Living The Red Life - How To Launch One of The Worlds Top Podcasts w/Jordan Harbinger
Episode Date: October 7, 2024Jordan Harbinger, a long-time podcaster often recognized as one of the early influencers in the podcasting world, shares his experiences and insights from over a decade in the industry. He talks about... the evolution of his podcasting journey, highlighting the importance of adapting content to stay relevant and engaging. Jordan also touches on common mistakes people make when naming their podcasts, stressing the importance of clear and effective branding. Additionally, he discusses how podcasters can gradually shift from niche topics to broader appeal while maintaining the core identity of their show.Jordan offers practical advice on building a loyal audience through consistency and authenticity. He also addresses common misconceptions about making money in podcasting, offering a more realistic view of the challenges and opportunities in monetization. The episode concludes with tips for networking, preparing for a podcast launch, and establishing stronger connections with listeners—key elements for achieving long-term success in the podcasting world.CHAPTER TITLES03:55 - The OG of Podcasting 05:10 - Naming Your Podcast: Mistakes to Avoid 06:30 - Evolving Your Podcast Content 08:00 - From Niche to Mainstream 09:15 - The Journey of Building a Loyal Audience 10:45 - Consistency: The Key to Podcast Success 12:05 - Making Money Podcasting: Reality Check 13:30 - Preparing Before Launching Your Podcast 14:45 - Networking Through Podcasting 16:05 - Deep Connections with Your AudienceConnect with Jordan:IG - JordanharbingerPodcast (Youtube/Audio) - The Jordan Harbinger ShowWebsite - https://www.jordanharbinger.com/podcasts/Connect with Rudy Mawer:LinkedInInstagramFacebookTwitter
Transcript
Discussion (0)
A lot of people turn into podcasting. Can you give me some quick and dirty tips if someone's
listening and starting a podcast? When you are first starting with a podcast,
do not try to be the everything show. People need to know what they're getting. Don't think that
you're going to make money podcasting. No one listens to this tip. Everybody's like, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah. Except I'm really going to make money podcasting. He's talking to everyone else.
Be consistent, which is it sounds really obvious, but I'm just always surprised by how many people are going to start a weekly podcast and then they
do three and then they take six weeks off because they can't find the time to create it. And then
they do three more and they're like, I'm not getting any traction. And the other thing I would
say is. My name's Rudy Moore, host of Living the Red Life podcast, and I'm here to change the way
you see your life in your earpiece every single week. If you're
ready to start living the red life, ditch the blue pill, take the red pill, join me in Wonderland
and change your life. What's up guys? Welcome back to another episode of Living the Red Life.
I have my friend Jordan Harbringer here today. He has a very famous podcast. You probably know
who he is and I always look up to him as like the OG of podcasting. Jordan,
welcome to the show. Yeah. Thanks for having me on just as I hit my lights. Nothing like
a professional is like, what am I missing? Oh yeah. All the lighting that I have in my studio
that I've paid thousands of dollars for. Maybe I should turn those on. Yeah. Thanks for having me
on, man. Of course. Of course. And thanks for your time. And guys, today we're going to dive
into the world of podcasting. You know, like I said, you've done an amazing job of building what I would say one of the
top podcasts in the world, which is an easy achievement. I know you've been doing it for
many, many years, top 10. And obviously in 2018, it was ranked as, you know, the best
of 2018 by Apple, which is a pretty amazing achievement when it comes to podcasting. You've
met some of the most fascinating people on the planet through it. But yeah, I think if anyone
doesn't know about the show and you, do you mind just giving a 30 second overview?
Sure. So the Jordan Harbinger show, obviously creative title that I thought of myself. Yes.
You know, it's funny. People are like, oh, you should have named it something about what the show is. And then became this discussion of like what are people searching for are there
enough search queries for my name in podcasting and on the web to get the traffic for that or
should I name it like live your best life with Jordan Harbinger you know something like that
and I couldn't think of any other good titles for it so I really thought okay temporary title
the Jordan Harbinger show but that it's been almost a decade with that and it's actually worked out quite well
but early in the game i i think you know if we're going to be practical here never name your show
after yourself with nothing else unless you have a name that is a lot of people name the show after
themselves because they're like this is going to build my name it doesn't work well in the internet
age you know if you're if you're on tv and it's 1985 you can be like let's just call the show larry king live and everyone's like okay and then it's like you're
larry king and this must be your show and i'm watching it because it's the only thing on tv
at 10 30 p.m right now you can't be like this is the john smith show because everyone's like so
what there's two million shows right so you really have to take a different tack with it it's better to be like you know mindfulness and presence and yoga with jordan it's like okay now i know what i'm getting
and there's this guy jordan here so my show to answer your question actually i just answer your
question my show i interview what i think are fascinating people i and i i try to sort of break
down their stories secrets and, and skills. So
whether it's a big time counterfeiter or drug trafficker or con man, I like those. But I also
like really incredible people who've built incredible businesses or high profile athletes.
