the top 10.” So you can always say that forever after it happens once, you can always use those things. So capitalize on that.
So you had the newsletter before. I had a newsletter I’d written on casually for various things throughout my life and for my last startup. And so I kind of put it all together to try to carry a big launch so that we really spike the rankings, maybe qualify for Apple does this new and noteworthy thing. And so there’s a lot of stuff you can do to build momentum at launch, but at the end of the day, all the momentum in the world doesn’t matter if your content’s not good. So I try to say content for me is product market fit for building software. It’s like you need to have a good podcast. And so if you launch big, one of the downsides is you’re like, you don’t really get that moment of tweaking and testing and seeing how it is. And I will say, I did five episodes in the fifth one. I was like, “This is number one.” The first one I recorded came out, I don’t know, fifth. But the fifth one I recorded came out first because I just knew it was episode one.
And the guest that I had on, and we talked about travel hacks, a guy named Leigh Rowan, he’s come on twice. It was just like this awesome energy episode about everything you want to know about travel hacks, allthehacks.com/one. So save yourself the need to scroll through the whole list. But if your content isn’t a unique perspective, you don’t have a unique way of saying it. It’s going to be really hard to stand out in the sea of podcasts. So I always say, be you, be authentic. Try to be someone’s favorite. Don’t try to be everyone’s okay podcast. I remember Tim Ferris was saying… I got a chance to go on Tim Ferris’s show and interview him about podcasting. And he’s like, “Look, I did an episode about how to…” I think it was like how to make violins or something. And he’s like, “I was so fascinated about this. 80% of people were like, what is this episode? But 20% of people thought it was one of the best episodes I’d done that year.”
And I think half of his top 10 episodes of all time are people you wouldn’t recognize. So I would focus on what gets you excited, not focus on what you think will move the metrics. Because every time I have a guest where I’m like, “I really think this person’s going to move the metrics.” It doesn’t. And then I interview someone who no one has ever heard of, and I get these emails like, “Wow, that was such a good episode. Can’t be. Oh man, I’m so glad you did that one.” I was like, “You don’t even know this person is.”
Lenny: Very similar experience in many ways across a lot of the things that you said. Something that you did mention that you shared previously with me is, and this is advice that I’ve thought about a lot, is you should be somebody’s favorite podcast. That’s like a sign that you’re doing something right. Can you expand on that?
Chris Hutchins: There’s this whole idea of your build your 1000 true fans. And I think anytime you’re creating something in the world, you want people to be your advocates for it because those are the people that are going to share it. Those are the people that are going to write the reviews, those are the people that are going to send you the ideas. Those are the people that are ultimately, when you make a call-out on a podcast like, “Hey, I’m looking for someone to help build this company or this enterprise.” That are going to reach out and want to work for you. I find it so valuable to build that relationship with people. And it’s even more valuable with podcasting because podcasting is such an intimate medium. You’re in someone’s ear and they’re actively listening to you while they’re going about their life. They’re going on a walk, they’re [inaudible 00:35:52], but you’re right there.
And I get so many emails, they’re like, “Ah, I feel like I’m just sitting on the couch with you while you’re talking to me.” And you create this really close relationship and the more you can create for those people and be their favorite time of the day, their favorite thing. Someone once told me, “Make sure you’re consistent with the time you release because you’ll get people that are like, “It’s Wednesday morning, where’s my episode? This is how I… It’s become a ritual in my life."" And so, I don’t know. I just think it’s so valuable to build that early kind of excited user base and those 1000 true fans that I always try to put something out that’s someone’s favorite.
And I actually surveyed the audience about 50 episodes in and ask, “Which was your favorite episode?” And every episode except one was someone’s favorite. There’s one episode that, no one’s favorite. So I’m still waiting. Maybe next time I survey someone will be like, “No. No, that one was my favorite.” But every other episode of 50 episodes was someone’s favorite. And it was like the coolest feeling knowing that every episode was someone’s favorite.
Lenny: That’s exactly what happens with my newsletter. I get a reply with every newsletter and someone’s like, “This is my favorite one yet.” Okay, somebody really likes this one. It’s so interesting.
Chris Hutchins: Yeah.
Lenny: Are you hiring or on the flip side, are you looking for a new opportunity? Well, either way, check out lennysjob.com/talent. If you’re a hiring manager, you can sign up and get access to hundreds of hand curated people who are open to new opportunities. Thousands of people apply to join this collective, and I personally review and accept just about 10% of them. You won’t find a better place to hire product managers and growth leaders. Join almost a hundred other companies who are actively hiring through collective. And if you’re looking around for a new opportunity actively or passively join the collective, it’s free. You can be anonymous and you can even hide yourself from specific companies. You can also leave anytime and you’ll only hear from companies that you want to hear from. Check out lennysjobs.com/talent. How did you pick your topic for your podcast? And then did you have just advice for folks for how to pick the topic for their podcast?
Chris Hutchins: This is an interesting one. So my podcast actually started as a parenting podcast from the perspective of dads. And I was doing all this research. I built this probably 75-page Notion doc all about parenting. It was like I had a kanban board for all the things I needed to do in each trimester of the pregnancy. And then the fourth trimester after the baby was born, I had all these checklists. I had a stroller spreadsheet that had, at least, let’s call it 15, 20 different features that you could filter on. Dimensions, cubic volume of when you sum up the dimension, everything. It was crazy. And I was like, “I’m so obsessed with this.” And I was like, “Nobody’s really taking this kind of crazy optimized approach to processing parental information except a few people.” Emily Oster, by the way, if anyone out there wrote a few books, I really loved her pragmatic science approach. But I just didn’t see a lot of this and I especially didn’t see as much content coming from dads.
And I was like, “I’m so excited.” And then we had our daughter and for some reason I was like, “I love her. But the topic of parenting and optimizing every aspect of it just wasn’t what it was before we had the child as after.” I was like, “Wow. But I bought this microphone and I figured out how to use all the editing software and I had never even recorded an episode.” And it just ended up that I was like, “That topic just wasn’t right for me.” And I went on another friend of mine’s podcast guy named Kevin Rose, who was a co-founder of a company we started, he started Digg back in the day. And in the middle of it we’d been talking about this, I’ve been brainstorming ideas, and in the middle of his podcast he’s like, “Hey, tell us about your new podcast.”
And then I was like, “Kevin, I haven’t nailed down what it is.” And he’s like, “Yeah, it’s fine. Why don’t you just record a response to that question and email it to me before this episode goes live and then you could just tell everyone what your podcast is about.” And then I was like, “Okay, I’ll think about it.” And the next day he was like, “Dude, I need this by Friday.” I was like, “Oh, man. So I have two days to figure out what my podcast is.” And I talked to a lot of people and they’re like, “What do you love, what do you love talking about?” I was like, “Gosh.” What question someone said is, when you’re at a dinner table, what’s the thing that you talk about where you notice that everyone at the table is leaning in and trying to listen and pick your brain on and maybe sends you a text after?
And I was like, “It’s probably all the hacks I have for traveling for free, for getting upgrades, for saving money, for shopping online, for optimizing my health or anything, house hacking, saving money on my rent.” And every time I bring those up, people are like, “I like saving money. I want to travel for free.” And they’re leaning in, they’re like, “Which credit card do I get? Is this one bad? What about this one?” And I couldn’t come up with a name. I had hundreds of names. It was like life upgraded, optimized your life. But every time I described what it was, I just said, “It’s life upgraded. I’ll teach you all the hacks to do this.” And then someone, I can’t even remember who was like, “What about just All the Hacks?” And then I looked and I was like, “Is allthehacks.com available?”
I was like, “What? It’s available.” It’s like… Get the domain. And then I very quickly recorded a response to Kevin’s question, which was like, “Yes, I’m launching a podcast called All the Hacks, here’s what it is.” And I had to go create a trailer and upload it all in three days. And I think I was fortunate that I just had the time pressure that I had a thing to get out. So I’d say one, what do you love talking about at the dinner table? What gets you excited? What do people reach out to you for expertise on? What do you spend your time going down deep rabbit holes on the internet on? Because all of those things are going to be part of your life as a creator. And then two, if there’s any way you can force yourself to just have to make a decision because I get stuck in this analysis paralysis, that’s great.
So find some friend of yours that’s like, “I’m tweeting about your podcast on Friday, or I’m going to include you in my newsletter next month.” And give yourself an artificial deadline or even a real deadline to just put a stake in the ground. And you could change the name, you could pivot the topic, you could pivot the style of content. All those things can happen after, but just get started because you’ll get to learn whether you like doing it, how it feels. And you could always… This is another fun hack. You could create a podcast and make a private feed and people can add a private feed to their podcast app. So if you want to get some feedback, you can just send people a URL and say, “Hey, paste this URL and the Apple Podcast player and listen to a couple episodes and let me know what you think.” Before you make that plunge to send it to the whole world.
Lenny: Awesome. I actually heard that interview with Kevin Rose back in the day, and I checked out the podcast, I think I actually subscribed and it felt very natural. So nice job.
Chris Hutchins: Yeah. Little did you know that it was inserted in post production, recorded on a separate system. Yeah.
Lenny: So people listening to this made feel like, “Hey, I don’t have Kevin Rose announcing my podcast. How do I get started? How do I get my initial traction in my podcast?” Do you have any advice there for people that are just launching things they could do to get their initial set of subscribers and get the word out and get some kind of traction without a friend with a huge platform?
Chris Hutchins: Yes. I interviewed a guy named Nick Gray, and it was a fun conversation because he wrote a book called The 2-Hour Cocktail Party, and it was all about how to build relationships by throwing the best cocktail parties. And it was very tactical guide, but one of the things he does is he has a friend’s newsletter. And he basically created a newsletter and every time he meets someone that is a friend of his, he sends him a note, says, “Can I add you to my friend’s newsletter?” People say, yes. And he just shares, “Here’s some cool articles I’m reading. Here’s a cool thing I’m doing in my life. Here’s a picture.” It’s instead of waiting till the holidays to send your holiday card to everyone that’s like, “Here’s what happened this year. Or maybe now we’ve…” That’s what my grandparents did. Now it’s just like, “Here’s a photo of the family.”
He just sends it out. I don’t even know what the cadence is. It’s just like every now and then I get an email and it’s like, “Oh, this what Nick’s up to, this is pretty cool.” Anyone can subscribe to it. And he shares all these great things. He’s like, “Ah, I was thinking about a virtual assistant. Here’s 75 things that I dreamed up that I could send to a virtual assistant.” I was like, “That’s really cool.” “Here’s how I tweak my Calendly. And I sent the Calendly to you. It’s like I added a few little things in it that…” He had suggestions to just make it a little more friendly, make it a little more comfortable. The one I loved was like, “If I’m not arrived within two minutes of the start time, here is my cell phone number. I just want to make sure I’m prompt. And people know that.”
And so, one thing is, before you even get started, find a way to just build an audience of your closest friends, family, colleagues, and throw stuff out in the world. You don’t have to do it weekly or monthly. You could just send it out every quarter, every six months, it doesn’t matter. But start to build something. So I started with a new, I think it was on MailChimp, called Life Updates. And I think I sent five of these out 10 years ago, and I hadn’t really sent one out in seven years, but I still had this email newsletter with 1100 people on it that I just collected from life. And so that was one thing. Look, you can always go out and try to find other creative ways to partner with people. So you have a newsletter, but you don’t have a podcast.
Could you use your newsletter to promote something? Could you find someone who has a platform that you could trade your services for promotional things? Yeah, I can think of any couple examples where there’s been something where I’ve been really excited use and I’m like, “Hey, could I talk to my audience about this thing? And then you could let me use this?” So if there’s anything, whether it’s consulting services or anything, you could maybe trade those services for other people with an audience to share and promote you. I think that happens more often than not. But again, it all matters if you have good content. So I’d say the first thing, the most important thing to grow a piece of content is just have it be good. And it’s hard to know what’s good. Put it out in the world, see if people like it. Maybe get your reps in before you even try some of these growth things.
I think I was fortunate to have done some public speaking before, so I felt a little more comfortable. But if you… You mentioned MrBeast earlier, he’s very public about the fact, if you go back 10 years and look at his YouTube videos, they were not exciting like they are now. And it took him a long time. And I think that’s the reality with content is, for almost every person that you see out there and you’re like, “Wow, they have this huge audience. It’s so awesome.” You go back 10 years and you’re like, “Oh, well their first episode wasn’t that awesome. It was actually kind of crazy. Or it wasn’t that interesting. And they got better over time. They learned what their audience liked, they built a following.” So those things are all there. Find communities. If you’re talking about a very specific thing, I never forgot Gary Vaynerchuk’s lesson, gosh, he probably told me this 13 years ago.
He was like, “When he was starting Wine Library.” Which most people don’t maybe even know that that’s what he was originally known for. He wanted to build this business and so he went on Twitter and he looked for every single person that asked a question about wine and he at replied them back. And so a tactic that I think could work really well is, for me, I’m like, “I love travel. I love points and miles.” I can just search Twitter and find every person on Twitter, every person on Reddit, every person on a forum, whatever that’s asking a question about the thing my podcast answers, and go in and try to be a value add to them. I guarantee that if you have a podcast and your favorite thing is quilting and in your bio on Twitter, maybe Twitter’s not the right platform, but let’s just go with the analogy, right?
Your bio says , “Top quilting podcast.” And you go find everyone that’s asking questions about quilting and answer their questions with strong, good answers. They’re going to look at your bio and be like, “Oh my gosh, this person knows their stuff about this topic. Let’s go see what they do.” And you have these advocates they share in their communities and it grows over time. I’ll come back to one more tactic, which I didn’t do, but there’s no built-in distribution engine in podcasting. TikTok, you make a TikTok video, TikTok sends it to like a hundred people and if no one likes it dies. But if like a few people like it, they send it to more people and more people. And YouTube does the same thing. Instagram Reels does the same thing. Podcasting doesn’t have that, and so it’s just a slow growth effort and you just have to be okay with that.
But what I didn’t do early on, which you can do is you can make clips of your podcast and you could put those clips on these channels that do have that built in distribution. And if those clips do take off, they could build a massive audience. And so there’s a guy, Danny Miranda, he has a podcast and he launched, didn’t have a huge following, but he created clips of every single episode, lots of clips. He didn’t know what was the most interesting piece of content, so he made a clip for everything. He built millions and millions of views on TikTok and Instagram, just by creating content from his podcast that drove downloads over to his podcast. Helped him build his audience, and he built an audience on social faster than I have a and bigger than I currently have out of just being all in on distributing his content on platforms that had growth engines built into it.
Lenny: The last point is interesting because what I’ve been hearing, and I’ve actually experienced it, so I have TikTok clips, I have YouTube videos and YouTube shorts, and I find they drive followers within the platform and downloads and views, but I haven’t seen any actual impact on the podcast. And maybe people can measure it or maybe they can tell something’s happening, but from what I hear and what I’ve seen, I don’t know if it actually drives a lot of downloads, but it’s still really useful, still useful to have an awesome TikTok account and an awesome YouTube account.
