Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Hala Taha: Turn Your Podcast into the Most Powerful Marketing Asset in Business | Marketing | YAP Live
Episode Date: July 25, 2025Now on Spotify Video! Podcasting is a powerful tool in modern marketing, yet most creator-entrepreneurs overlook this content marketing goldmine. But not Hala Taha. She turned her podcast, Young and P...rofiting, into a revenue-generating asset, scaling her business from zero to seven figures. Today, she runs YAP Media, a leading podcast, social media, and LinkedIn marketing agency that helps over 35 top creators scale and monetize their shows. In this episode, Hala joins Nathan Barry to share her proven online marketing strategies, how she secures premium brand sponsorships, and how to leverage podcasting for business growth. In this episode, Hala will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:09) Podcast Advertising and Sponsorship Strategies (05:34) Why YAP Media’s Podcast Network Is Unique (11:05) How to Package and Sell Creative Campaigns (16:57) Leveraging LinkedIn for Podcasting Success (29:54) Guest Networking as a Business Strategy (35:25) Proven Strategies for Scaling Podcast Revenue (41:34) Paid Interviews as a Marketing Strategy(47:33) SEO and Marketing Tips for Podcast Growth (1:02:10) Monetizing Your Podcast at Any Audience Size Hala Taha is the host of Young and Profiting, a top 10 business and entrepreneurship podcast on Apple and Spotify. She’s the founder and CEO of YAP Media, an award-winning social media and podcast agency, as well as the YAP Media Network, where she helps renowned podcasters like Jenna Kutcher, Neil Patel, and Russell Brunson grow and monetize their shows. With her business on track to hit eight figures in 2025, Hala stands out as a leading creator-entrepreneur. Sponsored By: Sponsored By: Shopify - Start your $1/month trial at Shopify.com/profiting. Indeed - Get a $75 sponsored job credit to boost your job's visibility at Indeed.com/PROFITING OpenPhone - Get 20% off your first 6 months at OpenPhone.com/profiting. Airbnb - Find a co-host at airbnb.com/host Boulevard - Get 10% off your first year at joinblvd.com/profiting when you book a demo Resources Mentioned: Hala’s Podcast, Young and Profiting: bit.ly/_YAP-apple Hala’s Agency, YAP Media: yapmedia.com The Nathan Barry Show by Nathan Barry: bit.ly/TNBS-apple Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap YouTube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ Social + Podcast Services: yapmedia.com Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com/episodes-new Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Podcast, Business, Business Podcast, Self Improvement, Self-Improvement, Personal Development, Starting a Business, Strategy, Investing, Sales, Selling, Psychology, Productivity, Entrepreneurs, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Marketing, Negotiation, Money, Finance, Side Hustle, Startup, Mental Health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth Mindset, E-commerce, Instagram, Digital Marketing, Content Creator, Storytelling, Social Media Marketing, Communication, Video Marketing, Social Proof, Marketing Trends, Influencers, Influencer Marketing, Digital Trends, Marketing Podcast
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Today's episode is sponsored in part by Indeed, Shopify, Mercury, OpenPhone, Airbnb, and
Boulevard.
As always, you can find all of our incredible deals linked in the show notes or at youngimprofiting.com
slash deals.
How much money do you expect to make off of your podcasts?
This year, my show Young and Profiting is set to make a million dollars.
On average, we are increasing sales per month for our podcasters by 300 to 400 percent.
Not 30 to 40.
No, by 300 to 400.
Last year, I made $6 million off my guess.
It's very strategic.
It was an accident at first.
Let's talk about the world of paid interviews.
How does this whole world work?
Do you think there are a lot of shows doing paid interviews?
People are doing paid interviews like every other month.
The other thing with paid interviews is sometimes.
What are the things that make a difference
in search optimization?
So I'm still like testing stuff,
but Spotify and Apple are two different algorithms.
So we can start with Spotify.
What I've found out so far is that another thing
that creators don't really understand is that your podcast
has multiple variables to be successful at monetization.
So why would someone come to Yap Media?
What would you be providing different?
So first of all,
Yap Fam, if you listen to this show,
you know that I'm always the one
asking all the questions and listening intently,
but I know you guys also wanna learn from me,
and this time, the mic got flipped.
I recently had the absolute pleasure of being a guest on the Nathan Berry Show and it's
one of the best interviews I've done in a long time and that's because Nathan is just
so smart, we're in the same world, he asks the right questions, we're both super nerdy
and so we go deep on all things podcast monetization, social media, building a business and I dropped
some serious insider secrets on how I built Young and Profiting into a million dollar
podcast and how I scaled the YAP Media Podcast Network into a
full blown soon to be eight figure enterprise. Yep,
we're about to hit 10 million this year in annual revenue.
So super excited about that. And in this episode,
we get real about podcast monetization strategies.
Most creators don't even know about the things that I talk about in this
interview. In fact,
I was a little bit like hesitant to share some of the things that I shared in this interview, but you know what?
I'm one to give away all of my secrets. That's my style.
And so we talk about creative ad campaigns, simulcast sponsorships, full catalog, dynamic ad insertion.
I reveal how I generated millions in agency revenue off the guests of my podcasts.
We talk about LinkedIn strategies going viral, and that's just the beginning.
Honestly, like I mentioned,
Nathan is super nerdy like me,
and so we just go really deep,
and he asked amazing questions
that really help me give the information out
that you guys probably wanna hear.
So if you're a podcaster, content creator,
creator entrepreneur that wants to grow your brand,
monetize, get sponsorships, build a network,
this conversation is gonna really help you with actionable strategies that you
quite honestly won't hear anywhere else because I learned it myself and haven't
taught it yet. So this is all new information.
So let's get right into my in-person interview with Nathan Barry.
Holly, you're one of the best of anyone I've ever talked to in monetizing and
growing podcasts. I just want to dive right into it.
How much money do you expect to make off of your podcast?
Just the podcast itself this year?
This year, my show, Young and Profiting, is set to make a million dollars.
That's what we're on track for.
We already secured over six hundred thousand dollars for the year.
That's amazing. And what was revenue last year?
Six hundred thousand.
So we already surpassed what we did last year.
Q1 is locked in and you're like,
we're already past those numbers, we can ramp it up from there.
Yeah.
So every creator listening is perking up at that and saying,
okay, tell me more.
Yeah.
So maybe let's just start with the size of the show
and some of those things so people can kind of frame
and be like, okay, you're twice as big as my show
or you're ten times bigger or any of that.
Yeah. So we do about 350,000 downloads per month
across my audio and my simulcast.
That's how much we sell per brand.
I technically do more than that,
but I only want to put half the ads
on my videos on YouTube.
And so what I sell to brands is 350,000 impressions per month
across my audio, my YouTube, and my LinkedIn Live.
That's my simulcast.
And I get about six to eight brands a month who sponsor me.
Okay, and so if I can ask maybe a naive question,
what is the simulcast and how do you break that down?
So a simulcast is basically any place that you can play your full episodes.
So not YouTube shorts, but a real... No but your real episodes where you can put your commercials.
So usually it's a one to one version or close to your podcast.
You don't have to title it the same, but generally the same show on your audio, your YouTube.
And for me, I also do LinkedIn live because I have a big following on LinkedIn.
Some of my creators in my network do Twitter.
You could do IG live if you want to stream your full episodes on there,
which I do sometimes.
So it just depends on what channels have your biggest audience.
And then you can package that up into one simulcast that you sell to brands.
Okay. And then I feel like there's a way that podcast advertising and sponsorships
used to work where it's,
this is what I always understood,
like someone sponsors, they're baked into that episode,
and it goes from there.
That's not really how it works in 2025 anymore.
Well, some people still do it that way.
Okay, that's not how the professionals and the experts,
like the people on the cutting edge do it anymore.
That's not the modern way to advertise on your show.
So there's like three ways to advertise on your show right now.
There's baked in episodic, which means that you bake in ads episodically and
you really are selling either a package of baked in ads, maybe four or eight a month.
Or like two every month for the year or whatever.
So you're selling a package of baked in ads typically.
