Episode 89

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Published on:

28th Mar 2024

Do Podcast Editors Need a Portfolio to Wow Prospective Clients?

Hey there, fellow audio wizards! Get ready to have your mind filled with golden nuggets of podcast editing wisdom in this latest chat we stitched together for you.

Jennifer and Bryan have been in the trenches, debating if the magic of our editing hands needs a showcase or if word-of-mouth does the trick. Spoiler alert: we don't exactly hear ear-to-ear on this (see what we did there?). While Bryan is all for flaunting your audio flair, Jennifer’s got a point — some clients care more about the whisper of a solid testimonial than a flashy edited collage.

We’ll dive deep into the world of demo reels, those pesky legal bits to think about before using your work as samples, and that headache-inducing task of updating your website. We might even shed light on why you should swap that "Hire me!" page for Jesse McCune's suggestion for something different.

So buckle up, pour a fresh cup of joe, and let's chop it up, editor to editor. And as always, we've got some laughs in store because, let's be honest, life's too short for dull conversations. Let's hit play on this treasure trove of insights!

Episode Notes: https://podcasteditorsmastermind.com/episode/pem089-portfolios

Listen to Discover

  • The challenges an audio-first medium faces when creating a portfolio.
  • Why we need to be super choosy about what we put into our portfolios.
  • One creative way to showcase your work WITHOUT highlighting client mistakes.
  • A potential SEO strategy you might be able to use.
  • What Steve Stewart says might be more valuable than a portfolio.
  • How we incorporated a bit of AI into creating this episode. :)

Links And Resources

And while we waxed poetic about demos, portfolios, platforms, and the cheeky antique key conundrum (got any ideas on that?), we didn't dive into a long list of tools this time. We focused more on the "how" and "why" behind showcasing your mad editing skills.

If you're hyperventilating because you expected some software name-dropping, don't fret! A previous brain-picking might have just what you need – check out our episodes archive or our Facebook group for those nitty-gritty details.

Keep those ears sharp and your sense of humor sharper, and remember to only share the work you have rights to. Legal oopsies are no joke! Happy editing, and let's continue making podcasts sound like a million bucks.

Join Us Live!

We stream live to our Facebook page and to YouTube every other week.

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Our Editor

This episode of the Podcast Editors Mastermind was edited by Alejandro Ramirez. You can find him on LinkedIn if you're interested in talking with him about editing your show.

Be a Guest

If you're a podcast editor, we'd love to see if you'd be a fit for a future episode. Fill out this form to let us know you're interested, and we'll contact you to see if it's a good fit.

Your Yetis Are

About the Podcast Editors Mastermind

The Podcast Editors Mastermind is for professional podcast editors who want to grow their business and get more clients. We’re creating a community of like-minded professionals that are passionate about the art and science of editing podcasts.

Our goal is to help you build your business by providing tools, resources, and support so you can focus on what matters most—your craft. This isn’t just another group where everyone talks about how great they are at podcast editing; we show our work!



This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:

OP3 - https://op3.dev/privacy
Transcript
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So How much is that?

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Hey there, and welcome to the Podcast Editor's

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Mastermind early edition. That's right. We started a few

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seconds early today because we saw somebody was online and we're like, hey, we can

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join them. So, Patrick, we know you're watching already. It's great to have you.

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Today's show, we're gonna talk about portfolios. And this show

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will be partially powered by AI, and you'll know more about that as we get

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to the end of it. But we get to use the AI word today, so

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we're pretty happy about that. Before we dig into this, we'll do quick introductions.

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I'm Bryan. You can find me at toptieraudio.com and over here.