Chris Hutchins: He said, “Look…” I don’t know if it drives downloads, but it drives brand awareness for me.
Lenny: Yeah.
Chris Hutchins: And he’s had multiple guests be like, “Oh yeah, I’d love to go on your show.” One of the clips he made, he made a clip talking about Ray Dalio. And Ray Dalio was like reposting his clip. And so he was getting a lot of engagement with people that would be very difficult to reach out to saying, “I have this many downloads.” But because he was getting thousands or even millions of views across a platform, it gave him the credibility to do a lot of things that he might not have been able to do now. Then he’s gone and translated that into, “Well, let’s go bring some of these people with really, really wide distribution of their podcast onto my show and let’s do an interview with them.” Then for the most part, people are like, “Oh, let’s distribute that content to my audience that you had me on.”
One thing he did that was so good is he did all of his videos in person, so he would fly to someone record in person, and the quality of the video for an in-person video was just so much better than you get doing a remote thing. It’s a lot harder. It’s a lot more work and it doesn’t even impact the audio, but he would make the best quality clips, and Erika Colberg does the same thing. And she would deliver them and he would deliver them to the guests, and now the guest starts using those clips because he spent so much time trying to come up with the best clips, the highest quality, best produced that made his guests look amazing. And then those guests were much more likely to share those in their audiences and all of a sudden you’ve got a lot of momentum.
Does that translate to downloads? I’ll give you a little shout-out, Danny has a paid newsletter on Substack where he actually breaks down all his downloads and all his tactics on how this is all working for him. And it’s fascinating, it’s called In The DM, because he did a lot of his early on recruiting with guests in DMS on social media. But it’s to be seen, how much of an impact it can have on your podcast, but it certainly builds other things that are, I’d say like indirect… There’s no direct attribution, but that doesn’t mean that things aren’t overall going up. And then the last one is finding other podcasts that you can go on as an expert in some area. So hopefully, you’re starting a podcast because you believe something is exciting in the world, you love it, you have a passion about it, you’re an expert in it.
Take that thing and go present yourself to other podcasts. And they all have listeners that are listening to podcasts, so it’s the best medium. Because yes, someone who likes short form, 60-second videos is maybe not the best target demo to listen to a one-hour audio only thing, those two are very different behaviors. But if you can find something you’re really good at and present a value add to people to come on their show, then that could help you build your audience while adding value to their audience. And I think as someone who gets a lot of pitches from people to come on their podcast, I will only caveat it with, do the work to make sure you’re really presenting a compelling pitch. You’re going to get a lot of nos, that’s just how it works. I’ve pitched myself to go on lots of shows and sometimes I get nos also.
Many times I get nos, but I never send an email that’s like someone would read it and be like, “This person obviously, doesn’t know what they’re talking about.” But I get so many, they’re like, “Oh, I’d love to have my client come on your podcast. They love talking about building a business.” And I was like, “Well, I don’t really interview people about that.” If someone came to me and was like, “Here is a tactic to improve your life that I think your audience would benefit from and here’s why my expertise makes me the best person to talk about it.” I’d be much more open to it because they actually understood what my show is about.
Lenny: Yeah, I get it. At least, one email a day with one of these pitches and I know exactly what you mean. I generally, don’t reply because it’s just not even worth trying to convince them they’re not a fit.
Chris Hutchins: Yes.
Lenny: Shifting gears a little bit, I want to talk about your stack, your podcasting stack. What do you use on the software? What do you use the hardware? Mic, headphones. What do you recommend?
Chris Hutchins: On a mic? I started out with the ATR2100X, I think it is a great entry level mic. It’s under a $100. You can use old analog XLR cables if you want, but it’s also USB. That mic got me through 50 episodes. I have since upgraded to a Shure SM7B, which is the XLR compatriot to, I think you have a Shure MB7.
Lenny: Yeah, I have the USB version if that’s what-
Chris Hutchins: Yeah, exactly. And those are two great kind of upgrade mics that I think… I like the sound quality a little better, but every time I’m traveling and I’m not sure if something’s going to come up, if I can make a recording and if I have to record the intro, do a remote interview, I still carry the ATR2100X, because I just think it’s an easy thing to have and it works really well. I record everything on Riverside. I put everything into Descript. I plug my XLR mic into a Focusrite Scarlett 2i2, which is like a audio interface. I would say I’ve gone a little bit overboard with video, so we were talking right before this started. I have a Sony a7C, which is like a mirrorless, full frame camera behind a $60 Amazon teleprompter so that I can make direct eye contact with the camera while an iPad that’s… I don’t know, it’s like 10-year-old iPad sits under it and projects as a second screen for my computer, using this-
Lenny: [inaudible 00:54:36] If you’re not watching this YouTube, you got to check out the YouTube video at least for five seconds to see Chris just staring at you. I’ve never seen this on a podcast video before.
Chris Hutchins: Yeah,
Lenny: It’s the future.
Chris Hutchins: So I have that set up using a iPad, running an app called Duet Display. I don’t do the editing. I’ve worked with one editor that uses Audition and one that uses Pro Tools. I don’t have a strong opinion there. Oh, my favorite of all, my friend of mine, Brendan Mulligan, started this company called Podpage. And so for people who don’t know a lot about how podcasting works, there’s a hosting platform, I use Simple Cast. I liked that they were one of the only hosting platforms that has a really affordable self-serve option, but also has a really great pro, all the features that you would want in the future for monetization, everything so that you wouldn’t have to switch. Not to say that you know couldn’t switch easily, it’s pretty easy to switch. How it works is you upload an MP3 file, you write out all your show notes, the title of the episode, everything, and they create an RSS feed for you.
You could literally just create an RSS feed, right? That’s all it really is, and you could host everything on your own on AWS or something, but they make it really easy for not that much money. And then you go distribute that RSS feed to all of these different players, so the Apple Podcast app, Spotify, et cetera. And one of the things that’s amazing is this site Podpage, you submit the RSS feed to this website and they go in and say, “Oh, here’s the description of the podcast. Here’s each episode. Here’s the cover art you submitted for that episode. Here’s the title, here’s the show notes.” And they just auto-generate a website for you. And then they give you the tools like a WordPress style set of tools to go and change the header, change the descriptions. They’re like, “You could go in and tweak things.” But every night on Wednesday, or I guess Wednesday morning at 2:00 AM my podcast goes live. And at 2:05 Podpage has already noticed, the RSS feed is up-to-date and that site is posted. I don’t have to do anything.
They even monitor for the slug, like the URL slug I put in as a checkout. This podcast at this URL and podcast page says, “Oh, that’s the URL you want them to check out. We’re going to inherit that and put it in so you don’t even have to give us any information. And we’ll just know the URL that you want to set this episode up on.” I think that is a super simple way to build a podcasting website. The only other thing, we didn’t talk at all about analytics at all, but I use Chartable for analytics. And podcast analytics are a little crazy because you don’t have a lot to go on. But Chartable is a really cool analytics platform that becomes really interesting when you start to cross promo with other shows or run ads for other shows or do anything like that because they basically can track IP address of downloads.
And I say track, I don’t know who’s listening to what from where in any kind of very specific way. But what I do know is if I’m doing a cross promo with another show where I’m saying, “Hey, check out a podcast I love.” And they’re saying, “Check out a podcast I love.” It actually says, “Oh, how many of the people that downloaded this episode actually went and listened to this other episode?” So you can get direct attribution of podcast listeners going from one podcast to another. So that is a really important tool in my kind of running a podcast toolkit, but it doesn’t matter as much until you start focusing on growth and doing promotions and stuff like that.
Lenny: Awesome. I host on Substack as maybe one difference. I use Podpage for my site, my producer/editor people actually use Descript/Descript also. That’s kind of what they use for editing professionally, so it’s good for amateur hour and good for professionals as well. I use Chartable, something’s up with my Chartable, I think I’ve told you, or it doesn’t count my Spotify downloads. It’s kind of a pain in the butt, but it’s still-
Chris Hutchins: Which is funny by the way, because for anyone listening doesn’t know, Spotify actually owns Chartable. So the one platform your Chartable doesn’t get good download data from, is the one that it is owned by.
Lenny: Yep. I do not understand what is going on. I’ve talked to them and they don’t know what the fix is. It doesn’t matter anyway. I get enough analytics other places. There’s one other site I’d recommend called Podstatus that just gives you quick access to where you’re on the charts every day, gives you these cool line charts. Which Chartable sort of does, but it’s a lot simpler on Podstatus. But otherwise-
Chris Hutchins: Awesome.
Lenny: All the same stuff. One other question real quick. Say someone launches their podcast, what would be a good download goal to aim for, when you’re getting started that’s like, “Maybe this is working.” Do you have a sense of a threshold try to hit?
Chris Hutchins: I wouldn’t think of a threshold to hit because you could launch with a huge audience and have a terrible podcast and you might hit 10,000 downloads and it would be crazy, right? You would feel really good. So I would care more about the direction than about the number because even the Apple charts, they’re more momentum driven. You could have one download, but the next week you have a lot more and a lot more and a lot more. You would actually rise in the charts faster than someone whose podcast is kind of stagnant doing X number of downloads. If you have 3000 downloads an episode or something like that, you’re in the top 1% or something. So you know, don’t have to get to crazy numbers to be in the top of the charts.
Lenny: Yeah, I heard-
Chris Hutchins: I would say-
Lenny: I heard a similar number, 3000.
Chris Hutchins: The top podcasts are doing millions in episode, but that’s like top 10, top 20, top 30. The next tranche of the top 50 are doing probably hundreds of thousands of downloads. But outside of the top two, 300, it’s in the 10,000s of downloads per episode. And this is a little bit variable if you have a daily show or a weekly show or something. But I would say if you cross 10,000 downloads an episode, you are now taken seriously by a lot of people. So I had conversations early on with networks like iHeartMedia and different podcast networks that wanted to bring in the show and would do all that, and that all started at 10 to 15, maybe 20,000 downloads an episode. But by no means would I expect anyone to get there right away. Even I didn’t get there right away. It took time even with a few friends to make announcements and stuff, it took time.
So forget how many downloads you get on your first three episodes because you’re probably going to tell everyone in the world and you’re going to use all your social capital to boost those. And then look at how many downloads you get on your fourth and fifth and sixth and does it go up? Does it stay stagnant? Apple and Spotify actually give you really cool data about how long people are listening. Do they drop off halfway through? You could start to be like, “Oh, do people stay for the whole episode?” I will say I haven’t found a good site for benchmarks, but it’s like the average podcast I think probably has less than 50% of listeners by the end. So don’t be turned off when you say, “Wow, only 40% of people made it to the end.” That’s not horrible. I think my best episode, it might be like 65 or 70% of people made it all the way to the end. It’s not 99.
Lenny: What I like about those charts is you can see what percentage of people skip the ads and then just keep continuing. It’s like a bump-
Chris Hutchins: Yeah.
Lenny: The mid-rolls and the-
Chris Hutchins: [inaudible 01:01:44] And it’s not as high as I thought.
Lenny: 10, 20% depending on-
Chris Hutchins: Maybe 15%. It depends.
Lenny: Yeah. Not bad at all.
Chris Hutchins: Yeah.
Lenny: Any last words of wisdom on the world of podcasting? Starting a podcast? Continuing a podcast?
Chris Hutchins: Yeah, I’ve got three things for you. One, this is a little bit of a financial outlay, but I think it’s really interesting. There’s this podcast app called Overcast, and it’s not the biggest in the world, but you can run ads in it. And the thing I like is that the ads are much more reasonably priced than a lot of other places and they’re very dynamic. So I would encourage anyone listening to watch it for a few weeks if you have a podcast and you want to experiment, because the same ad could be 700 the next week depending on how much demand there is for that category. So you can wait and hold out. But what I like is they take your art from your podcast and then you can rewrite your description and they tell you how many people saw the ad, how many people tapped on it, and how many people subscribed to the podcast after seeing the ad.
And technically they could also listen to the trailer, they could listen to an episode. And they even give you benchmarks of what to expect. So for a few hundred dollars, you could go in and run an ad for your podcast. Now, I would say in all of the experiments I’ve done with them, I’ve probably garnered… I’m looking at some numbers, like hundreds of subscribers, not thousands. And I’ve probably spent maybe a 10 depending on the appeal of your show, what kind of audience? I’m sure it could go way over that for a business show. And by business I mean, B2B focused kind of show. So, let’s call it 5 because your LTV of a podcast listener is $7. But getting it started, that’s not you.
What you can do is say, “Okay, what was my click-through rate on the ad?” Which will tell you if someone doesn’t click, it’s either not a good description or it’s not a good set of content, or your cover art’s not good. So you can think about, “Okay, I actually need to figure out the podcast before I even have content.” And you could run this ad with a trailer before you even record anything. And then it’s like, “Okay, well people tapped on it, how many of them subscribed?” And I like to use this as a way to say, “Okay, well the benchmark said I was going to get about 50 subscriptions for this ad that was going to get a thousand taps and I got seven.” So these aren’t people who weren’t interested. These are people who read the description, were like, this is interesting, and they didn’t subscribe.
That means my content probably sucks. That means someone listened to a trailer or an episode or something more than the description in the image and decided, “This is not for me.” Maybe they looked at your episodes, I don’t know. But if they don’t tap on it, if you’re supposed to get a 2% click-through rate and you get 0.5, then it’s actually the topic or the way I describe it or the cover sucks. And so I like that as a way to, for a few hundred dollars, get a good test. I’ve even thought of running an AB test of the same podcast with two different descriptions. I wish you could do it with two different cover arts. So I don’t know, that’s like a cheap way to do a little bit of testing. One other thing that I’ll share is I just try to share the podcast everywhere.
So you’ve probably noticed that in all of my emails at the bottom, it’s like, “Oh, great, talk to you Chris.” And then it says, “Hey, want to upgrade your life, money or travel? Check out my podcast and newsletter.” I’m taking every opportunity I can to let anyone know about it because you never know it’ll happen. And my favorite example, especially, when it’s written that it doesn’t come across a big bulky signature was we bought some floor mats and one of them didn’t fit. And I was going back and forth with the customer service person and they actually replied and they were like, “Oh, thanks for sending me that podcast. I really appreciate it.” They thought I was just randomly telling them, “Hey, if you want to upgrade your life, check this out.” They didn’t know it was my signature. So I got a new listener from customer service from a floor mat company. Which by the way, here’s one hack that I also learned from the floor mat company.
Come to my show for hacks, but if you’re ever trying to get a deal on something, that floor mat company, I just pulled up the live chat and just asked. And I said, “Hey, I’m looking at these floor mats, think you could give me a discount. It’s a little expensive.” And it was like, “Yeah, refresh your cart. It’ll be 15% off.” So, this episode’s not about all the hacks, but there’s one cool one.
Lenny: We need more hacks. Wait, I think we’ll get to that at the end. Keep going.
