Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2000: What 2000 Episodes Has Taught Us About Podcasting
Episode Date: January 30, 2023In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover twelve things they have learned about podcasting after recording 2,000 episodes.  Learning along the way through trial and error. (2:25) 12 Lessons 2000 E...pisodes Has Taught Us About Podcasting.  #1 - Sound is VERY important. (3:19) #2 - Communicate to your audience, not your peers. (7:46) #3 - Be CONSISTENT with time/day drops and episodes per week. (10:57) #4 - Sponsorships won’t make you money until you are already huge. (14:25) #5 - The best combination is entertainment with information. (17:48) #6 - Use analogies and storytelling. (22:53) #7 - Dead air is ok (For interviews, shut up and let the guest talk). (26:56) #8 - Some episodes are to get new listeners, and others are for old listeners. (32:31) #9 - Have something good to say and say it often. (37:08)  #10 – Hook them early. (41:00)  #11 - Be ok with sucking. Keep going. (45:21) #12 - Always seek ways to improve your craft. (49:42) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit MASSZYMES by biOptimizers for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP10 at checkout** January Promotion: NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS SPECIAL OFFERS! (New to Weightlifting Bundle, Body Transformation Bundle, and New Year Extreme Intensity Bundle) You get massive savings with each offer. The Fighter and The Kid - YouTube Mind Pump #1482: Canceled With Bryan Callen All-In Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Bryan Callen (@bryancallen) Instagram Brendan Schaub (@brendanschaub) Instagram Jordan Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness, health, and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, and by the way, this is our 2,000th episode and to celebrate in today's podcast podcast we're teaching you all the things we learned
in the last 2000 episodes about podcasting.
So if you think about starting a podcast
or you already have a podcast,
we were a friend that wants to start a podcast,
this episode is for you and it's also a lot of fun
even if you're not interested in those things
because we're fun to listen to.
Look, this episode is brought to you by a sponsor,
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January.com. All right, here comes the show.
All right, today's episode is number 2000.
I think that represents something like 3,000 hours of podcasting.
Wow.
That means we're all drunk at horns.
We're almost halfway to being good.
Yeah.
Well, we're going to talk about today's episode.
So close.
All the stuff we've learned podcasting for eight years,
2,000 episodes, over 3,000 hours of podcasting.
What have we learned?
What's made us successful?
And why are we the number one fitness podcast in the world?
So if you're getting ready to start a podcast,
this would, or know somebody who wants to start a podcast,
or ever thought about starting a podcast,
this will be informative.
That's right.
Is that the goal?
I think so.
I think so. I think so. I think so.
I think so.
Be helpful.
Yeah.
You know, we first started, I think,
before we get into some of the stuff we've learned, it's important to convey.
We had zero experience in media.
All media.
No, experience.
But you're right.
I had no zero.
Nothing.
We were trainers.
We had lots of experience in fitness and health and in business.
We're all launchpreneurs, but none of us had any experience doing this.
So we learned along the way, and a lot of it was trial and error.
So this is us in hindsight telling you kind of what worked and when didn't work.
So it's valuable information because eight years is a long time.
Well, I mean, we've done live events and we've met a lot of people in person.
And they have had a lot of people in person and they have had a lot
of questions regarding podcasts and became something that people are interested in creating
for themselves, seen if there's opportunity for them.
So I think that we've definitely found some lessons along the way here that we hope not
to repeat.
So I'll kick it off with the first one that you have to credit Doug for this. And to be honest, when
we first started, this almost annoyed me about Doug because I didn't believe this because
you, there are, and remember as we go through this list, by the way, there's always exceptions
to the rule. And that's what you're going to be careful of. Like, there's always like
a podcast that you could draw to be like, well, yeah, but this doesn't do that.
Or they do this. Like, okay, a lot of this, some of these are general truths that we have
found over the last eight years of podcasting on the first one was the sound. That sound
is very, very important. And Doug was crazy when we first started. I mean, he would just
play and get up on the wall and over the furniture. And this is back when we first started. I mean, he would just... You were playing kids up on the wall and over the furniture
and this is back when we started the podcast in his house
and then we moved to a small studio.
But, you know, a podcast, now a days I think
people assume this by the way,
this eight years ago, there were a lot of podcasts
with crappy sound, which is I think why we thought
it was not a big deal.
I thought for sure we were gonna be auto-tinned.
Yeah.
Just to make sure, the level of, you know, like he was going in terms of like details
and all the background noise and any kind of like fuzz from our electronics or anything
was like accounted for.
So since we credit you, Doug, on this, are there any tools that you use to make the sound
or any things that you would say are extremely important
in order, because I know the next thing
that people are gonna ask us is,
okay, well then what are some of the things
you did to have great quality sound?
Yeah, so the number one thing is the room treatment,
the sound treatment inside the room.
So if you have reflective surfaces,
this is what causes your audio to sound like
you're recording
in a bathroom, and that's the last thing you really want.
So when we started recording in my living room,
it had hardwood floors, it was actually a horrible place
to record.
And so I did all of these different things that you mentioned,
like put up the blankets, that type of thing,
to make it sound better.
But if you go back to those early episodes,
the sound was actually not that great.
No, no, and would you say that
the
That is far more important than even the equipment and the microphones that you have?
Yeah, so yeah, so you can have the best microphones the best equipment and you have a crappy
Environment with reflective surfaces and that type of thing. You're gonna have crappy sound
You can have kind of marginal equipment, but very good sound treatment on the wall, you're gonna have crappy sound. You can have kind of marginal equipment,
but very good sound treatment on the walls,
you're gonna have okay sound.
Now I'm not gonna suggest you go out
and buy some crappy equipment,
but you can get microphones,
recorders and everything else for a very reasonable price.
Yeah, they're not expensive anymore.