And so if we had a sponsor on this episode, then forever when someone goes back and listens
to it, it would be thanks to Squishface or whoever.
Unless you had some like 90 day clause that you can remove the ad after 90 days, usually
it's forever and brands will pay a higher CPM to get that baked in forever.
Now another way that people think they're modernizing their ad tech is to faked in. Okay, okay. So
basically, what faked in ads are is that you're on a platform
like art 19 or megaphone, and you're able to dynamically
insert the ad, but they're still doing it episodically. And so
they're faking in the baked in ad, and then they're typically
removing it after 90 days.
And swapping it out with someone else.
They might be swapping it out with another.
So a lot of people are doing faked in ads
for their new episodes,
and then they're monetizing potentially their back catalog
only with dynamic ad insertion.
At YAP Media, we do full back catalog
and new episode dynamic ad insertion.
So it's called full catalog, DAI.
We're monetizing every single download,
whether it's a new episode or an old episode
across the entire catalog.
And that takes a lot of work to get your catalog ready
to do that, especially if you have like an older legacy show.
So oftentimes, let's say Jenna Kutcher is in my network.
When she signed on, she had like 500, 600 episodes.
We had to take a 100 hours of manpower
and go through all her old episodes,
remove the old commercials,
and then add in dynamic insertion markers
so that we could run full catalog DAI on her show.
Right, that makes sense.
Yeah.
Give the rundown of Yap Media.
Yap Media is my company, and it's really twofold.
I started it as a social media and podcast agency.
We're the number one LinkedIn marketing agency.
And so I started my agency portion
of the business five years ago.
And we basically manage influencers, CEOs, entrepreneurs,
their personal brand across Instagram, LinkedIn,
and podcasts.
We produce podcasts as well.
Then about three years ago now,
I started the YAP Media Network,
where I grow and monetize other top business,
self-improvement, society, and culture shows.
And now we have about 35 shows.
People like Jenna Kutcher, Neil Patel, Russell Brunson,
John Lee Dumas, Laurie Harder.
We've got amazing creators in our network.
Yeah, there's so many people.
We cross paths a lot, right?
Jenna and JLD and others, I've been friends with them for a long time.
Jenna uses Kit. So there's a lot of these...
Yeah, so much overlap with our business.
Lots of crossovers. So why would someone come to YAP Media?
What would you be providing different from, you know, if you're listening to podcasts, you might hear,
I don't know, the HubSpot Podcast Network pop up or some of these others.
On the surface, it sounds like apples to apples.
And as I've dug in, I'm like, oh, they're not the same at all.
Yeah, I would say we're more of like a white glove
podcast network.
So first of all, we're so good at monetizing.
I was telling you earlier, my shows have been sold out
since January, like 70% sold out,
and now we're like completely sold out for the year.
So my number one goal is...
Yeah, so my friend Bob Glazer, who you represent his show.
You elevate, yeah.
Yeah, so we were hanging out, I guess, in end of February.
And he was like, oh, yeah, my show is sold out through the end of the year already.
And I was like, Bob, it's like February 15th.
And he's like, yeah.
It's crazy.
And no other networks, I don't think, have this problem.
Advertisers are like, what are you talking about?
You're sold out.
It's like, yeah, we're sold out.
And that's because we prioritize these really long-term deals.
We've got more demand for our shows
because we understand how to package up sponsorships
in a way where there's just not that many opportunities
for sponsors to get in because we want to lock
in people for the long term.
So for example, like I really only have 10 to 12 brands for the entire year that can really sponsor
my show at least for the long term because there's no room for like these small flights. And a lot of
these networks are doing is really small deals. And they're kind of just turning and burning
advertisers and we don't like to do that at yet media. But you were asking what makes this
difference.
So number one, we're just amazing at sales.
So on average, we are increasing sales per month for our podcasters by 300 to 400%.
Not 30 to 40.
No, 300 to 400.
People are like, what?
I can mix them.
That zero makes a difference.
Yeah.
So we're really able to increase monetization.
And that's because, like I said, we're focused on really long term deals, 360 campaigns.
So because I started as a social media agency, I really understand how to do all these creative
campaigns, these dynamic campaigns that go way beyond just commercials.
So we just don't only sell commercials.
And so 40 percent of our podcasters revenue every month comes from creative campaigns
that might touch the podcast, but it's not just related to the podcast itself.
We're also really flexible. So a lot of these networks will lock you in to a certain amount of ads to a certain amount of frequency of your podcast episodes or length. We're really flexible in that way because our creators are typically CEOs, they've got their own things going on. And so we try to support them in the best way that we can where they
can really opt in and opt out of anything.
Because they might have their own products or companies that they want to promote.
Yeah, they might need like a blackout period to promote their big push of the year, for
example, we help them flight any internal ads that they have some networks don't allow
that any sort of affiliate deals or whatever
that they wanna push on their podcast,
we don't take a cut of that.
We're only taking a cut of the sponsorships that we secure.
And in general, we're just more flexible.
Like if somebody's like,
Holla, I can't do eight episodes a month anymore.
I'm like, okay, cool, let's do four.
Just know that you're not gonna make as much money,
but we need this much time so that we can
re-rate all the deals. but it's just more flexible.
And I think it's partially because we're still small enough to be flexible, whereas these
other networks, you're just locked in and there's nothing that you can do about it.
So we're flexible.
And the other thing is that we're really transparent.
So that's the other thing that makes us completely different.
We've got 24-7 financial trackers.
We've got proposal updates every week where we're saying this is all the deal status,
this closed, this didn't.
And giving people updates that way.
And we try to be really helpful to our podcasters.
So we create recording packs, for example.
I don't think any other network does that.
Everybody's in our Slack, right?
We've got Slack channels for all of our teams.
So just like really tight knit.
We really help support the organization for the shows
and also our growth programs.
Because I don't think every podcast network
has like a holotah behind trying to figure out
how to grow all the shows.
So we've got lots of really innovative growth programs.
So I want to get into podcast growth
and that's probably where we'll talk about a bunch of that
in a little bit, But going back to your show, and that's $600,000...
From last year.
...from last year, is that all sponsorships?
How does that break down?
So that's 60... It's a really even split.
60% was podcast commercial money.
Just straight commercials, mid-rolls, typically.
And are those host-read?
Host-read. We don't even turn on programmatic.
Why is that?
Programmatic is, there's a couple reasons.
Problematic?
Programmatic is problematic.
So number one, lower CPM.
So host-read ads, we can get anywhere from typically
like gross CPMs, I'm talking 26 to $35.
Programmatic is usually like 5 to 17.
So way different.
The other thing is that you don't know what brands got played until the month is over.
So you can do category exclusions on Spotify ad network or ads as well as and say like I don't want gambling.
I don't want lottery or like nothing like this.
But you still don't know the brands until afterwards. And it just it doesn't perform as well.
It's not great for the listener experience.
I love doing ads and I never get complaints because I treat them like stories.
I make them funny.
And it's just like a part of the show.
It's just not as intrusive as a programmatic app.
So there's multiple reasons.
But we typically don't turn them on at all on our network.
OK, so then that 60% is from the commercial side,
the host red ads.
And then 40% is from creative campaigns.
So every podcaster has different creative campaigns
that they leverage.
So at my network, one of the first things that we do
during onboarding is we talk about
what are you willing to do?
How can we productize your creative campaigns
on like a quarterly basis?
So for example, I do webinars and they're really popular. So
I'll have Pipe Drive teachable, better help. They sponsor me for these webinars
where I educate the audience on the topic. So for example, Pipe Drive, I'll
do like a sales training. And part of that will include like a 10 minute demo
of Pipe Drive. And I'll just tie in pipe drive to that and there's
Social promotions there's email promotions to invite people to the live webinar
We're really trying to drive free signups. It converts super well
And then we then replay it on my YouTube my LinkedIn live and we clean it up and put it on the audio
Podcast as well. So it's a real 360 campaign and I'm doing two of these a quarter and people are paying anywhere from like
30,000 to $50,000 for just one webinar for me to do.