Chris Hutchins: And then the last is, I think it’s fun, that podcast you can experiment. I started out doing guests and then I did some Q&A episodes from questions listeners asked me, and then I recently did some solo episodes. I was really interested in the idea of all the ways you can rent and swap and exchange your home to stay in vacation homes around the world. So I just researched it for, I don’t know, two or three days and just did a 45-minute episode of me talking. There was no guest, there were no questions, it was just me talking. And that works. I’m going to start another series of episodes where instead of interviewing people about an expertise topic, I’m going to interview people who are really dialed into a country. So I’ve got a guy who’s written a handful of the Lonely Planet guidebook for Japan and is in Japan right now for three weeks getting dialed in, what are the latest, coolest stuff.
He’s going to come back and we’re just going to record an episode about everything you need to know about going to Japan. And I’m going to add on about 15 minutes I think at the end without him, where I just talk about all the tricks for using your points, your miles, deals and discounts. Like there’s this new airline in LA that’s super cheap to fly to Japan, but it comes with some caveats. So it’ll be like two thirds guide to going to Japan, one third guide to getting there for cheap. And there aren’t a lot of businesses or ideas where you could just have all of these things that you can experiment with.
Lenny: And then you could do them so fast. Yeah,
Chris Hutchins: Yeah.
Lenny: I love that.
Chris Hutchins: If I interview you, which I’m doing right after this, so anyone listening to this that wants to hear a little of Lenny’s story, come check out All the Hacks. And for 20 minutes we talk about some topic that’s a little off topic. I’ve sometimes just taken that it’s submitted it as a bonus episode on Friday. 15, 20 minutes, it’s not my regular show, but there’s so many ways you can experiment and find out what you like. And then you might say, “Wow, you know what? I really like doing the solo things.” Or maybe you have a co-host on for a week and you’re like, “Ah, that’s so much better.”
So I just love that it gives you a good opportunity to experiment with stuff, find the thing you love, because I think my big takeaway is once you find the thing you really love to talk about, all of that, it just makes everything so much easier because it’s natural and you would do it for free. And the harsh reality of this whole game is like there’s probably going to be a number of months or years you have to do it for free before it takes off. So if you don’t love it, that’s going to be a painful few years.
Lenny: To build on that, I find the same thing with a newsletter, same with a podcast. The last thing you want to do is create a job for yourself that you hate. And so picking a topic that is just not interesting to you, picking a medium that is painful to you, there’s no reason to do that. You may become a TikTok star and you hit a viral video, but then you have to make viral videos for the rest of your life. That’s no fun. You have to think about, “Do I want to do this for years and years and years.” And you can stop, but then becomes hard if it becomes a really good source of income. So that’s something to think about, just don’t create a job for yourself that you just don’t want.
Chris Hutchins: Yeah.
Lenny: With that, we’ve reached our very exciting lightning round. I don’t know if you knew this was coming. So it’ll be extra special, real quick, easy, whatever comes to mind, let me know, and then we’ll see how it all goes. Does that sound good?
Chris Hutchins: That sounds good.
Lenny: What are two or three books that you’ve recommended most to other people recently or in life in general?
Chris Hutchins: Two, I love. Actually, this could be three, Happy Money is a fantastic book. All about ways that you can spend your money to optimize for happiness. It’s like a collection of a ton of research about the science of happier spending, so that’s one. Vagabonding by Rolf Potts, who I had the pleasure… The last two I’ve had the pleasure of interviewing recently. It’s like a guide to long-term travel, but it’s just kind of a different perspective on travel. I would say if you’re at the point in your life where you now have kids, it’s probably going to be hard to live up to that. But I have gifted that book to so many people who are like, “Oh, I think I should take a trip for six months.” I’m like, “Go read this book.” My wife and I travel around the World for seven months, and that book was instrumental to us taking it and how we lived on that.
And then the last is called Die with Zero by Bill Perkins. And that book probably had the biggest impact. I haven’t gifted it to anyone. I’ve recommended it heavily the last week because it had a huge impact on me. And the fundamental premise of the book is that, this isn’t very lightning round response, but instead of optimizing for money, which is so tied up in American culture of how do I make more, how do I get promoted? How do I earn more money, how do I save more money? We should really be optimizing for the net fulfillment in life, and we shouldn’t be trying to save all of this money. We should actually be trying to allocate it over our lives in the most optimal way to increase experiences, increase fulfillment, increase happiness. And sometimes that means saving less when you’re younger and you’re more able to do things like backpack around the world for seven months or go bungee jumping. And when you build those experiences early on, the memories of those experience pay dividends, the rest of your life.
Lenny: Good choices. What’s a favorite other podcast, other than your podcast and my podcast?
Chris Hutchins: I love Animal Spirits. If you’re into markets, life and investing. And they always have good recommendations at the end also on podcasts, TV shows, books, movies, that kind of stuff. So that’s one I really like.
Lenny: What’s a favorite recent movie or TV show that you’ve really enjoyed?
Chris Hutchins: A show that I love, which I think is kind of like a version of a show called Silicon Valley, but not, it’s called Mythic Quests on Apple TV. And I haven’t heard enough people talking about this that I felt like maybe it’s a hidden gem. Maybe I’m amongst company of watching this show, but I think it’s a funny show. It’s lighthearted, it makes me happy, and hopefully at least a few people haven’t checked it out. But it’s like a startup life show, but just dragged out to the extreme like Silicon Valley was.
Lenny: What’s a favorite interview question that you like to ask on your podcast?
Chris Hutchins: I like to try to ask people about their favorite misconceptions in a space. Yeah, I like to kick things off usually with, “What’s a thing that you kind of have a contrarian take on or you think most people get wrong about the thing that best?”
Lenny: Awesome. Final question. What are your three favorite money hacks that listeners can take action on soon?
Chris Hutchins: Okay. One that has paid dividends and literally, I’ve had people on a podcast telling them, write back to me, guests that are like, “I just saved money.” So go to your state’s unclaimed money website. Every state has one, and you can go put in your name, state or city, you don’t even have to give your address. And you can find whether there are people that owe you money. And oftentimes they’re businesses like you moved and Comcast couldn’t figure out how to get you the final part of your prepaid month. And I had someone message me the other day and they’re like, “I just listened to you talk about unclaimed money on a podcast, and I just found $136. I’ve never gotten paid to listen to a podcast.” People have saved hundreds, some people, thousands. I always say, if you’re going to dinner party, you now know someone’s address.
You probably know their name instead of bringing a bottle of wine or in addition, just check if they have unclaimed money. I brought over to a bottle of wine to someone’s house and said, “Also, by the way, did you know that this pharmaceutical company owes you $200?” And I showed him how to go claim it and boom, free money. What a great conversation for the dinner table. So that’s one great one I love. Another great one, you can’t use it right now unless you have a trip planned. But anytime you’re booking a hotel book directly with the hotel and email the hotel in advance that, “Hey, we booked. We’re really excited to stay with you.” If you’re celebrating something, let them know. And if you can’t get the email address, just call the front desk, ask for an email address, follow up a couple days before you get there, let them know you’re coming.
And I would say, you’ve got a 50% chance of getting an upgrade, getting a bottle of wine, getting some comped something, getting a better view. One person wrote into me letting me know that the hotel had their initials embroidered on their pillow, which I thought was kind of a crazy thing to have happen. It’s never happened to me. Personally, I’d rather have the bottle of wine, but I’ll take that for what it is. And for people who like the points game, I’ll share something. Just give you a little tease of how I love finding all the points and miles optimizations. If you have a credit card that pays multiple points, three, four, or five x points on things like a grocery store or an office supply store, anything like that, drug stores, that’s great. You probably don’t have a card that pays any multiple of points on home improvements or Home Depot, Lowes.
So what I like to do to make sure I get the most points I can, instead of going to Home Depot and paying with a card that’s going to give me one point per dollar at Home Depot. I have a four x grocery card. I like to go to Safeway and I just buy Home Depot gift cards. I get my four x points on the gift cards, then I go buy stuff at Home Depot knowing that I got four x points. But you also have some cards that give you three or four x points, if you go to CVS or other pharmacies or drug stores, you can do it there. You can do it at Office Supply stores if you want to take it to the next extreme. If you have an Amazon card, you could buy Amazon gift cards and get your five x or 5% back on the Amazon Prime card.
So I’m a little crazy like that. My favorite is if you’re trying to buy something at a store, always shop online for coupons. If you Google like Lowes, Home Depot, Crate & Barrel coupons, there’s all these websites. My favorite one is Save n, the letter, deals.com. You could buy Home Depot and Crate & Barrel coupons online for a couple bucks, save 15%. So stack up and then the cashback portals. I’m going to buy something, I’m like, “How do I get the cashback portal? How do I get the most points per dollar on my card? And how do I get a discount maybe from asking in the live chat or going in and buying a coupon.” So I go a little crazy on that stuff, but I love saving money and just feeling like I got a good deal.
Lenny: Amazing. What an action packed episode we had. We got money hacks, we got big bets, we got podcasting, we got Self-Driving Money. What a conversation. Chris, this was amazing. Two last questions. How do folks find you online, where do they find your podcast? And then how can folks be useful to you?
Chris Hutchins: All the Hacks wherever fine podcasts are produced for your ears search or go to allthehacks.com or check out the newsletter, just allthehacks.com/email, or you can find it on the website. That’s it. How can you be helpful to me? Check out the show. Let me know what you think. Let me know what you like. Let me know what topics you want me to focus on optimizing in the future. I’ve mentioned I’m always trying to make stuff that someone’s favorite, so if there are things you want to hear me go deep on, let me know. I’m just chris@allthehacks.com and I try to respond to everyone in some reasonable amount of time. And if I haven’t responded in a couple weeks, nudge me and remind me. But I’d love to hear from you. I’d love to produce more content for you, and I’m excited that we have this conversation, and I’m excited to record one with you right after this.
Lenny: Oh my God, here we go. Chris, thank you for being here.
Chris Hutchins: Yeah, thanks for having me.
Lenny: Thank you so much for listening. If you found this valuable, you can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Also, please consider giving us a rating or leaving a review as that really helps other listeners find the podcast. You can find all past episodes or learn more about the show at lennyspodcast.com. See you in the next episode.
Glossary
| English | 中文 |
|---|---|
| 1000 true fans | 1000 个铁杆粉丝(1000 true fans) |
| All the Hacks | All the Hacks(播客名称,不译) |
| analysis paralysis | 分析瘫痪(analysis paralysis) |
| Animal Spirits | Animal Spirits(播客名称,不译) |
| ATR2100X | ATR2100X(Audio-Technica 麦克风型号,不译) |
| Audition | Audition(Adobe 音频编辑软件,不译) |
| batting average | batting average(棒球术语,击球率,比喻每次都击中但缺乏大回报) |
| Bill Perkins | Bill Perkins |
| Brendan Mulligan | Brendan Mulligan |
| Calendly | Calendly |
| Chartable | Chartable(播客分析平台,不译) |
| Comcast | Comcast |
| Crate & Barrel | Crate & Barrel |
| cross promo | 交叉推广(cross promo) |
| Danny Miranda | Danny Miranda |
| Descript | Descript(音频编辑软件,不译) |
| Die with Zero | 《Die with Zero》 |
| Digg | Digg |
| DM | 私信(DM) |
| Duet Display | Duet Display(app 名称,不译) |
| Emily Oster | Emily Oster |
| Erika Colberg | Erika Colberg |
| Erika Talk | Erika Talk(播客名称,不译) |
| Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 | Focusrite Scarlett 2i2(音频接口型号,不译) |
| Gary Vaynerchuk | Gary Vaynerchuk |
| Happy Money | 《Happy Money》 |
| iHeartMedia | iHeartMedia(播客网络/媒体公司,不译) |
| In The DM | In The DM(newsletter 名称,不译) |
| kanban board | 看板(kanban board) |
| Kerri Walsh Jennings | Kerri Walsh Jennings |
| Kevin Rose | Kevin Rose |
| Leigh Rowan | Leigh Rowan |
| Life Updates | Life Updates |
| Lonely Planet | Lonely Planet(旅行指南品牌,不译) |
| LTV | LTV(Lifetime Value,用户终身价值) |
| MailChimp | MailChimp |
| Morgan Housel | Morgan Housel |
| MrBeast | MrBeast(不译) |
| Mythic Quest | 《Mythic Quest》 |
| New and Noteworthy | New and Noteworthy(Apple 播客推荐位) |
| newsletter | newsletter(不译) |
| Nick Gray | Nick Gray |
| Overcast | Overcast(播客应用,不译) |
| PM | 产品经理(PM) |
| Podpage | Podpage(播客建站平台,不译) |
| Podstatus | Podstatus(播客排行榜追踪平台,不译) |
| Pro Tools | Pro Tools(音频编辑软件,不译) |
| product-market fit | 产品市场匹配(product-market fit) |
| Psychology of Money | 《Psychology of Money》 |
| Ray Dalio | Ray Dalio |
| Riverside | Riverside(播客录制平台,不译) |
| Rolf Potts | Rolf Potts |
| RSS feed | RSS feed(不译) |
| Save’n’deals.com | Save’n’deals.com |
| Shure SM7B | Shure SM7B(麦克风型号,不译) |
| Silicon Valley | 《Silicon Valley》 |
| Simple Cast | Simple Cast(播客托管平台,不译) |
| slugging average | slugging average(棒球术语,长打率,比喻追求高回报而非高命中率) |
| Sony a7C | Sony a7C(相机型号,不译) |
| Substack | Substack(不译) |
| The 2-Hour Cocktail Party | 《The 2-Hour Cocktail Party》 |
| Tim Ferriss | Tim Ferriss |
| traction | traction |
| URL slug | URL slug(不译) |
| Vagabonding | 《Vagabonding》 |
| virtual assistant | 虚拟助理(virtual assistant) |
| Wealthfront | Wealthfront(公司名称,不译) |
| Wine Library | Wine Library(不译) |
| YouTube Shorts | YouTube Shorts(不译) |
Reformatted by reformat_english.py
创办与发展播客 | Chris Hutchins(All the Hacks、Wealthfront、Google)
访谈实录
Chris Hutchins: 是的,现在有四百万档播客。但其中只有大约十五万档做过十期以上、且在过去十天内更新过。所以要想进入前 5% 左右——我不太确定具体数字,大概 3%、4%——最简单的方法就是坚持下去。如果你每周做一期,坚持十周,你就已经进入了所有人创建的播客中的前 4%。
Lenny: 欢迎来到 Lenny’s Podcast。我是 Lenny,我的目标是帮助大家提升打造和增长产品的能力。今天的嘉宾是 Chris Hutchins。Chris 不仅曾是一名产品经理(PM)、创始人和投资人,他这个月刚刚全职投入自己的播客和独立创作者之路。当我寻求如何做播客的建议时,Chris 分享了一份非常棒的幻灯片,里面包含了他整个旅程中积累的大量心得,所以我觉得花一期节目聊聊启动和增长播客需要知道的一切,会很有意思。Chris 的播客叫 All the Hacks,涵盖优化你财务生活的方方面面,是全世界最大的商业播客之一。Chris 还上过 Tim Ferriss Show,在那期节目里他采访了 Tim Ferriss。他也在 Wealthfront 担任过新产品战略负责人,在公司内部做了一些大胆的押注,我们后面会聊到。Chris 非常厉害,我很期待你们从他身上学到东西。让我们欢迎 Chris Hutchins。
Chris Hutchins: 谢谢邀请,我很期待。
如何打造一档成功的播客
Lenny: 这一集会比较特别。你是一名产品经理,我们会聊聊你在一些非常厉害的产品上做 PM 时学到的东西。但我想把大部分时间花在讨论如何启动一档播客上。你在短短一年半里就打造了最受欢迎、最大的商业播客之一。你教了我一些东西,也帮助过其他人做播客,所以我觉得聊聊做播客这项技能以及你需要知道的一切,会非常有帮助。怎么样?