We had Kobe Bryant on a few years back, sadly, you know, he's passed away since then, but
we were able to get some really amazing folks on the show and profile them.
And then every Friday I give advice.
People write in with questions like, how do I get a raise at work?
How do I escape from this cult?
How do I get my sister to leave this abusive relationship?
All kinds of crazy stuff.
And then on Sundays we break down, we do Skeptical Sunday, which is where we break down a topic like vitamins, diet pills, energy drinks, and we sort of break down the science behind
them and show like, is this bullshit or is it real, candidly?
And candidly, a lot of the stuff out there is nonsense.
Surprise, surprise.
If you remember that old show Penn and Teller Bullshit on, I think it was HBO or Cinemax
or whatever, like a decade or two decades ago. It's kind of like that,
of course, podcast version. So that's why it's been hard to pigeonhole the show, right? Because
I have three different segments that run every week that are very different from one another
entirely. And even the guest interviews are not all in one niche. So really, it's hard to sort
of put myself into one hole. But I know you like practical. So I'll, I'll, I'll stop yammering after this one.
When you are first starting with a podcast, do not try to be the everything show. I am the
everything show right now and can follow my own interests entirely because I've got 18 years in
the game and I have a massive loyal audience. When you're starting, people need to know what
they're getting right now. People go, I love your show. I to know what they're getting. Right now,
people go, I love your show. I never know what I'm getting, but I always know it's going to be
good because I've been listening to you for eight years and I'm never disappointed. What you can't
do is this is the everything show. You never know what you're getting. And also it's been three
weeks and I've just started podcasting because then people go, no, thanks. I'm here for business
interviews. I don't want to hear like your comedian interview with some guy I've never heard of.
The end.
And you'll lose your mind.
Yeah, it's kind of funny, the crossover, because like pretty much everything you just said there is what I teach when it comes to more building the business personal brand side of the same, right?
Like, I mean, an important point is, you know, I always teach, go a little more into a sub niche to start,
and then you can expand out as you grow. So like an example for me is I started as a Facebook ad
kind of guy guru, got really big there really good. And then I wanted to go bigger. And I got
more into marketing and business in general. And I think it's similar, maybe your podcasting
journey. And for a lot of people, maybe they should start being the expert on,
you know,
multi-family real estate.
Right.
And then over time they might become the real estate expert.
Then eventually how they invest in all these different types of
investments and how their life's wonderful.
And they balance family life and being an ultra millionaire.
Right.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Like it's,
it's easy for people to go, look at this Jordan Harbinger guy.
The first episode I see is like 2017 or 18 or whatever, and he is already doing whatever he wants.
Okay, but for the 12 years before that, I had different stuff going on.
And for more than half of those dozen years, all I did was talk about dating, relationships,
body language, some, you know, communication. And then it spread out into, let me interview
some of my favorite authors like Robert Greene, which was still sort of tangentially like reading
people and getting along with people and blah, blah, blah, 48 laws of power. And then it was
like, okay, I'm going to do something wildly different and interview this guy I know who was a drug smuggler. And it'll be interesting. But if you're
not into this kind of stuff, just skip the episode and then listen to the other stuff.
And a whole bunch of people were like, hey, you should do like one a month, something like this,
because it's really good and really interesting. And nobody's doing this. Remember, again, this is like 2011. And I was like, okay, cool.
And then I slowly, very slowly started to turn the oil tanker that was this business and podcast.
It wasn't like one day everyone woke up and all of my shows were wildly different than the core
thing. It was like 100% core subject, a year later, 90% core subject, a year later, 70 to 80% core subject.
And then it started to become a mixed thing. And then I still, and I got feedback, like,
I only listened to the core subject ones, you know, you're losing me with the other ones.
