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Welcome to the I Am Charles Schwartz Show. Today, we're diving deep into the world of podcasting with Jordan Harbinger, the host of The Jordan Harbinger Show, who transformed his passion for conversation into a media empire spanning 18 years. Jordan's journey is a testament to the power of authenticity and strategic long-term thinking. He built a podcast that not only attracts millions of listeners, but creates a blueprint for sustainable growth in a crowded digital landscape. Jordan is honest about his approach, from starting in his friend's basement to becoming one of the most respected voices in podcasting. You'll learn about his antiviral approach to content creation and how he leverages genuine connections to fuel steady organic growth. Jordan's focus is on building a available podcast model that emphasizes quality content and audience retention over quick viral hits. Whether you're looking to craft compelling interviews, master the art of audience engagement, or scale your podcast from zero to millions of listeners, Jordan's got the roadmap. So if you're ready to revolutionize your approach to podcasting, create a content strategy that converts casual listeners into diehard fans, and build a show that stands the test of time, this is the episode for you.

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Jordan is about to unveil the strategies that took him from a niche dating advice podcast to a versatile show, featuring conversations with everyone from scientists to ex-spies, all while maintaining his integrity and passion for genuine dialog. The show starts now. Welcome to the I Am Charles Schwartz Show, where we don't just discuss success. We show you how to create it. On every episode, we uncover the strategies and tactics that turn everyday entrepreneurs into unstable powerhouses in their businesses and their lives. Whether your goal is to transform your life or-Hi, welcome back.

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Today, we're with Jordan. Thank you so much for being here.

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Yeah, thanks for having me on, man.

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Absolutely. You've done something that a lot of people haven't, and we talked about it before we started recording that there isn't really any shortcuts to this, but I really wanted to talk about a little bit of your story and how you scaled to the level you're at with your podcast right now. So for those who don't know you, which has got to be shocking, tell us a little about your story.

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Yeah, it's hard to always put your business into a little nutshell, right?

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But I've been doing the Jordan Harbinger show or some iteration thereof for the past 18 years.

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And my business is actually quite simple.

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I've had many jaunts into, let's do training, let's do products, let's do these other things.

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But I always come back to the podcast.

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And since having kids, I've simplified my business quite a bit. And I think that's a hidden strategy that a lot of entrepreneurs decide not to take because they're always leaving money on the table, and we've trained ourselves not to do that and seize every opportunity.

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But I talk to smart people. I read books and talk to smart people.

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That's really what it is. Those conversations get recorded and they get put up on every podcast app and a Occasionally up on YouTube, although I only put maybe a quarter of my episodes there.

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And that's the business, man.

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And then Shill Mattresses, like every other podcaster, profit. That's really it.

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Shill Mattresses. So when you first started out, you were lucky because you were there before anyone else was doing it. That's right. I remember Joe Rogan talks about he was begging anybody to come on his show. So you've been doing it a really long time. But now that you've done it long enough, if someone's coming into this and we're all about scaling what people are doing, what are some of the things that people make massive mistakes on as you're trying to go in and scale their podcast? What are the things that they screw up from the beginning?

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Sure. I mean, my opinion as a long-time podcaster is people should generally not treat their podcast like a business. And I know that that's going to be really counterintuitive to audience because it's entrepreneurs, but I'm going to say it anyway.

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A lot of people start podcasting and they're like, This is so fun.

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I really enjoy it. I'm going to try and sell advertisers and scale this.

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I think that's typically a mistake in the beginning because, one, it's artsy, creative, whatever.

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It's a hobby, and it should stay a hobby for 99.99% of podcasters because 99.9 is the percentage of people who will probably never see a dime podcasting and will, in fact, lose money podcasting. Maybe it's 99%, maybe slightly more.

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It's fun. I agree. I love it.

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It's a lot of fun.

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If I had a billion dollars, what would I do?

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I'd podcast on a yacht instead of in this room that I'm in right now. I'd fly all my guests in first class and do it in a fancy studio. I don't know. But I would do it for free, for nothing. I would lose money on it.

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But most people can't afford to do that thing.

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I mean, I can't afford to do that thing either.

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So treat it as a hobby. Nobody's at home building model airplanes and it's like, I can't wait to monetize this. Nobody sets up their trains on Christmas from their collection and goes, One day I'm going to be a big model train guy and everyone's going to know my name.

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No one says that.

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But somehow with podcasting, it's different. It's, Yeah, we just do this thing.

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It's fun, but secretly, I hope that tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of people hear and or see this, and then we're going to start getting sponsorships, and then we're going to start making money.

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It's like, Why are you putting this pressure on yourself? If you want to do something that makes money, I would say podcasting is one of the worst businesses you could be in.

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The failure rate of a creative business, especially a podcast, again, is something along the lines of 99% or I should say that I should probably qualify this.

