Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Hala Taha: Start, Grow, and Monetize a Podcast | Social Proof
Episode Date: February 2, 2024Even in her lower-performing months, Hala Taha consistently ranks as a top Apple podcast. How does she do it? In this episode of the Social Proof podcast, Hala talks to David Shands about her top tips... for starting, growing, and monetizing a podcast. She also explains the marketing strategy that helped her grow Young and Profiting into the massively successful podcast it is today. David Shands is an author, entrepreneur, motivational speaker, and business coach. In a few short years, his “Sleep is 4 Suckers” concept has evolved from selling t-shirts out of the back seat of his car to selling his message on apparel across the globe. He is now the host of the successful entrepreneurial podcast, The Social Proof Podcast. He is especially focused on helping entrepreneurs launch their own podcasts. In this episode, Hala and David will discuss: - How Hala consistently ranks as a top podcast - Hala's game-changing DM strategy - Where should you advertise your podcast? - How to approach potential podcast sponsors - The most effective podcast marketing strategy - How Hala started her career in the entertainment industry - Should you start a podcast? - YAP Media Network’s scrappy business model - What it takes to be a top podcaster - And other topics… David Shands is an author, entrepreneur, motivational speaker, and business coach. David worked in various customer-oriented industries by day while building his own apparel business by night. In a few short years, his “Sleep is 4 Suckers” concept has evolved from selling t-shirts out of the back seat of his car to selling his message on apparel across the globe. He is now the host of the successful entrepreneurial podcast, The Social Proof Podcast. He is especially focused on helping entrepreneurs launch their own podcasts. LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Resources Mentioned: David’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidshands/ David’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/sleepis4suckers David’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sleepis4suckers/ David’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dreamsarebuiltovernight/ David’s Podcast (The Social Proof Podcast): https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/social-proof-podcast/id1374373035 David’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/DavidNeverSleeps Sponsored By: Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at youngandprofiting.co/shopify HelloFresh - Go to HelloFresh.com/profitingfree and use code profitingfree for FREE breakfast for life Nom Nom - Go to youngandprofiting.co/trynomnom for 50% off your two-week trial Coda.io - Head over to coda.io/profiting to try Coda for free Indeed - Get a $75 job credit at indeed.com/profiting More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/
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Hello, my young and profiting family. I know you all love tuning into YAP each and every week, but have you ever thought about
starting your own podcast?
If so, today's episode is going to show you how.
We're replaying my interview with David Shands on the Social Proof Podcast.
David is an entrepreneur,
author, motivational speaker, and a business coach. He also launched and hosted the podcast
summit in Miami last year, which was an awesome podcaster event, and I had the honor of speaking
there. And some of you may remember that I interviewed David on YAP in December of 2023.
We had a great conversation about his come up stories and entrepreneur
and how he built such a huge online community around his brand. And my appearance on David's
podcast was one of my favorite guest appearances of 2023. I actually flew down to Atlanta. We did
it in person. It was an awesome natural conversation. And nowadays when I go on podcasts, I'm always
talking about LinkedIn. Everybody wants to know about my LinkedIn masterclass because it's a top course,
not that I'm biased or anything.
This time around, David really focused on podcasting, probably selfishly,
because he has a podcast and he asked me some really hard questions.
He asked me how I rank my podcasts on Apple.
He asked me about my marketing strategy, how I get my subscribers.
And then also we really broke down monetization, how I monetize my network, 360 degree sponsorship campaigns,
and just my philosophy on monetization and sponsorships overall. Because honestly, I've
learned so much over the last two years. I launched a podcast network where it's my
job to grow and monetize some really heavy hitting shows like Jenna
Kutcher's, Gold Digger, Amy Porterfield's, Online Marketing Made Easy, and John Lee
Dumas Entrepreneurs on Fire.
I've got some of the biggest shows in my network, and it's my responsibility to sell their shows.
So if you want to learn about marketing a podcast, growing a podcast, ranking a podcast,
and so much more, this episode is definitely for you,
whether you're a podcast newbie or an advanced podcaster.
All right, without further ado,
here's my interview with David Shands
on the Social Proof Podcast.
Welcome to another edition of the Social Proof Podcast.
We find amazing people that do amazing things.
Today is no different.
I'm really excited about this conversation
because I am extremely interested in this podcasting
space.
I'm really deep into the podcasting space.
And you've been doing some amazing things in this space.
So today we have Hala Taha.
Thank you for having me on.
I'm excited for the conversation.
All right, so I wanna know, in this podcast,
first off, this is the first thing I wanna know.
How are you at the top of the business charts?
Every day, every week, every month, all year,
like how are you doing this?
This is crazy.
Straight to the hardest question.
Straight into it.
Well, here's the thing.
Apple Podcasts are trending charts, so you have to understand the algorithm.
And if you understand the algorithm, you'll understand how to rank at the top of the charts.
Are we going to talk about that today?
I can't give you all the secrets to that, but basically you have to make sure that you're getting a lot of people subscribing to your show.
It's not really about how big your show or how many downloads.
It's about how many subscribers
you're getting on a daily basis.
It's about how many subscribers you're getting
on a daily basis.
But it's measured with listening duration as well, right?
It's like a whole algorithm.
It's a whole algorithm, but it's primarily based
on how many daily users are subscribing to your show
on a daily basis.
So basically, I have my team, I have an army of VAs
that are DMing people constantly
to try to get new subscribers every single day.
If we're able to get new subscribers every day,
we stay at the top of the charts.
It doesn't matter if I had a slow month
and didn't get a lot of downloads,
it matters how many new subscribers you're getting every day.
You have a team of VAs that are reaching out to people
and saying, hey, subscribe to this channel.
Yeah, and we're proactively just recruiting new listeners
that way 24 hours a day.
What's some of the things that you're telling them to say?
So we'll target, for example, small business owners
or entrepreneurs.
We'll say, hey, what's up?
Nice to meet you.
My name's Hala.
I have a number one entrepreneurship show.
I've had Alex Hamouzian, Greg Cardone, Damon John.
You're gonna love this show.
Here's the link to check it out.
And we follow up, hey, did you take a listen?
Did you listen?
They'll say, you know, I loved it.
I subscribed.
It's a give me good feedback.
Then I'm like, hey, can you copy and paste this
as an Apple podcast review?
So then you get the social proof,
which then helps with people finding you on Apple
and then subscribing on their own accord as well.
How many,
how many people a day do you think you're reaching out to?
Probably like 2000 at least.
No, what, 2000 people a day?
And that's just, you know,
who we're proactively reaching out to.
And there's other things that we're doing as well.
We're doing media buys on other podcasts,
media buys on different podcast players.
So there's like lots of different tactics.
I'm guessing on shows like this all the time
to try to get new subscribers.
But really what I think moves the needle
is this DMing strategy where we're proactively
just getting new people every single day.
Because it's not enough to just get people to listen
and keep listening, you've to get new people every day.
Oh my gosh.
I would have never thought of that.
How'd you come up with this strategy?
I was just studying what worked and when I ranked, why did I rank and what happened and
then I realized that's what you need to do.
So now I do it for me and all my clients.
Okay.
The VA's.
Obviously, they write good English,
what imagine? What's the training process for them?
Well, so I primarily do this on LinkedIn, first of all.
LinkedIn is a plus.
You do more to DMs on LinkedIn.
We do it on Instagram and LinkedIn, but primarily LinkedIn
because then we can get really targeted and we can actually
search for the right people.
So I can find anybody who has entrepreneur in their title and then target them that way.
Or let's say I'm interviewing Chris Voss and he's the number one negotiation expert.
Anybody who may be interested in that, I'll reach out to them based on what's in their
title or if I have Grant Cardone on, I'll message all the real estate people, hey, I
just had Grant Cardone on.
