Millennials Choosing Podcasting Not Blogging

Published: Nov. 14, 2018, 4 p.m.

Why Millennials Are Choosing Podcasting Over Blogging To Build Their Personal Brands\n\nAccording to a recent Forbes online article, Has 'Millennial Travel' Gone Too Far?," Millennials are on the move far more than generations before them and their mobile devices are their lifelines. \n\nMillennials want to stay connected. Millennials want to make their mark. To do these, more and more millennials are developing a personal, as well as a professional brand, that they can expand into a growing community.\n\nEarly on, millennials was encouraged to create blogs and websites with portfolios. \nPodcasts were rarely mentioned. But millennials have found that podcasts can be an important part of their branding toolkits \u2013 important enough that they appear to be abandoning blogs for them.\n\nThis transition could be trace back as millennials realized that they themselves were not reading many blogs. According to a recent online article from Jeff Bullas, over 41% of millennials have no patience for text content that is too long. So if you want to say something, say it quick and say it well.\n\nIf they were not reading blog posts that much, their own audiences were probably not either.\n\nWhy do podcasts appeal to millennial podcasters and millennial listeners?\n\nPodcasts are great media for those with short attention spans. And today\u2019s attention economy.\n\nWith their ever present earbuds in place, listeners can work out, drive to and from work and walk their dogs. In these environments, video doesn\u2019t work. And blog posts don't work.\n\nPodcasts allows content to be delivered in a genuine, natural tone, so the podcaster can establish who they are as a person.\n\nPodcasts are also a great medium to break down typically dense or \u201cboring\u201d topics like real estate, finance or insurance into digestible chunks. \nAnd there are some successful examples of podcasting by millennials who have chosen this medium over blogs to promote their personal brand.\n\nCristen Conger and Caroline Ervin began a podcast, \u201cStuff Mom Never Told You,\u201d in 2014. \nKatie Roach began her \u201cDrunk Sex\u201d podcast, hoping to open up conversations about sex. \nPodcasting allows these millennials to build a better rapport with their fans, with proven results in higher loyalty, higher engagement and more authority online.\n\nRecorded in Studio C at the 511 Studios in the Brewery District, downtown Columbus, OH.\n\nSubscribe to my free weekly Open The Mic Newsletter at www.circle270media.com. It's chock full of podcast news you may have missed, as well as social media, sales, and audio production tips, as well as insights on how to grow your podcast. Anything that catches my eye that I think you, the Podcaster, should know about.\n\nBrett Johnson is the owner and lead consultant at Circle270Media Podcast Consultants. With over 35+ years of experience in Marketing, Content Creation, Audio Production/Recording and Broadcasting, the podcast consultants at Circle270Media strategically bring these strengths together for their business Podcast clients. \n\nEmail us at podcasts @circle270media.com to set up time to talk more about your new or established business podcast. \n\nwww.circle270media.com\nwww.notetofutureme.com