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99% of shows don't actually make money. If your goal is business, you're really better off doing just about anything else because you're still going to have the same small business failure rate as regular business, which is like most businesses are gone within four years. Except for now you're ratcheting that up by dozens of percentage points. But why? If your goal is really to get rich and famous or something, podcasting is the worst idea ever.

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So you should just not do it for that reason. And doing it for money at all is actually just a bad idea because your rate of success is going to be extremely low.

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Not only that, it requires a long time to build. There's a lot of bad things about podcasting that make it a really terrible business, but a fun hobby.

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It's like photography.

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You can buy a camera and run around taking photos, but there's some people that think, I'm going to sell these. It's delusional to bust out your iPhone and go somewhere and take a bunch of iPhone pictures and go, These are definitely worth a bunch of money.

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Nobody does that. It's unreasonable. But somehow, podcasting is the exception to that rule, and I don't really know why.

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At least people think it's the exception to the rule, and we have no idea why. But for those who For those of the listeners who haven't decided to just drive into traffic or jump off a building who are podcasters, what are some of the things that as you've gone through and you've done this and you've done it for a really long time, that you're like, Hey, this is what I would have done differently, or this is some of the things that, Hey, this tool really works, something that we can give them that's tangible walk aways. Because I agree for most of podcasting, as I started doing this, this isn't something I love doing. I love what the end result of it, but to sit down and have the cameras and all that, it's not something I love. That's not the purpose of it. So what are the things that you've learned that, Hey, strategically, this is an effective thing that I have found that has made this, that I get into that 0.9%?

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Yeah, that 0.9%.

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Is full of people who are really passionate about a topic. Shows like mine, the Jordan Harbinger Show, even higher percentage of failure because it's whatever I want to talk about, I'm going to do that.

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My audience goes, Oh, good. Jordan's interviewing, I don't know, some defector from North Korea or Dr. Fauci, love them or hate them, or a random mafia enforcer. My audience will come and listen to that. Joe Rogan, same thing. His audience will come and listen to that.

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Your audience, if you are brand new, is not going to come unless you are very specific.

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The start should be niching down.

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Do not start a podcast where we talk about sports and drink beer and hope that that is going to bring an audience.

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It should be a podcast where we talk about one very specific Triple A baseball team and drink beer, and we only talk about that team and associated stuff.

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If you're really into the, I don't know anything about baseball, but the Toledo Mudhens or something like that, people are going to be like, What is that?

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I think it's a farm team. It's a Triple A baseball team that feeds into the MLB.

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If you're really into that, then start a podcast on that because you're going to be the only game in town. Or if there is another game in town, they're going to quit after a few years because they're going to realize it's hard.

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Then pretty soon you're going to be experienced, and then you'll be the only game in town. So Leaching down is extremely important.

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When I first started, all I talked about was dating and relationships because I was 26 years old.

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That was the forefront of my life, dating relationships and some career stuff. A lot of guys my age, well, guys and gals, but mostly guys, cared about that stuff back then, back in the early 'auts. Then as I matured, my audience matured, my interest changed, and I let the podcast follow those interests.

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Not really a good strategy, though. But since it was a hobby, I was able to do Do that. That's important because if you start building a niche that you don't like dating, and then you get married and have kids, and now you're talking about Tinder, and you're like, How do you do, fellow kids, when it comes to dating?

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Because you haven't even used those apps. You don't know what Hinge is because you're 45 and you've been married for a decade.

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You're quickly going to go, This is terrible.

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Why am I doing this? I hate every second of it.

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But now it's your business.

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I really don't recommend that people do that.

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Start by niching down. Stay as flexible as you can because you're probably going to have to pivot unless this is a passion project that's been yours for a long time.

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If you're really into videography and you video birds, okay, there's probably a room for you in that niche.

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It's a blending of another passion of yours, so you're going to stay interested in it.

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If you're trying to follow trends, this is another thing. So niche down, yes. Follow trends, no.

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You can build a following quickly if you do a cryptocurrency podcast while crypto is hot. But then as soon as crypto is not hot anymore, nobody cares about you. So trend following is not great because pivoting is hard. Me pivoting from dating to whatever I'm interested in that week, that was tough. It took years. So don't think you're going to start the AI podcast, and then you're going to pivot into the crypto podcast, and then you're going to pivot into whatever the next big thing is, and you're just going to keep doing that because it's not going to work.

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It's not going to work. You're following those Venn diagrams. They don't always overlap. So chasing trends is bad.

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So start by niching Don't chase trends. Treat it as much as you can as a hobby, so making it your core business before it's really profitable.

