The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - What Comes After the Podcast Election, Scott’s Advice to Federal Employees, and an Update on Scott's Company, Section
Episode Date: March 12, 2025Scott discusses the evolving role of podcasts in political influence and campaign spending. He then offers advice to a federal worker worried about DOGE cuts, and wraps up with an update on his compan...y, Section. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for the show comes from ServiceNow.
Who is enabling people to do more meaningful, creative work?
The work they actually want to do?
You know what people don't want to do?
Boring, busy work.
But now, with AI agents built into the ServiceNow platform,
you can automate millions of repetitive tasks
in every corner of business, IT, HR, customer service, and more.
And that means your people can focus on the work that they want to do.
That's putting AI agents to work for people.
It's your turn.
Get started at ServiceNow.com slash AI-Agents.
Support for the show comes from User Testing.
Your brand is only as strong as the decisions behind it.
User Testing's Human Insights Engine helps marketing product and business leaders make
smarter, faster decisions with real human feedback, AI-driven insights, and the world's
strongest participant network.
Equip your team with the power to validate every decision, co-innovate at scale, and
build digital and in-person experiences with confidence.
The best brands don't guess, they test.
See how at usertesting.com slash ProfG.
Listen, we all love a good hustle.
We all love a rise and grind mentality.
But let's be real, you could do all that
and still be super comfy, right?
Right.
Nothing says comfort quite like a pair of Crocs.
Since 2002, they've been disrupting the footwear industry
with their iconic clogged silhouette.
And now you can choose from more than 800 styles
to find the pair of Crocs that is perfect for you,
like the Echo Wave,
with a sculptural boundary pushing design
that was crafted with the urban explorer in mind.
Whatever your style, buy yours at crocs.com.
Your crocs. Your story. Your world.
Welcome to Office Hours with ProfG. This is the part of the show where we answer questions about business, big tech, entrepreneurship, and whatever else is on your mind.
If you'd like to submit a question, please email a voice recording to office hours
at ProfGMeeting.com. Question number one. Hi, Prof. G. This is Jake from Washington,
D.C. I'm a big fan of all your podcasts. I think when it comes to marketing and building businesses,
you're spot on. I also think you've come up with some fantastic policy ideas that make sense,
and I hope more moderate members of Congress reach out to you.
I've been thinking about your post-election analysis, where you discuss podcasts becoming
the dominant campaign medium in the next election, potentially replacing traditional door-to-door
outreach.
This brings me to my question.
How do you envision monetizing the monetization of political campaigns on podcasts evolving?
Are we gonna be listening to you read,
this ad was paid for by Friends of Candidate X,
as is required for all political ads.
I'm curious to hear your thoughts on how you think
this emerging campaign medium will develop
and how would you maintain your authenticity
and credibility with your audience?
Look forward to hearing from you and keep up the great work.
Thanks for the thoughtful question, Jake from DC.
The 2024 cycle was the most expensive election
in American history,
with political ad spending totaling over $11 billion.
However, it wasn't all disco for broadcasters.
This was the first election
where their share of total spending fell below 50%.
Since the 2020 election ad spending increased about,
increased over $2 million,
but traditional broadcasters only saw a hundred million of this growth.
First off, I think it was Hearst or one of the big family on media companies was
really smart. About 20 years ago,
they went and bought all these local TV stations and swing states thinking,
okay, these are shitty businesses for about 20 months every two years.
And then for four months,
they're amazing businesses because they quintuple their ad rates and campaigns
which think, okay, old people vote. What old people do.
They want to watch the weather and see that handsome,
handsome young thing talking about the news.
And they turn on their local news and they can trap old people and they can run
ads basically saying that, you know,
the other guy is a pedophile and she's addicted to diet pills
and you should vote for our guy.
It's really weird, human condition,
it's much easier for us to believe something negative
about someone than something positive.
So as Newt Gingrich convinced his party 20 odd years ago,
go negative, go early.
Anyways, they bought these stations
and they've been the gift that keeps on giving.
They were able to scoop them up fairly inexpensively
and they're just cash machines.
I think that is about to come to an end for two reasons.
First reason, Joe, second, Rogan.
And that is when Trump went on Rogan,
he got about 15 million downloads on audio
and about 40, 45 million views on YouTube.