But then I got more feedback that was like, I really liked the variety in your show,
because I got sick of this other stuff, because I'm married now, and I don't care about dating,
you know, or whatever. And now I'm able to do whatever I want. But I've also again, I'm in my
18th or 19th year of podcasting. So that's like halfway through or more of a reasonably long
career in digital media, which in digital 18 years is an eternity right yeah that's it's like having 40 years in another
career basically you know yeah i i love that and exactly the same transition and i mean eventually
you also have an audience adaptation too like you mentioned that you know with me a lot of my
audience learned facebook ads but then they wanted to learn funnels and building a team
so it was a natural transition for me and probably like for you
with a lot of your audience.
So I would love to, you know,
talk about a lot of my audience
are personal brands.
They follow me because they're
influencers, entrepreneurs.
And I always teach now
there's such a crossover
between a physical brand
and a personal brand.
And they're almost interlinked these days.
And a lot of them are turned
into podcasting because it's such a great platform now to reach millions of people and i
always teach you know you can't get a more loyal customer than someone that's tuning in for an hour
a week or maybe even multiple hours a week listening right like that's more than they're
speaking to you know their best friend on many occasions and within a given week. So a lot of people are
turning to podcasting. Can you give me some quick and dirty tips if someone's listening,
starting a podcast? Yeah, one, I think we just covered this and I think people should write it
down. That sort of niche down idea. Don't try to be the everything show. Find one very specific
small niche that you're interested in and just cover it to death and see what kind of audience you build. There's almost no such thing as niching down too small.
I mean, of course there is at some extreme level, but you're probably not going to find it
right away. So niche down, be consistent, which is, it sounds really obvious, but I'm just always
surprised by how many people are going to start a weekly podcast and then they do three and then
they take six weeks off because they can't find the time to create it. And then they do three more
and they're like, I'm not getting any traction. And it's like, well, you're never going to with
this rate of release. Everybody thinks that you're gone. You're starting over every single time,
you know? And the other thing I would say is record your first six episodes before you release
anything and see if you even like podcasting.
Because the problem is a lot of people go, you know, it's really fun and I just like
it as a hobby.
And then they do six and they're like, oh, this is a ton of work.
It's not really going to get any traction right away.
And I don't like it that much.
You can just get rid of it and never launch the thing, right?
Just delete those or chalk it up to experience or release them all at once and then forget
it's up there and don't care about it anymore.
Don't release two and then say, we're going to be here all year and then lose traction
three weeks in because you'll look like kind of a knucklehead doing that.
And then you got to take it off your website and then you got to email your list and be
like, oh, sorry, podcasting is not really a thing we're doing.
And you just look like a weird quitter that can't get their crap together.
It actually damages your brand.
So consistency is key, and the way to do it is to record a bunch at first
and see if you actually like it.
Another tip that I give is don't think that you're going to make money podcasting.
No one listens to this tip.
Everybody's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
except I'm really going to make money podcasting.
He's talking to everyone else.
It took me years to make money podcasting. He's talking to everyone else. It took me years to make money podcasting. Sure, there were no such
thing as podcast ads. Sure, I didn't really have a coaching business in the beginning because I
didn't know what I was doing and I was just running a podcast for fun in 2006, whatever.
But most podcasts never actually get enough audience to monetize with ads, period.
Most podcasters don't have anything directly for sale.
And if they do, they probably aren't going to make a sale through their podcast.
They're going to make it through their email list or whatever, like Facebook ads, whatever
sort of like previous primary platform they already have.
So it's a lot of work for very low ROI for literally years.
So you really have to love recording stuff and putting it out there as a straight up
hobby.
And people always, my friends who are really successful, we always talk about like, what
would you do if you were diagnosed with a terminal illness and you only had one year
to live?
And I'm always like, I have so many podcasts I have to record.
And they're like, dude, you're going to die.
Jordan, you're going to die. Jordan, you're going to die.
I don't think you understand the exercise.
No, no, no.
This is my excuse to like call Barack Obama and, you know, Elon Musk and be like, I'm going to die.
So you kind of have to do my podcast or you're a terrible person.
You know?
And my friends are like, you're a psychopath, right?
No, but that's great.
That's true passion, Ryan. that's great. That's true passion, right?
And purpose, right?
That's great.
Yeah.
And I think also, like, just to touch on the make money side, like, and the launch side,
you know, my brand got pretty big over the last four or five years.
And a lot of my staff would give me pressure on my top customers about launching a podcast.