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I mean, that's as a general rule, you should never do that with anything in a business, making it your core business before it's actually profitable. I'll expand this because there's a lot of really bad advice out there. This is not related to podcasting necessarily, but there's a lot of bad advice out there from seemingly pretty respectable high-profile folks in the internet space that say things like, Burn the ships, go all in, quit your day job. It's terrible, terrible advice.

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I'm glad that you agree because I hear this all the time, and it's advice given to young people, and it's really, really bad. You get these kids who are like, I live with my parents right now, and I'm going to college, and I'm also a server at this restaurant, but I really want to start a tech company.

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Some influencers like, Move into your friend's basement, drop out of school, and do your tech company.

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It's like, No, this is a This is a terrible advice. Really, really bad.

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Absolutely.

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Same thing with business.

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The other advice that drives me out of my mind in that same niche is people are that same idea. People are talking about, Well, you've got to get up at 4:00 in the morning. You got to work out 17 times, have 47 meetings, It's this addiction to hustle porn. It's addiction to this grind, and it's vial. It's not what's going to work. It isn't just brute force. We were talking about before the cameras came on, we're talking about how a lot of this is luck. Yeah, you need to be prepared. You need to do this stuff beforehand. You need to have those things lined But if you're going to sit there and work 120 plus hours a week and grind into it, you're just going to die. It's not going to guarantee you success. You cannot hard work your way to success. You have to fail your way to get there faster than anything else. It's one of those concepts that I push against unbelievably because I love what you talked about. You would say inch wide, mile deep. I don't know if there's podcasts out there for videographers of birds, but.

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I'm sure there are.

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I'm sure there are. There's a podcast for everything. When you went into it, you talked about how sometimes you You don't post on YouTube. Sometimes you don't post on YouTube. What differentiates that? When you're like, Hey, you know what? I started the podcast. I did this hard pivot from dating and relationships into what I'm doing now, which are my interests because you've got this bulletproof audience. What do you do now when you walk in and say, Okay, I'm not going to post it here? Or what makes you decide where to post, how to post, when to post? What are those things?

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Yeah.

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So with YouTube, it's a trend-chasing machine, and it's a discoverability algorithm.

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So for me, I don't like to be told by the matrix, the machine, what I need to create.

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So YouTubers, there's this interesting phenomenon that I call the Jerry Springer effect.

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Do you remember? You know that show, Jerry Springer?

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I do know Jerry Springer.

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I don't know how old you are, but do you know who Heraldo Rivera is?

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I do. I remember when the guy broke his nose, I was very happy that day.

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That's so funny that you remember that because it's exactly what I'm going to talk about.

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So this is the Jerry Springer effect. What happens is Jerry Springer used to be a serious journalist. I think he was even either the mayor of Cleveland or the governor of Ohio. He ran for office.

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Yeah, he ran for office.

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He's a smart guy, and he was very well-spoken.

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It's funny that I stumbled before saying that. He was very well-spoken and just very clear thinker.

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He did a daytime talk show, and Heraldo Rivera did a daytime talk show. Heraldo had on, for those who don't remember this or haven't seen it, he had on Black Panthers and Ku Klux Klan members or something.

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They got in a fight and they started beating each other up, and one of them threw a chair and it hit Heraldo in the face and broke his nose and it made the news.

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He had a nose bandage on for the next two weeks of taping or whatever it was until the season ended.

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I don't remember.

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His ratings went through the roof. Then, Jenny Jones, Jerry Springer, Ricky Lake, I can't even remember who else, but all those folks from that era, they went, Oh, I can't just actually have real serious conversations on this show anymore. I need to be the Ringling Brothers, Circus, WWE, wrestling, nonsense, drama, reality, TV every day. Heraldo was like, Oh, my God, I've struck gold.

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His show became total trash. It probably was before anyway because it's Heraldo, but whatever.

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Jerry Springer went from intelligent, nuanced conversation for people that had brain cells and became a circus. Well, you can't go backwards from that. Jerry tried. He tried.

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He tried to run for office again, I think, and the polling was like, That guy, isn't that the Hulk Hogan of... No, I'm not doing that. That's not a serious candidate. It might work in 2024. Rip, Jerry. It's too late for him to find out.

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Yeah, sorry, Gary. I mean, you'd have to have dementia or delusion at this point for it to work. That's right. You're not qualified. You have to use your delusional or dementia.

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He might be more qualified than some of our candidates.

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Exactly. It's true. Having passed already.

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But the point is here that he really couldn't go back from this, and he never quite recovered from it. Youtube does this to every channel that's on there or every successful channel.

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I know a lot of friends of mine who are YouTubers, and they will start out like, I interview scientists and psychologists, and I'm very learned and I like this stuff.

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Then it's like, I tune in a year later because I'm like, What's this guy been up to? It's like the latest political drama, and the trailers are like, One thing that you'll I'll never be able to unsee.

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It's like explosion.

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It's just the whole thing is turned into this nonsense.