So call it 60 million.
For Vice President Harris,
who, by the way, totally fucked up
and should have gotten on a plane,
Joe Rogan is now more important than her
or was at that point, to Austin and done an interview.
I think Joe actually would have been kind to her.
He's not about calling people out.
He's pretty good that way.
He is, as a matter of fact,
he doesn't call people out enough.
Oh, mRNA vaccines alter your DNA.
Really, really?
Oh, okay, you're not a fucking quack
spreading misinformation that results
in unnecessary death, disease and disability. Really? Oh, that makes you're not a fucking quack spreading misinformation that results in unnecessary death disease and disability.
Really? Oh, that makes sense. No, it doesn't. Anyway, she should have done it, but for her to reach the same number of people,
she would have had to go on CNN, MSNBC, and Fox every night for three hours for an entire week.
As a matter of fact, a woman I really respect a lot
who has a, I believe it's a Sunday morning show on CNN,
asked me to come on every week and do this thing
like what's on your mind, where I talk for six to 10 minutes
and I said, I've done the math.
No one 25 to 54 is watching CNN.
And for me to do the work I would need to do
because I like you and I think you're smart,
it's just not worth, the juice isn't worth the squeeze. And I would have killed do because I like you and I think you're smart. It's just not worth the juice isn't worth the squeeze.
And I would have killed to go on Anderson Cooper or Michael Smirconish
or Stephanie Rule, by the way, all three friends, all wonderful people,
or any of these guys. I occasionally go on Chris Cuomo because I like,
I only go on with my friends. I know I'm name dropping right now, but it's just not worth it.
The people I'm trying to raise, I'm trying to reach a young man.
I'm trying to reach young people that want to develop economic security.
And guess what?
They're not walking.
They're not watching fucking CNN.
Get this, the average age, the average person watching MSNBC is a
seven year old white woman.
Oh, but it makes sense for politicians to go there.
What do you think a seven year old white woman has made up her mind
around who she's voting for?
Having said that podcast, 34 34-year-old male.
34-year-old males, what do they vote on?
They don't vote on issues or values,
they vote on economics.
They're at a point in their life
where they're trying to build economic security
and the economic issue is more dynamic.
What do I mean by that?
Every two or four years, it's not entirely clear
which party will become the party of economic growth
or become more favorable in the eyes of
voters around economics. Traditionally, Republicans are the business people, low taxes, but people
are starting to pay attention that under Democratic administration's last 50 years, there's been 50
million jobs created. Under Republican administration's, there's been 1 million
jobs. The markets tend to go up more during Democratic tenure. So people are kind of saying,
okay, whoever can sell me is going
to get my vote at the age of 34 if they're male, whereas a seven-year-old woman, so where is everyone
going to go? I think to podcast. Now having said that, your notion is how do they monetize it or
how do we monetize it? I don't see why it would be any more difficult to run a 30-second ad saying,
he fucking sucks, and then having the candidate go, I approve this ad. I think you're going to
start to see political ads.
The reason I know that this fear of influence
is massively shifting, and I'm not exaggerating here,
I bet 50% of the candidates,
mostly Democrat but also Republicans,
I'm seen as somewhat moderate,
have reached out to me for quote unquote advice.
When people reach out to me for advice,
it's not because they care about what I think,
it means they want help finding a job, they want money for their campaign, or they want to come on
the podcast. And I think that there's probably a hundred senators and congresspeople and governors
who look in the mirror every morning and say the following, hello, Mr. President, and or hello,
Madam President. And I've heard from most of them and they claim they really interested in my
advice and they say, Hey,
wouldn't it be a great idea for me for me to come on the pod and talk about it?
What's interesting is the political candidates don't do well on podcasts.
People would much rather hear from, I don't know, Kim Kardashian or a guy like
Fried,
Zuccaria gets unbelievable downloads.
He does so well. Anthony Scaramucci does incredibly well. He's not a political candidate, but he's a political commentator.
Ian Bremmer, these geopolitical politicians, Josh Brown on the markets, Aswath Damodhar
and Kata Scanlon, a young person on the market.
These people get huge downloads.
Mel Robbins, I had her on.
People love talking about emotions and raising their kids.