And so like I'll target people so that they're more likely to be interested and
not consider it spam because I'm like, hey, you look like you might be interested
in this based on your title and expertise.
You know, check this out.
How much do you pay to VAs?
It's not expensive at all.
Probably like for a full-time person.
It's like 500 bucks a month, 600 bucks a month.
And all day, they're reaching out to people, drumming up. And I have got like shifts, right? So it's just 24 bucks a month, 600 bucks a month. And all day, they're reaching out to people,
drumming up.
And I have got like shifts, right?
So it's just 24 hours a day.
Oh my gosh.
Yo, we need some VAs.
This is insane.
Oh my gosh.
Okay, so, okay, that's cool.
Being top of the charts, what does that mean?
And why does somebody even want to go through that?
Go for it.
Well, because on Apple specifically,
so the podcast industry is made up
of like 70 different podcast players.
So Apple's not the only game in town,
but they have a huge market share.
So let's say it's 20, 30% of all listens
are coming from Apple.
Plus, it still is like the most famous app
that everybody cares about.
So if you say, I'm the number one,
literally the number one podcast on Cast Box, right?
Which is like the fourth largest podcast player.
And if I say that to people, people will be like,
I don't care, like let's cast vlogs, right?
But if I say, I'm top of the top 10 business on Apple,
everyone's like, oh, wow.
Like, you know, because it still means something to people who don't know
anything about podcasts, right?
So it's good social proof to get guests and things like that.
But the main thing is that it's discoverability.
It's the only way that you can actually get discovered on Apple.
So if somebody is like going on, like, let's say Edmile at show, if they scroll
down, they're gonna see five podcasts
that show up that are ranking top of business as well.
So we'll say like similar podcasts like this
and it'll be the top five shows.
And if they click more, they'll see the top 20 shows.
So your goal is always to be the top 20
of your main category or subcategory
so that you can actually get discovered on Apple.
For sure.
But okay, so obviously discoverability,
but what does that even mean?
Like, okay, I wanna be on the top of the charts.
What other opportunities have you seen that come from that?
Getting huge guests on your show,
which then is like a flywheel effect
of having a big podcast.
So for example, Alex Ramozy has come on my show
and Grant Cardone and Matthew McConaughey.
Why?
Because I just show them,
hey, I'm ranking higher than you on the charts.
Come on my show.
You know what I mean?
So even though, you know, I'm getting a lot of downloads,
but maybe somebody like Tim Barris
is getting more downloads than me.
He's been doing it for 10 more years than I have,
but I'm ranking higher than him.
So it gives me the social proof.
And he knows your name for sure.
Mm-hmm.
Dang, that's crazy.
Okay, um...
But there's other ways to grow your show too,
so happy to talk about that as well.
Let's go, let's talk about it.
You will be talking about it at podcast summit.
Yeah.
Yeah, so it's gonna be good.
Okay, so what are some other ways we can grow the show?
So one of the main ways that you can grow your show
is by actually advertising in the podcast players.
So when you're thinking about growing your show,
the fastest way and the most cost-effective way
is to actually advertise in the podcast apps
where there's already people listening to podcasts.
Because if you're gonna be like broad on social media,
especially if you're just like posting on your feed,
most of the people, they're not listening to podcasts.
Like half of people on social media
don't listen to podcasts at all.
You wanna reach people who are avid podcast listeners.
This is their hobby.
They're listening to like seven podcasts at a time.
They're always putting new podcasts in their rotation.
So you wanna reach them where they are,
most preferably in the app that they already listen in,
right? So you can reach out them where they are, most preferably in the app that they already listen in, right? So you can, you know, reach out to the different podcast players and they all have these different advertising
opportunities where they might have like a banner ad that you can get featured on or
You could be incorporated in their onboarding series. So when somebody signs up for the app based on their preferences, they'll auto subscribe to your podcast
based on their preferences, they'll auto subscribe to your podcast. Then you can also work with them where they set out push notifications when you have new episodes
or email blasts to their subscribers when you have new episodes. So usually these podcast players
are less risky in terms of your investment because they'll guarantee subscribers,
they'll guarantee a certain amount of downloads. And so if you do that consistently,
that really works in their real listeners.
When you're a big podcast,
you need to make sure you have real listeners
because if you have sponsors,
they need to be clicking and buying
so that you can keep getting sponsors, right?
Absolutely.
So that's one way.
And then the other way is collaborating with other podcasts.
So that's buying commercials on other podcasts
and doing guest swaps.
So those are like the main ways.
Gotcha, gotcha. In terms of the guests, not guest swaps. So those are like the main ways. Gotcha, got you.
In terms of the guests, not guest swaps,
but buying advertisements in other podcasts,
you're asking them to say,
hey, go watch out, go listen to a young and profaner,
listen to social proof.
And you're having the guests do the read.
Yeah, so you're gonna write talk points
and give them talk points so that they can do
a host read ad the same way they would do an ad
for like Hello Fresh.
They would do it for your podcast.
But the cool thing about it is you can actually
track the success.
So what you'd wanna do is actually test
multiple shows at a time.
So like a lot of big podcasters like Jordan Harbinger,
for example, he's one of my mentors.
He does this on a monthly basis where he's just tested.
Yeah, he tests like a bunch of shows
and you track it on chartable
and you can actually see who went
and downloaded your show from that podcast
and you can get the conversion rate.
So you can see how many impressions that a commercial had.
Then you can actually see how many people went
and downloaded your podcast afterwards.
And then there's certain podcasts that will convert super high and you just keep buying on them.
Got you. Got you. Okay. Okay. Your, are you more focused on your podcasts? Are you focused
on like growing your podcast or helping your network or do you do them both simultaneously?
I'm just doing both at the same time because the more money I make with my network,
the more I have to invest in my own show.
Explain that.
As I make more money with my company, with my network,
it costs money to grow a huge show.
So as I do that.
That's it?
Most of the time, some people get lucky.
Some people have really great keywords in their name,
and they have zero social following,
and they don't try hard at all,
and somehow they become big podcasters.
Or like now a lot of TikTok influencers
with millions of followers on TikTok
are leveraging that to become popular podcasters.
But, you know, I found that one way to get it
is just to, you know, get ads and know what you're doing
and pay for it and grow your show.
Gotcha. So you've been podcasting for five years.
Yeah. Your first year in podcasting, so you've been podcasting for five years. Yeah.
Your first year in podcasting, did you make any money?
No.
Second year?
No.
Third year?
Yeah.
Okay.
Where was that, where'd that first dollar come from?
It was like two years into it, I started making money.
I actually first started monetizing my brand
through my social agency.
So what happened was is I had about 20 volunteers
who worked for free for me for two years.
I was the biggest podcaster on LinkedIn.
That's where everybody knew me.
I was like bigger than Louis Howes on LinkedIn,
bigger than Edmile Ed on LinkedIn.
And so I had a lot of super fans on that platform specifically.
And they would always reach out to me,
like I love your mission, you changed my life,
how can I help you?
And I know everything about marketing.
So I would teach like one guy had to do videos,
one guy had to do audio, one guy had to do my website,
and I would just teach all these interns.
And so two years into it, I had like a Slack channel
with 20 interns around the world,
in the US too, just working free from me.
And I was working corporate at the time.
And my podcast was just a side hustle.
Hold on, whoa, hold on. You have a job and you have a, you have 20,
you got 20 people to work for free for you.
For two years.
For two years, while you still have a job.
While I still had a job.
What were you saying to these people?
They were just obsessed with the mission
and I was teaching them a lot.
I would teach them how to, like I said, video edit,
how to copyright, how to blow up on social media.
And it was exciting.
We were getting huge guests from the start.
So it's like, I had a big podcast,
but I just hadn't figured out how to get sponsorships yet
or do any of that.
I was still growing, you know?