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I'll talk to them and go, What happened? They go, The YouTube algorithm. When we do crap like this, it gets a million views. When I interview a brain scientist that nobody's heard of and we have a a 90-minute serious conversation, it doesn't work.

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For me, I thought, Okay, I can either let the algorithm decide what I'm allowed to create in order to make a living, or I walk uphill both ways, is create audio, which has terrible discoverability, but retains audience. I can do an episode on the Jordan Harbinger show where I interview a controversial person, but then next week I can go, Here's science about the ocean. That gets as many downloads, and I make as much money from each of the episodes because the advertisers pay the same amount of money. On YouTube, I do an interview with Dr..

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Fauci, and it goes on YouTube. Then I do an interview with an ocean scientist, and I go, Don't bother. No one's going to want to. No one's going to search for this. The algorithm is not going to serve it, and it's just going to damage the channel.

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It becomes this thing where I just don't even bother because it's not even going to make the return on the investment I make to edit the damn thing together.

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That's unfortunate, but that's a platform issue. There's no avoiding this. I only post things that my YouTube team thinks is going to do well on YouTube, but I don't want to look at the stats myself. I don't want to pander to the algorithm because that changes your show forever, and you start chasing that. Then that's how you go from serious discussion to Jerry Springer, and you can never come back. If you are a podcast that only interviews whoever is going to get clicks, and then you try and have somebody on and it's serious, it's just not going to work.

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It's going to damage your channel to post it to YouTube. But also those people don't want to come on your show because the last five guests that you had were talking about how such and such, Anderson Cooper's a lizard body, and the Jews this, or COVID's not real caused by 5G towers. It's just like you're no longer a serious contender for journalism. I refuse to do that.

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I don't pay attention to YouTube. My team does its own thing, but it's siloed to the point where it doesn't affect what I create, and I refuse to think or worry about it in any way.

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How much of this influences... When you look at Joe Rogan, and Joe Joe has gone through and he's gone some serious stuff, and then some of his stuff is just wild. How much do you think that it's Joe versus chasing algorithm? Is there any way that you can see that? Because I think once you get to the point where you and Joe are, you're like, I can do whatever I want. I'm curious. I'm curious about the fact that you just sat there and said, You know what? I'm not going to do certain things. I might do it, but I'm not going to publish it in YouTube. I'm just curious, when does it reach the point where you're just like, Screw it. I want to talk to the lizard guy who thinks that the Earth is flat and that COVID was created by McDonald's or whatever it was.

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Right.

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So Joe Rogan has always been into conspiracies.

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In fact, even when he was an actor on news radio, he played to himself, which was a guy who really likes conspiracy theories and all this other stuff.

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I don't think Joe Rogan, I don't know him, but I don't think he has a malicious streak where he's like, I'm going to mislead everyone for money.

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I really don't think that's it. I think he believes that maybe the moon landing was fake. Then he's like, No, you're an idiot for telling me that.

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He thinks about it later and it comes to his senses. I think he does go Oh, man, maybe COVID is this fake thing.

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Then later on, he's like, No.

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It's hard to tell what's in somebody's head.

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Joe Rogan, I don't sense this malice streak.

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There are other creators that I won't name who I know damn well are well aware that what they're saying is complete BS, and they just don't care because they've been captured by the YouTube algorithm.

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This is the phenomenon of audience capture.

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They know that if they have on somebody who is just horrifically misinformed and a lunatic, that they're going to get clicks. Then, and you can tell that they believe this because their cynicism eventually shines through. They start to grift their audience.

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There's one channel, and I'll tell you off here, but I'm not a talk out of school, but there was one channel that he had a real conspiracy theorist on who thought that Jews were secretly lizard people, reptilians, and that COVID was fake and blah, blah, blah. The standard. I'm Jewish, so I'm always like, And? Is that weird? Is that a My last name is Schwartz.

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Is that a deal breaker for you? Yeah.

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Exactly. My last name is Schwartz. I said something like, Yeah, we're lizard people. Yes, we killed Jesus.

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How do you think I got here so fast? We do have a secret system of underground tunnels. Obviously, I can dig really fast.

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I do that thing. My former friend, unfortunately, had this guy on, and then he was like, Oh, YouTube's trying to cancel us. Youtube's trying to cancel us. I need your money to build a parallel platform where I can broadcast truth. I'm like, You've become Alex Jones. He collected a quarter million bucks or something like that, or I think it might have even been like 2 million bucks.

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I lost count.

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Then he never built the platform. Of course he didn't. You don't need another platform other than YouTube because you're being censored. You're just grifting. You don't do that if you really believe in your cause, generally. You only do that if you don't respect your audience and you feel like it's okay to steal from them. That's the The worst of the Jerry Springer effect. You become so deeply unserious that you say, Screw everyone, and you just rob anybody that you can because you've become that cynical.