That's something that I do, other creators do like
email newsletters or like a series of email newsletters.
There's all different types of creative campaigns
that we can do.
Yeah, okay that makes a lot of sense.
And so in that case the brand is looking for like
how many high quality leads did you drive to pipe drive or something like that?
Yeah, so they're tracking signups, right? How many paid signups did you get? Free trial signups? Did you get for that webinar? Yeah.
Okay, so to take the example further, if we were to hypothetically use, like let's use kit as an example, right? We're trying to reach entrepreneurs creators all of that
so how would you go about packaging let's say we want to do a webinar for kit and
Packaging that and maybe as you talk to it
Think of the things that speak from the creator side right that another creator
They're doing the same kind of offering might want to 100%
So first of all when you're selling any sort of creative campaign, you need to think of what are the channels?
What are the deliverables that I'm guaranteeing? Right?
So part of it would be pre-promotion period, then the live webinar,
then the post promotion is how I think about it. So for pre-promotion,
it might be like pre-rolls on my podcast.
I'll give a hundred thousand pre-rolls to promote people signing up to the
webinar. I'll do two LinkedIn posts,
and they're going to get 50,000 impressions each.
And then anybody who engages will then DM them
and invite them to the webinar.
So DM retargeting on the LinkedIn posts, right?
Okay, that's something that I haven't thought about more.
Like, break that down. How does that work?
So basically, especially on LinkedIn, you can...
So basically, especially on LinkedIn, you can.
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BELL RINGS
DM any of your first connections and then you can invite and then DM any second or third
connections.
So what we do for all of our sponsored promotions is anybody who likes or comments or even shares,
we're then going to retarget them in the DMs with either the promo CTA link for the brand
or the registration link for a webinar or whatever we're trying to drive clicks to.
And the click through rate on DMs is way higher
than people just clicking the posts.
And so that's typically how we get
almost all of our registrants for our webinars,
is actually DM retargeting on the posts that we're doing
to promote the webinar, or any past posts
that we think that that audience would want information
about that webinar.
So if you had a story-driven post
that got people's attention,
and maybe it talks about the brand
or the webinar a little bit,
but you're not pushing the CTA super hard.
So you're getting likes, shares, comments.
That's the top of funnel.
And then everybody who engages,
you're then following up with the CTA.
Exactly, to sign up to the webinar.
So then they get multiple touch points.
It could barely talk about the brand, right?
Just talking about sales.
Let's take Pipe Drive for an example.
So maybe I'm giving a sales tip.
It does really well on LinkedIn.
I get 1,000 likes, 500 comments, whatever.
We retarget those people, invite them to the webinar.
And then in the webinar, they're getting such amazing value.
The law of reciprocity is in play
because it's all sponsored by Pipe Drive.
Pipe Drive is on every single slide and they're like, oh my god, I learned so much in this webinar and it's all
thanks to Pipe Drive. And then they're receptive to watching the demo, they feel like Pipe Drive
is on their side and they end up signing up a lot of times. You're blowing my mind here already
because I didn't realize the way to do engagement. I was looking at the comments, or maybe you're replying
or engaging in the comments further,
but not realizing the DM follow-up
that's happening behind the scenes.
Because you don't actually see, you know.
Like if I'm watching your LinkedIn, I don't see that.
So like we have a LinkedIn agency,
so that's why I'm lucky, because I've got a whole team
that's like, you know, 24-7 DMing people,
and it's just another one of our strategies.
How does LinkedIn handle it?
On some of these platforms, if you're doing more outbound or you're pushing more of this,
there's limits.
Right?
So LinkedIn is actually really good.
There's no limits.
Once you've warmed up your account now, you can't like day one go DM a thousand people
in a day.
But on my account, we literally are DMing people 24 7
Hmm, are you doing it from your personal my personal account? You cannot DM on a company account
Yeah, you can only do it on a personal profile. So first connections unlimited amount of DMS
So the name of the game when you become a huge LinkedIn influencer
Once you hit 30,000 connections you actually want to remove people who don't respond to you so that you can keep DMing people.
So I am removing people every day to bring in new people
that will attend my webinars or subscribe to my podcast
or whatever it is.
And so you constantly want to bring in new people
that you can DM, but you always have 30,000 people
that you could DM every single day in an unlimited manner,
which is totally different than Instagram.
It's like 25 a day or something on Instagram.
So you can just DM all day, yeah.
Yeah, I'm gonna use you as my personal LinkedIn coach
for just a minute.
Okay.
I have a question on this.
So I have like 30,000 followers on LinkedIn.
Okay.
And I mostly kept the connections
for people that I actually know.
Yeah.
And so I don't know, I have maybe 1,500 connection requests
that I have just let sit there.
Yeah.
I think what you're saying is I should accept
every one of those connection requests.
If you think you can sell to them.
If not, you shouldn't, because they automatically
follow you now if they send a request usually.
And you can now, this is a new feature.
So I also have like thousands of people
who sit in my connection requests.
We can actually DM those people now without having to connect with them.
So part of my strategy, especially when we're like out of people to DM, I'm like, go DM
all the people on my invite list, you know, because it's more people to invite to the
webinar or do whatever we need to do.
So you can DM those people with some, sorry, my connections are full or I'm really picky
about my connections, but I'd love for you to check out ConvertKit, you know, so you can still DM those people and engage them
and it will tell you if they're following you or not.
Okay.
Oh, interesting.
Let's say I accept a connection request and then later remove them because they weren't
engaged and I need to, I've hit my 30,000 limit.
Do they remain following me?
You can't force them to unfollow you.
You can only remove a first connection.
Okay. So this is actually really important.
You don't want to have dead connections on your LinkedIn because you want people
who take viral action,
who see your stuff to engage within the first 90 minutes of you posting.
Okay. So you actually don't want dead connections who don't log on,
who don't take viral action or people who wouldn't like
your stuff because then you're never going to go viral
because in that first 90 minutes,
you're not going to get engagement because the people
either don't see your stuff or if they do,
they're not going to engage them.
Yeah. So you want to make sure that you're bringing in people
to your network who would take viral action
and support your content.
The one thing I'll say is that about two years ago,
maybe a year and a half ago,
LinkedIn wiped out a ton of dead profiles.
So when I first used to bring on clients,
I used to go through and have my team find out
who hasn't logged on in six months and stuff like that.
WhoSales Navigator, you can actually see that.
And then we'd remove thousands of followers
and that would kickstart their account.
But now they already removed a lot of them, so if you don't have a ton of followers, you don't need to really worry about it.
Just going forward, I would just make sure you are purposely trying to get people to take viral action.
I'll give you one more tip on how to find those people.
Go look at influencers on LinkedIn.
Go on somebody who has a really engaged profile like Gary Vee, Alex Ramouzi, Cody Sanchez.
Yeah, Chris Donnelly.
Me. you know?
So go on my stuff,
and if you feel like they're a look-alike profile,
somebody who has an audience that you want,
anybody who likes and comments on their stuff
is the perfect audience for you.
So you would just go look who likes and comments
and then invite those people to connect.
Because you know, they take bio action,
they like similar content,
and that's the perfect person to invite your audience.
And so you could go out and connect with them.
And that's how I first started on LinkedIn.
I targeted Gary V's followers.
How fascinating.
Yeah.
Because it's so much,
when people think about inbound marketing,
and you're gonna lead with great content
so that people will happen to see that in their feed,
follow you, and go from there. But what you're saying is, yes, obviously have the great content because that's what
they're going to stick around for. Yeah. But you can go out and find people and put your
content in front of them. Well, there's so many reasons why this works. We're getting
real into the LinkedIn rabbit hole here. We'll get back to podcasting in a moment. So the
reason why this works is because DMs are the most viral action on LinkedIn.
So if you DM somebody and they DM you back, they're 85% more likely to see your content
the next time they log on.
So basically what you're saying is that is determining the algorithm feed.
It's like on Instagram where same thing with DMs, the stories are going to show up at the
front.
Exactly.
Exactly. So because you DM them, LinkedIn's like, oh, they're friends.
Yeah.