Chris Hutchins: 听起来很棒。你刚做了一期关于如何发展 newsletter 业务的节目,我当时就觉得,“太棒了,因为我也有 newsletter,我想把它做大。“我觉得任何有知识想分享的人都可以这么做。我昨天跟一个 PM 聊天,他说,“我有好多产品想法,也许我应该开始做播客。“完全同意,这很有趣。
Lenny: 太好了,我也是这么想的。先做了 newsletter,然后是播客,也许还有别的,我不知道还有什么。
Chris Hutchins: YouTube 频道。
Lenny: YouTube 频道?
Chris Hutchins: 我不知道你是不是这种感觉,但 YouTube……我觉得仅仅把播客放到 YouTube 上是不够的,我需要学习 YouTube 的技能。
Lenny: 是的。好吧,我得请 MrBeast 来,那是下一个目标。
Chris 的职业经历
为了让听众对你有一些基本了解,能不能聊聊你职业生涯中最重要的几段经历,你之前在做什么,现在在做什么,还有你的播客?
Chris Hutchins: 我算是误打误撞进入产品领域的。我基本上很喜欢创业公司,但作为一个非技术人员,我不知道自己能做什么工作。大概十年前我加入了第一家创业公司,跟他们说”我什么都愿意做”。他们说”那就做商务拓展吧”。但结果是我们也没人做产品,所以他们问”我们应该做什么人们会买的东西?“我就想,好吧,我得搞清楚怎么把我们正在做的这个定位服务 API 变成一个产品。
离开那家之后,我和几个人联合创办了另一家创业公司,什么都干,然后大约一年后被 Google 收购。我经历了面试流程,他们说”你是一个 PM”。我说,“哦,太好了,PM 是做什么的?“我当时其实并不完全清楚,从来没做过 PM。经历了 Google 大约一周的培训,就被直接扔进去了。我现在花了很多时间才认识到,做 PM 确实很棒。但在 Google 做 PM、做 Google Plus,就不那么棒了。
我很快就转到了 Google Ventures,做了三年风险投资,之后离开去创办了另一家公司,试图让财务建议变得更便宜、更容易获得。做了大约两三年,最终把那家公司卖给了 Wealthfront,在那里我负责新产品战略。最近我刚离开那个职位,开始全职做 All the Hacks——这是我帮助所有人升级生活、财务和旅行的平台。我就是一个什么都用电子表格的优化主义者,做各种研究来帮助人们过上更好、更幸福、更富有、更健康的生活。我有一档播客,分享所有这些技巧。
Lenny: 太棒了。既然聊到播客了,我们后面会深入展开。大家在哪里可以找到它?它叫 All the Hacks。
Chris Hutchins: 在任何你听播客的地方搜索 All the Hacks 就行,也可以在 allthehacks.com 找到。如果听这个节目的人更喜欢读 newsletter 而不是听播客,allthehacks.com/email 就是 newsletter。
在 Wealthfront 做”自动驾驶资金”
Lenny: 哦,newsletter,我喜欢。好,回到你在 Wealthfront 的上一份工作。据我所知,你的头衔是新产品战略,而 Andy Rachleff 当了一段时间 CEO,是个传奇人物。他联合创立了 Benchmark,简直就是一颗超级大脑……每次在播客上听到他,我都受益匪浅。基本上是他把你拉进 Wealthfront 的,而且明确希望你专注于探索新的业务创意、新业务线、新产品线。是这样吗?
Chris Hutchins: 对,当时我们有一位工程师提出了一个叫”自动驾驶资金”(Self-Driving Money)的想法。我当时就想,天哪,如果你能把整个财务生活自动化、最优化,而且不需要依赖人工理财顾问,那会怎样?我们的客户一直告诉我们,他们付钱给我们就是为了不用和人说话,我们的用户群体不希望中间夹着一堆人。所以我们有了这个想法,但并不清楚它具体是什么。于是 Andy 说,你一直在研究财务规划和软件,作为创业者,你能不能来帮我们打造”自动驾驶资金”?
我就问:“它到底是什么?“他们说:“嗯,从算法角度我们有一堆想法,知道该怎么做。“但是,“它具体是什么?“于是任务就变成了——做大量用户调研,和很多人聊,然后尽可能大胆地构思一个方案,兑现这个承诺:自动化、最优化一个人的全部财务生活,让他不需要每天操心财务,同时知道一切都在正确运转。
Lenny: 我一听到”自动驾驶资金”这个说法,脑子里就浮现出钱在街上开来开去的画面,像特斯拉一样。钱遇上了特斯拉。
Chris Hutchins: 对,我当时的愿景是:财务生活中有哪些核心环节是让人焦虑的?比如”我得转钱,我得往各个账户里存钱,我得确保有足够的钱付账单”。所以我们最终做出了一款叫 Autopilot 的产品。它会监控你的核心银行账户——不管是不是 Wealthfront 的支票账户——确保我们留出一定金额的钱。你可以自己设定留多少。然后我们就会说”好的”,接下来就有一系列事情要用多余的钱去完成。比如:“确保你保留三个月的紧急备用金,把 Roth IRA 存满,确保孩子的 529 教育储蓄计划存满,剩下的放进你的普通应税经纪账户。“我们会定期说:“哦,你有余钱了,让我们把它划过来,该干嘛干嘛,你不用操心。”
Lenny: 能谈谈这个产品对公司产生了什么影响吗?还有,这个项目在 Wealthfront 内部持续了多长时间?
Chris Hutchins: 开始找人聊倒是很快就启动了,就这么临时插进工作里。我对时间的感知很差,但大概在六到十二个月之间,我们才真正把一个能执行所有功能的产品放到用户面前。中间做了大量原型 UI 测试。Andy 确实是传奇人物。如果听众中有人想了解产品市场契合度(product market fit),找 Andy 就对了。我相信是他首创了这个概念,他在斯坦福教这门课。他的核心教诲就是——找到那种让人恨不得隔着桌子伸手来抢的东西,确保你拿到了那种验证。于是我们把可点击的完整原型放到用户面前,我记得有一次,有人居然说:“我能去把我老公叫来吗?我必须给他看看这个。”
后来我做了一件可能不算新鲜的事——在访谈中我开始假装这个产品已经上线了。结果到最后,人们才发现它还没发布。他们会说”我想用……”你能真切地感受到那种反应:“不不不不,这必须得上线啊,我想立刻开始用。“所以我们找到了一个让一小部分人极其兴奋的东西。我们也清楚,这个产品会是一个高风险赌注,因为目前人们并没有把自己的财务生活自动化。就像人们会开车去取快餐,如果你能按一个按钮就把快餐送到家门口,你只是让一件他们已经在做的事情变得更高效而已。但信任软件来做这件事——我们知道这是一个高风险赌注。
关于对公司的影响,我想说的是,它没有我们期望的那么大——它并没有成为那种疯狂拉新的入口。我觉得它和特斯拉的自动驾驶很像——没有人会说”我就是冲着这个功能来买这辆车的”。可能有些人会,但总体来说,一旦你进入了这个生态,它在帮助人们多存钱、增强财务信心、自动化各种行为方面,影响是巨大的。所以令人失望的地方在于,它没有成为那种巨大的拉新引擎——人们不会说”哦,这就是我一直想要的”。尽管你去采访人们,问”你想要一个能把这些全部自动化的产品吗?“他们会说”当然,我很想要”。
然后你把产品递给他们,问”你想用这个吗?“他们却说”嗯……”这一点非常难测试。我们发现的结果是,它在提升储蓄、增加缴款等指标方面确实是一场胜利,但它并没有成为一个增长渠道。Andy 会说,产品市场契合度意味着指数级的有机增长。按这个标准,我们没有达到产品市场契合度。但作为一个把一整套产品系统整合得更好的工具,它的价值非常大——我们有带完整支票功能的现金账户,有投资账户,有退休账户。Autopilot 把这一切串联了起来,这本身就极其有价值。
Lenny: 太棒了。那我的大问题来了——你学到了什么?你花了很多时间思考大赌注、大创新,在公司内部做全新的事情。关于如何在一家大公司里做这件事,你学到了什么?如何成功创新?如何看待发布大赌注?如何搭建团队?这些方面有什么心得?
Chris Hutchins: 我学到了几件事,其中一些我觉得是创业者的经历带给我的直觉。大家往往以为有了用户调研就能做好产品,但在公司内部,你还需要想办法在内部制造热情,争取其他团队的认同,因为最终是他们在构建产品,是他们在帮忙推广。这一切都是团队协作。有时候你会陷入一种状态——至少我发现作为 PM(产品经理)很容易这样——觉得”哦,我们拿到了用户洞察,做了测试,结果都是正面的”,然后你展示调研评分、参与度数据或用户片段,就觉得万事大吉了。但那并不是终点。真正的终点是为你正在构建的东西创造一个令人信服的愿景。另外我从做创业者那里学到的一点是——你必须每次全员大会上都重申你的愿景、你的使命、你为什么在这里。
这看起来理所当然,因为这是我们的核心——为什么我们要做这个产品,它的目的是什么,它为什么了不起。但作为创始人,我每周都会说:“大家好,在开始之前,这是我们正在践行的使命,这就是我们在做这件事的原因。这就是我们在世界上正在做的事。“而作为 PM,有时候你会觉得:“我三周前就告诉过大家了,我发给大家的邮件里也写了,PRD 开头也写了,为什么大家还不理解这个产品为什么存在?“我很快就意识到,公司内部也是一样的情况。所以如果你想下大赌注,想做一款有大影响力的产品,你必须带着大家一起走。你公开演讲的能力、说服他人的能力、在公司内部建立影响力的能力,这些和发现用户需求、打造解决问题的产品的能力同等重要。
Lenny: 太棒了。这让我想起了 Airbnb,创始人们每次全员大会都会分享他们那一年的愿景和战略。每一次都是。大家的反应总是”嗯嗯,知道了知道了”。但你说的没错,这件事确实非常有力量、非常重要。
Chris Hutchins: 而且有些人确实不知道。有些人那次全员大会没在听,错过了,甚至没参加。你往往需要让每个人都能内化……这其实有点像做播客的过渡,我们之后会再聊到,但我每期节目开头都会说:“大家好,欢迎收听新一期 All the Hacks,一档关于升级你的生活、金钱和旅行的节目。“因为我就是想让每个人清楚地知道这个节目是做什么的,这样当他们的朋友问起来,他们就能说”就是做这个的”。公司的使命、产品、愿景也是一样的道理——任何你希望大家真正理解、能够简洁地谈论的东西,都要让他们脑子里有一个非常连贯的叙事。这一点非常关键。我觉得另一点就是要理解客户,不只是通过和他们交谈,还要亲自深入其中,把各种产品都用一遍。
在这次对话之前,我问了几位同事:“我有哪些事情做得特别好?“他们就说:“天哪,我觉得你比很多人都更了解我们公司围墙之外正在发生的事。“也许是因为我跟很多其他创始人聊天,跟很多正在创业的人交流,去读 Product Hunt 上所有新金融产品的评论。真的就是试图超越客户调研本身去理解用户。所以这是另一件我觉得很重要的事……作为创始人,你总是在寻找产品市场契合度,总是在学习。有时候在公司内部,你很容易陷入已经做过的调研、已经聊过的客户中,而忘了走出去跟其他人聊聊,看看别人在做什么。我想说的是,不要被竞争对手在建的东西困住、试图做功能对标,而是要去理解你公司围墙之外更广阔的领域。
Lenny: 关于你提到的提醒大家战略和愿景这一点,我想补充的是,如果你还能帮助他们理解自己的团队和项目如何与之相连——画一棵小树:“这里是所有团队,他们在做什么;这里是如何对齐到各个重点支柱和主题;这里又是如何连接到北极星指标以及愿景使命。“这样就会多一层感受:“哦,原来如此。我明白了。我明白这个团队为什么重要了。”
Chris Hutchins: 有一个很好的类比,我发个链接的话你可以放到节目备注里——关于一支橄榄球队的。总经理的目标是售罄门票、赢得联盟冠军,然后这个目标层层分解下去。比如”有一个防守线协调员”——我甚至不算什么体育迷——但防守线协调员的工作就是做好一件具体的事,但他们解释了这一切如何层层向上对齐到公司的一个或两个北极星指标。我觉得这非常重要。当你跟公司的同事交流时,不只是说产品做什么。而是说:“这个产品会自动化人们的资金流动,这样他们就不需要自己去转账,一切都是自动发生的。“这很酷,但同样重要的是提醒所有人:“然后他们就不用每周为钱操心了,也不用担心缴款之后支票账户里可能没有足够的钱付房租。”
这里面有两个层面——产品能做什么,以及你想让用户获得怎样的感受。这就进入了产品愿景与产品功能集的区分。每当我们为正在构建的东西撰写产品愿景声明时,就是:“想象一个世界,有人能对自己的金钱有这样的感受。“然后是”这个东西将实现这一点”。这就是产品战略。它是你如何执行的方式。Reforge 有一套很棒的产品战略、产品愿景到路线图的体系,把它们全部串联起来,我非常喜欢,也推荐作为学习资源。
Lenny: Reforge。实际上我今天早上刚录了另一档播客,你刚才说的让我想到了那期内容——很多人过于关注功能,而忽略了益处。你说的就是”想想对这个人来说有什么益处”,而不是”功能一、功能二、功能三”。
Chris Hutchins: 最后一个小技能,我知道你也聊过这个,但我觉得这是一件我很幸运地不太在意的事情。那就是,当你在公司里太关注”哦,我想升职”的时候,你就会陷入一种思维:“如果我想升职,我就得做老板想要的事。“而我有一种幸运的优势……我的上一份工作是 CEO。我不在乎头衔,不在乎级别晋升。我进来就是想继续执行我想要实现的那个愿景。这意味着我唯一关心的指标就是影响力,以及打造一个真正有效的产品。而在任何公司的任何岗位上,你可能会以为做老板想要的才是升职的途径。
但我手下工作过的人、或者我共事过的人中,那些总是表现最出色的,都是那些全身心专注于对公司产生最大影响的人。我觉得我学到的另一件事——感谢 Andy Rachleff 教会我这一点——就是当你极力推进自己的想法、拥有非常强烈的信念时,你也要确保表明你的意图。因为有时候人们会认为你是出于私利在行动。我会说:“哦,我们应该删掉这个功能,去做这个疯狂的东西,一定会很棒的。“然后人们就会想:“哦,Chris 就是觉得自己的想法比所有人的都好。“
表明意图的力量
Chris Hutchins: 所以他教会了我一件事。他说:“如果你在说出那些想法之前先加一句开场白,效果会大不一样。比如你说:‘大家,我有一些疯狂的想法,但在我说之前,我想让你们知道,我唯一关心的就是公司能成功。我觉得这个想法能让公司成功,这就是我为什么这么兴奋。我不需要拥有它,我不在乎谁来拥有它,我只是真的很兴奋。‘“当你表明自己的意图时,人们心里就会轻松一些,不会那么容易往不好的方向去猜。即使我相信一半听众所在公司的文化都把”假设善意”列为核心价值观之一,但人的天性仍然是——如果有人否定了我们的想法,我们往往会觉得对方是出于私利。
我学到的一点是,当你有一些疯狂的想法,并且要反驳很多人的时候,如果你能不断地提醒他们你这么做的原因、你在乎的是什么,效果会比带着锋芒冲进去硬推要好的多。
Lenny: 这让我想起来,Andy 应该就是在某个播客里说过,他每年都会挑一个那种”我们要把整个公司押在这上面”的项目,是吗?