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I really personally refuse to look at...

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Well, I can't guess what's in Joe Rogan's mind, but I do know that other YouTubers have been fully captured by the algorithm, which it really can break your business. If you are not getting the clicks you want, it hurts your ego and feelings. That's a bummer. But what it really does is make impossible for you to pay your rent because you can't get a million views on a video that doesn't have those elements, those kooky, stupid elements in it. Some creators are immune to this. Joe Rogan is so big, he can have anybody on and it would be fine. But there are other creators that are right on the edge. They get 5,000 views for a video that's serious, and they get 150,000 views for a video that's not. One of them lets them do this full-time.

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One type of content, I should say, lets them do this full-time, and the other one, they're at working at Applebee's. It's an easy choice for them, and it's easy for me to judge.

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But for me, I don't even want my ego or feelings or brainpower to be wrapped up in that because it does get tempting.

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Let me phrase this in a more realistic way. When I get a million and a half views on a video, it does get tempting for me to go, Wow, I made a lot of money off that.

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What other people... Who else do I know that might do that? And then I start to go, Do I want to create content sent like this?

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Not really.

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And I go back and read a book and do a show with a smart person and it does how it does on YouTube, or it never even goes up there in the first place.

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I think it goes back to what you're talking about before that you just can't come back. Once you do certain things, once you've crossed that line, there's no comment back from it. So even if you're going to hunt after it, either you're going to do it or you're going to not. And you talked about audience capture. What are the things that you do if you're not going to go after the people who think that we're lizard people or the Earth is flat or the moon landing didn't happen or those situations, how do you go about doing properly, effectively, audience capture if you're trying to do this in a way that doesn't make you want to jump off a bridge?

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Yeah. I mean, audience capture is a specific phenomenon in media parlance. It's a specific term. And what it basically means is you start to think about who's in your audience and you tell them what they want to hear, and you build an audience based on that. And so you see people doing that when they lean into conspiracy theories.

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And there's a really good example in a guest of my show.

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Her name is Renee DiResta. She wrote a book about this thing. There's an example in there about a guy who plays the guitar.

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He plays the guitar and he likes the guitar, and he makes a YouTube video, and he gets 100 people viewing it.

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Then he goes, I'm going to play live. He plays live and people send him $20, $25. He puts on a little concert and people like him, and he's happy with that.

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I mean, he still works at a bar down the street, bussing tables or serving somewhere or doing an engineering job for all I know. But then he starts talking about something while he's playing the guitar and messing around. One of those topics really strikes a cord. It has to do with the vaccine. Then the chat goes wild and people start sending him things and he starts reading those things in his spare time. He goes, Yeah, some of you guys sent me these articles about, I don't know, let's say, the vaccine having poison in it or microchips in it or whatever it is. Then those people get louder and then they talk about him in forums where those people hang out, and then more of them join, and then they tend to be the ones who are tipping him, and then they send him something to read, and he talks about it again. That rinse and repeat, and 18 months later, this guy's doing nothing with the guitar.

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Maybe he plays something, but basically, he's become an influencer that is anti-COVID restrictions or whatever it is. Look, I'm picking an example here. It doesn't matter what you agree with or not if you're out there listening to this. But that's what audience capture really is. And people do this all the time. It's a subconscious process in the beginning. And later on, it becomes something It becomes a grift.

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So the way to do this in a fair way is to not actually capture audience.

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In any deliberate way, what I do is I follow my own interests. And if I think that there's a shred of a chance that somebody else in my audience would be interested in it, then I will do a show on that topic.

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Since I have a large audience, there is a really good chance that somebody will actually resonate with that. People that didn't think they were going be interested in it, those people can either listen or not. When they listen, what's great about it is they often go, I never thought I would be interested in this, but I was. It turned out I was interested in this after all. Thank you for doing a show on this topic. Now, that's the beauty of podcasting. Youtube, you cannot get away with this most of the time. The past few shows on the past few weeks here that I've had, I had a guy on the show about AI and how it's going to help solve hunger, change the way people live, look into solutions for things like climate change, an in-the-weeds discussion.

[00:26:34]

Before that, I did an exposé on big dairy and agriculture. The day before that, I do every Friday, I get advice questions. People ask me crazy things like, How do escape a cult or get a raise at work. I do those. Those don't end up on YouTube.

[00:26:48]

The week before that, I had Dr. Fauci.

[00:26:50]

That's quite a varied mix of folks. Those are my interests.