And I was already getting known as like the podcast princess
and all this kind of stuff, but we were still growing.
So my big break was basically all these guests
that would come on my show.
They were authors, celebrities. They'd always be like, how had you grow your LinkedIn? Can
you do it for me? How had you grow your podcast? Can you do this for me? And I'd be like, no,
you know, I've got a job at Disney. I'm doing great. Like, I'm sorry, I just have a volunteer
team. They work for free. And then finally, do you know who Heather Monahan is?
No.
She's this big influencer on LinkedIn and a podcaster. She wouldn't leave me alone.
She just was like stalking me on LinkedIn,
commenting on all my videos,
and she's like, Hala, I need you to do my social.
I need you to do my podcast.
And so I was like, I can't do it for you, but I'll train you.
And so I started scheduling meetings with her on Saturdays,
trying to teach her how to video edit and do all the stuff.
And she's like, Hala,
I just like had a meeting with VaynerMedia.
I have a budget that I can give them,
but I want to give it to you.
You're better than them.
I know you have a company,
like just start paying your interns and let's do this.
I want to be your first client.
Like you've got to do this.
So I did it.
And then my second client was like a billionaire
at $30,000 a month retainer.
And then it just like everything skyrocketed.
I got like Cara Golden from Hintwater.
I got the CEO of 1-800 got junk, and I just started running all these big
CEOs, social media, and started making money.
And then I figured out how to take that money that I made and then really grow my show.
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Outside of your network and you know your agency and all that kind of stuff,
strictly from your podcast, what do you think you bring in for your podcast monthly?
$60,000 at least. About 60 a month at least just from podcasts as
Sponsorship. podcasts as sponsorships. And how do we approach these sponsors?
So this is a great question. It's there's lots of different
layers in the podcast industry. So one of the ways that you do
it is, first of all, in order to be eligible, you really need
to have like 100,000 downloads a month. At least. Without that.
Uh, and it can be a simulcast too. It can be audio and YouTube.
Gotcha.
Okay.
But you really need a hundred thousand downloads a month.
Then you can submit yourself to all these different agencies that work with big
brands and there's podcast specific agencies.
So there's like Veritone one, there's advertise, Gumball.
Uh, there's so many different ones.
Oxford road, right?
So there's like maybe 30 different podcast agencies
and you submit yourself to.
So for me as a network, I'm submitting all my podcasters.
And the more impressions that you have,
the more power that you have.
Because these brands,
they don't wanna work with every single little podcast.
They wanna work with big networks.
So they can just do like one order.
And so that's what you do.
You primarily work with the agencies and then the other way is just direct.
You reach out to brands, you pitch them, you find the partnership lead and so on.
Gotcha.
And you have how many shows on your network?
Like 25.
If 25 shows on your network.
And what does that pool of 25 represent in terms of monthly downloads? Um, probably like 15 million, 20 million.
You are absolutely crushing it.
So you're going to these sponsors saying, hey, I have 15, 20 million downloads that
I represent.
Give me money and I'll distribute them amongst these.
Well, my podcast network is different
because we're not just focused on audio ads
because I started with a social media agency.
So I'm monetizing my influencers across all their channels.
So I'm monetizing their audio, their YouTube, their social.
We're doing branded content.
We're doing CEO interviews and stuff like that.
So we do 360 campaigns.
A lot of it is ads, But we're doing like full circle.
And then we're kind of getting out of CPMs,
which in the podcast world,
typically like 20 to $30 CPMs,
which is how much they pay per 1000 downloads.
We're getting like $200 CPMs
because we're doing these social creative sponsorships.
So let me say that, let me ask this.
The 15 to 20 million
That's including not just download but video and like you're all that's just the odd I'm just like audio and simulcast like audio and YouTube. Okay. I got you. Yeah, audio and YouTube
Yeah, and then all my influencers typically, you know, I've got a big podcast
You typically have like a big Instagram or a big LinkedIn or there's some other platform that we can monetize
But that but initial number is just audio and YouTube pretty much. Okay. I got you got you got you you typically have like a big Instagram or a big LinkedIn or there's some other platform that we can monetize.
But that initial number is just audio and YouTube.
Correct.
Okay, gotcha, gotcha, gotcha.
So all of your, all of your podcasters,
I guess they all didn't come in doing great, right?
Some of them just started.
Yeah.
And you helped them grow it.
Yeah, so a lot of the times,
sometimes I get like business influencers
who are really, let's say really great Instagrams
or Wall Street Journal bestselling authors
or like New York Times bestselling authors,
they've got money and they've got a great show,
but it let's say has like 40,000 downloads.
And I'm like, okay, we need to get you to like
200,000 downloads so you can actually make money
per commercial and this is worth it for everyone.
So then I put them on a plan.
I rank their show, I grow their show every month,
and then we get them there and then they join my network.
So I can kind of take them from not being eligible
to being eligible.
Oh, so before they join your network, you help them grow?
Yeah, it's like a requirement.
I can't take you unless you have 100,000 downloads.
Got it.
But I can get them there.
Gotcha. Are you always recruiting or like, do you ever get in a freeze't take you unless you have 100,000 downloads. Got it. But I can get them there. Got you.
Are you always recruiting or like, do you ever get in a freeze
where, OK, I have enough.
Let me work with you.
For the network, I'm always recruiting.
For the agency now, I'm like frozen because it's like,
I want to concentrate on the network, you know?
Got you.
So let me ask you it.
Let's say, for instance, somebody has 200,000 downloads
in here on your network.
Are you giving them some sort of range of you'll probably make about this amount of money?
Yeah, there's calculators where we can basically say like, okay, if we sell out your show and
we can do five ads per show and we sell it at a $30 CPM, you can get X amount of money.
So I think like, you know, if I can just ballpark it, somebody who has 200,000 would probably
make like $15,000
a month net.
So after everything, and that's on the audio ad side alone.
That's not if we got like an interview for them
or something else that's more lucrative.
So when you say got an interview for them, what do you mean?
So a lot of podcasters, and this is like sort of
a little known thing, but it's becoming a big trend.
People are paying to come on podcasts.
Here's my question.
Is it illegal?
No, it's not illegal, it's a service.
Okay, but there are people that are calling that payola.
Like in music, so you can't pay somebody,
you can't pay to have your music played.
They're calling that payola.
High-casting, it's really unregulated.
It's not the same.
It's not the same, because the podcast is a business, right?
So I'm offering a service.
My service is exposure.
So if you wanted to come on my show, not you,
but like if somebody wanted to come on my show
and let's say they fit my target audience,
they have something relevant to say,
for I won't just put anybody on my show.
And I do this very rarely.
But like, it's like sometimes there's really successful
people who are smart
and sometimes they're my best episodes and people come and pay to be on the show.
And then we'll include like audio ads afterwards for their business.
I'll do social posts for them, DMs for them, and so on.
So we'll put together a little package for people to come on the show.
And it's basically like brand awareness.
It's another way to advertise.
Okay.
What is the range that you're charging?
Maybe not for your show, but just in general.
Like for like it just depends on the.
Or for your show.
Somebody might be watching got a bag for you.
Well, depending on the show,
we'll charge anywhere from like $8,000 in interview
up to like $25,000 or more.
There's some huge podcasters that are charging like $80,000 to come on their show.
I don't charge that much, but you know, I just got to deal with the Olympics,
where I'm interviewing three Olympians and they're paying me $60,000.
And I would have interviewed them anyway.
Oh my God.
Okay.
Do you have a group of people that are always looking to get
on podcasts that are willing to pay or,
or you don't really focus on that.
And if they come, they come.
There's always people who are interested.
You'd be so surprised.
A lot of the brands that would advertise on our show,
we then upsell them for some sort of creative sponsorship.
So another example is Shopify.