Chris Hutchins: 可以说我们确实这么做过几次。我一直跟别人说我想做的是这样的项目:“如果成功了,它能让公司目前做的所有事情都显得没那么重要,因为我们做了一件比现在所有事情大十倍的事。而我们现在做的这些只占公司的 10%。“这就是我喜欢做的那种疯狂的想法。它们非常难,有时候你觉得”哦,我找到一个了”,结果就是不成功。有时候你做了一个,方向却发生了转折。但我认为,当公司找到这种东西的时候,它的力量是巨大的。但如果你没有得到管理层的认同,让他们知道这就是你的目标……Andy 总是讲 slugging average,不是 batting average。他说:“我不在乎你是不是每次都能击中球。如果十次里你能打出一次本垒打,那也比十次里三次击中但经常出局的人强。”
他会考虑这个问题以及其中的平衡。他在内部写了很多关于在迭代改进现有功能和下大赌注之间寻找平衡的文章。但我认为他确实相信,永远需要去探索、去下大赌注,去尝试那些可能产生超量影响的挥棒。你必须平衡,因为你经常会判断错误。而我觉得这正是我想做的那种事。作为一个曾经经营公司的人,当你去一家大公司,然后说”现在我可以完全专注于这个大的产品赌注,不用担心招聘和所有其他事情”——那感觉很好。
播客之路
Lenny: 说到完全专注于某件事,我们来聊聊播客吧。这大概是你接下来要全职投入的新方向。你刚离开 Wealthfront,大约一年半前启动了这档播客——如果我说错了请纠正——大概一年半前。播客已经进入了商业类播客前 30、前 40,某些时候排名可能更高。关于你如何启动和打造这个东西,我有一堆问题想问。但先宏观地问一下,我对播客的整体定位有没有遗漏什么?
Chris Hutchins: 哦,对,就是这些了。播客大约 18 个月了。大概做了差不多 100 期,还没完全到。周更节目。过去 18 个月中我还有一段陪产假,我试图在家庭和全力做这件事之间找到平衡。它一直是我的一个热情项目,我很兴奋地看到这个品牌和内容能衍生出各种不同的分支和触角。
Lenny: 做播客、启动播客、运营播客,给你带来了什么样的好处和好的事情?
Chris Hutchins: 我们都会遇到一些人,觉得”天哪,这个人真聪明,我希望能跟他聊一个小时,好好讨教一下。“有时候你可以直接发邮件说:“嘿,我们能约一个月后的某个时间聊聊吗?“但有时候这样问就是感觉很奇怪。播客给了你一个很好的平台,你可以说:“我有一档播客,所以我很想邀请你来,帮你放大你的声音,花一个小时去理解关于某某话题的一切。“有时候内容很硬核很细,有时候很宽泛,但关键是能有一个理由。我最早的一期节目是跟 Morgan Housel 做的,他写了一本书叫《Psychology of Money》。我读了那本书,觉得”这本书太棒了,我有好多问题想问。”
但我能怎么做呢?随便给一个不认识的人发邮件说”嘿,我很喜欢你的书,能问你 45 分钟问题吗?“我绝不会这么做。但我给他发了封邮件说:“嘿,我们没见过面,但我有一档播客。“我甚至觉得当时还没上线,“下周就要上线了,我真的很期待。能跟你讨教一下吗?“他说:“好啊。“所以我觉得最大的一点就是,它给了你一个平台去探索你的好奇心——前提是你能把内容聚焦在某一个垂直领域、某个细分方向上,让人们知道这个播客是关于什么的。因为播客增长最难的地方在于,有四百万档播客,你必须找到一种方式在茫茫播客海中脱颖而出。
Lenny: 我们正好来聊聊这个。我正想问你这个问题。你说有四百万档,这看起来是对的。可能累计启动过的有四百万。另外,如果有人正在考虑”我该不该做播客?“你有没有什么建议,比如哪些迹象说明这值得你投入时间,哪些迹象说明你最好别做,甚至不要——
Chris Hutchins: 我给你两个视角。第一,是的,有四百万档播客。然而,只有大约 15 万档播客做到了至少 10 期且在过去 10 天内发布过新内容。所以进入前大约 5%——我不知道具体数学是多少,大概 3%、4%——最简单的方式就是坚持下去。如果你每周做一期,坚持十周,你就已经进入了所有人创建过的播客中的前 4%。当然,这不意味着你在那 15 万活跃播客中排前 4%。所以我想说的是……也许你已经有一个很大的平台了,如果是那样,直接开始做播客就好。但如果你还没有一个很大的平台,从统计数据来看,这件事成功的可能性不大。所以,如果你不能接受免费做这件事、在你想实验的整个期间一分钱不赚,那绝对不要开始做播客。
做播客的现实考量
Chris Hutchins: 我想说的一点是,你做播客最可能的结果是——它不会一飞冲天、大获成功。然而,我认识不少人,他们的播客只有几百个听众,做了几百期节目,一直坚持下来,因为他们真心热爱这件事。如果你不确定自己是否热爱,有一个很简单的办法——我自己就是这么做的——对自己说:“我要做一个季,共八期。“我承诺录制八次访谈,发布八期节目。这就是我对自己的全部承诺。然后我说:“如果效果不好,我也完全没问题,就说’这是第一季,没有第二季了。‘我能接受。“所以你可以在正式投入之前先做个短期承诺,看看自己是否真的喜欢。但大概率的情况是——你开始创作内容时可能也有类似感受——前六到九个月完全没有任何收入。
这比看上去的工作量大得多。我认识的每一个从零开始做播客的人都会感叹:“天哪,我以为每周就一个小时,跟人聊聊天就行了。“结果发现:“我还得做准备工作,写节目简介,确保剪辑到位,还得去邀请嘉宾。结果你联系十个人,只有两个回复,只有一个愿意这周安排时间。“要做的事情真的很多。所以我的建议是:只有当你哪怕另一端只有五个听众也依然充满热情去做的时候,才去做播客。
每期节目的时间投入
Lenny: 说到时间投入,你每期节目大概花多少小时?从准备到上线大概需要多长时间?
Chris Hutchins: 随着播客产生了足够的收入来雇人,流程有所变化。但总体来说,根据我对话题或嘉宾的了解程度,准备一次访谈大概需要两到十个小时。如果对方出了一本书,最开始我会觉得必须通读全书并做笔记。后来我想了想:“如果我读了全书又做了笔记,那我就什么都知道了,还问什么呢?“于是我改成只读几个章节。我会去听对方在各种访谈中的表现。有些嘉宾很难准备——有些人只谈一个话题,而你想聊别的方向。我曾经采访过 Kerri Walsh Jennings,她是沙滩排球的三届奥运金牌得主。我听了她做过的所有访谈,因为每个访谈中只有大约 3% 的内容不是关于排球的。
而我不想聊排球,我想聊的是表现力和训练方法。她怀孕期间还拿了一块金牌。这是一种极高水平的身心准备状态,我特别想深入挖掘。所以前期准备是一大块。录制完成后,后续工作取决于节目的风格。如果你做的是那种 NPR 风格的叙事驱动型节目,剪辑会非常耗时。对我来说,访谈类型的节目,我大概花一个小时以稍快的速度回听一遍,然后进去做调整:“嗯,这段不值得保留”或者”我们重复了某个内容,剪掉吧”或者”这个人口误了一下,处理一下”。
编辑流程与工具
幸运的是现在有一些非常棒的软件。我用一款叫 Descript 的软件,它基本上能把所有音频导入并转写,准确率大概 95%。然后你可以像编辑 Google 文档一样编辑播客。特别神奇。你只需要”哦,把所有’嗯’删掉”,Ctrl+F 搜”嗯”,全部忽略。然后你听一遍,发现”哦,那个’嗯’其实很必要,放回去吧。“就是这种小修改。这个工具让编辑流程变得非常简单。从一开始我就请了一位音频工程师,负责混音、母带处理、加入背景音乐之类的工作。
所以我估计每位嘉宾至少需要十个小时,再加上两三个小时的协调和对外联系——你联系三四个人才能约到一个。现在我雇了一个人帮忙做研究,他会去听两三期播客、读几章书,整理出带有链接的笔记。然后我拿着这些材料,把准备时间从十个小时缩短到三个小时。
我的播客启动经验
Lenny: 我简单分享一下我的经历吧。跟你很不一样,听完你的做法觉得很有意思。我的做法完全跟你的建议相反——我一开始就大张旗鼓地宣布:“我会一直做下去,这是我的新事业。我已经约好了 40 位嘉宾,名单在这里。“我觉得部分原因是,我已经通过 newsletter 度过了那段最初的迷茫期——你说的八九个月——确实,我每周写 newsletter 也差不多花了那么长时间,才到了一个我能对自己说”是的,我可以坚持好几年”的阶段,然后才开始加付费计划。所以我觉得我当时对自己能坚持下去更有信心。
而且我从一开始就计划好了商业化,部分原因也是我已经有了 newsletter 这个基础。另外,我自己不做编辑,我有一个制作团队,这绝对是个关键转折。能省下大量时间。我不知道你有没有找过制作方,但我感觉大多数人最终都会走到这一步。
Chris Hutchins: 我现在也换了一个剪辑师,他回去听了前二三十期节目,说:“哦,我知道你喜欢在对话中剪掉什么了。“每次录制结束我会说:“嘿,把这 90 分钟的对话拿去,我觉得大概有 20 分钟需要剪掉。“他做得非常好,每次都很接近我的判断。
Lenny: 太棒了。
Chris Hutchins: 好到有些期节目我甚至根本不看。
Lenny: 对。
Chris Hutchins: 录完就发。
Lenny: 对。
发布策略与排名机制
Chris Hutchins: 关于上线发布,我的一个建议是先多录几期存着。你要提前安排好……你不会想上线之后才手忙脚乱地找嘉宾。所以我认为一次性发布两三期,或者在一周内连发两三期,是一个非常有价值的策略。你在开头提到过,“有时候排名更高,但基本在前 30。“我在商业类目中排名从 100 名到第 5 名都待过,有时候前 10,各种名次都经历过。
原因是排行榜的计算方式跟你想象的很不一样。它们很大程度上取决于新增订阅者的增长势头,至少苹果的排行榜是这样的,而不是实际下载量。我有一个朋友做播客,她在社交媒体上有大量粉丝,所以一上线就获得了惊人的新增订阅者数量,一度成为全球所有播客中的第二名。
Lenny: 我去。
Chris Hutchins: 确实疯狂,持续了一两周。她叫 Erika Colberg,播客叫 Erika Talk。
Lenny: 哦,我知道她。
播客排名与发布策略
Chris Hutchins: 但现在已经不是第二了,因为排名很大程度上取决于新订阅者的增长势头。她仍然在商业类播客百强之列,但要冲到总榜第二,关键是每小时新增的关注者数量。如果你能在早期获得大量流量,就能推动排名上升。而且我想说,这样做的好处是,你会有一张截图——“看,我曾进过前十。“顺便说一句,她的做法和我一样。我进入前十的那一刻,立刻就联系了梦想嘉宾名单上的所有人,说:“嘿,我的播客进前十了,你现在就去看看,确认它在前十里。“所以只要发生过一次,你就可以永远用这件事来说事。所以一定要善加利用。
关于发布,你之前已经有了 newsletter。我当时也有一个 newsletter,之前断断续续写过各种东西,也为上一个创业项目写过。所以我把这些内容整合起来,试图做一次大规模发布,让排名真正冲上去,也许还能被 Apple 选为”New and Noteworthy”。你能做很多事情来在发布时建立势头,但说到底,不管势头有多大,如果内容不好都没用。我总是说,内容之于我,就像产品市场匹配(product-market fit)之于做软件——你得有一个好的播客。而且如果一开始就大张旗鼓地发布,一个缺点是你没有机会慢慢调整、测试、看看效果如何。不过我要说,我录了五期,录到第五期的时候我就知道,“这就是第一期。“我录的第一期实际上大概第五个才发出来,但我录的第五期反而第一个发布,因为我就是知道它应该是第一期。
内容要有独特视角
我那位嘉宾,我们聊了旅行省钱技巧,一个叫 Leigh Rowan 的人,他来过两次节目。那一期能量特别棒,涵盖了你所有想知道的旅行省钱技巧,链接是 allthehacks.com/one,省得你去翻整个列表。但如果你的内容没有独特视角,表达方式也不独特,在播客的汪洋大海中真的很难脱颖而出。所以我总说,做自己,保持真实。要做某个人最爱的播客,不要做所有人都觉得”还行”的播客。我记得 Tim Ferriss 说过——我有机会上了他的节目,专门采访他关于播客的话题。他说:“我做过一期关于……怎么做小提琴之类的节目,我自己对这个话题特别着迷。80% 的人说,这期节目是怎么回事?但 20% 的人认为那是那年最好的一期。“而且他历史上播放量前十的节目里,大概有一半是大家根本不认识的人。所以我觉得应该专注于让你自己兴奋的内容,而不是关注你认为会拉动数据的话题。因为每次我觉得”这个人肯定能拉动数据”,结果都没有。反而我采访了一个从没人听说过的人,却收到这样的邮件:“哇,这期太棒了,我太高兴你做了这一期。“我心里想,“你甚至都不知道这个人是谁。”
Lenny: 很多方面和你说的非常相似的经历。你之前跟我分享过的一条建议,也是我反复思考的——你应该成为某个人最爱的播客。这说明你做对了方向。能展开讲讲吗?
