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Showmakers: your guide to brand podcasting
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Showmakers: your guide to brand podcasting

Author: Studio 1878

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Showmakers is your fast track to creating podcasts people actually love. In concise, actionable 10-minute episodes, host Ed Barker unpacks proven strategies for marketers, founders, business leaders, and creatives aiming to launch, scale, or fine-tune their podcast. No fluff, no filler - just expert insights on growth, formats, gear, distribution, monetization, and more. Showmakers is the podcast for ambitious creators who want real results, one idea at a time.

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41 Episodes
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In this episode Ed Barker, Founder of Studio 1878, talks about how most company podcasts operate in isolation and argues they should be integrated into the full marketing system so each episode does more work. How do you do that? Practical integrations: email (each episode triggers a value-led message, and episodes drive email capture via resources), CRM (use directional company listening data to inform sales and segment nurture), and a unified content calendar so podcast topics align with campaigns. The episode also covers intentional repurposing planned before recording (clips, quotes, newsletter insights, transcripts, blog posts, YouTube segments), sales enablement (mapping episodes to common objections in a shared resource), and better social distribution beyond launch-day announcements. Integration requires stakeholder alignment, shared processes, and clear ownership to create compound value, and he recommends auditing current touchpoints and fixing one integration gap this quarter.The Cross-Channel Integration Checklist is here and the Stakeholder Alignment Template is here.00:00 Introduction00:48 Email Integration02:12 CRM Integration03:07 Content Calendar & Repurposing04:59 Sales Enablement05:49 Social Integration06:35 Stakeholder Alignment08:10 Key TakeawaysAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive and then a VC, Ed launched Studio 1878 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit working out of Seattle and podcasting worldwide.Studio 1878We're a creative podcast development studio that believes everyone has a story worth telling. Although we produce our own shows, we specialize in business and brand podcasts, helping you tell you story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with audiences. We produce our own shows, but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, examines why podcast growth is slower and more complicated than most people expect.Audio podcasts compound gradually because discovery is inefficient and listening demands a significant time commitment. The episode covers the main growth levers available to brand podcast producers: guest networks and how to make it easy and worthwhile for guests to share; content velocity and consistency, with weekly publishing often the right cadence but regularity mattering more than frequency; platform algorithms on Spotify and YouTube, where completion rates, follows, saves, streaks, watch time, and click-through all influence reach; and audience sharing, which is inherently high-friction and works better when built around specific shareable moments and well-placed prompts. The episode also covers podcast swaps and the host's personal brand, particularly LinkedIn for B2B shows, as underused channels, and sets out when paid promotion makes sense: as an accelerant behind specific high-value episodes aimed at a defined audience, not as a substitute for organic growth strategy.The Guest Amplification Checklist and 90-Day Growth Experiment Framework are available here.00:00 Introduction01:53 The Four Primary Growth Levers02:02 Lever 1: Guest Networks02:51 Lever 2: Content Velocity04:16 Lever 3: Platform Algorithms05:32 Lever 4: Audience Sharing07:52 Lever 5: Podcast Swaps09:08 The Host Personal Brand10:15 Paid Promotion: When It Works12:06 The Compounding Effect13:07 90 Day Growth Experiment14:39 Key Takeaways & Next EpisodeAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive, and then a VC, Ed launched Studio 1878 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide.Studio 1878We're a creative podcast development studio that believes everyone has a story worth telling. Although we produce our own shows, we specialize in business and brand podcasts, helping you tell you story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, opens a five-episode series on podcast distribution and growth by challenging the assumption that being available everywhere is the right strategy.RSS distribution to Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and other listening apps is largely automatic and not where the real decisions lie. The harder question is how many additional formats to commit to: full video for YouTube, social clips, and written content can push weekly production from a couple of hours to 15 or 20, and that investment needs to be justified. The episode introduces a three-tier framework for thinking about platforms: a primary platform where you build a direct audience relationship, typically a website with email capture; secondary platforms where discovery happens, such as Spotify, Apple, and YouTube; and tertiary platforms for short clips designed to drive interest. The right choices depend