And I pushed it off for like two three years for the exact
reason you said because i know you know being in business for 10 plus years the reality is
grass isn't always greener so i had i really waited until like in my core i felt i was ready
and then did exactly what you said i like planned four months out shot i think 10 plus episodes had
some great guests in um and had an everything ready and
and i do think that's so important and then um yeah i think also the monetization side like i
always say for me i've actually made a lot of money going on other people's large podcasts
where they have massive guests and then they come into my ecosystem but i mean that's because i'm a
great marketer with a great ecosystem i'm really my own
podcast is to connect with other amazing people just like i'm sure you you've been able to through
yours and to give my audience value and build that long-term rapport and relationship and value to
that that audience yeah i agree i mean podcasting is great for sort of the networking relationship
delivering audience value like that's one of the networking relationship, delivering audience value.
Like that's one of the reasons why I really love it.
And you mentioned this earlier, but having that sort of like.
When people tune into you for an hour or in my case, three hours every week, depending on how much they're listening.
And sometimes people listen even more. You know, I get those Spotify rap things at the end of the year where someone's listened to like 11,000 hours of the show or something. And I'm like, wait, how is this
possible? And they're like, I'm a truck driver. You know, I'm just like, holy smokes. You just
like, you're like, yeah, I listen. And then I start over because I realized I haven't been
paying attention and I listen again and then I listen again and then I listen again. And then
some of these stories are so good. I listen again. I'm just like, holy smokes. But like,
you get those those folks and
they they when they email me about something they know me better than some of my closest friends
because they've heard everything that i've talked about for a decade or more in and it's just like
they're like oh yeah your cats must be this years old by now and your kids must be doing this and my
kids and i'm just like wow yeah this is really interesting and not scary yet it's gonna be scary when an ai knows all
that stuff which i'm sure it already does but it's just kind of flattering at this point but it's cool
because you can't get that kind of rapport with say social media as much or with email as much
yes you feel like you know social media influencers because my wife email as much. Yes, I feel like, you know, social media influencers,
because my wife follows like these moms and they're like, my kid pooped all over the car
today. It's like, OK, you know, this anecdote, but you don't really know the mindset of this person.
Like people know me really well because I'm not a fake person on my show. I'm basically the same
person I am on the microphone as I am off the microphone. And so
it's a parasocial relationship, which is really, really cool. And it also brings with you
some sense of responsibility. You could really screw over your audience by selling out and
starting, I don't know, your own cryptocurrency or some crap. You know what I mean? You could
really screw people over. So you have a lot of responsibility
and a duty of care to your audience.
And I would say if you're not interested in that,
you should also not podcast
because people are going to be counting on you for things.
They're going to be writing into you.
They're going to be asking you questions.
And if you're just like,
buy my thing to get the answer,
you're building this really good relationship
only to kind of like squ're building this really good relationship only to
kind of like squander it for no good reason by trying to be too salesy or being standoffish or
ignoring your in inbound and that's a shame and it's not good it's actually bad for your brand
it would be better for you just to be email marketer you know marketer selling some course
online than it would be to be a podcaster that
then turns out to not care about their audience. That's worse because you're just selling a course.
Nobody's like, we're friends. He's, but he sold me a course. They're just like, I'm buying this
course online. But if you kind of give this parasocial relationship and you get that going,
and then you're like, if you want to talk to me, you have to pay money. It's like, what is this?
Only fans. So I've heard, uh, what is it? You know, like, I'm not to talk to me, you have to pay money. It's like, what is this, OnlyFans? So I've heard.
What is it?
You know, like, I'm not going to, this guy's a jerk.
I don't like him.
He's just trying to get my money.
It's like, it's actually worse to do this podcasting thing wrong than it is to not do it at all.
And I think, like, I teach in social media, which is just an extension.
I think everyone has it backwards when they go that route.
Like, I never very, very, very, very rarely do I ever sell on socials i always teach build the community there that's your top of funnel and then if they
come on your email list and all of these things you can retarget them with facebook ads and email
them and then if they want to go buy something they can but um yeah i always think social should
be like pure value over deliver top of, build a long-term longevity brand.
But a lot of people don't think that way, right?
So that's the downside to social.
I get it because I'm sure there is, I won't say wisdom,
I'm sure there's results in selling people crap as quickly as you possibly can.
But it's not going to be that good because you're
going to have, I think y'all marketers, you call it churn, right? Like you'll be able to sell
certain amount of people, your $4 to $5 entry level product. But the problem is a lot of them
are going to be like, oh, nevermind. Right. And then you'll just never hear from them again.
