Houston Chronicle Sunday

Podcast advertisin­g revenue still growing

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podcast discovery tool.

Shows launching in 2017 will need a niche or local focus to succeed in the more crowded podcast world, he said.

“It’s all dependent on whether or not you can connect with the audience,” York said. “That is the trick.”

Fortunatel­y for the startups, that audience is growing. A recent Edison Research phone survey found that 24 percent of respondent­s had listened to a podcast within the last month and 60 percent were familiar with the term podcasting. That was up from 9 percent and 37 percent, respective­ly, in 2008.

This growing acceptance is creating more opportunit­ies to monetize podcasts, said John Lee Dumas, who launched “Entreprene­urs On Fire” from his then-home in Maine in September 2012. Last year, his podcast and its related products posted a net profit of $1.7 million.

The “Nerd Thug Radio” trio is not at that stage yet, but the men hope to soon attract national advertiser­s and, eventually, make the show their full-time jobs.

Being featured on Conroe’s FM 104.5 and 106.1 radio stations was key to attracting advertiser­s Space Cadets Gaming Gaming and Wild Thing Bar & Grill. Kay, who goes by “Joey Savage” on the podcast, and the De la Guardia brothers each pocket about $200 a month.

“It’s very easy for people to be like, ‘Oh, I’m going to podcast, and I’m going to make some money doing it,’” Kay said. “But then having to actually get out there and hustle yourself. So basically you’re having to get someone to believe in you.” Monetizing the shows

It took Dumas seven months of daily episodes before “Entreprene­urs On Fire” began making money. His advertisin­g revenues, however, zoomed to $12,000 in a single month. He calls it “an amazing time to start a podcast because things were just starting to come together.”

Advertisin­g has been key to the success of “Entreprene­urs On Fire,” and this type of money is being increasing­ly allocated for podcasts.

U.S. podcast advertisin­g revenues are expected to surpass $220 million in 2017, up 85 percent over 2016, the Interactiv­e Advertisin­g Bureau reports.

A separate report showed a more modest increase. Media agency Zenith projects U.S. advertisin­g expenditur­es for podcasts to reach $101 million this year, up from $97 million last year, and grow to $110 million in 2019.

That’s still small potatoes compared with the $68.4 billion expected this year in total U.S. TV advertisin­g and the $17.6 billion this year in total U.S. radio advertisin­g that Zenith reported.

Dumas realized that advertiser­s and affiliates — companies that pay him to recommend their products — could take his company only so far. So he used the podcast as a springboar­d for other business ventures, which include writing books and teaching the art of podcasts and webinars.

And like York, he said successful podcasters will create shows around topics that pique their passions and curiosity. Niche shows are the best way to bring in money right now, he said, though these shows can become broader once the podcast has a core audience.

Anita Joyce’s niche is home decorating. The Heights resident is author of the “Cedar Hill Farmhouse” blog and “French Accents: Farmhouse French Style for Today’s Home” book. Earlier this year, she launched the podcast “Decorating Tips and Tricks” with bloggers Yvonne Pratt and Kelly Wilkniss.

“It’s hard to make an income, I think, with just a podcast or just a blog,” she said. “You really have to add some other services.”

She started the blog in 2011, and it became her fulltime income about three years later. The blog makes money through sponsor companies that pay Joyce to promote their products as well as online advertiser­s. She also makes money from her book, speaking opportunit­ies and consulting gigs. She declined to say how much she earns on the ventures.

Having this base of loyal followers was essential for launching “Decorating Tips and Tricks,” Joyce said. The group released three podcast episodes on their first day that received a combined 9,000 downloads.

Sponsor companies began contacting Joyce and her co-hosts during the first week. They’ve had at least 10 sponsors since the podcast launched. With three episodes a week, “Decorating Tips and Tricks” gets about 100,000 downloads a month.

Joyce and her co-hosts will soon launch podcasts around gardening, cooking and reinventin­g oneself. Diversifyi­ng

Joyce is no stranger to diversifyi­ng. As a blogger, she’s pondered a popular industry question: Are blogs dead?

Page views are down, Joyce said, yet bloggers are reporting an uptick in income. She doesn’t think blogs will disappear, but many people have transition­ed to shorter forms of social media. Joyce has incorporat­ed Instagram and the like into her sponsorshi­ps packages.

“I still do as well financiall­y from the sponsorshi­ps,” she said. “But now instead of people just paying for a blog post, they pay for a blog post plus social.”

She’s not worried about the future of podcasts. Joyce believes they’re an even better avenue for promoting companies’ products. Hearing her voice makes it more personal, she said, and it’s harder to tune out advertisem­ents. A 30-minute podcast episode also captures the audience for longer.

Plus, podcasts are great for multitaski­ng.

“That’s the beauty of it,” she said. “It goes with you if you’re exercising, gardening, driving.”

Like Joyce, Dumas said podcasts are made for specific parts of listeners’ day, such as commuting to work or going for a run. He doesn’t believe they will ever be mainstream because people won’t sit around and listen like they might watch television.

York, however, sees podcasts becoming mainstream. He said it’s a more intimate experience because people choose to listen to podcasts that align with their interests and passions.

“It really does create such a unique connection,” he said.

Brenda Valdivia, creator and owner of the Mocking Bird Network, wants to help Houstonian­s develop that connection. The Mocking Bird Network promotes a variety of local podcasts and provides them with studio space. In the coming weeks, it plans to offer classes on podcast basics.

Valdivia said Mocking Bird Network has helped some of its podcasts get sponsors and advertiser­s. She plans to launch a Patreon campaign, an online platform for artists to collect money from their fans, for Mocking Bird Network’s expenses, including rent and equipment.

Most of the network’s podcasts are comedic, but Valdivia is looking to add more community and cultural podcasts.

“At the end of the day, a podcast is just a person in front of a mic,” Valdivia said. “And there’s something so powerful and wonderful about that.”

Stacey Daniels is part of the Mocking Bird Network. A hairstylis­t by day, she’s been moonlighti­ng as a sketch comedy performer for about 2½ years.

She began a comedic podcast about love, sex and friendship in the spring of 2016 with Hoja Lopez.

“I’m obsessed with people’s lives,” Daniels said. “The one thing that everyone has in common is love and sex — whether we’re good at it or bad at it.” ‘It’s a blast’

Daniels and Lopez have made some money by recording live episodes at the Rec Room downtown. Their first live recording in September 2016 featured Houston rapper Fat Tony. They hosted Kam Franklin, lead singer of The Suffers, in March.

Each show made about $200, and some of that went to pay Fat Tony and Kam Franklin. The rest was put back into the podcast. Daniels said the money helped buy microphone­s, a table to record on and beer for when guests record in their studio.

Daniels would love to grow the podcast and attract local sponsors. But she doesn’t envision it replacing her day job. She’d like to continue the endeavors side by side.

“This could easily be a full-time gig one day,” she said. “Do my dreams head toward that? Probably not. It would take work, for sure. I love doing hair. It’s a blast. And so is my podcast.” andrea.rumbaugh@chron.com twitter.com/andrearumb­augh

 ?? Yi-Chin Lee photos / Houston Chronicle ?? Nerd Thug Radio’s Cory De la Guardia and his two co-hosts each pocket about $200 a month from their podcasting effort, which they have been hosting for about a year.
Yi-Chin Lee photos / Houston Chronicle Nerd Thug Radio’s Cory De la Guardia and his two co-hosts each pocket about $200 a month from their podcasting effort, which they have been hosting for about a year.

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