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A Great Microphone For Solo Podcasters and Professional Podcast Guests

A Great Microphone For Solo Podcasters and Professional Podcast Guests

Episode 887 Published 2 years, 11 months ago
Description

Today I'm talking about how I made 35% more than a host read ad. The POWER of feedback, and I'm playing with a new microphone that really lets me dial in a great sound. 

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The Knee Jerk Reaction to Podcast Ads May Be Missing Other Opportunities

I've heard the average host-read ad in a podcast pays about $25 per 1000 downloads. Less than 10% have the needed 10,000 downloads per episode to get a "big sponsor." In some cases, they may have enough for ads that pay anywhere from $3.85 - $7 CPM (boo!). 

On Ask the Podcast Coach, I mentioned Switchy ( A link tracker and more) from App Summo (where it's a one-time payment for life). I earned $17.20. Obviously, I'm not going to retire on that, but the show doesn't have a huge audience. When I calculated the CPM, it was $34. So, if you're getting $5 CPM with your programmatic ads, you might want to mix in an affiliate that truly fits your audience. (and buy my book Profit From Your Podcast: Proven Strategies That Turn Listeners into a Livelihood

For People Looking to Guest On Podcasts (and not start a show), the new Rode PodMic USB is a great choice.

The mic is both USB and XLR, so if you later want to plug it into an interface like a Rodecaster Duo, you can. 

It comes with a sturdy pop filter (the original PodMic was east to "pop." Its all-back design is cool. 

You can use software that has Aphex processing and tweak the sound of your microphone and then SAVE THAT SOUND into the microphone. So when you plug it in via USB, you're sound is right where you left it. 

It works with Rode's Capture app, so if you want to record directly to your phone, you can. (I had to use a USB C to Lightning Cable). Likewise, if your computer doesn't have a USB C input, you'll need a USB to USB C Connector

The bottom line is for around $200 you end up with a single-channel roadcaster. 

The Negatives

While this microphone is obviously meant to be on a stand, when I had it on a boom arm it was very sensitive to any kind of tapping on the des

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