And like you look at our walls here,
you know, we have these foam kind of,
they block sound or they make sound, so it doesn't reverberate the floor. We have
Carpet you could use with blankets. You could use with thick blankets as well
I know people who record podcasts. They'll take a closet. Yeah, and they'll change it into recording studio
And then they'll put blankets everywhere and then the sound is just as good as this one
Right, unless you're making a visual of course, and you have to have a studio like we do
But if it's just a podcast, that'll do a lot.
But those little things, I mean, like eating in the podcast,
like ruffling papers, like you got to think of
what the audience is actually experiencing in this,
and that's really obnoxious.
You know, when it was really, when it really was confirmed
for me was years later,
until we had already been recording for some time,
and the feedback from people,
and I heard this, I've heard this many times now, of people that said, I used to listen to
other podcasts and once I listened to the show, Mind Pump, it was the rest of them were ruined
for me because of the sound quality. And so even if I liked the content, it was the sound quality was so clean
and sharp coming from our show
that it ruined the show for the other shows
that they were listening to prior to.
Well, you gotta think a lot of podcasts are consumed
with headphones or earbuds.
So the ear, that's, excuse me, the sound is in your head
and you can hear every little off sound
and if it makes it, it's got to be palatable.
There has to be very palatable because you're going to have headphones on or earbuds.
So the sound should be clean.
It should, it should not be offensive anyway where it's like too much treble or too much
mouth noise.
It's got a sound warm, comfortable, and palatable.
And that makes a huge difference, especially if you want an audience that's going to come
back. All right. The next one, especially if you want an audience that's gonna come back.
All right, the next one, this one's a big one,
and luckily for us, we figured this one out early
because of our training experience.
So there's a lot of things we learned as trainers
that none of us realized would carry over to podcasting.
And that's to communicate to your audience,
and that your peers.
So there's a lot of, for example, in our space,
in the fitness space, there's a lot of these science
experts and fitness experts that seem to be communicating
to other scientists and other experts.
And so they talk at a very high level.
And I can appreciate that.
But, and if that's what your podcast is,
that's a small market, but if that's what your podcast
is, that's fine.
But if you're trying to attract a general audience or a large audience, you don't need to communicate
at such a high level.
And I know some people do that because it makes them feel like I'm going to convey that
I'm just in the audience.
But you're not going to get your point across.
Now we learn this as trainers because as a trainer, I could communicate, you know, external,
you know, abduction of the humorous or external rotation or whatever, the problem is my client
has no idea what I'm saying. So we had to learn how to speak in ways that they understood.
And luckily we learned that through personal training and we were able to apply it on
the podcast.
This was a difficult learning curve. I remember even then, by the way, this carries over
into all all mediums, right?
So whether you're talking on social media, whether you're on YouTube, I remember when
we first started doing the YouTube channel where we're putting out content and information
with this thought process, the same way I communicate to my clients.
And inevitably what I got was this, the hate from our peers,
from other coaches and trainers that we want to do.
Yeah, that want to argue the point you're making
or make, oh, you're dumb, you're an idiot,
or why would you say that?
So, and that is challenging when you're first building
something like that.
It's easy to get caught up and insecure about that
and then then allow that to steer your content.
Like, oh, I mean, next episode I do
or the next YouTube video,
I gotta show these trainers, I know my shit.
So I'm gonna step it up a notch
and really drop some real knowledge.
And really what you're doing is you're coming
from a place of insecurity
because you're listening to a handful of people
that are hating because you're doing something they they didn't or can't and
So you're allowing them to steer your message focus on
Your consumers focus and not on your peers. Yeah, can you get them to understand what you're trying to say?
I'll give two examples outside of our space Carl Sagan was an astrophysicist and he
He was brilliant, but there's other astrophysicist, and he was brilliant,
but there's other astrophysicists that are brilliant,
probably even more so than him,
but he communicated so well to the average person
that he literally motivated an entire generation of kids
to wanna learn about space,
Milton Friedman, an economist, like, economy's boring,
but he communicated in a way where the average person
understood and he also motivated a generation of people to be interested in economics
So if you want to make an impact to the average person remember you're talking to them and not your peers
If you talk to your peers you lose the the average person. All right next this one's a big one and I see today
I still see this today new new podcast screw this up
Whatever time whatever day and however many episodes you drop
Whatever you start with be consistent as hell
I think because podcasting is digital and I can drop in episode whenever I want that people don't
They don't think that being on a schedule as as important as it was when there was broadcast TV like back in the day
When you'd watch TV you would expect your show to come on on Thursday at 3 p.m.
or Friday at 6 p.m.
and you'd show up and it's at 6 p.m.
I'm gonna watch the show.
We'll imagine if you showed up at 6 p.m.
and it wasn't on.
And you couldn't figure out what the hell's going on.
Yes, it's true.
People get your podcasts on the phone.
They can listen whenever.
But there's a chunk, if you do a good job,
you will build an audience that's gonna look forward
to when you drop your episode.
And if you drop it inconsistently, sometimes on Tuesday, sometimes on Wednesday, sometimes
at five, sometimes at eight, or whatever, especially the amount of episodes per week, some
weeks, two episodes, some weeks, one episode, you'll actually lose an audience that way.
So whatever you decide to go with, stick with and be consistent as hell. Keep stoking that fire.
And really, this just points back to, well, I didn't know if this was going to be on
the list or not, but like just to be professional, a level of professionalism.
And this is one of those factors of being able to drop consistently, same time, like they
can rely on you to continuously do that.
And it's something that they end up
like building anticipation towards and excitement towards, which is what you want from your audience.
You want them to really start digging into your stuff further and know that like they can
count for the fact that you're going to come back next week.
You know, I don't know if this is going to be one that will remain important forever, but it's for sure that your average listener has already
been conditioned because of network television.