[00:26:56]

It's really interesting with Dr. Fauci how he's, what, 83 Three. Three. And he seems to be more with it than the 70-year-olds that are in that same field right now. The irony and the hypocrisy, it's really interesting in that one. If you're going to do this and you're going to grow an audience, there's a lot of people that do it through doing paid ads. There's a lot of people who do it through getting guests. Because there's four ways to get an audience. You build it, you borrow it, you buy it, and you beg for it. And begging is the most ineffective. You just think, Oh, please subscribe, please follow, and then you go through that process. When you're trying to build an audience as a podcaster, or at this point, anything, if you're not going to sell your and you're not going to become the Hervardo Rivera's of the planet out there. What are the ways that you found, other than just time, that works best to create and to get an audience?

[00:27:40]

Yeah. So something that will surprise no one is creating content that people really want to share. There are white hat ways to do this and black hat ways to do this. The creation of content that people want to share can either be stuff that is really controversial, and that's what works on TikTok. I don't use TikTok, I don't use social media really at all. It's shallow engagement. I answer people's incoming messages from show fans, and that's it.

[00:28:08]

But the other way to do it is to create a conversation that is so novel, unique, and interesting that smart people go, Oh, my God, my brother-in-law would love this.

[00:28:18]

He's so interested in virology. He's a virologist. Or, Oh, my God, my friend would love this. He works for SpaceX, and this is about colonizing Mars. He would really be into this.

[00:28:28]

I encourage to share episodes with a specific type of person. At the end of my show, as I say, Share this episode with somebody you love. In fact, if you know somebody who's interested in space exploration, rockets, technology, evolution, or whatever that was discussed during that episode, share this episode with them.

[00:28:43]

Then people go, Oh, yeah.

[00:28:44]

No, actually, I hadn't thought about that, but my brother-in-law who went to intern at NASA, he might be really interested in this.

[00:28:51]

It gets people thinking and sharing.

[00:28:54]

That's really the way to do it. The problem is that that's really hard because the idea is you've created really good in-depth, engaging content that people really care about. That's the gold standard for any content creator, and it takes a lot of practice and a lot of resources, whether it's cognitive or financial, to create something like that.

[00:29:14]

When I do my show, I don't just show up and have the guests sit down in front of me. I read the whole book cover to cover. I take notes. I usually start off with eight pages of notes for an hour long interview, and of course, I'm following my curiosity during that time. I record for 70 to 90 minutes, sometimes even more. I recently did show that was two and a half hours long. I cut it into two parts. I mean, that book that I read for that show, I guarantee you was at least 400 pages long. That's a lot of work. That probably took me 10 hours plus, 12 hours plus to prepare, a couple hours to record it, and that doesn't count engineering resources on my team of cutting it together and posting it and uploading it and correcting the sound and all that stuff, color correction in the video. That stuff, I don't even count that because that's not me doing that work.

[00:29:57]

But it's still resource allocation. Creating Meeting things like that is very difficult.

[00:30:01]

That's why people grab an iPhone, talk into it, and say that this is a podcast.

[00:30:07]

There's nothing wrong with that. You should start that way because then you'll see if people- As long as you're not trying to monetize it. That's right. Then you'll see if people actually care about what you have to say. When I started the show, man, it was in my friend's basement. We recorded it, we smashed it into a crappy MP3. There was noise all over the place. We were making noise on the table. The microphones were too... I mean, there was a million things wrong with it, but we put it out there and people were like, Wow, these are real. Back then, in 2006, it was novel for guys to talk about their dating life in a show and prepare for a conversation. No one was doing this. Then when I was like, I'm going to read books and talk to the authors and ask them questions, nobody was doing this. It was like me and Terry Gross at Freshair, who had a huge radio show on NPR, has me and her were doing this. I was doing it in podcast format for like, Young 20 something dudes, and she was doing it for literally everyone else.

[00:31:01]

That was it. There weren't other shows doing this. That was my novel idea.

[00:31:06]

It doesn't really work anymore. It works for me because I've been doing it for so long and people trust me and expect that stuff from me over at the Jordan Harbinger show. But starting another one that's like that without some novel angle, that's really tough, man. This is not PC, but whatever. You ever look at those old photos or old videos, and there's a bunch of white dudes playing basketball for the NBA, and you're like, What year is this?

[00:31:34]

Yeah, but you're like, What year is this? And it's like, Oh, yeah. This is before African-Americans really became into basketball and took over. Or you look at football and there's guys running with no helmets, and it's all just a bunch of white dudes, and you're like, What? This is when... These are the before times. I started my podcast in the before times, where you could show up and be like, You know what? I'm going to do a totally different show. I'm going to make notes, and I'm going to do it for dudes, and I'm going to do it every week. People were like, Wow, no one has ever thought to do this before. It's a joke now because there's 3 million podcasts, and it's all a bunch of white dudes talking about the same crap. That's really what it is. Over and over and over. Over and over again.