They've been my long-term sponsor for a really long time and I crush it for them.
So I interviewed their president.
I'm also going to interview the CEO of three of their huge brands and we did
this like extended brand campaign with them.
Another example is Constant Contact,
another one of my long-term sponsors.
So instead of interviewing their CEO,
their CEO is not interested in that kind of stuff. I did like an email marketing webinar and
did like a creative campaign for them. So it's like you can just like kind of upsell
to do like some co-created branded content with the brand.
What's how many downloads your podcast get? Like 500,000 a month across all channels.
So it's not even like the biggest show in the world. It's just...
It's lit though.
Yeah.
It's lit.
The people that like,
the people that subscribe,
do you see that it,
like you have these people say,
hey, subscribe, subscribe, subscribe.
Do you see that moving the needle in downloads?
Yeah, for sure.
Because podcasting is like a leaky bucket.
You continually need to grow it
because what happens is that,
and you guys have probably all done this before,
you listen to a podcast,
you're obsessed with it for three months,
and then some new shiny object comes along,
and you leave.
So it's like I continually have to be bringing people
and even to maintain the 500,000.
And then if I really wanna get a jump in downloads
that I need to invest in media buying and get like different ads on different
players and really invest in it. But in terms of maintaining it,
it's important for me to continually bring in new people.
And then everybody listens to probably like 10,
12 episodes until they drop off.
Maybe some people listen for years,
but it's more realistic to think that people are listening to like 10,
12 episodes and then moving on to the next thing.
That makes sense.
All right, so five years ago you start your podcast.
Where were you at in your life?
Where you started?
I was working in corporate at Hewlett Packard.
I started my career in radio.
So I used to work at Hot 97.
I was Angie Martinez's assistant.
Really?
Yeah, for three years.
So I was-
Is that Angie?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, Angie's on the wall.
Can you still talk to her?
Yeah, once in a while she was like,
oh my God, look at you, like, you know.
So I was Angie Martina...
She's amazing.
She's great.
I was Angie Martina's assistant for three years.
In the radio world, you work for free.
So I worked for free for her for three years.
Oh, wow.
Every day on her show, I dropped out of college to work for her.
Wow. And when I wanted a of college to work for her.
Wow.
And when I wanted to paint job, she fired me.
And then I started this website called the sorority
of hip hop and that blew up.
And I always got a MTV show.
So like I've been in this world for a long time trying it.
I didn't get the MTV show after they filmed this all summer.
It was right after Jersey Shore.
Oh wow.
They got us a studio on Broadway.
They must have invested like at least $200,000 in the show.
And then two weeks before it was supposed to air,
I was the lead of like a new show.
It was gonna be the new Jersey Shore basically.
They pulled the plug.
And so I got fired from Hot 97 even though I was like,
you don't keep somebody around for three years
if they suck, right?
It's just that I became a flight, a risk
because you're not supposed to have a free intern
for that long, right?
I didn't get the MTV show.
So then I kind of got like discouraged and I was like,
okay, let me just like shut everything down.
Like I said, I had this really popular blog site.
I had 150 girls who blogged for me
in and out of this organization for three years.
How are you getting slaves?
I mean.
Yeah, I know. I'm really, I not slaves. Yeah, wait. who blogged for me in and out of this organization for three years. How are you getting these slaves? I mean...
Yeah, I know.
I'm really...
Not slaves.
But I really...
That's one of my talents, I swear, is getting...
I don't know how many times I've done it.
I've done it so many times in terms of getting...
Because at Hanani 7, I was the queen of the interns too, teaching all the interns.
So from there, then I was just always knew that I needed interns for everything that
I did. you know?
So. Oh my gosh.
So, yeah.
I'm gonna get some interns.
We need some interns, please.
Interns?
Well, we need interns, right?
So my daughter, she's 13, so she's kind of like,
she's kind of an intern,
but we need some real interns.
Yeah. How do you get them that you just paint a picture
and say, hey, this is gonna be amazing,
you're gonna be a part of it?
Yeah, like when I had the sorority of hip hop,
we were hosting all the cool parties
and so it was like really cool to be
in my sorority of hip hop, right?
Like I was the president,
I was hosting parties with DJ Camillo
and Funkmaster Flacks,
all the DJs were my really good friends.
So it was like everybody wanted a piece of that
like and just wanted the exposure.
They got to blog,
they got to be on this popular blog.
I would teach them how to blog,
how to use WordPress and whatever.
So they wanted the exposure and we were all young
so it's like they worked for either very little or nothing
and we all just had fun, right?
What'd you learn from Angie?
Oh, it was three years.
She definitely instilled hard work for me.
My memories of Hot 97 are just like running.
I was just like constantly running everywhere.
You know, she would come up to me and be like,
holla my nail chips.
I need you to find the color of this nail immediately.
You have 20 minutes.
Really?
And then I was like running around trying to find this nail color.
Yeah, it was like sort of like, what is that show with Diddy
that like it was making the band? That's what it was like.. Yeah, it was like sort of like, what is that show with Diddy that like it was making the band?
That's what it was like.
That's what it was like every day.
And so like I would just do, I would babysit her kids.
I would do her research.
I would do everything for her.
So like she definitely taught me how to hustle
cause I wasn't doing really well in college or anything.
And then I remember when I left hot 97 and went back
to college, I was so much smarter.
I was getting straight A's like just like crushing it and everything that I did. And I think it's
just because she just really like, you know, instilled really hard work. I just like worked so
hard at the station. And I learned how to do, I was doing commercials and all that kind of stuff,
audio editing. So you were in working for hot nights. Was that before or after college?
I dropped out of school.
It was my junior year of college.
I got one internship where I was working for Ebro,
then they promoted me to work for Angie.
Oh, wow.
And then I dropped out of school
because Angie wanted me there every day.
Yeah.
And so then I used to make...
For free.
Yeah, but I would make money at night
hosting showcases with the DJs.
Okay, so like that free job kind of led into other money.
Yeah. It's like at night I would like host parties and stuff like
this and make money doing other stuff. But it wasn't like, you
know, all my siblings are doctors. So like imagine I come from
like an Arabic like immigrant family, all my siblings are
doctors in med school. And I'm like, yeah, I'm working out
any seven for free and hosting parties like, you know, as a
black sheep for sure.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, so you drop out of college, junior year,
work for Angie three years and you go back to college.
Then I went back to school because I got let go
because a job opened up that I wanted
and they hired DJ Drew Ski who you might know
who's on hot in any seven right now,
who was one of my best friends and I was pissed pissed, and so I texted Druski, like,
hey, I don't feel good.
If you wanna learn how to be the producer,
learn it on your own,
because I was doing the job already.
And then he showed it to Angie, Angie got mad at me,
and she cut my key cards and fired me.
But then we made up.
She tried to-
Hold on, I'm sorry, real quick.
A job comes up.
You wanna go for it, DJ Druski goes for it. Druski's like two years older than me, mind you, like I'm sorry, real quick. A job comes up. You wanna go for it, DJ Druski goes for it.
Druski's like two years older than me.
Mind you, like I'm young and I'm-
But you're still been there for three years.
I know, but I'm young.
Like I didn't, like looking back on it,
I had no business being Angie Martinez producer.
Like I don't know why I thought that I deserved that job.
You know what I mean?
Like I really want, I was doing the job.
Yeah, but like, you know, looking back on it,
I guess it was silly, but it was good for me
that she kicked me out because honestly,
like I'm really happy where I am now.
And it took me on this like different route.
And now, you know, there's actually not a lot
of money in radio.
If I kept on doing what I was doing,
I would have been on hot 97.
I would have probably been Nessa.
That's who I would have been.
I don't know, Jiskey, but you probably make
way more money than him.
Way more money than him.
Ha!
Sorry, Driskey.
But it's true.