on owned versus rented audience relationships, where your actual listeners are, what the show is trying to achieve commercially, and how much production capacity you can realistically sustain.The Platform Decision Matrix and Distribution Audit Template mentioned in the show can be found here.00:00 Introduction: New Series on Distribution00:53 The Content Factory Problem02:45 Three Tier Framework03:01 Primary, Secondary & Tertiary Platforms06:01 Framework in Practice08:25 Platform Deep Dive: Spotify, Apple, Youtube10:20 Which Platform Should You Prioritize?11:21 Owned vs Rented Land12:30 Decision Framework Questions13:44 Key TakeawaysAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive, and then a VC, Ed launched Studio 1878 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide.Studio 1878We're a creative podcast development studio that believes everyone has a story worth telling. Although we produce our own shows, we specialize in business and brand podcasts, helping you tell you story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this final episode of the series on show design, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, tackles the challenge of producing content for audio and video at the same time.Simply filming a podcast is rarely the right answer. Audio and video audiences have different expectations and different listening or watching habits, and serving both well requires deliberate trade-offs rather than a one-size-fits-all approach. The episode outlines three ways to integrate video into an audio-first show, covers the production complexities and additional costs that come with each, and makes the case for choosing a primary format and building everything else around it. Supplementary materials should support that core design, not complicate it. A show built with a clear sense of what it is, and what it is not, is easier to sustain and more likely to hold its audience over time.00:00 Introduction: Should We Do Video?01:16 Why Audio and Video Are Different03:00 Three Approaches to Audio and Video05:36 Why 'We'll Just Clip It' Usually Fails07:08 How Cameras Change Behavior09:27 Production Reality: Time and Budget10:40 Framework for Making Decisions11:57 Coherence Matters More Than Reach12:54 Closing: Good Podcasts Are DesignedAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, makes the case for treating production budgets as a strategic decision rather than an afterthought.The episode breaks down the components that make up a typical production workflow: research, recording, editing, quality control, and asset creation. Different budget tiers are examined alongside the trade-offs each involves, and the connection between production choices and the long-term quality and sustainability of a show is explored in detail. Poor planning in this area is one of the more common routes to burnout, and the episode addresses how to avoid it through realistic scheduling and a clear-eyed view of what each production commitment actually requires.00:00 Introduction: Production as Strategy01:21 What Production Actually Includes02:48 Production Time Breakdown04:25 High Production vs High Quality05:53 Budget Tiers and Trade-offs08:42 Time as the Real Constraint09:53 In-House vs External Production11:13 Episode Frequency and Sustainability12:15 Designing for Longevity13:12 Key Takeaways13:59 Next Episode PreviewAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, examines why episode structure matters more than most podcast hosts realise.Topics and guests tend to get the attention, but listeners are really asking one question: is this worth my time? Good structure answers that question by guiding listeners through an episode in a way that feels purposeful, which leads to higher completion rates and stronger audience relationships over time. The episode covers the pitfalls of meandering conversations, strategies for maintaining engagement through clear narrative arcs and recurring segments, and why both the opening and the closing of an episode deserve more thought than they usually get. A well-structured episode serves the audience and makes the host's job considerably easier.00:00 Introduction: Why Structure Matters01:00 The Data on Drop-Off Rates01:23 Why Conversation Alone Isn't Enough03:09 What Listeners Actually Want03:48 The Shape of a Good Episode05:41 Openings: The First Minute07:09 Pacing Over Length08:47 Using Segments to Create Rhythm11:31 How Structure Helps the Host12:29 Why Endings Matter13:44 Structure Respects the Listener14:47 Next Episode PreviewAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, argues that choosing a podcast format is a strategic decision, not a creative one.Format determines how much work a show generates every week, and that operational reality shapes whether a show survives long enough to build an audience. The episode examines the main formats available: loose conversational interviews, structured interviews, narrative storytelling, and co-hosted conversations, weighing the demands and trade-offs of each. Picking a format without understanding what it requires is one of the more reliable paths to burnout and inconsistency. The right choice is the one that fits the show's goals and the team's realistic capacity, and holds up week after week.00:00 Introduction: Format as Strategy00:47 What Format Determines01:19 Format Examples in Practice02:30 Why Interviews Become the Default03:14 The Booking Trap04:37 Guest-Led Trade-offs05:53 Where the Thinking Happens06:07 Single Host Monologue06:48 