[00:32:17]

When I started this, it literally was a bet. We literally sat down and said, You're going to create a podcast because I was complaining. It's entrepreneurship. If you're going to complain about something, you got to create two viable solutions for it. I wanted tactical things. When a lot of people talk When you're talking about trying to adhere to the platform, you're talking about YouTube earlier. With your audience, do you offboard them to a platform? Do you create your own mastermind? What are the things that you've done that you're like, Hey, I still can retain my audience just in case I get kicked off in any way?

[00:32:42]

Yeah. So podcasting is decentralized, so nobody can kick me off of anything.

[00:32:47]

That's the beauty of podcasting. Youtube can demonetize you or kick you out, but I don't care.

[00:32:52]

So in order for me to get removed from podcast apps, a bunch of different companies have to decide that I'm so harmful that they're going to collude to remove me.

[00:33:04]

I don't think that is going to happen. There are literally Nazi podcasts out there. They're still there.

[00:33:11]

Why would they leave those up and remove a show that I do about where I give advice to somebody who has...

[00:33:16]

They found their sister on OnlyFans or something. Who cares?

[00:33:19]

We are not even in the top 10,000 most dangerous types of dialog.

[00:33:27]

We don't even curse on the show most of the time. When we do, bleep it out. We are really in no danger of that.

[00:33:33]

Do I have an email list? Sure. But podcasting is decentralized, and that's one of the things I love about it is I've got, again, back to the YouTube crowd.

[00:33:42]

I did a show on something and I had a bunch of friends go, I would love to do a show on that.

[00:33:46]

I'm like, Yeah, let's do it. I'll even give you my notes. Why don't I join you?

[00:33:49]

They're like, No way. Youtube is going to demonetize us if I do that and that damages the channel and watch time is going to go down and we're going to have this happen.

[00:33:57]

It's like, Oh, you can't talk about whatever you want. You're self-censoring because this has done poorly for other channels in the YouTube algorithm. Or you say something, let's say, about China, and China sends 10,000 people to report your video for violence, even though there's no violence in it. Well, YouTube just takes your video down until you can have it manually reviewed three weeks later, by which point you are no longer able to monetize it.

[00:34:21]

So then you stop doing that stuff pretty quick.

[00:34:24]

Go ahead and report the Jordan Harbinger show. I'm sure wherever you do that, first of all, I don't even know how you do that, but if you do, it's going to take them eight months to open that email, and then they're going to go, Huh? Delete. You can't do anything about it. You really can't. The only way to really hit me would be to hit me in the wallet by going after my sponsors. What are you going to tell them?

[00:34:43]

You don't like something I said?

[00:34:45]

Go ahead. They know what I've said. That's why they paid to appear on the show and paid for my endorsement. Dozens/hundreds of sponsors do that. You have to convince all of them, pretty much, or a significant majority of them, that I am so toxic, they shouldn't do that anymore, even though I make money for them.

[00:35:03]

Good luck finding an example of something I've done on my show that's going to stop them from doing that. There isn't one.

[00:35:09]

When it comes to getting sponsors and getting affiliates, which most people will never happen, but what is the best way to approach to get the sponsorships, to get the affiliate programs?

[00:35:19]

I hire this out. I have a network, podcast1. They pay for my web hosting, they handle the tech back-end, and they have a sales team that sells all the spots. I don't have to worry about this at all.

[00:35:29]

I have additional sponsorship revenue that comes in that falls into my lap, that's a minor percentage of my revenue each month, which is great.

[00:35:36]

If podcast one goes out of business tomorrow or something like that.

[00:35:38]

But even if they do, I can move my show somewhere else and I could sign a contract with a competitor overnight if their company was going under.

[00:35:46]

I'm not waiting. There are no danger of that, by the way. Just for everyone who does, I don't want to get in trouble for saying this using this example. Podcast one is fine. They're doing good.

[00:35:53]

Yeah, podcast one is fine.

[00:35:54]

We're on solid ground.

[00:35:55]

But they sell all the ads. I recommend that. The problem is they're not interested in selling small shows.

[00:36:01]

You have to have 50,000 downloads per episode or whatever it is, maybe 25, I don't know, in order for them to make enough money where they can have somebody, where it's worthwhile for them to get out of bed, so to speak.

[00:36:13]

There are marketplaces for smaller shows to get sponsorships sold.

[00:36:19]

I can't vouch for any of them because I don't use any of them.

[00:36:24]

Are there any tools that you have found that people could use as they're listening to this? Because I'm sure there's some people who had no idea what podcast one was, and that's brand new to them. What are some of the tools that you use? This saves my team an immense amount of time. I'm a big fan of OPT, which is other people's time. I outsource and systematize everything. If someone put a gun to my head and say, Hey, what tools are your staff using? I'm like, I don't know. Send them an email. I won't take it if you don't know. What are some of the things that you know that are like, This is resourceful, this is helpful, this is something that we like?

