iPods and Podcasting for Learning and Sales Enablement


The Corporate Podcast Push

What do Duke University, IBM, Capital One, Newsweek and Barenaked Ladies all have

in common? Answer: they are all reaching out to staff, students, and customers with

a new and powerful tool - podcasting. You may have heard about podcasting from

your kids or on the news, but podcasting is much more than some phenomenon

started by the rock and roll or techy crowd. Podcasting is a powerful communication

tool being used to reach global and mobile audiences, save people time and, most

importantly, really connect with their audiences in news ways - in today's

communication/message glut. But let's take a look at what podcasting is, who is

using and why it is so effective for both business and individuals.

First, we'll look at the size and scale of the podcasting phenomenon...

-- A recent study by the Pew Internet and American Life Project found that more than 22 million American adults own Ipods or and MP3 player and 29% of them have

downloaded podcasts or listened to podcast that have been "pushed" to them. That

equates to 6 million people listening to podcasts. Market researchers and analysts

continue to buoy up podcasting's future with latest figures suggesting a US

audience alone of 56 million by 2010.

-- Jupiter Research recently predicted that US digital music player sales would

grow to 56 million by 2010, up from 16.2 million in 2004 and by 2010, three-

quarters of all people who own portable digital music players will listen to podcasts,

a growth from less than 15% last year.

What is podcasting?

Whether you describe it as the greatest communication tool since email, or as an

RSS feed for audio, podcasting is a way to "push" audio content to subscribers for

virtually zero cost. Podcasting allows anyone (me, you, IBM, or NBC) to post audio

content that gets pushed to any subscriber's desktop and then directly to their iPod

or MP3 player. This is global. Anyone, anywhere can "tune in" to your podcast and

learn what you have to offer or say. You don't need to be NBC with a global

distribution infrastructure. Now people can "subscribe" to a podcast and have new

content "pushed" out to them without them having to surf the web, download MP3s

or burn CD's.

Ideas/Stories/Voices ? Audio/MP3's ? Internet ? PC ? MP3

player

All the arrows go in one direction. Once someone has subscribe to your podcast,

your content get "pushed" out to them. There is no turning in to stations with

podcasting. You don't have to visit a website to find streaming podcasting. Podcasts

show up (pushed) when new content is produced. If you are a subscriber, you get

the podcast right then. All you need is an Ipod or MP3 player of any kind for

listening, thus the word podcasting.

The term "Podcasting" is derived from the iPod (Apple Computer's popular device

for playing compressed audio files) and "broadcasting." Podcasting allows for audio

files that would have been previously downloaded and played on a personal

computer to be automatically downloaded and listened to on portable music playing

devices (such as the iPod and other MP3 players).

Having originated in the world of blogging, some have even referred to podcasting

as "audio blogging." For many, podcasting is a logical next step from blogging. As

Business Week Senior Writer Stephen Baker observes, "The heart of the podcasting

movement is in the world of blogs, those millions of personal Web pages that have

become a global sensation. In a blogosphere that has grown largely on the written

word, podcasts add a soundtrack."

Now that you know what a podcast is, let's look at where they come from: who is

producing the "pushed audio content."

Who is producing podcasts?

The answer is wide ranging. Teenagers, techies and rock musicians were early

adopters. Today you see the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Business Week, ESPN and news

programs of all types producing, distribution and marketing podcasts. The number

of podcasts available is growing at a very rapid pace. In late 2004, there were close

to 500 podcasts available. Today there are over 10,000 different podcasts to choose

from.

Now that podcasting has becoming more mainstream, corporate and non-corporate

organizations are getting into the act, using podcasting to connect with customers,

students, staff and partners. Here are some examples:

-- Duke University handed out iPods to their entire 2005 freshman class so they

could receive podcasts that included university news, class work and social content.

-- Capital One University has handed out over 3000 iPods to support corporate

training and communications. This includes, leadership training, sales, customer

service and other topics.

-- IBM has created podcasts to show their thought leadership to customers

investors and prospects.

-- Keane Inc. has handed out over 100 ipods to their global sales force to share

training, customers' stories and organizational content.

Why have these and other organizations gotten into podcasting? They have gotten

into it because they know their audience (whether internal or external) is inundated

with text-based content: emails, articles, the web portals, and marketing messages.

Podcasting allows them a unique medium to reach and connect with their audience.

iPods will be part of Duke University's new Duke Digital Initiative (DDI). "We've been

focusing on iPods and other mobile computing, but our wider goal is to integrate

technology broadly into the teaching and learning process," said Peter Lange, Peter

Lange, the university's provost and senior academic officer. "The iPods have helped

jump-start this process, and we plan to keep pushing ahead."

Listeners love podcasting because it delivers rich content directly to them, in a form

that allows them to save time, control what they hear and listen to while

commuting, working or whenever it works for them. No longer is learning tied to a

book, PC screen or web portal.

Content is still king in any communication, especially recorded podcasts. Podcasting

is the delivery tool. Compelling content ensures continuous listening and not a flip

of the power switch or turn of the dial.

Should you podcast?

Podcasting is not answer to all your learning and communication problems. As great

as audio is, like any medium, it has its limits. While audio allows users to multi task,

it is not easily scanned - which means you consider the listeners needs very

carefully. You must provide value.

Corporate podcasting is different that individuals or media podcasting. The

standard for a corporate podcast is much higher than for individual or media. Your

staff and customers expect certain from your communication with them. You can't

just offer long-winded rants, self serving commercials or cute content. It is all about

value. When producing that value, ask yourself; who and how will you produce your

podcast? Who will review it and how? Will you get it transcribed? There are legal

issues to consider as well.

Despite these issues podcasting can be simple. Once you have determined your

format and established a process the whole process gets much easier. Still

podcasting takes a proactive effort, a planned approach, creative development and

the courage to try new things. But if you have the courage, and are willing to put the

front-end work into it podcasting and mobile audio can provide huge benefits. If

you would like to:

-- Reach a global audience

-- Connect with that audience in a new and effective ways

-- Save your audience time

-- Share the passion, experience and stories of your business

...try podcasting - it works!

© 2006 Tim Keelan, StoryQuest Inc.








Tim Keelan is the founder of StoryQuest Inc. A Chicago based firm that produces peer-based mobile audio learning and communication tools. You can reach Tim at tkeelan@storyquest.us or by calling StoryQuest at 312-258-0111.


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