I don't know what it is, but.
It's true, like they don't make a lot of money.
They make money hosting parties and stuff,
but like I'm happy where it ended up.
Yeah, I bet, I bet.
So just for clarity on the story,
a job opens up at Hot 97.
Yes. You apply for it, Dr job opens up at 97. Yes.
You apply for it, Drew's get applied for it.
He gets the job that he's-
There's no applying, there's like picking,
like it's, there's no applying.
Oh, you say, hey, I want the job.
He says, hey, I want the job, but he gets it.
He gets it.
You don't, you're pissed.
He's my friend.
We are hosting, I'm hosting like online radio shows
on the side, precursor of podcasts I was doing
at the whole time I was at Hanani7.
So me and him had a show together,
so we were really good friends.
So I was mad at him,
because my job that day was to go train him
how to do his job.
Hey.
So I said, I texted him, I said,
hey, I was just sad and I was young.
And I was like, hey, I don't feel good today.
If you wanna learn how to be the producer,
learn it on your own. Angie was furious because she needed I don't feel good today. If you want to learn how to be the producer, learn it on your own.
Angie was furious because she needed me to show up that day.
And I left them high and dry,
because I did all the work.
I did all the research, I did all the stuff.
Like, and so I decided I'm not going to work today.
And she got really mad and she fired me.
Because who knows what it could have been Jay-Z with her
that day and I didn't show up.
Like, you know what I mean?
So she was mad at me.
Yeah, okay.
So kind of your key card.
You're fired.
And then the first thing you decided to do
is go back to college.
I got fired on Thursday.
On Sunday, I had a new idea.
I was going to start strawberryblunt.com.
That's what I called it.
Strawberryblunt.
Strawberryblunt.com, the sorority of hip hop.
OK.
Then you start that and then that's your own thing.
Yes.
And then in three months, we were one of the most popular hip hop
and entertainment sites in the world.
We blew up, because I figured out how to hack Twitter.
And I was the first blog that basically,
you know when blogs on Twitter and they like at somebody
in the title of the blog,
and then it goes to the blog post.
So it was a music blog.
So I'd be like at Wiz Khalifa, new song, blah, blah, blah,
at Drake, new song. And there'd be like 50 pretty girls
tweeting the same thing at once.
And I was the first one to do that,
and then the celebrities would retweet us.
Oh wow.
So then our blog blew up right away.
And then all the DJs that wouldn't pay me minimum wage
started being like, Hala, come host my party,
come do this, come do that.
Oh wow.
Yeah.
You have a very interesting career.
Yeah, really cool story.
But then I didn't get MTV
and I just never thought I'd get back on a mic.
I went into corporate, I worked at Hewlett Packard.
I got my MBA, got a 4.0
and just literally thought I was never gonna be
in entertainment, never gonna be on a mic
and I just did the corporate thing.
But in the corporate world, I was doing the same stuff.
I was interviewing the CEO, interviewing the CMO, became the face of the corporate thing. But in the corporate world, I was doing the same stuff. I was like interviewing the CEO, interviewing the CMO,
became the face of the young employees.
Like so, was still doing the same stuff in corporate,
but just a different, like taking more of a business side
of it.
And then four years into my corporate career,
I started seeing like this thing called podcasting,
really bubbling up.
And it was more accessible.
Like podcast was a thing for many years now,
but it wasn't accessible.
Like you would need to be really tech savvy
to figure it out.
Even to go listen to it.
Yeah, it was really hard.
Then all of a sudden I was like, wow, I can do this.
I know everything.
I know audio editing.
I can make videos.
I know how to blow up on different social media.
So instead of Twitter, I focused on LinkedIn. And I just...
Why LinkedIn though?
It's mostly for entrepreneurs
because it's young and profiting, it's for entrepreneurs.
It's for, in the beginning it was really
for corporate professionals
because I wasn't an entrepreneur yet.
So I didn't know how to speak to entrepreneurs, right?
In the beginning it was for corporate professionals
and then entrepreneurs I found out liked my show
and I kind of evolved to more of an entrepreneurship show but um linked in because people were interested in learning and I saw it
as a wide open field because no other podcasters were really focused on that platform and you
always want to stop the scroll and stand out and so I would just stand out because I would put my
videos up on there before video podcasting was a, I used to do like comic book audiograms
and kind of stand out on LinkedIn that way.
And so I just kind of became the number one
podcaster on LinkedIn and then I leveraged that
to really grow everything else.
Got it, got it.
What is it about LinkedIn?
Cause I just started posting clips on LinkedIn.
We're doing maybe like two a day now on LinkedIn
and I'm seeing there's some traction. I don't even know anybody over there on LinkedIn. We're doing maybe like two a day now on LinkedIn and I'm seeing there's some traction.
I don't even know anybody over there on LinkedIn.
I don't even know how to really like log in and look at it.
So maybe I'll have you look at my analytics,
but is LinkedIn something you definitely recommend
podcasters to jump into?
It just depends who your audience is.
Gotcha.
I'm one of entrepreneurs.
LinkedIn's aren't-
Then definitely entrepreneurs.
There's all small business owners are on LinkedIn.
I think of LinkedIn as jobs.
Mm-mm.
There's so many entrepreneurs on LinkedIn
because they're selling to everyone who has jobs.
Like for example, I have a LinkedIn masterclass
where I teach people how to like figure out the algorithm,
hack LinkedIn, all that kind of stuff.
And 99% of the people who take that class
are entrepreneurs who are trying to crush on LinkedIn.
I would take it.
Yeah, you can join it.
Okay, thanks.
Oh, how much is it?
$2,500 for two days.
Is it?
It's a two-day workshop.
You do it in person?
It's a virtual two-day workshop.
Virtual, okay.
So talk to people that don't have a podcast. It's a virtual two-day workshop. Virtual, okay. So talk to people that don't have a podcast.
It's my belief.
It's my belief that everyone needs two podcasts.
If you're an entrepreneur, a business owner,
somebody that just wants a good hobby,
or like, I believe everybody needs a podcast
for some sort of reason.
Whether you learn how to be a better communicator,
like you got something you can create,
that is yours and gives the message to the world.
What is your thought on the average person podcasting?
I think it's tough.
I think that if your goal is to network with other people
and you have a business model
where you are actually interviewing people
who could become your potential clients, then it's a good idea.
Because then no matter how big your show is or how small your show is, you're always talking
to your target audience, which is your guest.
So like I said, the first way that I monetized my show and made a significant amount of money
off my brand was the guest that came on my show would become my social and podcast clients. Now the guests that come on my show,
a lot of times have a podcast
and they become a part of my network even, right?
So it's like I can monetize my guests in other ways
by offering them services, right?
And then once you do that,
you can invest in your show to grow it
and then get sponsorships.
Cause like I said, you need a hundred thousand downloads
a month at least to start getting sponsors.
So you are a network and you're recruiting people.
Has anyone ever tried to recruit you to their network?
Yeah, I signed to a network once
and it was one of the biggest mistakes in my life.
Why?
Because I didn't do a good job selling.
I signed to a network and I had done such a great job
selling from month one for my show, I was sold out.
Sold out every month.
I only had like three other podcasts or four other podcasts
sold them out every month.
And when I signed to this network,
I was already sold out two months ahead.
In four months, they got me like $5,000 in ads.
When you say sold out, what do you mean?
So every podcast, depending on the length, has a certain amount of ads they can put on
the show.
Yes.
Sponsors are usually buying mid-roll ads, which are in the middle of a podcast.
And so typically, an hour-long show might have four to six ads.
So for me, a sold-out show was six ads.
Hostread.
Because you can get, there's other ads called Programmatic,
but they're basically prerecorded,
like let's say Ford has like a commercial
that they air on your show,
but it's way less CPM.