This person wants to see your content.
They responded back.
Right.
So first of all, new connections also
see your stuff more frequently.
So you connect with them.
Hey, I noticed you engage with Gary V. If you like his stuff,
you're going to like mine too.
I talk about motivation.
I have a podcast.
I talk about marketing.
Let's connect.
Yeah.
I'd love to provide value on your feed.
They accept. They respond back. Better yet, you have a podcast. I talk about marketing. Let's connect. I'd love to provide value on your feed. They accept.
They respond back.
Better yet, you have a conversation with them so they're not only bought in from the algorithm,
but they bought into you as a person.
Then they start engaging on your content.
Because they start engaging on your content, LinkedIn starts showing your content to their
first connections that are similar and are interested in that type of content.
So it's like a flywheel effect.
Yep.
Also, when you comment on that influencer's post where you share so many connections,
LinkedIn's more likely to notify those connections that you commented.
And so you'll get engagement on that comment on Gary V's post, for example.
And comments have their own impression algorithm.
And that's
actually being shown on LinkedIn now you can see this comment has a thousand
impressions or whatever so people start seeing your comment they're even more
likely to follow you on their own accord because they're like why does this
person have so much engagement on their content who's this person right and then
they follow you that way so there's so many different reasons why it works but
the whole strategy is how do you get people
who are engaged on LinkedIn to start engaging with your steps
so that you're just in this community
that will just help you go viral.
Oh, that's amazing.
Okay, so bringing this back from LinkedIn to podcasting,
because LinkedIn is a huge part of your podcast success.
It is.
So talk to me about what you do specifically
for the podcast growth on LinkedIn.
So I have a couple strategies for LinkedIn.
I do LinkedIn Lives and I play my full episodes and then I'll retarget anybody who likes and
comments on those videos and I'll ask them to subscribe to my podcast.
So I'll say, hey, I noticed that you checked out my live stream.
If you didn't catch the full episode, here's the link to the full episode.
Most of the time people are like,
oh, I already listened or oh, I listened, it was awesome.
Oh, thank you, can you copy and paste that
as an Apple podcast review, right?
So what is this doing?
This is actually helping my ranking on Apple.
So driving new people to your Apple page
increases your ranking.
So ranking is not based on downloads.
It's based on new subscribers.
So daily new subscribers.
Okay, is this happening?
Because I've seen some shows shoot way up the rankings
where I'm like, I don't think that you're getting
more downloads than these other established shows.
So Spotify rankings is based on trends.
They're trending charts.
They're not download charts.
So you can't actually tell who's a bigger podcast
based on their ranking.
It's all based on daily new subscribers.
Now, some people are using virtual machines and people from Bangladesh and whatever,
and they can just manipulate it, right?
And so some people are doing that.
Some people are doing like me, where they're sending DMs constant.
I'd send DMs 24-7, and I'm always at the top of the charts
because I'm just driving new subscribers all the time and I have a fairly large
Show as well which helps but it's really the new subscribers through the DM
So LinkedIn live is the primary way that I'm getting new subscribers and then also like I was mentioning before since there's unlimited
DMS we're constantly thinking of strategies of how can we find more people interested in the podcast?
So for example, we can see who registered for like a negotiation event.
And then we say, hey, I just interviewed Chris Foss about negotiation.
I'd love to send you a link to my podcast.
Or you mentioned Mark Manson before.
Hey, I just interviewed Mark Manson. I noticed you follow him.
I'd love to give you a link to the podcast.
So we're constantly trying to just get new subscribers
through finding the target audience on LinkedIn.
Okay, that's fascinating. And then the target audience is so interesting because
for my show, I'm focused so much on serving professional creators who are
already really established. And so if someone's like, oh, when are you going to
do a beginner episode on this? I'm like, never, it's not going to happen. Right?
Because I want the show to be like your favorite creator's favorite podcast.
Yeah.
And so some of the growth tactics that I've heard other podcasters talk about
are all about how do I just reach more masses?
I don't care about that at all. I want to get the right people.
Yeah.
And so what you're describing is really this direct...
You know, you could say like, okay, let me figure out how to find established creators
on LinkedIn and then invite them to come
and listen to the show.
Yeah, there could be a certain title that they have
in their profile that you target that way.
It could be certain events that they register for,
groups that they're a part of.
Could you do it based on follower account?
I don't think you can filter for follower account.
I wish you could.
Yeah, but you could have a VA go through
and build lists based on follower account.
Totally, I would say the best strategy would be like,
who's another creator like you or entrepreneur
who has a following that you want?
And then you can just go look at their following,
you can go look at their posts.
Oh, that's fascinating.
Yeah.
Okay, so going back to your podcast,
because this is so many things
of how you've grown the show,
and then you're on track for a million in revenue this year.
And we talked about those two sides of it, right?
The advertising side and then this 360 deals or...
What other things go into driving revenue and...
Look, because you were actually telling me
you just like dropped a little hint of this.
That you actually like, this is relatively small compared to...
Which is crazy to say that a million this year is relatively small compared to some of the
other ways that you're monetizing and earning off the podcast. Yeah so my
podcast is the main lead gen for my social media and podcast agency and for
my podcast network. Yeah. So the people who I interview we're pretty strategic
about it. It's people that I want, we're pretty strategic about it.
It's people that I want on my show.
Anyway, I have an entrepreneurship show.
So it's most, a lot of entrepreneurs have podcasts now,
need somebody to help them with their personal brand.
And so a million dollars this year off my podcasts.
Last year, I made $6 million off my guests
from the agency and my network.
A portion of the guests saying, okay,
so tell me more about this.
Like I'd love to sign up for your agency.
Exactly how I do it.
It's very strategic.
It was an accident at first.
Yeah.
And then you're like, wait a second, that'll work.
And then I was like, oh my gosh,
we could just totally use this, right?
So podcast is the main lead gen
and it's all like stealth marketing.
So first of all, our guest outreach team,
who's incredible and like super professional,
like they don't skip a beat.
They've got email signature that says,
number one, LinkedIn marketing agency,
top self-improvement and business podcast network,
just on the email signature.
So like, they're getting a glimpse of what we do.
We send everybody a gift box, who's the guest.
So they get a branded box,
it says number one, self-improvement network.
There's like a little flyer in there.
They get like a mug and a mic and like all this cool stuff.
And there's just like a little bit
about what our company does.
Then before the interview,
and this is something that I learned
and I wish I was doing it earlier,
because when somebody hops on an interview with me,
they always just assume I just have this podcast and nothing
else.
You know, like they're just like, or like that I got lucky or whatever they thought.
So now I'm just like, my name is Hala.
I have a company called Yap Media.
That's like the number one LinkedIn agency.
We're a top podcast network.
Sometimes I'll throw out we're on track to hit eight figures this year, whatever, depending on what I want to do. And I just let them know what
I do. And typically what happens is that after the interview, and of course I do a really
good job. For example, I was supposed to interview you today and I was like, I can't, I didn't
get time to study. You know, I was like, I can't, I got to study really hard for my interviews,
because I want to do a great job. And then usually at the end of the show,
they're like, I know that you do LinkedIn,
can we talk about it?
And if they don't ask me something like that,
I'd be like, so how's your podcast going?
How are you monetizing at the end?
And then I'll just give them some advice.
I'll be like, oh, you're doing it that way.
You should do X, Y, Z.
And they'll be like, hey, like, can we talk about this more?
I had this client who did this,
and you could share a story.
Yeah, so it's like I just give advice.
I'm not hard selling in any way.
I'm always waiting for them to say, can we hop on a call?
Right.
And that's how I get all my clients.
So are you deliberately leaving five to 15 minutes
at the end of the podcast recording so that if you could have a conversation?
I try, yeah, I try.
Sometimes it's hard because I just want the content for my show and there's like two
minutes and I'm like, by the way, how's your podcast?
You know?
Yeah, exactly.
So I should be better at that.
But yeah, like it usually just naturally ends up and I love it because they feel like it
was their idea, you know?
And like, so it's just way easier to sell.
And it was their idea.
It was their idea.