When I bring senators or congresspeople on,
people just don't care. It's really interesting,
but I am committed to bringing more and more politicians
on specifically moderates on the left and on the right,
although I'm having trouble finding moderates on the right.
I'm a moderate, but that wasn't a Nazi salute.
Yeah, okay, okay.
What are your pronouns, he and Himmler?
Anyway, I do think that if you get attention,
you can monetize it.
And if you have attention and influence,
which podcasts will have, they're
going to be able to grab a disproportionate amount
of that, what it'll probably be $15 or $20 billion
going into the next election.
So if you have influence and attention,
you'll figure out a way to monetize it,
whether it's ads, sponsored events,
I don't know what have you, but we're gonna see,
I think we're gonna see for the first time
these local news stations start to feel
some of the same pressure
that every other media company has felt,
and then we're gonna see a massive transfer
of influence, attention, and monetization to podcasts.
In terms of conflict of interest, I read ads.
I don't do crypto ads anymore, because worry it's gambling and I worry there's
too many young men staring at their phone, losing money or making money on crypto.
But I have no problem advocating for products.
And if it's a conflict, if I'm talking about a company,
I'm an investor and I try to be transparent. I'm here because I enjoy this,
but I am a close second here because I wanna make money.
And I don't think people mind that.
So what I think they mind is when they feel like
you're abusing their trust and not being upfront
about your intentions or your investments.
So as long as you're transparent, I think that's fine.
But coming your way, I'm Joe Bob and I approve this ad.
Thanks for the question.
Question number two.
Hey, Prof G. Love your show. Question for you.
What advice do you have for federal workers considering leaving public service? As you know, the Doge efforts are cruel and chaotic. They've created a stressful work environment that leaves
me full of anxiety, wondering if I'll be the next to lose my job. I joined the federal workforce as a military spouse five years ago.
Prior to that, I spent my career in the private sector.
Despite high evaluations, leadership programs, and a graduate degree, I'm still concerned
I could lose my job.
I live in Virginia with a high concentration of federal workers.
Should I jump ship before the job market is oversaturated?
Should I stay put?
Am I overthinking this?
I'd love to hear your thoughts.
Anonymous for Virginia, the first is,
I'm really sorry you're stressed out.
It's sort of the unknown sometimes is more stressful
than the actual known, and that is a means of,
I think, trying to assuage your stress,
and there's the basics, spending time with
loved ones, working out, meditation, breathwork.
I tried breathwork.
I tried this straw method from this guy named Dan
Reeves, who I love, who's fantastic.
This very soulful guy who does this 10% happier
podcast.
Here's the straw method.
Breathe in, two seconds, then breathe out.
Four seconds.
Okay. That shit does not work for me. It does not work for me. The breath work does not work. Um,
I understand that you're stressed out, but anytime there's,
there's change or chaos, there is a silver lining.
And that is sometimes there's opportunity where you don't see it.
What do I mean by that? What is happening at the federal government level right now? I'm up two
minds about it. The first is to be blunt and coarse, welcome to the work week. The idea that
you get a random email from someone who might be laid off and have insecurity and anxiety,
people feel that across every business sector in America. in America. At the same time, the injustice I get,
but there's tons of injustice in the private sector,
the thing that I find most troubling about it
is not what people, most media is reporting on,
it's the incompetence.
It's laying off workers who oversee our nuclear stockpile
and then rehiring them thinking,
oh, maybe we should in fact look after this shit
such that it doesn't, you know, such that we can ensure that nobody, the babies don't start playing with it before it becomes
less radioactive in 60,000 odd years. The way they're going about it, it just feels stupid and
ineffective to me. And also the corruption, firing people that happen to be investigating Musk's
business dealings, and also just the general incompetence. Oh, we saved $8 billion.
Well, actually it's 8 million that you saved.
Oh, we saving a million and a half dollars here.
No, you're not.
They already spent a million and a half.
There's no way to get it back.
So I find the whole Keystone cops fucking incompetence
that doesn't reflect the general competence
you find across most government agencies.
I think I'm sort of that attitude of let them.
I think it's just so weird that the genius of the Republican party is its ability to convince people
who are going to get hurt the most that this is a good idea for them.