So I think that's why this becomes so important.
We are moving in a time now where people follow you on Instagram and they see your day-to-day
stuff and so maybe potentially in the future you can tell your audience that day,
hey, tonight at five o'clock, I'm dropping,
and it'll be there, and you might be okay.
But we're coming out of an era of television
and schedules of when just to your point,
how it's gonna be dropped.
And so I think it's really important right now.
Will it remain that way?
I don't know.
I think it will, like look at HBO Max, Disney Plus,
and other streaming services that will drop an episode
once a week.
Netflix drops all the episodes, right?
But you're like HBO Max.
I know Sundays at six.
I'm waiting for the next episode of the last of us,
for example, I'm watching that right now.
Could you imagine if you went HBO Max at six o'clock
and it's not there, you're like, where's it?
What's going on, right?
How many viewers they would lose?
So this is important, and you might not think it's important
because you're small or you're just getting started,
but if you're lucky enough to build an audience
that is fervorous, that is consuming your stuff
that loves following you, you better be consistent
because you'll lose them.
You'll lose them with your inconsistency.
So this is, sounds silly, but it's a big deal.
Now, part of this means, whatever you start with,
you stick with, so don't start with something,
you don't think you can continue.
So don't start off with, like I'm dropping four episodes a week,
if you don't know if you can maintain four,
it starts better to start low, and then add than it is to add,
and to start big and they have to take away,
because that, you know, that conveys something totally different.
All right, next up, this one's a big one because I think people think the way that you
make money with podcasting is sponsorships.
You don't make money on a podcast or at least good money with sponsorships until you're
big.
Like, until you're already pretty big, you ain't going to make no money with sponsorships.
So if you want to make money through your podcast, you're probably pretty big, you ain't gonna make no money with sponsorships. So if you wanna make money through your podcast,
you're probably gonna have to sell your own products.
And then when you get big, that's when you start,
it's like YouTube, right?
Like people say, oh, you make millions of dollars on YouTube.
No, by the time you make millions of dollars
on YouTube, you're massive.
You have a huge amount of money.
Every successful podcaster I know that makes
really good advertising money, made really good money
well before that and doesn't even
need the advertising money.
So it's such a great point.
And one of the things that really shocked me as we got into this space and I remember
when we were first building that side of the house and two in the math on what they
pay for CPMs and stuff and going like, oh like, oh my God, we're gonna make like 20 bucks
for every thousand people that are listening.
Like, that's crazy, like that's terrible.
We have a huge audience before it even makes any sort of,
and if you actually have a business with multiple people,
like in our case, you divide that by,
it's like, oh my God, it's hardly anything.
Not to mention what you get when you're small
as far as the potential people that will advertise with you.
A lot of times are not brands that you may align with.
So then you get desperate for money.
And so you take on these partnerships or advertisements
that you don't even really necessarily align with
just because you're so desperate to get money going.
And then the money that's coming in
isn't even that good for you.
And so you really hurt yourself in multiple ways.
Because if you end up partnering up or advertising for a brand that other people don't
think that aligns with your message or that brand does something shady or something like
that, that it's this huge black eye on you
and you lose the trust of your audience going forward.
And that, the trust of your audience
is far more valuable than what any advertiser
could ever pay you.
So building trust is more important
than building an advertising portfolio.
Yeah, look, if you were getting 3,000 downloads
an episode on a podcast, which is good,
you're getting thousands of downloads, you're not going to make any money with sponsorships,
but you could turn that into six figures.
You could make six figures off a few thousand downloads by selling your own products and
services.
So the point with this is that if you want to monetize your podcast, think of a service
or a product that you could sell and don't wait for extra time.
Ahead of times. You know, you have a business, a viable business strategy going into it.
And I do think what's great, it's a huge scene now, right?
There's, there's millions of podcasts actually out there.
And is there any room for new ones and that yes, there's room.
And there's actually a lot of room in the smaller space in terms of going
real niche with your podcast and to your point of only having like a thousand people listening, but they're fervorous
people that are really interested in that one very specific subject, you're going to
get very specific sponsors that are going to find and attract you eventually, but you
provide that kind of level of service that really like feeds that group of people well.
You're going to do just fine off of a small group, totally. service that really like feeds that group of people well,
you're gonna do just fine off of a small group, totally.
Now, this next one is another thing that we learned
as personal trainers.
Again, if you train people for a long time,
you start to figure out what works in terms
of keeping people, getting them to show up,
getting them good results.
And this actually translated very well to the podcast space.
And that is that the best combination
for a podcast was entertainment and information.
This is also what made you,
made us successful as trainers.
You got to provide the value with the information,
but you also have to be fun and likable
so they want to show up and be around you.
Same thing with your podcast.
If it's too information heavy,
then people will get value,
but then they'll get bored
or if they lose motivation, they're out of there.
If it's just entertainment, they're having fun,
but there's no value, there's no authority.
How can you sell that?
Unless you're a comedian or like this professional entertainer,
it's gonna be really hard to build a business
off of just entertainment.
Also, don't overestimate how entertaining you are. I can't tell you how many times people are like,
oh, I'm gonna sort of podcast with my buddies because we're so funny when we hang around. It's
like, you're not that funny. You're not as entertaining as you think you are. There's professional
entertainers out there that have podcasts. Well, an entertainment doesn't necessarily mean that you
have to be a comedian either, right? Like, I think that covering current events,
talking sports, doing other things
that you're passionate about and you love
could be a form, the same things that you communicate
with clients like you referenced what we used to do
with our clients when we were trainers.
I mean, that was the key was like,
I knew that it was so important
that my client liked me first.
Like I can have all the knowledge in the world,
but if they didn't like me, they didn't know
that I cared about them,
they weren't gonna care about what I had to say.