It was your idea to create the opportunity for it to be their idea. The space, exactly, exactly.
Oh, that's fascinating.
And swaps work even better.
Okay, talk about that.
Because that's an opportunity for me to give my expertise.
So once they're like, oh my gosh,
she knows so much about LinkedIn and podcasting,
I wanna work with her.
So I've noticed that like conversion,
if we do a swap, skyrockets.
Because they're gonna spend an hour asking you about all of the things.
And they're going to take all of these notes and they're going to go,
Can I just pay you to do this?
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
So the way that you're ultimately monetizing then is the agency fees
that they're paying you for managing social, implementing all these LinkedIn
strategies, all of that.
And then obviously, revshare.
On the sponsorships.
On that side.
What's the split of that in your business?
I would say about two and a half million was agency.
And then last year it was like four million on the network,
including my show.
Oh, that's amazing.
I always think about packaging of content, right?
So as you're having a conversation,
things that run through my head of like,
okay, how would you package this on YouTube
so that someone is searching for the right thing
and they come across it and totally delivers on it?
And just as a very meta thing that creators will care about.
In this, what's running through my head is like,
oh, building a $6 million agency,
building a podcast to a million a year in revenue.
The secrets for growing on LinkedIn.
We've covered all kinds of stuff.
And it all fits together.
I feel like I have so much more to share,
especially on the podcast side.
Yeah, what's something on the podcast side
that you think professional creators would really want to know?
So I feel like a lot of people just don't understand
how podcast sponsorships work.
And I feel like there's so many creators that like are kind of scared of it.
Okay, why would they be scared of it?
There's so many creators that have a big enough show to monetize,
but they're like, I don't do sponsorships.
You know?
Like there's a... Is there like some status that comes from that?
Or like they feel like I've never done that before,
or I just sell my own products,
or I make so much money on my stuff that I don't need to do that.
I mean, candidly, I'm in that boat, right?
You are in that boat.
Because the show's so targeted,
we've got a good number of downloads,
but not hundreds of thousands a month,
and I make a lot of money running Kit.
So you might not be a great fit,
because you still need maybe more volume.
Yeah, but if you're getting to someone who, say,
has 100,000 downloads per month,
and they're like, I don't do sponsorships because I make, you know, my course makes a million dollars a year.
Yeah, but they can make another million or maybe they can make another quarter million doing sponsorships
or more depending on how creative they are.
Like I was telling you, like, I punch way above my weight. I probably make double a podcast for my size.
So transparently guys, I get like 350,000 downloads a month
across my simulcast.
It's a big show.
It is not a huge show.
So I'm like probably the fourth biggest show
on my network right now.
Now a lot of people lie about their podcast numbers.
So when I say 350,000 people,
like they might think like that's small, but a lot of people in about their podcast numbers. So when I say 350,000, people are like,
they might think that's small,
but a lot of people in this world lie about their numbers,
and I don't lie about my numbers.
People will combine in a way,
that's why I dug in a little bit when you said,
long form plays, like full length.
Exactly.
Because people will put their YouTube shorts numbers in there,
or they're like, this reel went viral,
and that was from the podcast.
It's actually really funny.
I have people that, I'll hop on a call for my network and they'll be like,
oh, I'm like, how many downloads do you get?
They're like two million a month.
And I'm like, that's not true.
You know, I'm like, let's talk real numbers so I can give you real projections.
And then I'm like, I go into their stuff and they get 20,000 downloads a month.
I don't know if people are like lying on purpose or like they just don't understand.
So when we talk about downloads, it's usually monthly downloads
So some people will give their all-time downloads, right?
You know, some people will give their downloads before the Apple iOS 17 update talk about that for a second because yeah
there are definitely people as algorithms change both in podcasts or email or all of that where there's one way of
Running and checking numbers before and then after the update,
things are different.
So what happened there?
So iOS 17 update happened like a year and a half ago,
and basically it removed automatic downloads on Apple.
So in the past, if somebody listened to your show
and they didn't go on Apple,
the next time they went on Apple,
let's say they didn't go on Apple for six months,
the next time they logged into their Apple app,
it would download at the same time all the episodes that they missed.
So it was just a lot of bloated downloads on Apple.
And podcasters lost anywhere from 40 to 70 percent of their downloads.
Oh, wow. And they weren't real listeners.
They weren't real listeners.
And they were also mostly back catalog downloads.
So again, it was the downloading of all the old episodes, typically.
It really impacted legacy podcasters who were on Apple for a long time.
So legacy podcasters on Apple are funny because a lot of people, they have tons of reviews,
right?
So if they started in like 2016, 2014 to 2018 timeframe,
you'll go on their page, you think they're a huge podcast
because they have like 12,000 reviews, whatever,
but they were just early adopters
and there wasn't a lot of podcasts,
so they ended up getting a lot of listeners and reviews,
but now their podcast is likely really small
after this iOS 17 or has drastically
decreased in downloads.
And I saw that with a lot of my podcasters, a lot of my shows lost downloads.
I was lucky because I had a really diverse strategy.
Like I'm a big podcaster on Castbox.
I have downloads on all these different platforms.
So I didn't really see much of a hit, but other podcasters did.
Yeah. Okay, that makes sense. all these different platforms, so I didn't really see much of a hit, but other podcasters did.
Yeah.
Okay, that makes sense.
So then where we're getting into with podcast growth and your show and all that.
So you're talking about how downloads are calculated, but what's that in service of?
So another thing that creators don't really understand is that your podcast has multiple
variables to be successful at monetization.
If you have 100,000 downloads on your podcast
and you can only take one commercial,
that means that you can only monetize 100,000 downloads.
But if you have 100,000 downloads
and you can fit six commercials on your podcast,
suddenly you can monetize 600,000 downloads.
Okay? Okay.
So there's lots of ways to monetize
and kind of expand the amount that you can make just on
Increasing your episode length for example and just getting creative
So for example, I created like a new inventory from my network of mini episodes
Like at a hundred percent share voice, so we're all sold out. So I have to think how I make more inventory
You know, so one of the ways is through these mini feed episodes, they're 10 to 20 minute episodes that will do like six a quarter for a brand,
100% share of voice.
And it's sort of like a really long baked in ad,
it's more expensive because it's like a full episode and we put it in the podcast.
Right?
So now suddenly you can six extra downloads just by having a longer show where
you can fit more commercials.
So typically it's about for audio, it's about one commercial per 10 minutes.
Okay.
Is what you can fit comfortably.
And you can also do creative things to monetize your show like paid interviews or
mini series or these other things like we were talking about webinars,
whatever else you want to do in terms of monetization.
Let's talk about the world of paid interviews.
This is something that I think both brands need to know
and understand more about, and the creators and the hosts
need to know more of.
How does this whole world work?
I think that a lot of people just assume that every guest
on a show is just someone that they thought would be interesting
and you had them on.
And it's very casual in that way.
But actually, there's a lot more happening behind the scenes.
Yeah.
So there's lots of different ways
that people can do it.
Some people are like literally,
you have to pay $3,000 to come on my show
and every single guest for the most part is paid, right?
Very few shows like that, I think.
But there are some shows where like
that's their entire monetization strategy.
Most shows, especially reputable shows
that have great content, great following,
they're typically doing paid interviews
when there's good brand fit.
So for example, with my show,
I interviewed the CEO of Just Thrive.
She has like a probiotics company.
She talks about gut health.
She's really passionate about it.
She has an awesome story.
And she did like a tour on my network
where she paid for the interviews.
And then after the interviews,
we did mid-rolls for her company.
And it worked really well.
And that's her like number one marketing strategy
to grow her company is guessing on shows
and then doing mid-rolls afterwards.
So now she just does this at every network,
but she started with YAP Media.
So it's just like any other 360 campaign.
It's very similar to the webinar campaign. We put
together deliverables, so it includes an interview. It
includes a link in the show notes. It includes mid-roll
commercials, social posts, email blasts, and it's just a
package of deliverables based on your channels and the
impressions that you can guarantee, and you price it. And
the way that you price it is really up to the podcasters discretion.