In general, the reddest districts are the ones that are the biggest takers.
The Department of Education sends the most money per capita
to these deep red states in the South.
Okay, you wanna eliminate the Department of Education?
Fine, you wanna eliminate Medicare
or take money out of Medicare where six in 10 kids
in poor households in red states
get the medical treatment they need?
Okay, have at it, let them.
You're about to see just how incompetent you think government really is. red states get, get the medical treatment they need. Okay. Have at it, let them,
you're about to see just how incompetent you think government really is.
And when these cuts come home to you. So I'm sort of the attitude of, okay,
you wanted it, you broke it, you own it. Uh, now,
coming back to your specific situation, one,
until you actually get laid off, unless it's never a bad idea to do a market
check see what's out there start investigating start having coffees do interviews if you have
ideas on who you want to speak to i don't think that's a bad idea in any situation to be kind of
on a regular basis doing a market check having said that i would not jump i would certainly not
quit until you have another job and also a couple things couple things can happen. One, if you do get laid off, you'll probably get some sort of severance.
And two, when there's change, say they left 10 or 20% of the people at your organization,
they're pretty soon going to realize they need people to actually run the fucking organization.
And the top of the pyramid will, quite frankly, get broader. And that is you might find that you're
in a position to be promoted sooner than
you thought, because there's fewer people around.
I've always told people when there's a transaction in a private sector, when
their company gets acquired or there's layoffs stick around because churn and
chaos results in a lot of anxiety, oftentimes a lot of negative things, but
oftentimes a lot of opportunity because the company has been reconfigured and you might wake up with a bigger and a better job. So in sum, find
things and people that help manage your anxiety. Two, it's never a bad idea to do
a bit of a market check and talk to people. And three, think to yourself what
could go right, right? We're always about what could go wrong. Well what could go
right? Maybe the organization, maybe people get laid off, maybe you're good at what you do, and maybe it ends up
creating more avenues or arteries of opportunity for you. I appreciate the question, Anonymous from
Virginia. We have one quick break before our final question. Stay with us. Support for PropG comes from Masterclass. We're all more than our job titles. You know, airline
pilots can be fantastic cartoonists, butchers can be master gardeners, nannies can be genius
investors. Not all of us get to make a living off our passions, but that doesn't mean they're
not worthwhile pursuits. So, if you're looking for a way to hone on unexplored talent, then
you might want to try Masterclass.
Masterclass is the streaming platform that brings insights from the world's greatest minds directly to you.
There you'll find instructors including Martha Stewart, Howard Schultz, RuPaul, and so much more.
Masterclass is also highly accessible.
You can access it from your phone, computer, smart TV, or even an audio mode.
What's more is that 88% of Masterclass users claim that it's made
a positive impact on their daily lives. All this for just $10 a month with an annual subscription.
I've checked out Masterclass. I watched the Masterclasses with Bob Iger and Martha Stewart
and I enjoyed learning about them. They gave me different insight into managing the creative
process. Right now, our listeners get an additional 15% off any annual membership
at MasterClass.com slash PropG. That's 15% off at MasterClass.com slash PropG. MasterClass.com slash PropG.
It's been reported that one in four people experience sensory sensitivities,
making everyday experiences
like a trip to the dentist especially difficult. In fact, 26% of sensory-sensitive individuals
avoid dental visits entirely. In Sensory Overload, a new documentary produced as part of Sensodyne's
Sensory Inclusion Initiative, we follow individuals navigating a world not built for them, where bright lights, loud sounds, and unexpected touches
can turn routine moments into overwhelming challenges.
Burnett-Grant, for example, has spent their life masking discomfort in workplaces
that don't accommodate neurodivergence.
I've only had two full-time jobs where I felt safe, they share.
This is why they're advocating for change.
Through deeply personal stories like Burnett's, Sensory Overload highlights the urgent need
for spaces, dental offices, and beyond that embrace sensory inclusion.
Because true inclusion requires action with environments where everyone feels safe.
Watch Sensory Overload now, streaming on Hulu. Support for PropG comes
from Grammarly. Think about the most tedious part of your job. Is it writing
the exact same email you've already written a hundred times? Some studies
have shown that 88% of professionals spend more than half their work week on
repetitive writing tasks. Well, imagine you had an assistant that could take
the small stuff off your plate and help make your writing more effective and persuasive.