And so I first had to accomplish that,
and then I could slide in a little bit of science,
a little bit of information around their behaviors.
And so being able to win them over
as a client-slash friend, you know, relationship first,
then be able to provide the science, the information,
the value, that's kind of the second,
that's second to building the relationship first.
And so I think leading with that,
this is an area where we'll call it luck
or whatever, or that we had this experience,
this is something that I think fed into the success of the show
that maybe we didn't sit down and go,
this is what we need to do, but I think that it came out naturally
because of our experience.
You train your clients, you were half of the time
you want them to just be there and enjoy being there.
They'll have to time your teaching and stuff.
If it was just one or the other, it was.
You gotta have an expertise to keep people around. I mean, it's even to the point of the entertainer. They have
an expertise in that. That's right. You know, coming in. So, you know, don't skip that step.
That's why I use comedian as an example. It's like people are like, I'm going to be so entertaining.
There's professional entertainers that start podcasts. But if you have a skill set and you can
combine some entertainment with it, you're got, you have a winning formula because there's people that listen to our show
For the fitness information some people that listen to you say like listening to us
And they don't always have to work out
So when I'm like one of the best compliments ever ever gotten from listeners was yeah, you know
I listen to you guys even when I'm not working out. I'm like, okay, cool because we're keeping you on and for us our goal
Of course, this is specific to us is to get people to improve their lives
to health and fitness.
So I think you keep you listening
that I'm at least getting you to do that
and I'm gonna have more influence.
I don't think that our original conversations were,
I mean, they were entertaining to a small group of people,
right, that thought that way, they were interesting.
Our saving grace was that we made sure
to also always provide value.
So kind of what Justin was alluding to is that I think we would have been crazy to think that
we were going to come out. And one of the podcasts we used to listen to a lot back then early on
and admire their conversation that have is the fighter and the kid. And I think that if we thought
we were going to be a fighter and a kid, And I think that if we thought we were going to be a fighter and a kid
comedy type of routine and think that we were gonna rival a podcast with that we were silly. Yeah, I mean
Brian Callan is unbelievably talented and even Brendan is a great communicator so they make an incredible team and
That was not gonna be our our strong point was that we had lots of
That was not going to be our strong point. Our strong point was that we had lots of information that we had acquired over decades of training
clients.
So, we knew that we had an endless amount of trainer knowledge and value we could provide
for free to the audience.
And we leaned on that.
It was like, okay, can we win them over through conversation, slash entertainment.
But at the very least, they'll never walk away
from an episode not saying, oh, that was interesting or I didn't know that or I learned something
new.
And so if you're starting a podcast and just think that you're funny or think that people
are going to listen to you because you're entertaining or your friends all think you're
the life of the party.
And so you're going to be a great podcaster.
I think it's important that you have something to give if you're going to create a loyal audience that wants to
come back time and time again to listen to that's what creates the value 100%. All right.
Next up, and this has more to do with just communicating effectively. And that is to
learn how to use analogies and also learn how to do storytelling. In fact, going back to comedians,
I use comedians as an example
because I feel like comedy is one
of the most challenging forms of entertainment.
You're standing on a stage, people are expecting you
to try to make them laugh.
And you'll notice that some of the best comedians
tell stories, this is how they tell their jokes,
they'll tell stories, stories draw us in.
It's the original ways that we passed on information
as humans.
This is what we did around the fire.
When we were cave people,
before we learned how to write and record information,
is we would tell stories and stories draw us in.
In fact, what's the story is at the Warriors' journey
that's known as a common...
The Warriors' journey.
Sorry, heroes' journey.
Thank you.
It's a common way to tell a story. You see it present in
many, many different movies and stuff, and it pulls to us in a particular way. And that just kind of
shows you the power of storytelling. So when you're trying to convey a message, you're trying to
talk about information and teach someone something, think of ways to convey it with analogies, and think
of stories you could tell. Like one example of an analogy that we've used
many, many times is to communicate the relationship
between the central nervous system and muscles.
Your muscles are like speakers,
your central nervous system is like an amplifier
and without a strong amplifier,
the biggest, strongest speakers produce hardly any sound.
So right away, you don't need to understand human physiology
to understand now the relationship
between your central nervous system and your muscles.
That analogy is very effective.
Storytelling is another way, right?
Storytelling, I can tell somebody,
hey look, if you eat protein at the beginning
of your meals, you're less likely to overeat.
And then I'll say, you know, I just have this client,
and I'll tell a story about a client
who had trouble overeating, who did this, who then found that they lost,
you know, seven pounds doing so or whatever, right? So storytelling and analogies, very,
very potent time-tested ways of communicating effectively.
Well, this is one of the key ways to make sure that you continue to communicate to your
audience and not your peers. So if you're very educated in your field and you have this desire to start a podcast and then
because you know you've acquired all this knowledge, I went to school for eight years, I've been
in the industry for 10, 15 years, I've got this wealth of knowledge around this topic or space.
Probably the biggest mistake that that person makes when they get into the podcasting space
is this desire. And again, coming from a place of insecurity,
they want to prove to the people listening,
how smart and credible they are.
And so they speak at such a high level
that they only attract a very small amount of people.
That when they should be trying to grow their audience
through normal people and help them understand
all this complex information that you went to school
and have all the experience for.
This is very much so, and by the way,
people always wanna see us get challenged
by some doctor, some new fitness nerd kid
that comes up and a lot of times we don't entertain it
not because we can't go around for round
with somebody like that, it's because we don't think
it's doing much for our audience.
It'll confuse the audience more times than not.
That's right.
It's like there's, and we're far better off,
because most of all those studies we've all read
multiple times and we understand them,
and we understand how to communicate that
to the average person so they can now take that information
and apply to the life.