Sometimes these are like $2 CPMs,
whereas HostRed ads are like $30 CPM.
So you don't want really too many Programmatic ads
because they're not good for the audience
and you don't make a lot of money.
So I was like 100% sold out host red, joined a network and they promised me the moon, we're
gonna do this.
And I thought, oh my gosh, like instead of my four person sales team and my interns from
India, I'm gonna have this big network help me sell my show.
And then you get lost in the shuffle, they did nothing for me. They didn't grow my show, they didn't sell my show. And then you get lost in the shuffle. They did nothing for me.
They didn't grow my show, they didn't sell my show.
And in fact, they ruined like six months of everything.
And then I pulled out after four months of them,
like not selling anything and kept kind of pushing me along.
I pulled out and I really just got focused.
I'm like, I'm just gonna start my own network.
You guys don't know what you're doing.
And now we're crushing, you know,
but it took us a while to kind of get rebooked
because they screwed me up so much.
Out of your 25 shows, what is your goal
in terms of like revenue to bring into the network
on like a monthly basis that you can start
distributing to people?
Like what is your goal?
Do you have a target number?
Like I want to make X amount of dollars
for my network every single month. I don you have a target number? Like I want to make X amount of dollars for my network every single month.
I don't have a target like that yet.
My goal is to try to sell out all my different shows.
All 25 of them?
Try to.
And that takes time, right?
So the longer you've been on my network, the more likely we're closer to being
sold out on your show because it takes time to sort of fill up those ads and then
do a good job with sponsors.
So right now I'm a new network.
So a lot of my shows are new,
like I signed them last month, the month before or whatever.
So I'm just continually trying to book them up.
And then also get creative deals
because they're a lot more lucrative.
Yeah, okay.
Let's say for instance, I create a show
and I come to you a holla.
I got this dope show, I think it's gonna go well.
I already have a podcast and it does well,
but I'm gonna create a whole nother show
and put it on your network.
Would you be able to give me some money?
We'd have to grow it to a certain amount first.
We've got to grow.
We can't pre-sell it.
Mm-mm.
You got to...
Even based on past success or something?
Definitely not.
Just nobody's gonna look at you
if you don't have the downloads, right?
There's so many other podcasts out there with downloads.
A brand's not gonna put money on something
if they don't know that they're getting
a certain amount of downloads or not.
But if you have a social reach, I think it would help.
You might be able to get signed to a network
that would give you a guarantee.
Yes.
And then they would just like bank
on the fact that you're gonna grow your show,
but you'll probably get a low guarantee.
Oh, it's gonna be like three million, I'm coming.
I'll help you grow your show,
and I can do it non-exclusively.
I think the only thing is, so I'm on Red Circle,
and they do treat me really good.
And they go and get a lot of ads,
and I got a
relationship with those guys over there. So we do, we do pretty
good in terms of our show, the social proof show. But I was
here's my thing. I'm thinking, maybe I create different shows
because we have the capacity in the bandwidth to do a lot of
content. Like we got our own studio, right? Where you might
have a different audience that you could put me in front of
another network has a different audience you could put me in front of.
Another network has a different audience
you could put me in front of.
I would just have to have three shows
running simultaneously,
then I'm pumping two different networks.
Yeah, I mean, my advice would be to grow one show really big
because it's like the same amount of effort
and then you make so much more per commercial.
Yeah, but I wanna,
what if I wanted my goals is to get different audiences though
Oh, well, then that's a different story if you have different target audiences
Yeah, it might be a slower build
But like let's say friends you have a whole another network or group of people that you will promote me to
That I don't know. I just don't even know those people right
Or like some people like if you go on let's say revolts network
They're putting your videos on their channel, their YouTube channel.
So that's a whole nother audience, which ultimately at the end of the day,
they may come back to you anyway in terms of your main show.
Yeah.
That might work.
Yeah, why not? I mean, if you have the bandwagon, you have the team,
and you've got different concepts that you think could work, why not?
I want to do mad content. I just want to outwork every other podcaster,
but you don't advise it.
I would part, like for me personally,
I just want to grow my show as big as possible
because if you think about it, when you get sponsorships,
it's a lot of work to do all these commercials, right?
So if you could do one commercial
and make $10,000 of commercial,
instead of doing three commercials
and making $10,000 altogether, it's less work to do one commercial.
Same thing with me.
I want to recruit the biggest podcast because if I sell 10 ads for a small podcast,
the same amount of work to sell 10 ads for a huge podcast.
That makes sense.
So you don't tell everybody to need a podcast?
I'm not the type of person to say like everybody needs a podcast.
I'm saying everybody.
Because it's a lot of work to do a podcast and do it well.
There's a lot of crappy podcasts out there, right?
So it's a lot of work to do it well,
but if you are inspired to do a podcast
and you think you have something to say
and you feel inspired to do it,
then I definitely think it's a great idea.
I think anybody who's got the motivation to do it
and really wants to do it, should do it. But I don't think, if you're not ready to put in the work,
don't start a podcast.
Okay, so tell people what it means
to put in the work of a podcast.
Consistency.
So it means, are you willing to at least do
four episodes a month?
Cause that's the minimum.
If you can't do four a month, one a week.
No point.
There's no point.
And a lot of people are like,
oh, I'm gonna do two a month.
It's like, you're never gonna get any traction.
People are gonna forget about your show.
So four episodes a month consistently,
which means that to start,
you've gotta have a backlog
so that if you get sick or this and that.
So it's like, when you launch,
you wanna have eight to 10 episodes ready
so that you can always have a backlog
so that you're not always like scraping by.
It means focusing just as much on promotion as you do production.
So I always say it's 50% promotion, 50% production.
It's not just about putting out content.
Because unless you get really lucky or unless you're already a huge influencer on TikTok
or Instagram or another platform like that, you're not going to get listeners.
You're going to have to spoon feed your show to everyone.
You're going to have to put up micro content on your social channels
You're gonna have to DM everybody who likes and comments on those clips and send them a link to that actual episode
You're gonna have to learn about all the different podcast players
You got to be on you're gonna have to learn about
Chartable and how to track your stuff like you actually have to absorb yourself in the industry and how to promote things if you actually
Want to get any traction or you need to be rich enough to hire in the industry and how to promote things if you actually want to get any traction.
Or you need to be rich enough to hire a team
that knows how to do that.
So.
Got you, got you.
Somebody hit me yesterday.
They said, yo, I've got a whole bunch of money.
I'm putting a whole bunch of money into my podcast
and it's just not working.
And I actually asked them on my link and they was like,
yo, okay, I'll be a podcast of it, no problem.
But they have the means to do it.
And actually, somebody actually hit me today too,
said, hey, I've been putting money into it
and it's not working.
But just putting money into it
doesn't mean the podcast is going to work.
You gotta be good at it.
And also, what does that mean?
The money into the production?
Yeah, I mean production, promotion.
He said he's been doing promotion too.
Let me just, let me pay guests and all that kind of stuff.
I'm like, that stuff doesn't work.
That doesn't work.
The thing is that you've got to figure out,
you've got to work with somebody
who actually knows what they're doing.
Not a lot of people know how to actually grow podcasts.
Just putting up social, if somebody's like,
I'm going to produce your show
and put up content on YouTube and Instagram,
still that's not going to lead to subscribers.
You've got to close the loop.
You got to know how to actually close the loop,
bring those people on social media to your podcast,
advertise in the podcast players themselves.
Like all the things that I was mentioning before
in terms of how you actually need to grow your show,
it doesn't just work to produce it
and put up content on social media.
And you've probably seen that yourself too. Like it's hard to get subscribers, right? You need to, you know,
put in the work.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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Let's say somebody is starting fresh today, young Hala, okay?
You don't know nothing about Hot 97, you work it.
I don't know, Olive Garden.