做某个人最爱的播客
Chris Hutchins: 有一个理念叫”打造你的 1000 个铁杆粉丝(1000 true fans)“。我觉得不管你在世界上创造什么,都希望有人成为你的拥护者,因为正是这些人会帮你分享,会写评论,会给你提供想法,也正是这些人——当你在播客里发出号召,比如”嘿,我在找人一起做这家公司或这个项目”——他们会主动联系你、想要加入你。我觉得和受众建立这种关系极其有价值。播客尤其如此,因为播客是一种非常亲密的媒介。你在别人的耳朵里,他们在日常生活中一边做事一边认真听你说话——散步的时候,通勤的时候,你就陪在他们身边。我收到很多邮件说:“啊,感觉就像坐在你家沙发上,听你跟我聊天一样。“你会建立起一种很亲密的关系。你越能为这些受众创造价值,成为他们一天中最喜欢的时光、最喜欢的东西,就越好。曾有人告诉我:“一定要在固定时间发布,因为会有听众说,‘周三早上到了,我的新节目呢?这已经成了我生活中的仪式。‘“所以,我也不知道,我就是觉得建立那种早期热情的用户基础、那 1000 个铁杆粉丝特别有价值,因此我总是努力做出能让某个人当成最爱的内容。
实际上,大约出到 50 期的时候我做了次观众调查,问”你最喜欢哪一期?“结果除了那一期之外,每一期都是某个人心中的最爱。有一期没人选。所以我还在等,也许下次调查的时候会有人说:“不不,那期是我的最爱。“但其他 49 期,每一期都是某个人的最爱。知道每一期都是某个人心中的最爱,那种感觉真的太棒了。
Lenny: 我的 newsletter 也是一模一样的情况。每期 newsletter 都会收到回复,有人说”这是目前为止我最喜欢的一期”。好的,看来真的有人特别喜欢这期。真的很有意思。
Chris Hutchins: 是啊。
如何选择播客主题
Lenny: 你当初是怎么选定播客主题的?你对想要做播客的人选择主题有什么建议吗?
Chris Hutchins: 这个问题挺有意思。我的播客最初其实是一个从爸爸视角出发的育儿播客。当时我做了大量研究,建了一个大约 75 页的 Notion 文档,全是关于育儿的。里面有看板(kanban board),列出了怀孕每个三个月周期需要做的所有事情。产后第四个”三个月”也有各种清单。我还做了一个婴儿车对比表格,至少有十五二十个可以筛选的维度——尺寸、折叠后的体积等等。真的是疯了。我当时特别痴迷,心想:“没有人用这种极致优化的方式来处理育儿信息吧,除了极少数人。“顺便提一下,Emily Oster 写了几本书,我很喜欢她那种务实的、基于科学的方法。但我确实没看到太多这类内容,尤其是来自爸爸视角的内容就更少了。
从育儿播客到 All the Hacks
Chris Hutchins: 我当时特别兴奋,心想:“太激动了。“结果女儿出生之后,不知为什么,我爱她,但在孩子出生前后,我对”育儿”这个话题以及优化其方方面面这件事的热情完全不一样了。我心里就想:“完了,但我已经买了麦克风,学会了所有的编辑软件,却连一集都没录过。“最后我只能承认,这个话题确实不适合我。后来我去上了一个朋友的播客,那个人叫 Kevin Rose,他是我之前一起创业的合伙人,早年创办了 Digg。在录制过程中我们聊到了这件事,我一直在头脑风暴想点子。录到一半他突然说:“嘿,跟大家说说你的新播客吧。”
我当时就说:“Kevin,我还没想好做什么呢。“他说:“没事,你回去录一段回答这个问题的音频,在这期节目上线之前发给我,到时候你就可以告诉大家你的播客是做什么的了。“我想了想说:“好吧,我考虑一下。“结果第二天他就催我:“兄弟,周五之前要给我啊。“我心想天哪,那我只有两天时间搞清楚我的播客要做什么。我跟很多人聊,他们都问我:“你喜欢什么?你爱聊什么?“我想了半天。后来有人问了我一个问题:当你坐在饭桌上,你聊什么话题的时候会发现桌上所有人都在前倾着身子认真听,想从你这取经,甚至事后还给你发短信追问?
我想了想,大概就是我那些各种 hacks 吧——免费旅行、升舱、省钱、网购、优化健康等等,还有住房 hacks、省房租之类的。每次我提起这些,大家的反应都是:“我喜欢省钱,我也想免费旅行。“他们身体前倾,追问:“该办哪张信用卡?这张不好吗?那张怎么样?“至于名字,我一直定不下来。我想了几百个名字,什么 life upgraded、optimized your life 之类的。但每次我描述这个播客的内容,我就会说:“它就是 life upgraded,我会教你所有这些 hacks。“后来有人——我甚至记不清是谁了——说:“那你干脆就叫 All the Hacks 呢?“我一查,“allthehacks.com 这个域名还在吗?“居然还在。那还犹豫什么,赶紧把域名拿下。然后我迅速录了一段回应 Kevin 问题的音频,大意是:“没错,我要上线一档播客叫 All the Hacks,内容是这样的。“我还得在三天内做一个预告片并上传所有内容。我觉得自己挺幸运的,正是因为有这种时间压力,才逼着我把东西做出来。
如何选择播客主题
所以我有两个建议。第一,问问自己:你在饭桌上最爱聊什么?什么让你兴奋?别人会因为什么专长来找你请教?你会在网上因为什么话题而深陷兔子洞无法自拔?因为所有这些都会成为你作为创作者日常生活的一部分。第二,想办法逼自己做出决定,因为我特别容易陷入分析瘫痪。你可以找个朋友,让他跟你说:“我周五就要在推特上宣传你的播客了”,或者”我下个月的 newsletter 要提到你”。给自己一个人为的截止日期,或者哪怕是一个真实的截止日期,先立个 flag。名字之后可以改,主题可以转,内容风格也可以调整,这些都可以后面再说,但最重要的是先开始。因为只有开始了,你才能知道自己到底喜不喜欢做这件事、感觉如何。还有一个有趣的小 hack:你可以先创建一个播客,做成一个私密 feed,别人可以把这个私密 feed 添加到他们的播客 app 里。这样如果你想收集反馈,只需要把一个 URL 发给朋友,说:“嘿,把这个 URL 粘贴到 Apple Podcast 的播放器里,听几集然后告诉我你的想法。“在你正式向全世界发布之前,可以先这样做。
Lenny: 太棒了。我当年还真听过你和 Kevin Rose 的那次访谈,然后去看了你的播客,我记得我还订阅了,感觉非常自然。做得很好。
Chris Hutchins: 谢谢。你当时肯定不知道那段是后期插入的,是在另一套系统上单独录的。
如何获得初始听众
Lenny: 听到这儿的听众可能会想:“我又没有 Kevin Rose 帮我宣布播客上线,我该怎么起步?怎么才能让播客获得初始的势头?“对于那些刚开始做播客的人,你有什么建议吗?在没有什么大平台朋友的情况下,怎么做才能获得第一批订阅者、把消息传出去、获得一些初始的 traction?
Chris Hutchins: 有的。我采访过一个叫 Nick Gray 的人,那次对话很有意思。他写了一本书叫《The 2-Hour Cocktail Party》,讲的是如何通过举办最棒的鸡尾酒会来建立人脉。内容非常实操。其中他提到的一件事是他有一个”朋友 newsletter”。他基本上是这么做的:创建了一个 newsletter,每次他交到一个朋友,就会发消息问对方:“我可以把你加到我的朋友 newsletter 里吗?“人们一般都会同意。然后他就分享一些内容:“这是我最近在读的不错的文章,这是我在做的一件挺酷的事,这是一张照片。“与其等到节假日才给所有人寄一张节日贺卡,写上”这是今年发生的事”——那种方式大概是我祖父母那辈人的做法,现在可能就是发一张全家福照片。
他就是时不时发一封。我甚至不确定他的发送频率是多少,反正隔三差五就会收到一封邮件,看完就觉得:“哦,Nick 最近在搞这个,挺酷的。“任何人都可以订阅。他分享了各种好东西。比如他说:“我最近在考虑用虚拟助理,这是我想出来的 75 件可以交给虚拟助理做的事。“我觉得这太酷了。他还分享:“这是我怎么调整 Calendly 的。我把 Calendly 的链接发给你,里面加了几个小改动……”他提了一些让预约体验更友好、更舒适的建议。我最喜欢的一条是:“如果我迟到两分钟以上才上线,这是我的手机号。我只是想确保自己准时,也让对方知道这件事。”
所以一个建议是:在你正式开始之前,先想办法建立起一个由最亲近的朋友、家人、同事组成的受众群,把一些内容分享出去。你不必每周或每月都发,可以每季度发一次、每半年发一次,都无所谓。但先开始积累。我当时也是先做了一个 newsletter,我记得是在 MailChimp 上,叫 Life Updates。大概十年前发了五期,之后七年基本没再发过,但我手上仍然有一个 1100 人的邮件 newsletter,都是生活中慢慢积累下来的。这是第一点。当然,你也可以去想一些有创意的方式跟别人合作推广。比如你有 newsletter 但没有播客。
合作推广与内容交换
Chris Hutchins: 你能不能利用你的 newsletter 来推广什么东西?你能不能找到某个拥有平台的人,用你的服务换取他们的推广?我能想到几个例子,有些时候我特别兴奋地用了一个产品,就会去问:“嘿,我能不能跟我的受众聊聊这个东西?然后你让我用那个?“所以不管是什么——咨询服务也好,其他什么也好——你都可以拿自己的服务去跟有受众的人交换,让他们帮你分享和推广。我觉得这种事其实挺常见的。但说到底,前提还是你的内容得够好。所以我想说的第一点,也是最重要的一点:想让内容增长,首先得让内容本身足够好。但什么是”好”很难定义。先发出去,看看大家的反应。在尝试这些增长技巧之前,先多练练手,把基本功打好。
我觉得自己比较幸运,之前做过一些公开演讲,所以面对镜头没那么紧张。但如果你……你之前提到了 MrBeast,他自己公开说过,如果你回到十年前看他的 YouTube 视频,远没有现在这么精彩。他花了很长时间才有今天的水平。我觉得做内容的现实就是这样:几乎每一个你看到的人,你会觉得”哇,他们的受众好大,太厉害了”。但如果你回到十年前看他们的东西,你会发现”哦,他们第一期其实也没那么好”。甚至有点粗糙,或者没那么有趣。他们是在过程中不断进步的——慢慢摸清受众喜欢什么,逐步建立起了自己的粉丝群。这些都是需要时间的。还有一点,去找到相关的社区。如果你讲的是某个非常具体的话题,我一直记得 Gary Vaynerchuk 给我的忠告,天哪,大概是 13 年前他跟我说的。
Gary Vaynerchuk 的社区策略
他说他当初在做起 Wine Library 的时候——可能很多人甚至不知道他最早是靠这个出名的——他想把这个生意做起来,于是他上 Twitter,找到每一个提问关于葡萄酒的人,然后一一回复他们。所以我觉得有一个策略特别有效:以我为例,我热爱旅行,热衷于积分和里程。我可以在 Twitter 上搜索,找到每一个在 Twitter、Reddit、论坛上问相关问题的人——而这些问题恰好是我的播客能回答的——然后进去为他们提供有价值的内容。我保证,如果你有一个播客,你最喜欢的话题是拼布,你在 Twitter 的个人简介里写上——也许 Twitter 不是最合适的平台,但我们就用这个比喻吧——你的简介写着”顶级拼布播客”。然后你去找到每一个在问拼布问题的人,用高质量的回答去帮他们解决问题。他们看到你的简介就会想:“天哪,这个人对这个话题太了解了,去看看她做了什么吧。“于是你就有了这些拥护者,他们在自己的社区里帮你传播,慢慢地就壮大了。
利用有分发引擎的平台
我再补充一个策略,这个我当年没有做,但播客本身没有内置的分发引擎。TikTok 你发一个视频,TikTok 会把它推给一百个人,没人喜欢就死了。但如果有几个人喜欢,它就会推给更多人、更多人。YouTube 也是这样,Instagram Reels 也是这样。播客没有这个机制,所以它就是一个慢增长的过程,你必须接受这一点。
但我早期没有做的,而你 可以做的是:把播客做成短视频片段,放到那些有内置分发机制的平台上去。如果这些片段火了,就能积累起庞大的受众。有一个人叫 Danny Miranda,他有一个播客,刚起步时粉丝不多,但他把每一期节目都做了片段,而且是大量片段。他不知道哪段内容最吸引人,索性把所有内容都做了片段。他在 TikTok 和 Instagram 上积累了数百万的播放量,就是靠把播客内容转化为短视频,引导大家去下载他的播客。这帮他建立了受众,而且他在社交媒体上建立受众的速度比我快、规模比我大,就是因为他全力投入在那些有增长引擎的平台上分发内容。
Lenny: 最后一点很有意思,因为我听到的说法——我自己也经历过——我有 TikTok 片段,有 YouTube 视频和 YouTube Shorts,我发现它们能带动平台内的关注、下载和播放量,但我没有看到对播客本身的实际影响。也许有些人能衡量,或者能感觉到某些变化,但根据我听到的和亲身经历的,我不确定它是否真的能带来大量播客下载。不过它仍然很有用,有一个很棒的 TikTok 账号和 YouTube 账号本身就是有价值的。
Chris Hutchins: 他说,“你看……”他不确定是否能直接带动下载,但确实帮他提升了品牌知名度。而且有好几位嘉宾主动说:“哦,我很愿意上你的节目。“他做过一条片段,是关于 Ray Dalio 的。Ray Dalio 转发了那条片段,于是他跟很多原本非常难接触到的人产生了互动——如果你只是跟对方说”我的播客有这么多下载量”,人家未必搭理你。但因为他在各个平台上获得了数千甚至数百万的播放量,这给了他足够的公信力去做很多本来可能做不到的事情。然后他进一步把这些关系转化为:邀请那些播客分发能力特别强的人来上他的节目做访谈。而大多数人的反应是:“哦,那我把这段内容也分发给我的受众吧,毕竟你邀请了我。“
Danny Miranda 的线下录制策略
他做了一件特别聪明的事:他所有的视频都是线下录制的,会飞到对方那里当面录制。线下录制的视频质量比远程录制好太多了。这要辛苦得多,工作量也大得多,而且对音频质量也没什么影响,但他做出的片段质量是最高的。Erika Colberg 也是这么做的。她会把这些高质量片段发给嘉宾,他也会发给嘉宾,然后嘉宾就开始使用这些片段——因为他花了大量时间精心挑选最好的片段,制作质量最高、让嘉宾看起来特别棒的片段。这样一来,嘉宾就更愿意在自己的受众中分享,突然之间你就获得了巨大的势能。
这能不能转化为下载量呢?我给你推荐一下,Danny 在 Substack 上有一个付费 newsletter,叫 In The DM,里面详细拆解了他所有的下载数据和策略,讲这些东西怎么帮他一步步做起来的。非常精彩,叫 In The DM 是因为他早期很多邀请嘉宾都是通过社交媒体的私信(DM)完成的。到底能对播客产生多大影响,还有待观察,但它确实能带来其他方面的收益——我觉得是间接的……没有直接的归因,但不代表整体趋势没有在上升。
作为嘉宾上其他播客
最后一点,找到其他你可以作为某个领域专家去上的播客。你做播客,应该是因为你认为世界上有某件令人兴奋的事、你热爱它、对它充满热情、你是这方面的专家。
把这件事带到其他播客上去展示自己。所有播客都有听众,而听众本来就是在听播客的,所以这是最好的媒介。当然,喜欢 60 秒短视频的人未必是听一小时纯音频节目的最佳目标群体——这两种行为模式差异很大。但如果你能找到自己真正擅长的领域,并向他人展示你能为他们的节目带来价值,那就能在帮助他们增长听众的同时也扩大你自己的受众。作为经常收到大量上播客邀请的人,我唯一想提醒的是:一定要下功夫,确保你的推介真正有说服力。你会收到很多拒绝,这就是现实。我自己也向很多节目推介过,同样也会被拒绝。
很多时候我也会被拒绝,但我发的邮件绝不会让人觉得”这个人显然不知道自己在说什么”。然而我收到的大量邮件是这样的:“哦,我很想让我的客户上你的播客,他们很擅长聊创业。“我心想,“可我的节目并不采访人聊这个啊。“如果有人来找我,说”这里有一个改善生活的技巧,我觉得你的听众会从中受益,而且我的专业背景让我最有资格来谈这个话题”,我会开放得多,因为他们真正理解我的节目在做什么。
Lenny: 是的,我完全理解。我每天至少收到一封这样的推介邮件,我太懂你说的了。我一般都不回复,因为根本不值得去说服他们自己并不合适。
Chris Hutchins: 没错。
播客工具栈
Lenny: 话题换一下,我想聊聊你的工具栈,你的播客工具栈。软件方面你用什么?硬件呢?麦克风、耳机?你有什么推荐?