Like what is it worth for you to have somebody on the show?
And then you want to back into like a reasonable eCPM.
So a CPM is for podcast commercials and now eCPM is this new term for
the CPM across all different deliverables.
And so typically a good eCPM is anywhere from $40 to like $150.
And the more that you are famous, you're like a celebrity where your endorsement is worth
more or the more difficult the project is. So for example, an interview is a lot easier
than creating a whole presentation training, right? So an interview eCPM might be like $50, which is still higher than a
commercial which is $30, but a webinar might be like $80 because it's harder to do. Right?
So you always want to put some sort of CPM behind it or else the brand is going to be
like, well, this is just doesn't make sense. I can't back into this, you know?
Yeah, that makes sense. Okay, so a brand is thinking about it of,
how do I build credibility for my executive
or the brand as a whole?
Yep.
And then how do we follow that up
with buying more impressions?
Because for example, if I were to come on your show
as paying for the slot, then I know that a good chunk
of your audience is gonna hear that episode.
Yep.
And so then over the next month or more, as I'm running ads on your show,
then they're going to be like, oh, yeah, I listen to Nathan on the podcast.
I know what kid is. Exactly.
And then they're more likely to take action.
Right. Podcasting, you really need to repeat, like have repetition.
And if you have a whole interview, that's basically an hour long
commercial for yourself to get people bought in to trust.
And then if you're playing a commercial for another month, the listener has so many chances to remember the link that they need to
click to follow up. So the listener just has more chances to actually take action.
Do you think there are a lot of shows doing paid interviews or is it really
like if you had to guess of of the show's over 100,000 downloads a month,
like what percentage are you doing?
I think it's like, it's not a lot
because most podcasters, if they're gonna have,
first of all, once you become a bigger podcaster,
you don't wanna have just random people on your show, right?
So for me, it has to have really good brand fit,
they have to be able to afford it,
which most people, you tell them $18,000
to come on my show, that's a hard sell for some people,
right, so, and for bigger podcasters, they might charge
$50,000, $80,000, you know?
So I think they're like every so often,
but not every single episode.
So they might be doing one out of every six to 12 episodes
or more than that. Exactly.
Yeah.
Okay.
That makes sense.
And then does it end up driving a meaningful percentage of revenue or is it still usually
small relative to the rest of the advertising?
On average on my network, it's usually 60% commercials, 40% other stuff, whether that's
social paid interviews.
And I would say on my network, people people are doing paid interviews every other month.
I wanted to get more of them, right?
They're just hard to secure.
The other thing with paid interviews is sometimes
it's like an upsell for the brand.
So for example, with Shopify,
I have the most commercials out of anybody for Shopify, right?
And so I interviewed all their top founders
that use Shopify as a paid interview series, right?
So you can also like upsells the brands.
I did something with the Olympics
where I interviewed all these Olympians.
And that's great content for your show, right?
Cause someone's like, oh, we'll pay the $18,000
for the interview and we want to have this person on.
And you're like, no, no.
Who's the person that's going to deliver a ton of value
and really elevate the brand?
And the benefit of like pricing high is if they can afford it, they probably have something
cool to say because they can afford that cost, you know?
So yeah.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
Okay, what about if we dive into growing shows?
Yeah.
So we talked about the LinkedIn strategy.
What are some other things that work really well for growing shows?
So there's like two avenues that you can take.
There's media buying, and that's really getting advertising on the different podcast players.
So there's about 40 different podcast player apps out there.
There's Apple and Spotify, right?
And the way to get organic visibility on there is through PSO and like you can't really buy
ads on Apple and Spotify.
What's PSO?
Podcast Search Optimization. Okay. So it's like the SEO of podcasts buy ads on Apple and Spotify. What's PSO? Podcast Search Optimization.
Okay.
So it's like the SEO of podcasts.
Got it.
PSO.
Something I'm obsessed with lately.
It's like my number one thing that I'm obsessed with right now.
Okay, well let's dive into that for a second.
I always want to talk about someone's obsession.
What are the things that make a difference in search optimization?
So I'm still like testing stuff, but basically what I found out, and we can take Spotify and Apple
are two different algorithms,
so we can start with Spotify.
What I found out so far is that
all the different metadata points are ranked differently.
So your title is ranked the highest,
your author title is second highest,
then your description, then your titles,
then your show notes.
When I say description, I mean your podcast description.
As a whole, not the individual episode.
And the key is to have the same keywords
repeating throughout all of them.
Okay.
So something that I've done is I put entrepreneur marketing
and sales in my title now.
And now I don't even want to give these secrets away.
I'm like, wait, should I tell these secrets?
But yeah.
But you're noticing that you're ranking higher for those search terms.
Yes.
So it's all about repeating the same search terms throughout all the different metadata
spots.
And the impact of the keywords in your title and author title and your show titles
are ranked way more heavily than your show notes.
For your show notes, you wanna have keywords
in the first two to three lines,
nothing else really matters after that.
And again, it's the same keywords over and over again.
So this is something that I always kind of knew,
but I never proved it.
I always kicked myself for calling my podcast
Young and Profiting and not like Young Entrepreneur. Okay.
Because it would have gotten way more organic search and visibility within the apps had
I just called it Young Entrepreneur than Young and Profiting because nobody's searching Young
or Profiting, but they're searching entrepreneur, right?
So having a keyword in your title is so important.
If you don't have a big show, I would definitely right now go change your name to
something with a main keyword. And you can actually use the tool called OSHA. AUSHA. It's a new tool
and it will show you how you rank on all these different keywords and you can track it. And
that's what I've been using kind of like test things. So Apple is really heavily based on
keyword using the same keyword over and over again. And Apple, I believe is the same thing, but it also-
Spotify is the same thing?
Or-
So Spotify is using the same keywords over and over again.
Apple is similar, except I believe that they heavily weigh
how popular your show is.
Okay.
So on Spotify, you can rank very easily,
no matter how popular you are, just if you've
got a good keyword strategy.
On Apple, it seems like it's tracking your downloads and then deciding who gets shown
based on their popularity.
Does that make sense?
Yep.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
Oh man, there's so many things in that.
Okay, so that takes us down.
So that's the PSO.
Yeah.
Okay.
That side. Now, let's go back to you talking about advertising in these other podcast players. Well,. So that's the PSO. Yeah. Okay. That side. Now let's go back to you talking about advertising
in these other podcast players.
Well, I have another tip for PSO that's really hot.
Okay, so on Apple, on the bottom of the show,
and I actually told you this
when we were on the phone the other day.
On the bottom, it says podcasts you may like,
or podcasts like this, something like that on the bottom.
That is one of the only organic discoverability features that Apple has.
Right.
Other than ranking on the charts, like we just talked about.
The way that you get on that is by guessing on other shows.
So if I go guest on Lori Harder's show, people listen to that.
They end up following me because I went on her show.
Now, if she goes on my show, they end up following her because she went on my show.
And they show podcasts based on who has mutual subscribers.
So now, because I went on Lori's show and I invested in guesting on her show,
my show pops up when people go on her show and that's discover ability for my show.
So big strategy would be guesting on other shows so that you can get in not only that
episode, but there's a long tail effect of getting in this podcast like this.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
So you're getting the instant return from being perceived as an expert in front of a
new audience.
And then Apple is saying, Hey, there's mutual subscribers here.
Yep.
And it's a very genuine people who like show A, seem to like show B. And it's like, yeah,
because they-
Yeah.
And then also on Apple, there's channel pages now for networks.
And so there's also, if you're part of a network, in their Apple channel pages, also another
bar that says podcasters in the network.
Right?
So that's also how you get organic discoverability
is joining a network who has an Apple page.
Okay.
Yeah.
So then talking about advertising in these other players,
how does that work?
So every player has a different advertising strategy
and there's a bunch of them.
There's Podcast Attic, Player FM, Castbox, Overcast, right?
So there's all these different podcast players.
And you can get banners in their apps.
You can get integrated into their onboarding series.