And you're like, I got this message for the world
and I wanna start a podcast.
What does Hala do?
First of all, be really smart about your podcast name.
I think one of the worst mistakes I made was calling my podcast young and
profiting. I love it now. And I mean, a lot of people know it,
but to this day, no one's going to find me casually, unless some, you know,
they're looking at the charts or something.
Nobody's going to type in young and profiting in their search bar.
So I found a lot of mediocre podcasts
that just have keywords in their name
are getting a lot of downloads just by having keywords in their name.
So if you think about what people would be searching in the app,
you'll get a head start.
So it's like, first of all,
be really careful about your name and make sure you pick a name that is gonna get you SEO.
So I'll give you a couple of examples.
And these podcasters are by no means mediocre.
They're just examples.
So Kevin Miller hosts self-helpful podcasts.
His podcast gets 600,000 downloads a month
because people are typing in self-help
and what pops up self-helpful.
Yeah, that's smart.
Pain, that's a hat.
Millennial investing.
This guy has no social media following.
He's in my network, gets 500,000 downloads a month or something.
This has zero social following.
And it's because people are typing up investing or like, it's a keyword that's in the name.
There's another podcast called Self-Imp Improvement Daily, millions of downloads,
because people are typing in self improvement
and what pops up.
So like, had I been smart,
I would have called my podcast Young Entrepreneurs.
And you know what?
I still may.
I still may rebrand.
And cause I don't, you know,
I can't be young and profiting forever.
So I might call it like profiting
or I don't know, entrepreneurship, whatever,
but something that's more searchable,
because then it's like a downstream battle
instead of it being an upstream battle to get subscribers.
So that's really important.
Okay, okay, what else?
I would say have standards with your guests.
I think one of the smartest things that I did
is that from the start, I had big standards from my guests.
I did not just like have anybody on my podcast.
From the start, I had big guests
and I knew that it was a volume game.
Yeah, but if you're working at Olive Garden,
you're not getting big.
I was at this point, I was starting from zero.
I had no following anywhere.
I was working in corporate.
All I had was like my past.
I got to tell them like, I did this, this and that, I guess
and believe in me, right? Yeah, this and that, I guess, and believe
in me, right?
Yeah.
You work in Holla Garden.
Okay.
You're not Holla, you are a Holla, but you're not, you don't come from a hot 97, you don't
know the DJ's, nothing.
Yeah.
I'm from a small town, I got something to say, I'ma come up with a searchable name.
Searchable name.
And then we just-
I would say try your hardest to have standards with your guests.
Try your hardest.
I understand that everybody has to start somewhere, but try your hardest to have standards with your guests. Try your hardest. I understand that
everybody has to start somewhere, but try your hardest because what will happen is that once
you get somebody big to say yes, it becomes easier for more people to say yes. That's true. And if you
understand that a lot of this is just a volume game, there's actually a lot of people who are famous
that are going on any podcast. I'll give like John Lee Dumas, he'll go on any podcast.
Yeah, he dedicates like two days a month
to go on any podcast, big or small, right?
There are people out there
or somebody who's a little bit older, like really reputable.
And they just might be retired and have more free time.
You might be able to get like a bigger name
who's like a little bit older
or somebody who had a popular book 10 years ago
and get them on your show.
But once you start to get a little bit of notoriety
with the names, you can start to ask more people to come on.
And what you have to realize, it's really a volume game.
So when I first started my podcast,
my first episode was about first impressions.
And so I reached out to all these different
like human behavior experts.
And I reached out to 30 and two said yes.
You know what I'm saying?
So then it's just reaching out,
putting out a broad like net
and then hoping that at least one person says yes.
And then you just keep moving on from there.
I like it.
Third step.
So first, cool name.
Let's find some standards for guests.
Try to find the coolest people that we know
in that particular space.
Third thing, what are you doing?
So you want wanna make sure
that you've got a consistent production plan.
Okay.
So how often are you recording?
How are you recording?
Making sure that you're putting out an episode every week.
You have a backlog, like I talked about,
figuring out how you're titling your episodes
so that it's consistent and looks professional.
What are you putting in the show notes
so that you're discoverable and you have searchability?
What keywords are you putting in your titles and the show notes so that you're discoverable and you have searchability? What keywords are you putting in your titles
and your show notes so that you can be discovered
and searchable?
And the fourth thing would be promotion.
How are you gonna promote it?
You're putting it on social media.
You're gonna, are you gonna advertise in the apps?
Are you gonna try to guest on other shows in your niche?
What are you gonna do to get the word out?
Because like I said, it's not just about production.
I would say production is very important,
but on the grand scheme of things,
the winners know how to market.
Yeah, for sure.
Last thing, Trent Shelton's on your iCast network, right?
Yes.
How did that connection happen?
Because he was pretty big in motivational speech areas
for a minute.
He came on my podcast, and then a few months ago,
he was like, Hala, you know,
how are you doing everything, whatever?
And then we talked and he joined my network.
Gotcha.
How do you get corporate clients
for you to produce their podcast?
Cause I want to go into that space.
A lot of it is LinkedIn.
So one of the strategies that I have
and the same strategy to get podcast listeners,
I target entrepreneurs.
A lot of the time these are CEOs of huge companies
and they're like, yeah, I listened, it's so great.
Can I come on your show?
And then I say, I'm sorry, I'm booked up,
but you could either pay for an interview
or I can help you with social services
to get your brand awareness up or whatever.
So I just retarget them with services.
Hold on.
They reach out to you and say,
hey, I want to be on your show.
Exactly.
CEOs of corporate corporations, whatever.
Super successful.
And your default answer is we're booked up,
but you can pay.
That's hard.
Come on.
That's good.
We're booked up right now, but you can pay, which means we're not really booked up.
I am really booked up, but I'll squeeze you in.
Okay, okay.
But then it turns into other conversations like, you know, I'll top on a call with them
and then they'll realize they want social services or they want this or that or it turns
into a whole network tour typically.
Well, if they have money, they want to hop on all the shows, you know, and so then all my
podcasters get the deal. Okay. But because they asked, it doesn't look like I sold them anything.
They asked to come on my show. So usually, what if they're not a good guest though? You don't
think that ruins the show a little bit? I don't, people who aren't, or like I'll fit them on a podcast that's a better fit.
Oh, but they might not come on yours.
Yeah, like I'll do it with like, like I said,
like the president of Shopify, that's a cool interview.
You know, like, so it's like, it would,
it has to make sense for me.
But then there's smaller podcasters
where like they're happy with, you know,
a smaller company that wants to come on.
But this stuff is expensive.
So usually the person's pretty accomplished
if they're willing to spend like 100 grand
on a network tour or something, you know?
Do they spend 100 grand on a network tour?
My network tours are typically like 120 to $150,000.
And it's like a three or four month thing.
Three or four month.
It's like three shows a month or something like this
for like three or four months.
And you pay the podcasters too.
I pay out the podcasters.
Right.
You be like, yo, I got this interview, do this, you X and Y.
Yeah.
So it's like a rev show.
I get 30%, they get 70%.
So, since it's $100,000, so you're saying you take 30 and you divvy up to 70,000 amongst
these other shows.
Yeah.
But for my show, I take 100%.
And my show is always a part of it too.
So it's like, I do it for me and then I just add everybody
else and take 30% of their cut.
But they don't really get a cut because it's one big amount.
What do you mean?
So let's say for instance.
The proposal is broken up by reach.
So it's like my show might cost $20,000.
A show that's smaller than me might cost $20,000. A show that's smaller than me might
cost $8,000. Everybody has their own rate that I put in the proposal. Then I take 30%
of their rate.
I see. Okay. So they're not saying I got 100 something thousand.
No, no, no. I'm putting together a proposal based on the shows that they want and every
show has its own rate. Hmm, that's lit.