Chris Hutchins: 麦克风方面,我最开始用的是 ATR2100X,我认为它是一款非常棒的入门级麦克风,不到 100 美元。你可以用传统的模拟 XLR 线缆,同时也支持 USB 直连。那支麦克风陪我录了 50 多期节目。后来我升级到了 Shure SM7B,它是 XLR 接口的,你用的应该是 Shure 的 USB 版本——
Lenny: 对,我用的是 USB 版本——
Chris Hutchins: 没错。这两款都是非常棒的升级选择。我觉得 SM7B 的音质稍好一些,但每次旅行时,如果不确定会不会有录制需求——比如需要录一段 intro 或做远程采访——我依然会随身带着 ATR2100X,因为它轻便易用,效果也很好。录制方面,我所有内容都在 Riverside 上录制,然后导入 Descript 进行编辑。我的 XLR 麦克风接的是 Focusrite Scarlett 2i2,这是一个音频接口。说实话我在视频方面可能有点过度投入了——我们刚才开始录制前还聊到过——我用的是 Sony a7C,一台全画幅无反相机,架在一个 60 美元的 Amazon 提词器后面,这样我就能在看着镜头的同时保持眼神接触。提词器下面放着一台大概有十年历史的旧 iPad,它作为电脑的扩展屏幕来使用,通过一个叫——
Lenny: 如果你没在看 YouTube 版本,至少得去看五秒钟,就为了看 Chris 直勾勾盯着你的样子。我在播客视频里从来没见过这种设置。
Chris Hutchins: 是的,那套设置是通过 iPad 运行一个叫 Duet Display 的 app 来实现的。编辑方面我不自己做,我合作过一位使用 Audition 的编辑和一位使用 Pro Tools 的编辑,我对这两个工具没有特别的偏好。哦,还有我最喜欢的一个工具——我的朋友 Brendan Mulligan 创办了一家公司叫 Podpage。对于不太了解播客运作方式的人来说,播客需要一个托管平台,我用的是 Simple Cast。我喜欢它的原因是,它是少数几个既有非常实惠的自助方案、又提供完整的专业功能的托管平台之一——包括未来可能需要的变现等所有功能——这样你就不用中途换平台了。当然换平台其实也不难,迁移起来挺简单的。具体来说,你上传一个 MP3 文件,填写节目笔记、单集标题等信息,平台就会为你生成一个 RSS feed。
实际上你也可以自己创建 RSS feed,本质上就是这么回事,你也可以把所有东西托管在 AWS 之类的上面,但这些平台以不算高的价格让一切变得非常简单。然后你把这个 RSS feed 分发到各个播放器——Apple Podcast、Spotify 等等。而 Podpage 这个服务厉害的地方在于,你把 RSS feed 提交给这个网站,它就会读取并说:“哦,这是播客的描述,这是每一期节目,这是你提交的封面图,这是标题,这是节目笔记。“然后自动为你生成一个网站。之后他们会提供类似 WordPress 那样的工具,让你去修改页头、调整描述等等。他们让你可以自行微调。每周三凌晨两点我的播客上线,两点零五分 Podpage 就已经检测到了——RSS feed 已更新,网站也同步发布了。我完全不需要做任何事情。
他们甚至会监控 URL slug——比如我在节目中提到”去这个链接看看”,Podpage 就会说,“哦,这是你希望听众访问的 URL,我们会自动继承过来,你甚至不需要提供任何信息,我们就能知道你想为这一集设置什么 URL。“我觉得这是搭建播客网站最简单的方式。还有一件事,我们之前完全没聊过数据分析——我用的是 Chartable 做分析。播客的数据分析有点令人头疼,因为你可参考的数据有限。但 Chartable 是一个非常出色的分析平台,当你开始与其他节目做交叉推广,或者为其他节目投放广告时,它就变得特别有意思了,因为它基本上可以通过 IP 地址追踪下载行为。
我说的追踪,并不是指我能知道具体是谁在哪里听了什么。但我能知道的是:如果我与另一个节目做交叉推广——我在自己的节目里说”嘿,去听听我喜欢的这个播客”,对方也这样说——Chartable 就能告诉我:“有多少下载了你这期节目的人,实际去听了对方的那期节目?“这样你就能获得播客听众从一个节目流向另一个节目的直接归因数据。所以这是我运营播客工具箱中非常重要的一件工具,但在你开始关注增长、做推广之类的事情之前,它的重要性还没那么大。
Lenny: 很棒。我的一个不同之处是我托管在 Substack 上。我也用 Podpage 做网站,我的制作团队实际上也用 Descript 来编辑——Descript 既适合业余爱好者,也适合专业人士使用。我也用 Chartable,不过我的 Chartable 有点问题——我好像跟你提过——它不计入 Spotify 的下载量,挺烦人的,不过——
Chris Hutchins: 这其实挺讽刺的,因为对于不知道的人来说,Spotify 其实是 Chartable 的母公司。所以你的 Chartable 获取不到良好下载数据的平台,恰恰是拥有它的那个平台。
Lenny: 是的。我完全搞不懂是怎么回事。我跟他们沟通过,他们也不知道怎么修。不过也无所谓了,我从其他渠道能拿到足够的数据分析。还有一个网站我想推荐,叫 Podstatus,它可以快速查看你每天在排行榜上的位置,还能给你生成漂亮的折线图。Chartable 基本上也能做到,但 Podstatus 更简洁。不过其他的就差不多了。
Chris Hutchins: 很棒。
Lenny: 都大同小异。还有一个小问题——如果有人刚上线自己的播客,你觉得一个好的下载量目标是什么?在起步阶段,什么数字会让你觉得”嗯,这可能有效”?你有没有一个建议去达成的门槛?
下载量目标与排行榜
Chris Hutchins: 我不会用某个门槛来衡量,因为你可能带着一个庞大的受众群体开播,但播客做得并不好,也许也能拿到一万下载量,这听起来很疯狂对吧?你会感觉非常好。所以我更关注趋势方向,而不是具体数字。因为即使是 Apple 排行榜,它也是靠势能驱动的。你可能第一周只有一个下载量,但接下来一周越来越多、越来越多、越来越多,你实际上会比那些下载量停滞在某个固定数字的节目更快地爬上排行榜。如果你能做到每集 3000 左右的下载量,你就已经跻身前 1% 了。所以你不需要达到惊人的数字就能登上排行榜前列。
Lenny: 是的,我听说——
Chris Hutchins: 我想说的是——
Lenny: 我听过类似的数字,3000。
Chris Hutchins: 排名最靠前的播客每集能做数百万下载,但那基本上就是前十、前二十、前三十的节目。下一个梯队的 top 50 大概是数十万级别的下载量。但再往下,前两三百名之外,基本上就是每集万级别的下载量了。当然这会有些波动,取决于你是日更还是周更之类的。但我想说,如果你单集下载量跨过了 1 万这个门槛,很多业内人士就会开始认真对待你的节目了。我早期就跟 iHeartMedia 这样的播客网络以及其他一些播客网络有过接触,他们想把我的节目纳入旗下,替我打理一切,而那些对话都是在单集下载量达到 1 万到 1.5 万,甚至 2 万的时候才开始的。但我绝对不期望任何人一上来就能达到这个水平。就连我自己也不是一开始就达到的。即使有几个朋友帮忙宣传造势,也还是需要时间。
所以,忘掉前三集的下载量吧,因为你大概率会告诉全世界,动用你所有的社交资本去推这几集。然后看看你的第四集、第五集、第六集的下载量,是在增长?还是停滞不前?Apple 和 Spotify 实际上会给你很详细的数据,告诉你听众听了多长时间。他们是不是听到一半就退出了?你就可以开始观察:“哦,大家会不会听完整个节目?“我还得说,我没找到一个好的基准数据网站,但据我所知,平均来说播客大概有超过 50% 的听众不会听到最后。所以当你发现”哇,只有 40% 的人听到了最后”的时候,不要气馁,这并不算糟。我最好的一期,大概也就 65% 到 70% 的人听完了全部内容,不是 99%。
听众留存与广告跳过率
Lenny: 我喜欢这些图表的地方在于,你能看到有多少比例的人跳过了广告,然后继续听下去。就像一个凸起——
Chris Hutchins: 对。
Lenny: 中插广告那块——
Chris Hutchins: 跳过的比例没我想的那么高。
Lenny: 大概 10%、20%,取决于——
Chris Hutchins: 可能 15% 左右。看情况。
Lenny: 是啊,完全不差。
Chris Hutchins: 对。
播客运营的最后建议
Lenny: 关于播客这个世界,无论是起步还是持续运营,你还有什么最后的心得想分享吗?
Chris Hutchins: 好的,我有三点建议。第一点,这需要一点资金投入,但我觉得很有意思。有一个播客 app 叫 Overcast,它不是全球最大的,但你可以在里面投放广告。我喜欢它的原因是,广告价格比很多其他平台合理得多,而且非常动态。所以我建议有播客并且想尝试的听众,先观察几周。因为同一个广告位可能这周 200 美元,下周就变成 700 美元,完全取决于那个类别的需求有多少。所以你可以等待、观望。但让我喜欢的是,它会直接抓取你播客的封面图,你可以自己重写广告文案,然后它会告诉你有多少人看到了广告、多少人点击了、多少人看到广告后订阅了你的播客。
严格来说,他们还可以听预告片、听正片。它甚至会给你提供基准预期数据。所以只需几百美元,你就可以进去为自己的播客投放一条广告。不过我要说,在我做过的所有实验中,大概获得了……我正在看一些数据,大概是数百个订阅者,不是数千。而我大概花了 1000 美元左右。如果你做付费营销,获取一个播客听众的平均成本大约在 3 到 10 美元之间,具体取决于你节目的吸引力以及受众类型。我估计如果是商业类节目,这个数字可能会高得多。这里说的商业类是指 B2B 方向的节目。所以,大概 5 美元一个听众吧。这不是增长受众的最佳方式。但到了某个阶段,如果你的节目已经有了一定规模,已经接了广告,而且你知道一个听众值多少钱,那也许花 5 美元获客是划算的,因为你每个播客听众的 LTV 是 7 稀。但在起步阶段,这不是你该做的事。
你可以做的是,去看”我的广告点击率是多少?“如果没人点击,那要么是文案写得不好,要么是内容定位不对,要么是封面图不行。所以你可以思考:“好吧,我在有内容之前,其实就需要先把播客的定位搞清楚。“你甚至可以在还没录制任何内容之前,就只用一个预告片来投放这条广告。然后看,“好,有人点击了,但有多少人订阅了?“我喜欢用这个方式来判断——“基准数据显示,这条获得 1000 次点击的广告大概能带来 50 个订阅,但我只拿到了 7 个。“这些可不是不感兴趣的人,这些是读了你的描述、觉得”这挺有意思”的人,但他们没有订阅。
那说明我的内容可能有问题。说明有人听了预告片或某期节目,在看完了比描述和图片更多的内容之后,决定了”这不是给我的。“也许他们还翻了一下你的节目列表,谁知道呢。但如果是他们根本没点击——如果预期点击率应该是 2%,你只拿到了 0.5%——那问题就出在话题本身,或者你描述它的方式,或者封面上。所以我喜欢用这种方式,花几百美元做一个有效的测试。我甚至想过对同一个播客用两套不同的描述来做 A/B 测试。要是能对两套不同的封面图做测试就好了。总之,这是一个低成本做小规模测试的方法。另外一点我想分享的是,我就是尽量在所有地方推广播客。
处处推广播客
Chris Hutchins: 你可能已经注意到了,我所有邮件的末尾都会写类似”好的,回头聊,Chris”之类的,然后下面会附上一句:“想提升生活、理财或旅行体验?看看我的播客和 newsletter。“我会抓住一切机会让更多人知道,因为你永远不知道机会从哪里来。我特别喜欢的一个例子,尤其是这种写法看起来不像是一个笨重的签名——有一次我们买了几个脚垫,其中一个尺寸不对。我跟客服来回沟通了好几轮,结果对方回复说:“谢谢你推荐那个播客,我很喜欢。“他们以为我是随口跟他们说的——“嘿,如果你想提升生活品质,可以看看这个。“他们根本不知道那是我的签名。所以我从一家脚垫公司的客服那里获得了一个新听众。
顺便说一下,这家脚垫公司还让我学到了一个技巧。欢迎收听我的节目学各种技巧,但如果你想在某样东西上拿到折扣——那家脚垫公司,我直接打开了在线客服窗口问了一句。我说:“嘿,我在看这些脚垫,能不能给我打个折?有点贵。“对方直接回复:“好的,刷新一下你的购物车,打了八五折。“所以这期节目虽然不全是讲技巧的,但这里有一个不错的。
Lenny: 我们需要更多技巧。等等,我觉得这个放到最后再说。继续。
播客的形式实验
Chris Hutchins: 最后一点,我觉得很有意思的是,播客可以做各种实验。我最开始做嘉宾访谈,后来做了一些问答节目,回答听众提出的问题,最近又开始做单人节目。当时我对各种租房、换房、交换住房来在世界各地住度假屋的方式特别感兴趣。于是我大概花了两三天做了些研究,然后录了一期 45 分钟的单人节目。没有嘉宾,没有问题,就是我自己一个人讲。效果还不错。我打算再开一个系列——不再采访某个领域的专家,而是采访那些对某个国家非常熟悉的人。我认识一个人,他给 Lonely Planet 写了好几本日本旅行指南,现在正在日本待三周,深入了解最新、最酷的东西。
他回来之后我们就录一期节目,聊关于去日本旅行你需要知道的一切。然后我打算在末尾自己再追加大概 15 分钟,讲讲怎么用积分、里程、优惠和折扣来省钱。比如洛杉矶有一家新航空公司飞日本特别便宜,但有一些附加条件。所以大概会是三分之二的日本旅行攻略,加上三分之一的廉价到达攻略。没有多少业务或创意领域能让你像这样随心所欲地做各种实验。
Lenny: 而且迭代速度可以非常快。
Chris Hutchins: 对。
Lenny: 我很喜欢这一点。
Chris Hutchins: 比如我现在要采访你——录完这个之后我马上就录——所以听这期节目的朋友如果想多听听 Lenny 的故事,欢迎去 All the Hacks 听。我们会用 20 分钟聊一个稍微偏题的话题。有时候我就把这段内容作为一个周五的加更节目发出去。15、20 分钟,不是常规节目,但播客有太多方式可以让你去实验、去发现自己喜欢什么。然后你可能会说:“哇,我发现我真的很喜欢单人做节目。“或者你请了一个联合主持来试一期,觉得”啊,这样好多了。”
所以我特别喜欢播客给了你一个去实验的机会,去找到自己真正热爱的事。因为我最大的体会是,一旦你找到了那个你真正热爱的话题,一切都变得容易得多,因为那是自然而然的,你愿意免费去做。而这件事的残酷现实是,在它起飞之前,你大概需要免费做上几个月甚至几年。所以如果你不是真心喜欢,那几年会很痛苦。
不要给自己创造一份讨厌的工作
Lenny: 顺着这一点说,我对 newsletter 也有同样的感受,播客也是一样。你最不想做的就是给自己创造一份自己讨厌的工作。所以选一个你不感兴趣的话题,选一种让你痛苦的媒介形式,没有任何理由这样做。你可能成为 TikTok 网红,拍出一条爆款视频,但然后你就得一辈子拍爆款视频。那一点也不好玩。你得想清楚:“我是否愿意做这件事做很多很多年。“你当然可以停下来,但如果它已经成为一个很好的收入来源,停下来就很难了。所以这是一件值得思考的事——不要给自己创造一份你不想做的工作。
Chris Hutchins: 对。
闪电问答
Lenny: 到此为止,我们进入了非常令人期待的闪电问答环节。我不知道你有没有预见到这一刻。所以会特别有意思,快速回答,想到什么就说什么,看看会怎样。可以吗?