You're in luck, because that's why Grammarly exists.
Grammarly is your AI writing partner designed to help improve your communication.
It's not just a glorified thesaurus.
Grammarly can give you writing prompts, help with brainstorming, and can even help you
strike the right tone for your intended audience.
And the best part?
They offer enterprise-grade security
and will never sell your data.
So you can have the peace of mind that comes from knowing
that your data is completely secured.
We've used Grammarly at PropG.
And as I've said before, it has made us more efficient
and takes our written work and makes it just, quite frankly, more competent.
Get more done with Grammarly.
Download Grammarly for free at grammarly.com
podcast. That's grammarly.com podcasts.
Welcome back. Question number three. Hey, Prof. G. This is John Ward from Los Angeles.
I took a marketing class from your company, Section,
a couple of years ago, and it was called Section 4,
and really enjoyed it.
Can you give us an update on the company?
Has it gone as expected?
What's working?
What's not?
Have you taken more money?
Just really interested in that as an entrepreneurial journey
and what's going on with that company.
Thanks so much.
John from LA, thanks for the kind words.
I pride myself on being transparent.
Everybody talks about their wins
and people don't wanna talk about their failures.
Section is still got a question mark around it.
And that is the initial vision was find,
build this all-star team of the best professors
of business schools and offer 80% of an amazing class.
At every business school, there's five or six ringers
that everybody has to take regardless
of what they're teaching, because they're so good.
My thought was I'm gonna aggregate all these ringers
from the top 20 schools, put them online,
really highly invest in marketing and graphics
and production quality, and give you 80%
of the valuation class from Demodaran
or from Adam Alter's marketing class
or, or,
um, God, I forget his name is wonderful guy from, uh, Kellogg, uh,
Sarah Beckman from the Ha school and give you 80% of her course for $1,000
instead of 7,000, which is what it costs to take these courses at a private
university. I'm not sure that's true at the Ha school anyways, in some,
it wasn't working. Uh, We were spending a lot more money and
without the certification you get from an MBA, we had trouble charging even a thousand dollars.
We got this incredible sugar high of COVID and that is I put in, I raised a seed round of seven
million bucks. I put in, I think two million of my own money, maybe three. And it just took off
during COVID because everyone had a lot of time.
And I knew that we were in a sugar high, but I didn't realize we were in like a speedballed
meth cocaine high.
And the company went from like one to 10 million overnight.
I went out and I raised another $30 million.
That was a mistake.
I should have kept it small.
I should have been more judicious with the capital because once we had $30 million, we
brought in a management team and they started spending money like fucking drunk sailors
on shit that didn't work.
We hired Malcolm Gladwell to speak to our audience
for a hundred grand or Adam Grant, who I love,
and think it's great we paid him a hundred grand.
They're not worth that much money
to speak to a bunch of prospective students
as good as they are.
So we were just wasting money.
We went from 20 employees to 120.
And here's the mistake I made that I continue to make
in the private markets. And that is once I have made that I continue to make in the private markets.
And that is once I've access to capital,
I try and grow too fast.
I spend way too much fucking money,
hire mediocre people,
and then end up having to lay off 60 or 80% of them.
And that is what happened here.
As soon as we came out of COVID, revenues crashed,
our burn was unsustainable,
and we had to lay off 60, 70% of the staff.
Now the company is about 25 or 30 people.
We have pivoted to AI. What do I mean by that?
We found a lot of people and companies coming to us and say,
could you upskill our media department at L'Oreal on how to use different AI tools to make our department much more robust?
Give us this great,
L'Oreal's always had amazing media buying.
That's kind of, I would argue their core competence
is they're just fantastic media buyers.
They said, how do we take the most cutting edge tools
and turn every media planner,
every media buyer into a warrior
and make them just much better at what they do?
So we have pivoted section to basically AI up-skilling
for the enterprise.
And this is more my ValleyWick. I've always done B2B businesses. I've never done B2C.
I like B2B more. It's based on individual relationships.
Corporations, if you can move the value or move the shareholder needle for them, are much less price sensitive than consumers.