[00:36:54]

Sure. We use Descript.

[00:36:55]

What this is is a program that you can dump the audio files in, even It's in video files now, I think. It gives you a full transcript of the interviews, or in my case, of the interviews. You can edit the text.

[00:37:08]

You can do Control F, find that place where I talked about China and just delete it because I don't want that in there.

[00:37:15]

Or I said something, I said Mexico and I meant El Salvador. Delete that.

[00:37:18]

You can go back in and you can edit the text and delete it.

[00:37:21]

Then from there, you can publish it to various platforms.

[00:37:23]

We use that for the transcript.

[00:37:24]

We use it for the show notes. If there's AI tools in there that can condense things or give you ideas. I don't personally use it on my team. Somebody on my team uses it. But I know that we've been customers of theirs for, I don't know, however long it's even existed, half a decade or a decade now. I own shares in the company. That's not why I recommend it. I just coincidentally was given shares in the company because they acquired another company that I was advising. That's really awesome. Another company, the company that I advised that got acquired, they're called Squadcast. It allows you to record high-quality interviews. Zoom is okay, but It's low quality. It compresses the video, compresses the audio. Squadcast gives you local... It's like you're in the same room. It sends the local file from them and the local video file, uploads it to essentially what a Dropbox platform would be, and then sends it to the creator. You get uncompressed HD quality, both audio and video, and it results in a much more professional production. That is not expensive. Squadcast. Fm is really nice to use. I use other stuff that's not sexy, right?

[00:38:27]

Google Drive. Okay, fine. Some Something that allows me to get through hundreds/thousands of pieces of fan mail every single month is Superhuman. It's an email program. It's lightning fast. It lays on top of Gmail. You don't need to change your email address, but it uses keyboard shortcuts, and it is super fast. There's AI responses built in. There's reminders. You email me and I go, Yeah, okay, let's do this, but now it's not the right time.

[00:38:50]

Let's do something in two weeks.

[00:38:51]

I just do a quick thing on the keyboard and it bounces that email back to me in two weeks and says, You and Charles are going to talk about, I don't know, making spaghetti. I'm like, Oh, yeah, right. I don't have to track those things. I don't have to remember those things. Or I can ask you something and I could say, If he doesn't respond, remind me in three days or a week. I don't know how I did this before that happened.

[00:39:15]

Was I just trying to remember to see if people replied to me?

[00:39:19]

I have no idea. But now I use it for pretty much every single email that I send because I need a response, and I don't want to have to mentally track it. Superhuman for email, Squadcast for recording, and Descript for production is what I use.

[00:39:34]

Ben, I really appreciate you coming on the show. If someone wants to track you down, if someone wants to find you and gain access to you, what's the best way for people to interact with you and ask you more questions and learn more about you?

[00:39:43]

Sure. Well, the Jordan Harbinger Show, H-A-R-B-I-N-G-E-R, is wherever fine podcasts are sold, Apple, Spotify, the works.

[00:39:52]

Like I said, I put a couple of episodes here and there on YouTube. Not many, not most.

[00:39:56]

And I'm available at jordanharbinger.

[00:39:59]

Com. There's There's a form there. People can email me. I'm pretty good about responding. It'll take like a month, but it happens. I promise you. Jordanharbinger. Com.

[00:40:09]

I'm happy to hear from people who are starting a show or just want to say hi or listen to a show.

[00:40:15]

I'm I'm all ears, man.

[00:40:17]

I really appreciate you coming on the show. Yeah, thanks for having me on.

[00:40:20]

See you next time. Yeah, thanks for having me on.

[00:40:20]

Thank you. Absolutely.

[00:40:22]

As we wrap up this insightful conversation, we hope Jordan's incredible 18-year journey in podcasting has inspired you to approach content creation with authenticity and a long-term perspective. We're immensely grateful to Jordan for sharing his wealth of experience. His honest discussion about building a podcast empire, the importance of niche selection, and the power of genuine audience connection is truly priceless for content creators at any stage of their journey. To our listeners, your commitment to growing your podcast and pursuing your passions drive us to continue delivering these transformative dialogs. We deeply appreciate your ongoing support and engagement. For those to revolutionize their podcasting approach and master the art of sustainable audience growth, you won't want to miss Jordan's in-depth companion guide. It's packed with practical strategies, including his step-by-step process for creating compelling content, techniques for organic audience building, and tips for evolving your podcast over time. This valuable resource is available now on our website at podcast. Iamcharleschwartz. Com. It's your guide to crafting a podcast that stands the test of time and resonates deeply with your audience. Remember, authenticity and consistent value are your keys to standing out in the crowded podcasting landscape. So go ahead, create content that truly matters, and watch your audience grow.

[00:41:39]

Until our next session, keep innovating, stay.