Chris Hutchins: 可以。
Lenny: 最近或者人生中,你最常推荐给他人的两三本书是什么?
Chris Hutchins: 有两本我特别喜欢。实际上可能是三本。第一本是《Happy Money》,非常棒的一本书。讲的是如何花钱来最大化幸福感。它汇集了大量关于更幸福消费方式的研究成果。第二本是 Rolf Potts 写的《Vagabonding》,我最近有幸采访了他——最后这两本书的作者我最近都有幸采访过。这本书是关于长途旅行的指南,但提供了一种不同的旅行视角。我想说如果你已经到了有孩子的阶段,可能很难完全按照书里说的去做。但我把这本书送给过很多人,他们都说:“我觉得我应该去旅行六个月。“我就说:“先去读读这本书。“我妻子和我曾在世界各地旅行了七个月,那本书对我们下定决心出发以及一路上的生活方式起到了关键作用。
最后一本叫《Die with Zero》,作者是 Bill Perkins。这本书对我影响最大。我没有把它送给过谁,但最近一周我强烈推荐了它,因为它对我影响巨大。这本书的基本前提是——虽然这不太像闪电问答的节奏——我们不应该一味追求金钱,而美国文化中却深植着”如何赚更多、如何升职、如何挣更多钱、如何存更多钱”的思维。我们真正应该优化的是人生中的净满足感,我们不应该试图把所有钱都攒起来。我们应该在整个人生中最优地分配这些钱,以增加体验、增加满足感、增加幸福感。有时候这意味着在年轻时少存一点钱,趁你还有能力去做那些事情——比如背包环游世界七个月,或者去蹦极。当你在早期积累了这些经历,那些经历的记忆会在余生不断给你带来回报。
Lenny: 选得好。除了你自己的播客和我的播客之外,你最喜欢的播客是什么?
Chris Hutchins: 我很喜欢 Animal Spirits。如果你对市场、生活和投资感兴趣的话,这个很不错。而且他们每期结尾总会有一些好的推荐——播客、电视节目、书籍、电影之类的。所以这是我很喜欢的一个。
Lenny: 最近有没有一部你特别喜欢的电影或电视剧?
关于影视推荐
Chris Hutchins: 我很喜欢一部剧,它有点像《Silicon Valley》那种类型但又不是,叫《Mythic Quest》,在 Apple TV 上可以看。我觉得讨论这部剧的人还不够多,所以它可能是个隐藏的宝藏。也许身边看这部剧的人挺多的,但我觉得它很搞笑,轻松愉快,看了让人心情好,希望至少有些人还没看过。它讲的是创业公司的故事,只不过像《Silicon Valley》一样把各种情节夸张到了极致。
Lenny: 在你的播客上,你最喜欢问的采访问题是什么?
Chris Hutchins: 我喜欢请人们谈谈他们所在领域最常见的误解。是的,我通常会这样开场:“在你的专业领域里,有什么大多数人搞错了的事情,或者你有什么逆向思维的看法?”
Lenny: 很棒。最后一个问题:你最喜欢的三个理财技巧是什么?听众可以马上行动起来的那种。
三个理财技巧
Chris Hutchins: 好的。第一个真的带来了实际收益——真的是字面意义上的。有听众写信告诉我,有嘉宾说”我刚省了钱”。方法是:去你所在州的无人认领资金网站查一查。每个州都有这样一个网站,你只需要输入你的名字、州或城市,甚至不需要提供地址,就能查到有没有人欠你钱。很多时候是这种情况——你搬家了,Comcast 不知道怎么把最后一个月预付费的余额退给你。前两天有人给我发消息说:“我刚听了你在播客上讲无人认领资金的事,我找到了 136 美元。我从没想过听播客还能赚钱。“有的人省了几百,有人甚至省了几千。我总说,如果你去参加晚宴,你肯定知道主人的地址,大概也知道他们的名字——与其带一瓶葡萄酒,或者除了带酒之外,顺手帮他们查查有没有无人认领的资金。我曾经带了一瓶葡萄酒去朋友家,然后说:“对了,你知道吗,有家制药公司欠你 200 美元。“我教他怎么去领取,砰,白得的钱。晚宴桌上的话题不就有了吗?所以这是我很喜欢的一个技巧。
另一个很棒的技巧——除非你已经有旅行计划,否则现在用不上——但每次预订酒店时,直接通过酒店官网预订,然后提前给酒店发邮件:“你好,我们预订了你们的房间,非常期待入住。“如果你在庆祝什么特别的事,告诉他们。如果你找不到邮箱地址,就打电话给前台,要一个邮箱,在入住前几天再跟进一下,告诉他们你快到了。我觉得你有大约 50% 的概率获得升级——一瓶葡萄酒、一些免费赠品,或者一个更好的房间景观。有个人写信告诉我,酒店在他们枕头上绣了他们的姓名缩写,我觉得这挺疯狂的。这种事从没发生在我身上。就我个人而言,我宁愿要那瓶葡萄酒,不过这也挺好的。
对于喜欢玩积分的人来说,我分享一个技巧。先给你一个小小的预告,让你们感受一下我有多喜欢挖掘积分和里程的各种优化方案。如果你有一张信用卡,在超市、办公用品店、药店等消费上能获得多倍积分——三倍、四倍或五倍——那很好。但你很可能没有一张在家装消费(比如 Home Depot、Lowes)上能获得多倍积分的卡。所以为了确保我拿到最多的积分,我不会直接去 Home Depot 用只能拿一倍积分的卡付款。我有一张超市四倍积分的卡,我喜欢去 Safeway 买 Home Depot 的礼品卡。这样我在礼品卡上拿到了四倍积分,然后拿着礼品卡去 Home Depot 购物,心里知道我已经赚到了四倍积分。另外,你手上可能还有在 CVS 或其他药店消费能拿三到四倍积分的卡,也可以在那里买礼品卡。如果你想更极致一点,还可以在办公用品店买。如果你有一张 Amazon 的卡,可以买 Amazon 礼品卡,用 Amazon Prime 卡拿到五倍积分或 5% 的返现。
所以我在这方面的确有点疯狂。还有我最喜欢的:如果你要在某个商店买东西,先上网搜优惠券。在 Google 上搜 Lowes、Home Depot、Crate & Barrel 的优惠券,会有一堆网站。我最常用的是 Save’n’deals.com,你可以在上面花几块钱买到 Home Depot 和 Crate & Barrel 的优惠券,省下 15%。然后再叠加返利门户。我要买一样东西的时候,就会想:“怎么通过返利门户拿返利?怎么用信用卡拿到最多的每美元积分?怎么再弄个折扣——也许通过在线客服问问,或者去买张优惠券?“所以我在这些事情上确实有点疯狂,但我喜欢省钱,喜欢感觉自己捡了个好便宜。
Lenny: 太精彩了。这期信息量真大——理财技巧、大胆押注、播客经验、自动驾驶理财,全都有了。Chris,太棒了。最后两个问题:大家在网上哪里可以找到你?你的播客在哪里可以听?另外,大家怎样能帮到你?
Chris Hutchins: 搜索 All the Hacks,所有优质播客平台都能找到,或者访问 allthehacks.com,也可以订阅 newsletter,地址是 allthehacks.com/email,网站上也能找到。就这些。怎么帮到我?去听听节目,告诉我你的想法,告诉我你喜欢什么,告诉我你希望我未来深入优化哪些话题。我说过,我一直在努力做出能成为某人最爱听的内容,所以如果你有什么想让我深入探讨的,请告诉我。我的邮箱是 chris@allthehacks.com,我会尽量在合理的时间内回复所有人。如果几周后我还没回,再提醒我一下。我很期待听到你们的反馈,也很乐意为大家制作更多内容。很高兴我们进行了这次对话,也很期待结束后马上就和你录制一期。
Lenny: 天哪,来吧。Chris,谢谢你来做客。
Chris Hutchins: 谢谢你的邀请。
Lenny: 非常感谢大家的收听。如果你觉得这期节目有价值,可以在 Apple Podcast、Spotify 或你喜欢的播客应用上订阅。另外,也请考虑给我们评分或写一段评论,这对其他听众发现这个播客真的很有帮助。你可以在 lennyspodcast.com 找到所有往期节目或了解更多关于节目的信息。下期再见。
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| 原文 | 中文 |
|---|---|
| 1000 true fans | 1000 个铁杆粉丝(1000 true fans) |
| All the Hacks | All the Hacks(播客名称,不译) |
| analysis paralysis | 分析瘫痪(analysis paralysis) |
| Animal Spirits | Animal Spirits(播客名称,不译) |
| ATR2100X | ATR2100X(Audio-Technica 麦克风型号,不译) |
| Audition | Audition(Adobe 音频编辑软件,不译) |
| batting average | batting average(棒球术语,击球率,比喻每次都击中但缺乏大回报) |
| Bill Perkins | Bill Perkins |
| Brendan Mulligan | Brendan Mulligan |
| Calendly | Calendly |
| Chartable | Chartable(播客分析平台,不译) |
| Comcast | Comcast |
| Crate & Barrel | Crate & Barrel |
| cross promo | 交叉推广(cross promo) |
| Danny Miranda | Danny Miranda |
| Descript | Descript(音频编辑软件,不译) |
| Die with Zero | 《Die with Zero》 |
| Digg | Digg |
| DM | 私信(DM) |
| Duet Display | Duet Display(app 名称,不译) |
| Emily Oster | Emily Oster |
| Erika Colberg | Erika Colberg |
| Erika Talk | Erika Talk(播客名称,不译) |
| Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 | Focusrite Scarlett 2i2(音频接口型号,不译) |
| Gary Vaynerchuk | Gary Vaynerchuk |
| Happy Money | 《Happy Money》 |
| iHeartMedia | iHeartMedia(播客网络/媒体公司,不译) |
| In The DM | In The DM(newsletter 名称,不译) |
| kanban board | 看板(kanban board) |
| Kerri Walsh Jennings | Kerri Walsh Jennings |
| Kevin Rose | Kevin Rose |
| Leigh Rowan | Leigh Rowan |
| Life Updates | Life Updates |
| Lonely Planet | Lonely Planet(旅行指南品牌,不译) |
| LTV | LTV(Lifetime Value,用户终身价值) |
| MailChimp | MailChimp |
| Morgan Housel | Morgan Housel |
| MrBeast | MrBeast(不译) |
| Mythic Quest | 《Mythic Quest》 |
| New and Noteworthy | New and Noteworthy(Apple 播客推荐位) |
| newsletter | newsletter(不译) |
| Nick Gray | Nick Gray |
| Overcast | Overcast(播客应用,不译) |
| PM | 产品经理(PM) |
| Podpage | Podpage(播客建站平台,不译) |
| Podstatus | Podstatus(播客排行榜追踪平台,不译) |
| Pro Tools | Pro Tools(音频编辑软件,不译) |
| product-market fit | 产品市场匹配(product-market fit) |
| Psychology of Money | 《Psychology of Money》 |
| Ray Dalio | Ray Dalio |
| Riverside | Riverside(播客录制平台,不译) |
| Rolf Potts | Rolf Potts |
| RSS feed | RSS feed(不译) |
| Save’n’deals.com | Save’n’deals.com |
| Shure SM7B | Shure SM7B(麦克风型号,不译) |
| Silicon Valley | 《Silicon Valley》 |
| Simple Cast | Simple Cast(播客托管平台,不译) |
| slugging average | slugging average(棒球术语,长打率,比喻追求高回报而非高命中率) |
| Sony a7C | Sony a7C(相机型号,不译) |
| Substack | Substack(不译) |
| The 2-Hour Cocktail Party | 《The 2-Hour Cocktail Party》 |
| Tim Ferriss | Tim Ferriss |
| traction | traction |
| URL slug | URL slug(不译) |
| Vagabonding | 《Vagabonding》 |
| virtual assistant | 虚拟助理(virtual assistant) |
| Wealthfront | Wealthfront(公司名称,不译) |
| Wine Library | Wine Library(不译) |
| YouTube Shorts | YouTube Shorts(不译) |
此文档由 AI 分片翻译(translate_long_document)