I've just always been in B2B businesses. Anyways, we pivoted. We have really wonderful investors. General Catalyst is my lead and they've been incredibly
supportive and nice and smart. And I have a good CEO, Greg Shove, running the business now. We
have some very talented people in the organization and it is starting to grow again. And we are now,
I think, almost two-thirds subscription revenue back towards a $10 million run rate
and working with very large corporations,
helping them, again, upskill certain departments
within their organization around how
to leverage these new AI tools.
So I'm hopeful, but the last five years
have been really mediocre.
I have wasted a ton of time and money.
Is that fair?
Not wasted.
Have not gotten the return I was originally hoping for.
I would bet if I had to bet what's gonna happen,
there's an outside shot, it does really well.
I think there's a good shot.
We're gonna get our money back.
Keep in mind, we've raised $38 million,
so I need to get my investors $38 million back
before we start really showing any return.
I'm fairly confident, is that right?
I think I'm fairly confident that'll happen.
And we seem to finally have found our footing.
Having said that, this is kind of the story of my life
in most of these companies.
I've had a couple of companies
where it's just been up and to the right,
but usually I start something, it does okay,
then it doesn't do okay, and the key is agility
and kind of zero in on something that works.
And I think we have finally done that after five years and spending 25 or $30 million, I think we finally zeroed in on something that works. And I think we have finally done that after five years
and spending 25 or $30 million.
I think we finally zeroed in on something.
They're signing up corporations and it's doing,
it's actually doing quite well and growing again.
But this is, you know, this shit is hard.
This is, this is chestnut checkers,
but it's finally, it seems to me,
kind of found its footing again in doing really well.
But again, one out of seven companies succeeds. I've started nine. I've had two do really well.
I've had two or three just do okay, and I've had four just like flaming balls of shit hit a giant
wall and spray and everyone gets their face burned off. That was a little graphic. That was a little graphic. Anyways, thanks for the question
I hope that satisfies your need to understand what is happening at
Section and it's now called section AI
That's all for this episode if you'd like to submit a question
Please email a voice recording to office hours of propgmedia.com again, that's office hours at PropG Media.com.
This episode was produced by Jennifer Sanchez. Our intern is Dan Shalon. Drew Burrows is our
technical director. Thank you for listening to the PropG pod from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
We will catch you on Saturday for No Mercy No Malice, as read by George Hahn.
And please follow our ProfGMarkets pod wherever you get your pods for new episodes every Monday
and Thursday.
Fox Creative.
This is advertiser content brought to you by the all new Nissan Murano.
Okay, that email is done.
Next on my to-do list, pick up dress for Friday's fundraiser.
I'll write, okay, I'll write, where are my keys?
In my pocket.
Let's go.
First, pick up dress,
then prepare for that big presentation.
Walk dog, then...
Okay, inhale.
One, two, three, four. Exhale, one, two, three, four.
Exhale, one, two, three, four.
Ooh, who knew a driver's seat could give such a good massage?
Wow, this is so nice.
Oops, that was my exit.
Oh well, that's fine, I've got time.
After the meeting, I gotta remember to schedule flights for our girls' trip.
But that's for later.
Sun on my skin, wind in my hair. I feel good. Turn the music up.
Your all-new Nissan Murano is more than just a tool to get you where you're going.
It's a refuge from life's hustle and bustle.
It's a place to relax, to reset, in the spaces between items on your to-do lists.
Oh wait, I got a message.
Could you pick up wine for dinner tonight?
Yep, I'm on it.
I mean, that's totally fine by me.
Play Celebrity Memoir Book Club.
I'm Claire Parker.
And I'm Ashley Hamilton.
And this is Celebrity Memoir Book Club.
Listen, we all love a good hustle.
We all love a rise and grind mentality.
But let's be real, you could do all that and still be super comfy, right?
Right.
Nothing says comfort quite like a pair of Crocs.
Since 2002, they've been disrupting the footwear industry with their iconic clogged
silhouette.
And now you can choose from more than 800 styles to find the pair of Crocs that is perfect
for you.
Like the Echo Way, with a sculptural boundary pushing design that was crafted with the Urban
Explorer in mind.
Whatever your style, buy yours at Crocs.com.
Your Crocs.
Your story.
Your world.