What I, what I like is when somebody emails me and they're like, Hey, I've never written in,
but I have an opinion about this.
And I'm like, oh, cool.
You know, how did you find the show?
And they're like, oh, I've been listening to you for eight years.
It's like, wow, this person really trusts, knows, likes what I create.
Eight years.
I'm just now hearing from them.
So I have a large degree of trust with this person.
What am I going to do with it?
Buy my thing for 40 bucks.
That's kind of a waste
i'd rather just have them support the sponsors of the show that they enjoy
write in share the show with anyone who will listen at thanksgiving like these are priceless
fans of my work and the show so that i want to keep those those people are worth i don't even
know hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of dollars the last thing I'm going to try to do is sell them a $28 PDF.
You know what I mean?
Well, it's the loyal tribe thing, right?
So as we come to the end of today, I want to just recircle and wrap the audience.
We talked a lot about naming the show correctly, how to maybe find a good niche to sod in it,
how to look at it from the right perspective, how to make
sure you are actually committing for the right reasons and beta test it before launch.
And then finally, I think how to look at it from a longevity perspective, which isn't
maybe as obvious, but we've been talking about it the last five, 10 minutes is how to really
nurture that audience and build a tribe and community the right way.
So hopefully that's a ton of takeaways already in this short episode today um any last words for people that are either
have their podcast trying to get off the ground or thinking of starting it before we wrap
uh i'm sure that i do let me let me think here i would say, you know, I think for podcasting, I'm sort of like, I guess I'm very, I hold podcasting, I have like a special place, you know, in my heart for this thing.
And there's 2.5 million, literally, I think, podcasts.
Wow.
If in like a few hundred of them actually make money from it, I'm sure there's
more that actually make money in other ways. I really think people should not podcast unless
they really, really enjoy the process. Like I said, most of them are never going to monetize.
It's a lot of work. But if you're really obsessed about a topic and you really love talking about a
topic and you really love talking to other people about that topic, podcasting is like the most fun thing I think you can do. And so you don't, and you don't have to have a radio voice.
Everyone's like, I hate my voice. Yeah. Join the club, man. Uh, I was, I grew up in the eighties
and nineties. I heard my voice on answering machines. It was, it was ugly. You know, I've,
I've had years of voice coaching. My i'm not self-conscious about my voice anymore
it only took two decades you know there's there's you don't need natural talent for this you build
it over years and years so just start doing the thing and it doesn't matter if it's good
really it doesn't it matters if you try hard it doesn't have to be brilliant in the beginning
you don't worry about your animations don't worry about your animations. Don't worry about your lighting. Don't worry about whether you get famous people on at first.
Just obsess over a topic, talk about it, and make it valuable for somebody who's listening,
and then mercilessly edit it down to the salient chunks and release that. Make a 20-minute really
sort of category-dense, information category dense information dense nutritious podcast product
that people can consume without talking about your weekend for 20 minutes in the beginning right
without uh dropping an f-bomb all the time because you don't have anything important to say and that's
your brand now you know like there's all these simple things you can do to make something really good. And you just do that for literally years if you want to.
And you will find that people who stick with you are going to buy everything that you wanted.
It's just going to take longer than you probably wanted to do that wanted to take.
That's really it.
And if you don't enjoy it, quit, because you're not going to get to a point where your podcast is really making a ton of money and you hate it.
That's never really i don't i know podcasters that hate it but are making so much money that they're still doing it zero i think that can happen in some businesses but in podcasting it
has to be a factor play with social media in general i teach them on instagram and like people
think they launch an instagram organically make a bunch of money i'm like no it's the opposite
that's why i teach ads that's where you can actually launch quicker and make money or right
gotta be the long play so jordan thanks so much for coming on i know we could keep going for a
lot longer than you're used to going for a lot longer i am um but but i you know obviously if
people don't know who you are then it's a perfect gateway for them to check you out and i'm really
excited to have you here to
talk about podcasting in itself if you've not done that and i thought who do i want to bring
on about that well no one better than you so yeah thank you buddy it's uh it's been a pleasure
and uh we'll uh throw the show notes in all the links so they can check you out
uh we'll catch up soon so thank thank you, everyone. Thanks, Rudy.
Take care, buddy.
Everyone keep living the red life.
I'll see you guys soon.