So keep that in mind if you're someone starting a podcast and you consider yourself an expert in a field,
that's great that you have acquired all this knowledge and that you're considered one of the best at what you do.
But remember when you are going out in the podcast space and you're just the general population is searching for your podcast,
one of the things that will keep them coming back is your ability
to storytell and create analogies, to be able to disseminate that all that knowledge you have down to
layman's terms or something that's applicable to their lives.
Yeah, next one. This one actually took us a while to learn
because when you're on a podcast, if you've never done media before like us,
it can be because when you're on a podcast, if you've never done media before like us,
it can be uncomfortable.
Like you know you're being recorded.
You know that there's someone
potentially listening to what you're saying.
And so dead air is very uncomfortable.
Now this was something that I understood in sales.
So I remember when I first learned how to present
and sell products and services,
I remember getting taught by one of my mentors
and my mentor taught me when you ask your closing question,
the final question, which option do you prefer,
or would you wanna get this one or this one?
He said, pause and wait, wait for the consumer,
the customer to make a choice.
And sometimes I'd have to sit there and wait 15 seconds. This doesn't sound like a long time, but when you're doing a presentation and you're drawing
the person in and then you ask that closing question and then you stop for 15 seconds, it's really
uncomfortable, right? But I learned that in sales and he would hit me under the desk if I tried
to talk and say, don't say anything. First person to talk loses, he would tell me. And I learned
how to do it. And it worked. People would make a choice.
Now, why should I not talk?
Cause I asked the closing question,
if I keep talking, then I lose the momentum.
Well, in podcasting, if you know people are listening,
we're talking to each other, we're being recorded,
pausing can feel super uncomfortable too.
Like, I better fill this with butts,
or repeat myself 10, 15 different times.
Dead air is totally fine.
That's how real people have conversations.
People don't just blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, real fast.
In fact, in real conversation, if someone just
rapid fires you, you kind of feel uncomfortable,
this is like that.
It's okay to pause.
I think to,
so I see you use an UMM right there.
But that's a lot of times you'll get in that predicament
where you're trying to think of exactly how to articulate
something and you just have to pause a second
and then regain it and then deliver it,
sounds way better on the other end of that rather than just
sitting there and having those ticks that normally happen.
Totally.
This was the hardest thing for me to grasp
and the most powerful thing that I've learned in the eight years helped me out so much. And I'm notorious
for making words up and blending sentences together. So we've teased me about that for my
analogies. And I'll tell you, for the audience, so they can have a little insight on, on
that. I remember when you, when you, this was a big deal for you, it was like, maybe
it was like five six. It's just really did. This was a, and this is, and. I remember when you, this was a big deal for you. It was like, maybe it was like five, six.
This was really good.
This was a, and what I, when I look back and I unpack
like why and the challenge, that isn't
happening to me in normal conversation.
And I'm very comfortable in big groups or talking to
someone, people, I'm outgoing personality.
But on here, I feel more like a presenter,
which is not my comfortable space.
And if I'm presenting like that, it doesn't flow the same way for me as a natural conversation.
And so I had to train myself to do those pauses.
And still, to this day, like almost every episode, I'll intentionally do that to just keep,
I have to practice it like a muscle working out.
Like I have to constantly tell myself, it's okay to stop, catch your breath, gather your
thoughts.
And when I found, when I go back and I listened to it, I'm like, oh my God, it comes off
so much more professional by allowing yourself that freedom to have those long pusses.
And by the way, as a podcaster,
if it was, you could pause for two minutes
and go back and edit that shit down to 10 seconds.
That's true.
So you know, so if you know that in the back of your head,
it's better for me to stop and really take the time
to gather my thoughts than it's to ramble
and throw something else in there
because then it sounds really unprofessional.
And so this was
any I you know, Sal didn't give the credit to somebody who I know that I remember when he would he pointed this out, I think first. And it was Jordan Peterson. Yeah. Listening to him. And there
was this was early on when we first all kind of found him and started listening to him speak a lot.
And he's notorious for this. He'll be on stage talking, and they'll be like a 30 second silence.
He'll say something, and then you'll see him.
He's just thinking.
What's funny too is people on the edge of their chair.
Yes.
They want to listen.
Yes.
This is especially important when you're interviewing someone,
because you'll ask someone a question,
or they'll be telling a story, they'll pause,
and you as the host will feel uncomfortable
and feel like you need to fill.
Yes.
And this made me personally so much better at interviewing
because I would let the person pause.
I didn't feel like I had to fill every bit of air with sound.
And it made so much more of a better podcast.
Huge difference.
And for sure, one of the things that I can always tell
when I hear somebody
Communicating on a podcast like how good their skills are or how long they have been doing this for because
They have that and I can always tell when someone's even if you're already kind of naturally gifted like I have friends that are starting podcasts that are great communicators
Have a great vocabulary
But still still break that rule of like the dead silence thing because it makes you kind of feel nervous and you don't know what to do And so they just keep inserting and talking or they make inappropriate jokes to fill the dead air, which is what we were kind of notorious for, right?
There'd be dead air and so that we'd slide these random dick jokes in there or something
So that to me of all these things we're covering, that for personally, that was such a game changer
to learn to do that and gather my thoughts
and not be afraid of those long policies.
All right, so next, this one we figured out,
probably halfway through our careers here on the podcast,
which is that we realized that some episodes
were good at getting new listeners,
and other episodes were great for, you know,
listeners who are coming back, old listeners, if you will, returning listeners.
So for us, this is just full transparency.
This episode right now is more of a new listener episode, right?
It's informative.
It's got a single topic.
For old listeners, people who've been listening for a while, especially when you're covering
a topic like health and fitness, we or actually any topic for that matter.
You do 2,000 episodes, you're going to cover
the same stuff over and over again.