So when somebody signs up for the app,
it can say like, select the categories you're interested in
and then it will say like recommended shows
and they might reselect you subscribing to them. They can put you in the feature.
They can send push notifications to their users.
So there's all these different ways.
And really what you want to do is test these apps, see what the retention is like, which
is really easy to do because most likely if you're a podcaster and you've never bought
on these apps, you probably have like 10 downloads from that player.
And then you can just see like, okay,
during the promotional period, I got X downloads,
a month later I got this much, a month later I got this much.
And you can see like, does this retain or not?
And then if it does, and you're happy with it,
you just keep buying it.
So like I personally love Castbox and Player FM,
and I do media buying with them all the time.
Is that something that creators should put
a thousand dollars a month behind
or would you spend even more than that?
So usually these packages range anywhere
from like five to $10,000 a month.
So usually it's like if you're already monetizing
or you wanna monetize and this is more for like volume.
So if you've got a broad show, it's good for that.
But if you're like really niche, it's not a good strategy
because you're basically just advertising
to anybody who's on the app.
Right?
So if you've got a broad show like mine,
it's a great strategy.
But if you have a niche show,
better just guest on other niche shows
is a better strategy for you.
That makes a lot of sense.
Or commercials on other niche shows.
Something that I'm fascinated by from the outside is watching different creators
maybe move between networks.
Yeah.
So, for example, I feel like when HubSpot came out with their network
and they're ramping this up, one, I thought that it worked differently than it did.
Mostly they're just facilitating swaps and buying their own ad inventory.
But, you know, I watched a bunch of big podcasters come on with them.
And then I've actually seen a decent number
of those large podcasters leave HubSpot
and go to your network.
So you take someone like Jenna Kutcher as an example,
what goes into winning her over
from any of these other networks to your network?
Yeah, I think with these big creators,
most of the selling is control.
You can still have control.
They trust me.
I'm their friend.
Right.
I'm not this big, scary, serious network or like some guy that they don't know that they're
signing to.
I'm the head honcho at YAP Media.
They already know me, so they know that like they could just text me and be like, yo, holla,
like blah, blah, blah, whatever the problem is, you know?
Instead of like, oh, well, yeah, let me talk to my boss
and then I'll try to get the director of whoever.
It's really funny because so many of my podcasters
are podcasters that have never signed to a network before
because you mentioned HubSpot,
but they weren't really a real network.
They were an advertiser that was just calling themselves
a network, they were just buying up pre-roll and a mid-roll.
They did not have sales exclusivity.
So like for me, if you're a network, they were just buying a pre-roll and a mid-roll. They did not have sales exclusivity. So like for me, if you're a network, you are responsible for all of the podcasters.
Sales.
So for a while, Jenna was on paper in the HubSpot network and I was doing all her ads,
including sliding her HubSpot stuff.
But I was getting her, she's got five ads.
One of them is HubSpot and I was doing the other four, right.
And sliding her HubSpot ad.
So yeah, it wasn't really a real network.
Yeah, okay, interesting.
So then when you're saying,
hey, I'm already doing this, fully come over and-
Yeah, because I helped explain to her as well,
because she was confused too.
She was like, I'm part of the HubSpot network,
and I was like, are they running your sales?
No.
Can you get more ads?
Yes. Okay, are they hosting your sales? No. Can you get more ads? Yes. Okay. Are they hosting your show?
No. Okay. They're not flighting your ads.
Then they're not a network.
They're just an advertiser that has branded themselves as a network.
Okay.
Yeah.
That makes sense. So in that,
as you win her over and you're taking over all of the sales and-
Yeah. All the ops all of the sales and...
Yeah, all the ops, all the sales, all the tech stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah, so where do you take that from there?
What are some of the first things that when you bring over a big show like that, that
you're like, all right, here's everything that we're optimizing and...
During the onboarding, we're transferring their RSS feed, their audio RSS feed, to our
network account on megaphone.
Yeah.
And that's actually really simple.
So a lot of podcasters are scared of this, right?
But it does take an hour, right?
Just moving their RSS from wherever they were to like a modern advertising platform.
Usually it's Art 19, megaphone, I think Captivate might be another one.
There's really only three.
Then we're going through their whole back catalog.
We're removing all the old commercials,
and we're agreeing on an ad load.
So this is a conversation that we have with the podcasters.
Hey, your show's 45 minutes.
I think we can put four ads comfortably,
four mid-rolls, maybe two pre-rolls.
One can be for your internal promotions,
the pre-roll, one can be for sale.
And we're kind of like negotiating,
like what is a good ad load?
This can change over time, right?
Like I mentioned, everything is collaborative.
So then we're setting up the show to feature-proof it,
whatever their max ad load they're comfortable with.
And then we're just helping them
with their episode frequency, length,
all the things that we need to make sure
that we're able to project impressions for advertisers.
And then we're coming up with their monthly catalog number.
Once they're in our megaphone,
we're getting all their downloads,
then the next step is what is their monthly catalog number
that we're gonna start selling them at?
Okay?
Then we're trying to get a gauge of
here's the top 100 advertisers we work with.
Do you approve, do you not approve?
Then we're hitting the ground running,
trying to get sponsorships.
One of the things we didn't talk about yet
is the way that we sell differently in terms of at Yap, we're focused on monthly flights.
So other networks, they might sell weekly dynamic flights,
and a lot of them are selling that faked-in strategy
that I was talking to you about, right?
So we sell full monthly flights.
So for somebody like Jenna, who takes five ads on her show,
that's only five brands a month that can sponsor her show.
So all year, I'm trying to get her tests. So like a new show comes on, let's say they have no
advertisers, they've never advertised before. Okay. My job is to get them as many tests as
possible and renewals for the year so that by the time like September, November, December comes,
that I'm booking them annual
deals.
So that's a big part of how you're getting sold out.
Exactly.
First of all, in your time is you're like, I'm not dealing with, oh, I want to sponsor
two episodes or something like that.
You're saying so like our minimum is one month flights.
And typically people are testing two or three months at a time.
So our tests are two to three months flights.
Then if you perform well, you get a renewal. Sometimes this tests are two to three months flights. Then if you perform
well, you get a renewal. Sometimes this renewal is till end of year. That's the goal, right?
So we want to perform so well that brands will test for two, three months, and then
they're going to renew for the rest of the year. Okay? So if you're with a network that
is churning and burning advertisers, they're doing it wrong. Okay? They're not strategic.
They're just looking for scraps
and you're just getting scraps all month, basically.
You're doing a lot of work
because you're having to read
all these different commercials.
Your audience is getting a bad experience
because you've got 20 different brands that you're repping.
For example, like Shopify has sponsored me
for like four years now.
Indeed, four years.
Masterclass, like I just, LinkedIn,
I have the same sponsors. I already know what my sponsors are. Like they don't change. Airbnb, four years. Masterclass. I just LinkedIn. I have the same sponsors. I already
know what my sponsors are. They don't change. Airbnb. They don't change. So my goal for
a new podcasters, I need to first of all get them in front of the brands that sponsor my
whole network like Shopify, Indeed, Airbnb, LinkedIn. Get them tests, get them renewals.
And then in September, November, December, this is called the podcast upfront
season.
Okay.
That's when we're trying to negotiate all the annual deals.
Okay.
The worst time I would say to join a network is in that period.
Because you don't have any tests.
Because everyone's focused on annual deals.
And so the slowest quarter of the year is Q1 because everybody was focused on annual
deals in Q4. So whenever focused on annual deals in Q4.
So whenever somebody signs with me in Q4, I'm like, oh, this is going to be suck for them, you know, but it is what it is. They didn't do their tests yet. And we've got to focus on
the annual deals. So for example, by the time Jan one hit, my network was 60, 70% sold out already
for the year because everybody had three, four annual deals
on their show and that took up spots for the whole year.
And then now what's left is just two spots.
And the highest performing shows,
usually the bigger shows end up being
the highest performing shows are already sold out 100%.
So like I had one spot left,
Tory Dunlap had a couple spots, Jenna Kutcher.
Like if you're a bigger show,
you're usually also a top performer.