Oh, this is exciting, man. Thank you.
More of the story, we for sure need to get you
into this LinkedIn masterclass.
Okay, LinkedIn is just showing podcasters
how to grow on LinkedIn?
LinkedIn or?
No, no, no, this is for anybody who's like an entrepreneur
or a coach or an author or speaker
or a corporate professional who just wants
to be an influencer on LinkedIn.
This is for anyone.
It has nothing to do with podcasts.
Got it.
And outcome for this class is what for me?
Basically, you're going to learn how to copyright.
You're going to learn the psychology of design.
You're going to walk away with a clear personal brand and voice guidelines.
And then I'm going to teach you how to hack the algorithm and all the engagement hacks.
And then when you're finished, you actually join my mastermind, which is like office hours
calls where I actually help everybody with their business.
And they join my engagement pod where then everybody supports each other's posts.
So it's like instant engagement on your content.
All right. So can you look at my LinkedIn and tell me what's wrong? It's posts. So it's like instant engagement on your content.
All right, so can you look at my LinkedIn
and tell me what's wrong?
It's terrible, I know.
I don't even navigate, and I got mad different pages.
This is managed pages, and I got five pages.
I have no idea.
So company pages are not it on LinkedIn.
You just look at my situation.
You wanna do a personal page on LinkedIn.
Okay. Does my personal page on LinkedIn. Okay.
Does my personal page have the content going to it?
He has 3,366 followers.
You do have content, but you're getting very little engagement.
You're getting five likes, two comments on your stuff, which is very little engagement.
So basically what that means is that you need to be proactive about bringing in your target
audience and you need to know the features that work on LinkedIn because you're posting
videos, but videos don't do good on LinkedIn.
Images do good on LinkedIn.
So you need to know the features that are working well on LinkedIn.
You need to understand how to pull in a proactive audience that takes viral action that's going
to engage on your content.
You need to know all the different hacks.
Like you can't put a link in your caption.
You've got to do be skimmable.
Like there's all these different hacks.
You can't even really use hashtags on LinkedIn.
It screws you up.
So there's like lots of little things that you need to learn about the
platform so that you can actually kind of break the algorithm and get reach.
Okay.
Uh, do you see any difference between, um,
and get rich. Okay.
Do you see any difference between
podcasters of color and white podcasters?
Are you seeing a difference at all?
In terms of?
I mean, audience approach.
Well, I think that, you know, I hope to see more podcasters
from different backgrounds kind of dominating the charts.
If you look at the charts, it's very white.
Sure. I'm one of the only like brown faces on the charts, right? So I hope that, you know,
we can figure it out and start to rank and, you know, do better. But
do you see white podcasters approaching it differently? Is there something else, you know,
that, you know, it's another strategy that other people are using that we're not. I think if you think about all the really big podcasters, they started a long time ago. So
you think about Lewis House, Tim Ferriss, Joe Rogan, all white men, when they start 12 years ago,
right? So they've a head start because it was way easier to get podcast listeners when there was
only 50 podcasts to choose from. So we kind of have to like be creative.
And the other thing to think about, and this is really important,
podcasts are not just audio only anymore.
This is a new era of podcasting.
Podcasts are being streamed on social.
A lot more people are actually watching podcasts on live stream.
People are more into YouTube now.
People are watching podcasts and short form content.
So you can dominate other platforms as a podcaster
and not just focus on the audio apps.
Cause the audio apps is pretty expensive to grow.
You really need to have a budget or get lucky.
Like it is, you need money to grow on the audio apps.
YouTube is really hard as well,
but if you can figure out how to like stream your podcast
on LinkedIn, stream your podcast on TikTok,
you can also get sponsorships and you're still considered a podcaster, a
simulcast, when you're streaming across all these different channels.
So I guess my advice would be don't just focus on the audio app, see where you can stand out.
Just like I stood out on LinkedIn, see where you can stand out. Maybe it's TikTok now,
maybe it's you know threads or just something else that you that you can stick out on and grow your presence on.
Then once you grow one channel, you then have leverage to grow the other ones.
Yeah. You know what? I haven't experienced that it costs a lot to grow on the audio side.
But you have a huge YouTube. You have the advantage, right? So if you have that YouTube presence,
people are gonna search for you on the audio apps,
but if you're starting from nothing,
you gotta go one channel big.
How did you grow your YouTube?
Just putting out content.
But I think it's good content though.
And I've been putting out content on YouTube
for a very long time.
How long?
I think my first video was 2010.
Yeah, so it's like you've been doing it for 13 years, right?
So it's like, it takes a long, it's consistency.
And 13 years ago, putting out content on YouTube
isn't as common as it is now, right?
So it's like, you found something
that was open and available and attacked it, right?
So it's like, what is out now
that somebody else can do that on?
That's real.
Okay.
Hala, thank you so much, man.
We will put a link in the description of this podcast
for the LinkedIn masterclass and use code social proof
for 30% off.
30% off.
And they'll still be able to get a mastermind?
Yeah, well.
Dang, that's dope. Yeah.
OK.
Yep, and it's yappmedia.io slash course.
Yes, there we go.
Use the promo code, OK?
Last thing, where do you see yourself in the next five years,
or do you see something that you know you're going to accomplish
within the next five years?
And I'm asking because I want to be able to watch this interview
five years from today
and say, you know what, I said she's going to do that five years ago.
How much you did it?
Well, I knew I'm going to write a book.
Okay.
Definitely going to write a book.
I think that I'm going to be by far the number one female podcaster.
I think I'm already on my way, but I think everyone's going to know me as like the female podcaster, sort of like Tim Ferriss' in the podcast world, but the female version of it.
And I'm building a podcast empire.
I already almost have the number one business, I think I have the number one business podcast
network already, and it's only been like a year of doing it.
So it's like, I think my company and network, yeah, media will be just as known as Wondery
and all these other huge networks like SiriusXM
and all these other big networks.
I think that my network is gonna be like up there
with everybody else.
Wow.
You know, we got him on the wall,
at least sold for 250 million, his network.
Yeah, like I can imagine something like that
definitely happening for me with my network. Yes, you take your always
Who are you looking for to join your network? So you've got to have at least a hundred thousand downloads
But as we get bigger, we're gonna, you know, keep stepping that number up
Most of our podcasters are getting three hundred thousand five hundred thousand downloads a month
You got to be in the business or entrepreneurship space because that's where we're focused. And preferably you should have at least
one other social channel,
whether that's YouTube, Instagram, LinkedIn,
that we can monetize.
Okay, all right, there it is.
All right, so listen, Val, thank you so much.
Take us out with a word of wisdom.
Okay, so my word of wisdom is that life is limitless.
You've really gotta believe
that there's no limits to your life.
I remember when I was in corporate
and I was sort of stuck,
it was because I told myself I wouldn't make it
and that like my career in entertainment was done.
And it wasn't until I like found myself again
and was like, okay, I'm gonna just give it one more shot.
And I'm so happy I did.
If I didn't give it one more shot,
I wouldn't be here today, right?
I would have been in a corporate job,
making $150,000 a year.
And maybe I would have been happy,
but certainly not as happy as I am now following my dream.
So you really need to believe that life is limitless.
And if a gatekeeper tells you no,
you need to do it anyway.
You need to find your own lane, find your own path.
Don't go knocking on everyone's door,
make your own door and just your own path. Don't go knocking on everyone's door, make your own door,
and just do it and believe in yourself.
That's a bar.
Thank you so much, man.
We can't close it out no better than that, man.
Make sure you follow Hala, okay.
Pick up that LinkedIn masterclass.
And also go get you some social proof,
meaning go build something really, really, really big,
but it's important that you document the process
so you can come back to your community
and teach them how you did what you did.
Alright, we are out of here. Peace.