You might communicate it differently each time,
but we've talked about fat loss, muscle gain,
speeding up your metabolism, improving your health,
thousands of times.
So our old listeners have heard us
and probably get a lot of it.
What do they come back for?
Personality.
They come back for stories.
They come back for what's happening with us in our lives.
Maybe opinions on certain things.
New listeners don't care about that.
They don't know us.
They don't care about Justin's family life or opinions
or Adam.
What do you think is about what's going on
with the warriors or whatever?
They want to hear the fitness stuff.
How do I burn body fat in five easy steps
or how do I build muscle with the best body parts
but routine?
So when you're creating your episodes, think to yourself, is this a magnet for new listeners?
Or is this an episode where my old listeners or my returning listeners are going to appreciate?
And then organize them as such.
Well, we should share how we learn this.
So I totally remember when this all came together for us was when we would do these
these quads, right? Our questions and answers and then the front half where we talked about all
these random topics that a lot of our long-time listeners love because we address so many different
things and we enjoyed those conversations. But what we didn't realize is
that iTunes and Spotify and these platforms work very similar to like how Google does
in search. And Google doesn't reward you. Like let's say if you're a blogger or you create
a website, they do not reward you if you have tons of random information and lots of it in a single place, you get rewarded for going very deep on one or two things.
And so the single topic episodes that we create are very focused.
They have a title and a topic and we stay right in that lane and go as deep as we can and answer as much as we can to that specific topic. And because of that, we're rewarded for random people
that are searching iTunes for a topic
that's closely related or exactly that topic.
Whereas that same topic could have been covered
in a two hour, qua episode along with politics
and the economy and sports and all that and gets watered down
on the search engine because we have so many other topics.
And so having very focused topics will serve you
in the searchability for your show.
And so no matter what kind of show you have,
making sure that you have dedicated episodes like that
that are very searchable.
Another thing to add to that, that we learned,
and kind of a hack that we figured out years ago to create topics is
We use Google to help drive some of our content ideas. So let's say we come in like hey, we haven't we haven't talked about
Building muscle in a while. Let's let's do an episode around building muscle
So then we go to Google and we search some of the most search topics related to that look at at some of the top blogs that are written, read them, unpack them, agree or disagree, and then we can build
content around similar points.
Yeah, so a lot of that, no, those strategies are perfect for maintaining and keeping
a new influx of listeners to come in.
The reason why we still kept the personality side of it coming in in the
beginning was to be able to keep these old listeners engaged. We need to make sure that they have
something to look forward to, that we're also invigorated by, and this is something that we always
want to make sure that we're having fun, that comes across in terms of like our energy levels and all of that. So that's,
we initially were like about to get rid of it, but this is actually something that there
was a bit of a split between people when they'd come and listen, whether or not they listened
for just our take on a lot of different subjects or whether or not they're just getting
that valuable information at the end.
Yep, that's right.
All right, this next one Doug actually put this quite well.
He said this before, which is have something good to say
and say it often.
So I'm gonna give you a few, and now,
look, if you listen to every single episode,
100% you've heard us repeat a few lines
over and over again, right?
Like Adam, you know, his famous, yeah, yeah, do the least amount of work to
elicit the most amount of change, right?
Or, you know, I've said things like chase, health, and you'll get a great deal of
aesthetics or the man who loves walking will walk further than the man who loves
a destination. That's the more latest one. If you have something good to say
and it's powerful and it resonates, say it often and find different ways to convey
it and communicate it because those messages travel far, those messages and the ways you
say them go out and bring you new people and people recognize you for these things. So if you
say something that resonates, don't be afraid to say it again and again and again, do so.
Just make sure you do it in kind of slightly different ways. It's an old saying, but it's totally true.
They've said it in sales presentation.
It's very true with podcasting as well.
Yeah, and when I teach other people how to do this
within their field, it's actually pretty easy.
If you have some level of expertise in any field,
during that time that you've learned all this information, there's been things that
were massive epiphanies for you or paradigm shattering moments, things that you believe
to be true.
And then because you got educated and it found out, oh, shit, that's not true.
It's really like this.
That's one of those good things to say often.
Like, if it's your field, you were wrong about it, you were proved right, and
you now you now have this newfound knowledge, like that's podcast gold right there.
That's really what this show is sprinkled with over 2000 episodes.
It's just all those moments for us.
We've just collectively, we've got so many years of being wrong that we've learned a lot
of these great epiphany moments
that we have been able to share with our audience.
And we lead from that.
We lead from a place of vulnerability and understanding
that we were wrong and we did it the wrong way
for a long time and hey, here's what we found.
And so whatever your expertise is,
whatever your field is,
you know, glom onto those things that have happened
in your life
and share that and share it a lot
because I don't know how many times we've done an episode
that is and said something like what Sal was referencing
and the 30th time I said it, someone goes,
man, that was powerful.
What you said, what's, that's the 30th time I said it on the show,
but it resonated because
the way it was delivered on that show, because maybe the story that we shared it with right
before that, or maybe the conversation was so engaging right before that it pulled them
in.
And so that same piece of information that I've said a bunch of times actually hit home
at the, and we learned that as trainers, right?
That's a, you say the same thing over and over again to your clients, different ways.
And sometimes, and there's that one time that it finally works.
Yeah. You know, and you find something within that conversation that pops up that you hadn't
really considered before. And then also a point I was going to make to proceeding this
point was like, you can revisit something that you think you missed, right?
So as we're talking and discussing, and I was like kind of like going off on a different
different thing that I was trying to bring up for the last point, but I forgot to mention
vulnerability, which is what I wanted to get to, which was another real valuable thing that I
thought that we hit out of the beginning. Just something we learned as trainers was to be able to relate with your client better,
is to be more vulnerable in terms of you really describing
things that you're not great at,
or struggles you've had personally,
and being comfortable with portraying that out there.