Co-Hosted Conversation07:52 Structured Interview Format08:45 Narrative or Reported Format09:46 Why to Avoid Panel Shows10:43 Why Constraints Make Shows Better12:10 Format and Sustainability13:18 Format as a Positioning Tool13:58 Questions to Ask About Format14:45 Wrap-up and Next EpisodeAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, sets out why designing a show and simply producing a podcast are two very different things.A well-designed show has a clear, repeatable idea at its centre, and that consistency is what builds audience trust and loyalty over time. Two companies' podcast strategies are compared to illustrate what that difference looks like in practice. The episode also addresses a common mistake: replicating a format that works for someone else without understanding why it works, which rarely produces the same results. For marketing teams starting from scratch, the episode offers a framework for thinking through show design strategically before a single episode is recorded.00:00 The Power of Podcasts for Brands00:39 Starting with the Right Question01:21 Podcast vs Show: Understanding the Difference02:16 Example: Two Companies, Different Outcomes03:24 Why Interviews Alone Aren't Enough04:50 The Importance of a Central Idea05:53 The Risk of Copying Successful Shows06:49 Three Strategic Questions to Ask08:22 Designing for the Return08:50 Reducing Risk Through Upfront Design09:51 Closing and Next StepsAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Future Podcast MeasurementIn the final episode of the Showmakers analytics series, Ed Barker from Studio 1878 explores the future of podcast measurement. He discusses the limitations of current metrics and predicts significant advancements in attribution, brand lift studies, and sentiment analysis using AI. Ed emphasizes the shift from mere data collection to actionable insights that enhance both internal and external brand storytelling. By focusing on audience emotion, brand trust, and improved integration with overall marketing strategies, this episode presents a vision where podcasts become a crucial part of a brand's intelligence system.00:00 Introduction00:22 The Current State of Podcast Measurement01:17 The Future of Attribution02:50 Smarter Brand Lift and Sentiment Analysis03:59 Measurement as Brand Health Indicator05:04 AI and Automation in Podcast Analytics06:38 Internal Measurement and Employee Engagement07:01 From Proving Value to Using Insights08:45 The Next Five Years of Podcast Measurement09:53 Closing ThoughtsAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Building a Lasting Podcast Measurement SystemIn the final episode of Showmakers’ analytics series, Ed Barker of Studio 1878 discusses how to create a measurement system that endures leadership changes and budget reviews. He emphasizes the importance of turning data into a rhythm that the business understands and ensuring measurement becomes part of the working culture. Barker outlines the creation of a measurement stack, setting up a cadence, assigning ownership, and designing dashboards tailored for different audiences. He stresses the significance of incorporating feedback and institutionalizing the measurement system to future-proof it. Finally, Barker highlights the need for measurement to be a cultural pillar, driving better decisions and long-term success for brand podcasts.Chapters00:00 Introduction 00:19 The Importance of a Lasting Measurement System01:40 Building Your Measurement Stack02:51 Setting Up Cadence and Ownership03:47 Creating Effective Dashboards05:02 Feedback Loops and Continuous Improvement05:56 Institutionalizing Your Measurement System06:49 Leadership and Long-Term Value07:46 Measurement as a Cultural Practice08:27 Conclusion and Next StepsAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode of the analytics series, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, takes on the question that haunts almost every branded podcast project before a single episode is recorded: how do you prove the ROI?The tension between creative ambition and business accountability is real, but measuring a podcast strictly like a performance ad, chasing direct attribution and conversion, tends to produce something transactional, short-lived, and not worth listening to. The episode makes the case for treating a podcast as brand infrastructure: a compounding asset that builds trust, accelerates pipelines, and supports retention over time. That framing changes what you measure and how. A practical framework is outlined for tracking success in a way that satisfies business accountability without stripping out the human quality that makes a show worth coming back to.00:00 Introduction to Showmakers00:53 The ROI Dilemma in Branded Podcasts02:10 Understanding Different Types of ROI03:28 The Challenge of Attribution in Podcasts04:23 Connecting Creativity to Commercial Outcomes05:27 The Compounding ROI of Podcasts06:20 Protecting Creativity in Podcasting07:28 Reporting ROI Effectively09:20 Key Conversations with Budget Owners10:55 Conclusion and Next StepsAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode of the analytics series, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, works through the gap between having podcast data and knowing what to do with it.Charts and dashboards are only useful if they lead somewhere. The episode breaks down what analytics can and cannot reliably tell you, how to find the signal beneath the noise, and how to translate findings into creative and marketing