Now, so you've shared all kinds of stuff,
very specific tactics and all of that,
but I want to, as we wrap up, go as actionable as possible.
Okay.
And maybe if we could take two different sizes of creators.
So someone who's getting 50,000 downloads per month,
and then a creator who's getting 300,000 downloads per month.
Okay. Like what are the things that you would go and implement right away?
Okay. So if you're getting 50,000 downloads per month,
I would recommend that you start dabbling and getting sponsorships
because you are big enough for certain networks.
Okay? So there's these networks like AdvertiseCast and Gumball.
They cater to non-exclusive podcasts, which means they don't host their podcast.
Okay.
So you don't need to move anything.
You can still do your own independent thing.
It's a really great option for people who want to stay independent and sort of dabble in advertising.
So you sign up with Gumball, you sign up with AdvertiseCast,
you're non-exclusive with them,
and they just start sending you deals.
You've got to flight everything yourself,
they're not gonna help with your ad ops at all,
you're likely gonna just start with Baked-In or Faked-In,
depending on if you can get on megaphone or not,
and you can start just monetizing, getting a feel for it.
So that's how I first started, I was independent,
and I just started with AdvertiseCast, Gumball, and then I was like, wait a second,
who are they working with?
And then I figured out all the agencies they were working with,
and I started bypassing them,
and then started my own network, right?
So that's a good place to start.
You can also start reaching out direct to brands.
So let's say you have a company,
and you use 50 different tools.
So what I used to do is I used to just go, okay, we use Slack, we use Indeed, we use
this, we use that.
Let's just reach out to them.
Sometimes these brands will reroute you to their agency if they work with a podcast agency.
Now suddenly you've got podcast agency contacts.
And that was a good introduction.
You didn't come in.
It's like, oh, the brand made the introduction to the person.
And they're like, oh, I'm trying to keep this brand happy because they're a client of mine.
So let me take the.
Yeah. So you can work direct with the brands and come up with your deals yourself.
You're going to use CPM models.
So there's so much information online about podcast CPM.
So typically $22 to $30, depending on your niche.
And you can put a package together of probably baked in if you're not with a network and you
don't want to get too techie. And you can also sell social media, you can sell webinars, you can sell
whatever you want directly to these brands, right? And getting experience with AdvertiseCast and
Gumball will teach you how podcast ads work and how to do them and all. And then you'll be able
to sell direct better because you'll already know how it all works, right? So that's what I would recommend for 50,000.
Now, if you're 300,000 plus and you're in business,
self-improvement, and society and culture, come talk to me.
Yes, exactly.
But seriously, you are a great candidate for a network, OK?
So for you, I want you to think about how
can you max your downloads?
You want to think about episode frequency. So your downloads? You wanna think about episode frequencies.
So one of the quickest ways to do that,
if you are only putting out four episodes a month,
make it eight.
Usually it's like a 30% increase in downloads off the bat.
If you've been podcasting for a long time,
play old episodes.
I do YAP classic episodes twice a month of older content,
or I'll play my guest appearances.
I would love to play your episode on my podcast.
I think my listeners will love it, right?
And so you can get creative,
especially if you speak or whatever,
to double your episodes.
And now suddenly you have 30% more impressions to sell.
Okay?
The guest appearances is an interesting one
because if you're doing an interview show,
you spend all of this time
drawing all the expertise
out of someone else.
Yeah.
And, you know, if you look, maybe you talked 20%
and the other person talked 80%,
and that's just, that's how an interview goes.
That is, yeah.
But then if you invert it,
Exactly.
Your own audience hasn't heard as much of your expertise,
so it's like, take the guest interview and run it.
And they love it, right?
So like, my audience loves to hear my appearances
because I don't do that much solo episodes.
Or you can add solo episodes.
It's another idea, right?
So the frequency of your episodes, the length,
like I said, there's multiple variables
of how you can make money.
The number of commercials that you can put on a show.
So if you have an hour long show, you can put six ads.
So if your show's only 20 minutes,
then you want to monetize.
Can you make it 40 minutes?
Cause you'll make a lot more money.
You'll make double the amount of money
if you made it 40 minutes, right?
So there's little things you would tweak.
You would want to think about, okay,
if I'm really going to be serious about monetizing,
maybe I should be guesting on shows once a month
to grow my show, joining a network
so that you could be in all these growth programs.
So for example, we're going to do PSO revamps
for all of our shows.
You're taking what you've learned from your own experiments,
and they're like, all right, this is what's working,
now we're going to go implement it.
And I have relationships with all these podcast players
because I've done so much media buying with them,
so now we do, in exchange for $5,000 of social media,
you get 10,000 subscribers on CastBox.
So we're doing that all the time for our podcasters,
so you get into these growth programs time for our podcasters. So you get into these growth programs
for more advanced podcasters.
And chances are, if you're that big of a podcast,
you've got your own business going on,
you wanna be with a partner who's gonna handle all the tech,
make it easy for you, create recording packs,
and do, you know, to make it as easy as possible
for you to monetize.
So those are my two recommendations.
I like it.
That's very specific.
So just going back to the beginning, you know, we came on talking about your show and doing 600,000 revenue last year on track for a million this year, just have your show. But I think what's so interesting is that the other business opportunities beyond that are worth 6 million combined. And that's like, just going to keep 10 million this year. Yeah, just keep growing and everything from there. And that's like just going to keep-
Hopefully 10 million this year, yeah.
Yeah, just keep growing and everything from there.
And that's the power of attention.
When you can get in front of the right people
and you have the right message,
the level of business that you can build
is absolutely amazing.
So thanks so much for coming on, for sharing all of this.
I had so much fun.
This was such a great interview.
Thank you.
Thanks for being one of the first,
or actually the very first to record in Kits of U of Chicago. Your studios are beautiful, a great interview. Thank you. Thanks for being one of the first or actually the very first to record in
Kingston, Chicago.
Your studios are beautiful, Nathan. Congratulations.
Thank you. Where should people go?
Either to follow your show and maybe connect with you on LinkedIn,
but also if they're like, all right, I am that 300,000 subscriber,
300,000 download show. And, uh, I'd like some of this managed for me.
So Young and Profiting is my podcast.
It is an amazing entrepreneurship show.
I highly recommend you guys go check me out on Apple, Spotify, YouTube,
wherever you like to watch your shows.
And then yapmedia.com, y-a-p-media.com,
if you want to check out agency stuff, network, fill out a recruitment form,
whatever you want to do, it's all there.
I love it. Thanks so much for coming on.
Yeah, thank you.
I hope this episode lit a fire under you, whether you're a podcast, content creator,
marketer, or just somebody out here trying to grow your impact. Remember, we all start from zero.
We all start from scratch. I didn't launch Young and Profiting with a fancy team or a big budget.
I was working full-time, doing this as a side hustle, grinding every day and night
because I believed in my vision.
And that belief allowed me to recruit other people
who helped me build it alongside of me
because you can't do it alone.
And now we've grown into a multimillion dollar show,
a soon to be eight figure business,
a network of some of the top creators in the world,
some of the people that I used to look up to
like John Lee Dumas, Russell Brunson,
Neil Patel, Lori Harder, Jenna Kutcher, they're all in my network
and I'm responsible for their podcast monetization.
And while I am the podcast princess and I'm one of the biggest experts in podcast monetization,
the thing I want you to know is that I'm still learning.
I'm still learning every day and I'm still trying to learn more and more.
And that's the mindset you need if you want to build something meaningful.
You need to be an expert.
Something that lasts requires consistency, curiosity, courage, competency.
And if there's one thing I want you to take away from this episode, it's that your voice
matters.
So with the right strategy, the right positioning, and the right energy, you can turn your message
into a movement just like Young and Profiting.
Thank you so much for tuning in to this Yap Live episode.
I hope you guys got a chance to check us out on Spotify video or YouTube. Make sure you
subscribe if you're a new listener of the show. I appreciate you guys so much
more than you know. Keep showing up, keep dreaming big, and as always, listen, learn,
and profit. This is your host, Hala Taha, aka The Podcast Princess, signing off.