Totally glad you brought that back.
All right, here's the next one.
This one we learned relatively recently.
This is one of the latest lessons we learned,
and that was to hook your listeners early in the episode.
So we, your returning listeners will stick around past
your intro, past the beginning,
because they like you already.
They're already there to listen to you.
But like us, we're a fitness podcast,
but we also put in entertainment.
If we open with just current events in entertainment and somebody's never heard of us before, and they come to listen
to the show, and they want to listen to fat loss or muscle building. And the first 15 minutes,
we're talking about current events and our kids and stuff like that, they're going to turn
it off. So now we open our Q and A episodes, our quad episodes with a fit tip, because
it opens with fitness right out the gateway. You get to take away. And that alone, that
one small thing alone resulted in a dramatic increase in downloads
and stick.
Oh, this was, this last year was our greatest growth year and eight years.
Podcast revenue, all line items, it was the greatest growth year this last year.
And I attribute that to this, this thing that we switched up, is it was this last year
that we traded this, we switched this out. And I'll never forget how this all came together because a couple
a little over a year ago, I think it was Jackie who knows me really well, referenced this
podcast called All In, which you obviously, if you've heard the show, you've heard us reference
this podcast several times. It's one of my favorite shows, Sal listens to it too, all the time.
And, you know, and Jackie knows me so well.
She's like, oh Adam, they talk about this, this, this,
and this, you're gonna love it.
I'm like, oh yeah, those are all the things I like.
And oh, and they're also kind of like buddies,
like you guys, they're very mind-pump-esque.
And so I'm like, okay, okay, I'm listening.
I'm gonna listen and I listen to this show.
And that happened to be an episode where they were teasing David Friedberg for losing weight
and like how he did it and stuff like that.
And they were just joshing each other back and forth.
And they went on for like 20 something minutes and they never touched on any of the four
things she told me I would love about the show.
And I recall going over to stop it.
And then I stopped myself and I was said, wow, Jackie really knows me
Let me let me sit all the way through and see what happens and then eventually towards the other show
They touched on a couple of those things that was just enough to give it to give me the like let me go
Okay, I'll I'll watch or listen one more episode and see if they have what I want in this this podcast
I remember coming back to the studio the
next day and telling the guys my experience. I thought, man, we are now at a size now where
there's potentially one to 5,000 new people every day hearing Mind Pump for the first time ever
that were probably referred by somebody who we probably changed their life one way or
another whether that was advice on the show or the programs or something and they probably
were raving about oh my god these mind pump guys they know their fitness they know their
nutrition you gotta listen to them and I was like oh shit how many times do you naturally
just let the conversation flow and 30 minutes
in and we haven't said a single thing about fitness.
And I thought, man, how many people are we losing that are first timeless with that never
come back as they go, oh, this isn't for me, especially if we say something that's a
little edgy or that you don't necessarily agree with.
Because you really got to build a relationship like that
before you can open somebody's mind.
And so forcing people to open their mind up
before you build the credibility with them
is a really rough way to start a lot of relationships.
And so I think this was another one of those
when I think of all these tips.
Massive one for us is to remember.
And I see other people trying to build podcasts similar
to ours with this kind of conversational style
and Joe Rogan style, whoever you want to call it,
I'm claiming it as our style, but you know,
they try and have this conversation.
And then they're a lawyer, you know,
or they're a banker or they have this expertise.
And then they're having this bullshit conversation
at the, oh man, like you got to get to your expertise. Unless they already know you and like you.
They're not gonna listen.
Right, you gotta get the hook.
You gotta get that hook first.
And it could be as easy as a statement.
That's right, that's right.
Something that is related to your expertise,
so they're like, okay, give them that quick value,
then you can give them the entertainment,
and then you can circle back with value again.
All right, this next one, we learned through working out
because this is a lesson you learn in fitness.
And that's to be okay with sucking,
to be okay with not being good at something.
When you first start working out and you do an exercise,
you're not gonna be good at it, just the way it is.
But the way you get good at it is you suck at it for a while
until you become less sucky at it and then you're okay at it
and then you become great at it is you suck at it for a while until you become less sucky at it and then you're okay at it and then you become great at it through practice and through failure and just
try again and again and again. Podcasting is no different. Had we stopped when we sucked,
we would have never made it past episode 10, right? But we did, we kept going and one thing
that we did is we learned this in fitness as well was the more you practice, the better you get and the faster you get better, this was originally
why we decided to do so many episodes per week.
It was actually a strategy, primarily, to get us better, faster.
We knew that if we did five episodes a week, and this might not be true for you, you don't
have to dedicate yourself this way, but we knew we do five episodes a week, we'll get
good five times faster than if we did five episodes a week, we'll get good five times faster
than if we did one episode a week.
So let's just do five a week
and let's be shitty for as little as possible
so we can just keep practicing.
And that's what you have to be okay with.
This I think is a lesson for life by the way,
but when you first start a podcast,
however good you think you are,
you're gonna suck compared to how good you can be
or will be, you gotta be okay with that.
Yeah, and that whole paralysis by analysis,
I mean, it cripples a lot of people
when they're embarking on something new like this.
This is a big step in terms of a project,
a business, opportunity that they're kind of stepping into
and you have to know, you're not gonna be good out of the gates
and that's totally okay.
It's all a matter of how much effort and will
you put in towards getting better continuously.
Well, I made the comment when this conversation started that we're almost halfway to being
good. It takes 10,000 hours, they say, to be a master at any craft. And yet here we are,
even with 2,000 episodes under our belt and I still wouldn't even consider
as halfway to being masters at our craft. But I do to Sal's point, this is one of the ones,
like some of these things we learned, this is something we came in, I were totally recalled
before we even did the first part, we knew this, we like, we know we were going to suck, like nobody
had any like, oh, we're going to be good at this. We all knew like, okay, we don't know what the fuck we're doing.