decisions that actually change something. It also covers how to present that analysis to leadership in a way that builds credibility rather than inviting scepticism. For anyone who has found themselves staring at a retention curve and genuinely unsure what it means, the episode offers a practical way through.00:00 Introduction00:45 Data Isn't the Story01:27 Three Layers of Insight03:06 Understanding Retention04:16 Turning Insights Into Action04:59 From Reporting to Learning06:18 How to Report to Leadership07:04 Closing ThoughtsAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this opening episode of the analytics series, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, starts with the question most brand podcast projects never answer properly: what does success actually look like?Excitement and a strong concept are a reasonable starting point, but vague goals like awareness or thought leadership lead to measuring the wrong things and wasting time. The episode covers how to connect a podcast's goals directly to business outcomes, how to design a format around intent rather than instinct, and how to think about measurement across three time horizons. The frameworks here are aimed at teams who want to build something strategically coherent from the start, rather than reverse-engineering the rationale after the show is already in production.Chapters00:00 Introduction00:25 Launching Without Clear Goals01:05 Chasing the Wrong Numbers01:50 Start with the Business, Not the Show02:31 Connecting Goals to Show Design04:25 Intent-Metric-Message Framework05:33 Three Horizons of Measurement06:48 Aligning Strategy with Leadership07:53 Setting Realistic Targets08:40 The Pyramid of Purpose09:19 Building Goals into Your Workflow10:10 Wrap-Up and Next StepsAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, Ed Barker, founder of Studio 1878, tackles the moment every marketer dreads: being asked how the podcast is performing and not having a confident answer.Downloads and chart rankings are the easy metrics to reach for, but they rarely tell the story that matters to leadership. The episode sets out how to define the purpose of a show before settling on KPIs, which health metrics and more advanced indicators are worth tracking, and how to turn reporting into something that makes a coherent case for the show's value. The frameworks here apply whether the goal is reach, reputation, or internal engagement, and the underlying argument throughout is that measuring what actually matters and proving ROI are not in conflict, as long as you start with the right questions.00:00 - Introduction: Measuring Podcast Success00:46 -The Problem with Traditional Podcast Metrics01:42 - Define Your Why Before Your KPIs02:25 - Core Health Metrics That Matter03:52 - Advanced Metrics for Mature Shows06:06 - Turning Data Into a Story07:13 - Measurement Cadence07:47 - Wrap-Up & Next Episode PreviewAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Building Listener Loyalty in Brand PodcastsIn this episode of Showmakers, Ed Barker from Studio 1878 discusses the importance of building deep engagement and loyalty in branded podcasts rather than just chasing reach or vanity metrics like downloads and followers. Ed explains how loyalty, consistency, and respecting your audience's time are key to creating a podcast that listeners return to regularly. He emphasizes the value of designing episodes to reward listeners, involving internal audiences, creating habits, encouraging participation, and leveraging other marketing channels for a two-way dialogue. Finally, he highlights the importance of focusing on listener loyalty to naturally drive growth and build meaningful connections.00:00 Introduction 00:33 Building Listener Loyalty02:05 Designing Valuable Episodes02:53 Nurturing Internal Audiences03:29 Creating Habit-Forming Shows04:10 Encouraging Audience Participation04:37 Utilizing Signature Segments05:31 Integrating with Other Marketing Channels06:16 Common Mistakes in Podcast Growth06:52 Final Thoughts on Loyalty07:20 Preview of Next EpisodeAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive - and then a VC - Ed launched Studio 1878 in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story.ContactWeb: www.1878.studioEmail: hello@1878.studioMobile: 425-520-3483 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Redefining Podcast Distribution: Building Reach and ReputationIn this episode of Showmakers, Ed Barker from Studio 1878 emphasizes the importance of effective podcast distribution. He explains that distribution goes beyond simply uploading to platforms like Spotify and highlights the concept of 'audience design' which involves targeting where listeners already spend their attention. Ed also discusses the multi-layered approach to distribution, integrating podcasts into overall brand campaigns, leveraging guests and team members as micro distribution channels, and measuring the real influence of a podcast. He concludes by underscoring the importance of reactivating and resurfacing archived content to maintain relevant brand assets.00:00 Introduction to Podcast Distribution00:38 Understanding Distribution as Brand Architecture01:33 The Shift in Multi-Platform Discovery02:14 Integrating Distribution into Campaign Planning02:52 Leveraging People as Distribution Channels03:33 Measuring Podcast Influence Beyond Downloads04:16 Reactivating Your Podcast Archive04:53 Conclusion and Final ThoughtsAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive (and then a VC), Ed launched Studio 1878 (www.1878.studio) in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story. 😈 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