But we thought we were awesome people.
Yeah.
So that helped.
I mean, we had confidence.
Yeah.
What we had confidence in it,
and this is something for sure,
a common thread amongst all of us is our work ethic.
We all, and we had all experience success
in other places in our life,
and we all got it in similar ways,
which was hard-ass work,
getting our ass kicked, being crappy for a long time, and then becoming good at something.
And so that was one of the common threads of the relationship when we first met, was like
everyone agreeing like, yeah, we're not going to be good.
We're going to be about this, but our secret power is we have so much good free information
that we're just going to get so many reps and eventually we
will get good.
I do really believe that this played in our favor a lot because sometimes I think if we
were to have started this podcast today with our inexperience that we had, I don't know if
the market would have allowed us that many reps to get this to get this good because of
how competitive it is.
I don't think it're gonna kick this off,
but I think the key here is knowing that,
here's the key, how can this help you?
You're not gonna adjust and set a paralysis by analysis.
You're not gonna sit there and try and make it
so perfect for your first five episodes.
You're gonna do your best,
but then you're gonna put them out there.
And you're gonna know, I just gotta practice.
I just gotta practice, I just gotta practice.
Because doing 20 episodes is gonna get you better
than doing one and spending so much time on it
that it takes the time of 20 episodes.
You just gotta go, you just gotta go,
you gotta have those conversations,
you gotta put out your information,
you gotta listen to your episodes,
listen to your audience,
look at the response, what's the market saying,
how effective am I, change it, modify it,
get better, get more comfortable comfortable and over time you do for us. It's like every
Hundred or so episodes we tend to get better
That's what we've always noticed. We know it's every hundred episodes or so we tend to level up and it's exciting
It's exciting to see that we're gonna do that so it's almost like how can I get there faster? Just do more right?
Just practice more. Yeah, all, last is always seek ways to improve your craft.
Well, how have we done that here? Well, we've hired improv coaches who've come in and done improv
exercises with us. We've done work with other podcasters that we think are really good. We listen to
other shows, maybe not so much because we like the content, but rather we admire the way they
present their content.
And we come here and we try things out and we practice them.
So always seek ways to improve your craft.
And when it comes to podcasting and presenting, there's a few different ways you could do
this.
You could look at how to give a good speech, how to do good presentations, how to organize
podcasts and episodes really well.
You can get that from other podcasters, had to work with people who do presentations
and stuff on stage, comedians, improv, coaches,
that kind of stuff.
And all of that I think will contribute
to making you better at the craft of podcasting.
This is also another thing that I have so much appreciation
for you guys as partners, because I remember that.
And by the way, it doesn't happen quite as much
as it used to be.
This used to happen a lot.
And what I love about you guys is that nobody has got these massive egos that are afraid
to take criticism from the other partners early on.
Like we'd hang up a podcast and one guy would be like, that sounded really bad when you
said that, or don't do that.
Like, we would get into it.
Yeah.
We would get into it about, and no one ever took it
as a personal jab at me, or it was about the show,
about the content.
It was always like, we're trying to create
really good content, so if I came at Justin
or I came at Sal or vice versa, they came at me,
I never took it like it was like attacking me personally.
It was they wanted the show to be better.
We wanted to present better information
or whatever it may be.
And I would, and nobody else was like that.
I felt like we were able to do that.
It was always constructive.
It was, yeah, and it was,
and sometimes it was harsh with each other,
so it was taking it easy.
Yeah, yeah, it was, it was taking real,
and that was, that's the important piece was that
everybody was open to grow and to learn and to mold
and to change.
And this thing has really has molded over eight years.
It didn't sound the way it is.
I mean, at one point, we didn't even take notes before.
We never even had a monitor of bullet points so that we didn't discuss the show before
after as much.
And so there's a lot of things that have come together that over time, I think we've done. But the most important thing was the the the fact that we were okay with that.
They were okay to critique each other or embrace that. Like tell me, did I sound that sound
terrible? Or do you know, what do you guys think? And, you know, I like to, so I intentionally
do this, right? Still today, I don't listen to the show hardly ever, but I will check back in maybe every hundred episodes
or so.
And what I'm listening for, it's not the narcissistic side of me that wants to hear my
voice, it's to pick out and to critique all of us, to hear how Justin's flowing, how
salad's flowing, how am I communicating, how's the show flowing together, how's it organized? And if I'm listening, what I found early days,
when I would listen a lot, it would be hard to measure
and see that where when I remove myself,
just do the work, do the work, do the work,
and then come back and revisit.
It's kind of like before and after type pictures, right?
If I'm taking pictures every day
or looking at myself in the mirror every single day,
it's really hard to see that progress.
If I put away the scale, put away the mirror, do the work, do the work, hard and consistent,
make sure I have that beginning photos. And then I take another photo six months from later
and then I compare them like, oh shit, I didn't feel like I was changing that much. But when
I look now at six months ago and today, I really see a difference. I feel the same way with
the podcasting of when we podcast, I step away from it, I don't really listen,
and then I come back, you know,
100 episodes down the road,
and they're like, okay, wow, we are getting better
with those things.
So, well look, it's been a pleasure,
and I look forward to doing the next 2,000 episodes
with you guys, that's what I'm doing.
Yeah, yeah.
Been a blast.
Look, if you like, Bime Pump, head over to MimePumpFree.com
and check out our guides.
We have guides that can help with almost any health
or fitness goal. You can also find all of us on social media. So Justin is on Instagram at my pump. Justin,
Adam is on Instagram at my pump.com and you can find me on Twitter at my pump.com.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. If your goal is to build and shape your body,
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check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at MindPumpMedia.com.
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