From Raw Talk to Brand NarrativeIn this episode of Showmakers, Ed Barker from Studio 1878 explores the crucial role of editing in corporate podcasting. Rather than just trimming and adding music, editing transforms raw conversations into a narrative that mirrors your brand's intelligence, empathy, and perspective. Ed discusses how emotional architecture, pacing, and narrative structure can enhance the story, making it more impactful and authentic. By treating editing as a form of authorship and reputation management, brands can craft podcasts that not only sound good but also reflect their identity and values.00:00 Introduction00:22 Editing as Strategy01:08 Emotional Architecture01:54 Editing as Reputation Management02:43 Reordering for Clarity03:29 Sound as Brand Identity03:55 Protecting the Host's Humanity04:43 Closing Thoughts & Next EpisodeAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive (and then a VC), Ed launched Studio 1878 (www.1878.studio) in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story. 😈 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Keeping Your Solo Podcast Energy HighIn this episode of Showmakers, Ed Barker from Studio 1878 shares practical tips on maintaining high energy levels while recording solo podcast episodes. Ed discusses the importance of visualizing a real listener, recording while standing, using a bullet point script, varying your pacing, and breaking content into segments. He emphasizes the power of storytelling and advises recording in short bursts to keep energy high. Ed wraps up by highlighting the value solo episodes bring in building intimacy and trust with listeners.00:00 Introduction00:22 Why Solo Energy Matters01:10 Tip 1: Picture a Real Listener01:41 Tip 2: Stand Up and Move02:14 Tip 3: Script Smart02:58 Tip 4: Vary Your Pacing03:53 Tip 5: Break Into Segments04:21 Tip 6: Include Real Stories04:59 Tip 7: Record in Bursts05:28 Closing ThoughtsAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive (and then a VC), Ed launched Studio 1878 (www.1878.studio) in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story. 😈 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
How to Make Storytelling a Habit: Enhancing Your Podcast ConsistentlyIn the final episode of Showmakers' five-part miniseries on storytelling, Ed Barker from Studio 1878 explores the importance of making storytelling a consistent habit in podcast creation. Ed emphasizes that without intentional storytelling, podcasts can become dull and forgettable. He offers actionable tips on embedding storytelling into every stage of the podcast process—from planning and recording to editing and promoting. Ed also encourages podcasters to review their previous work with a storytelling lens and consider storytelling as a continuous practice. This episode concludes with a recap of the mini-series and an invitation for further support and collaboration.00:00 Introduction00:43 The Importance of Intentional Storytelling01:19 Starting with Story in Episode Prep02:14 Developing Story Radar02:53 Storytelling in the Edit 03:13 Building a Storytelling Culture04:21 Storytelling as a Practice05:12 Series Recap06:21 Closing and Next Episode PreviewAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive (and then a VC), Ed launched Studio 1878 (www.1878.studio) in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story. 😈 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Shaping Stories Through Editing: Techniques for Narrative PodcastingIn this episode of Showmakers, Ed Barker from Studio 1878 explores the art of editing and highlights the importance of narrative shaping in post-production. Ed emphasizes that editing is more than just cutting audio; it's about uncovering and structuring the story within the conversation. He offers practical tips for both DIY editors and those working with editors, including identifying the story arc, removing non-essential dialogue, and reordering content for better impact. He also stresses the value of human moments and encourages editors to develop their unique style. This episode is geared towards ensuring that every podcast episode tells a compelling, well-structured story.00:00 Introduction00:44 The Purpose of Editing01:25 Finding the Story Arc02:06 Being Flexible with Content02:27 Removing Verbal Scaffolding03:22 Reordering Content04:00 Rhythm and Flow04:43 Working with Editors05:37 Developing Your Style06:18 Closing and Next Episode PreviewAbout Your HostEd Barker has been producing and recording podcasts since 2009. After a long career as a corporate marketing and strategy executive (and then a VC), Ed launched Studio 1878 (www.1878.studio) in early 2025 with the goal of making brand and business podcasting much better. Ed is a Brit, working out of Seattle, and podcasting worldwide. 🌎Studio 1878A podcast development studio for the modern brand. We believe everyone has a story worth telling. Specializing in business and brand podcasts, we’ll help build your story from ideation to distribution, transforming concepts to real connection with your audiences. We produce our own shows but our core proposition is in helping businesses and creators produce something truly compelling and authentic. We’d love to help you tell your story. 😈 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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