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Jennifer Longworth of Bourbon Barrel Podcasting. Well, my new logo behind me

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if you're watching live. Yeah. It looks really pretty. In fact, for those of you

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that are listening to the podcast, of course, you can always join us live, or

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we do actually stream this to Facebook and YouTube. You can watch the video

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later if you really want to. Now, today, we're gonna talk

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about portfolios, and I think this

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is gonna be fun. This is something that I don't really consider myself a super

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big expert in, so I did a little bit of research. But this is something

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that we see popping up from time to time in the Facebook groups. Like, how

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do I build a portfolio? Do I even need a portfolio? So we're gonna talk

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about that. Unable to join us tonight are Carrie Caulfield, who you can

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find at carrie.land, and Daniel Abendroth, who you can find at

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rothmedia.audio. As we go through this, we would love to have

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your comments, not just about, hey, we love you. Although, Patrick, if you have

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comments or questions, we would love to have that be part of this as well

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because we wanna make sure this is valuable for you, but also that this

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features you because we realized that neither of the 2 of us have all the

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answers. In fact, we were talking beforehand about how in this

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particular thing, there's really not one right answer. So it doesn't matter what we say.

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We can still be wrong. So congratulations to us. On the

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portfolios, I thought probably the first thing to do is just talk about what is

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a portfolio. I think we all generally know, but we just

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wanted to make sure that we we talk about that. So when we're talking about

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a portfolio, we're talking about some kind of demonstration of your

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work. If you've gone to a photographer's website, a lot of times they'll have

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a gallery. Right? That's their portfolio. We're talking about that

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for podcast editor. And really, you know, like, what's a

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portfolio? How can you build a portfolio? What are some different strategies

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as well as like, what are some of the hurdles or the roadblocks? So my

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first question, I'm gonna ask Jennifer. I'm gonna put her on the spot since she

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said I could host. Jennifer, does a portfolio even matter for

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a podcast editor? I say no.

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And the reason I say no is because people hire me

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without asking for examples of my work. So either

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they found it without asking or they don't care.

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So my answer is no. Word-of-mouth and testimonials

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go farther. Okay. And just for the sake of the conversation,

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I will take the opposing view of saying, I think they matter. I

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think that there are some people that do want a demonstration of what you can

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do. That's maybe not the clients that Jennifer's getting, or maybe because it's

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word-of-mouth, they've already heard a show that she's worked on. So I would actually pause

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it that some people are hearing your unofficial portfolio before

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they ever hire you. Right. They've heard a show that you've worked on or something

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like that. And so I

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But I think they matter. Jennifer says no, that's great. In the comments, if

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you disagree with either of us, you're certainly welcome to share that. Or if you

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have a slightly different perspective, because we do want to feature your perspectives here as

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well. So I think a portfolio matters. But the

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question I think is why? And I think that comes to the whole comfort level.

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Right? So if I go to and I'm gonna use a terrible example. But if

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I go to a copywriter's website, I'm going to wanna see examples

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of what they've done and how their creative work

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is generating results. And a lot of times, that's going to be not only how

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well is their website laid out, because if they're a copywriter, hello, you should have

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a good website, sort of what you do. But also, how can I know

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that it delivers results? As a podcast editor, I know that I

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can deliver results for my clients, but my prospective

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clients wanna know that, especially if they're not coming to me as a referral.

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Right? I think that's also, Jennifer, why your particular

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clients maybe don't value your or value having a portfolio on

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your website quite as much. But those are my thoughts. I've never had

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someone come into me and go, oh my gosh. I loved your work on women

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changing leadership. I wanna hire you. Yeah. That's fair.

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I mean, this is fun. Right? We're taking the opposite approach, and I'm I'm trying

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to think through both because in truth, I'm actually in the camp that it kind

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of matters. Right? I don't think it matters all the time. Right. I

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mean, it could matter. It it also depends on

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like what style of show you're doing. I

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don't touch audio drama. If I were looking

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for an audio drama editor, I might wanna know more

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about their sound design. Oh, and then how they

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use the music and the effects and all the things. I don't go

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there. If you want a audio drama editor, I'm

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gonna send you to Steve Stewart to ask him to post it somewhere and

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get you an editor. Because I don't even know anybody who does that. And,

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like, narrative, I tried narrative once. I don't do narrative. It's

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a different skill set kind of that you gotta be pickier about. And I

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think that speaks a little bit to some of the challenges also

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for a a podcast editor who's wanting to build a portfolio.

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Again, take the perspective that a a portfolio matters.

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But as a person also who goes to websites that have a portfolio

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and honestly, for an editor, it's really hard to

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work with a portfolio that's been presented. And I think

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that's because, in my mind, the portfolio

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for a podcast editor or any kind of audio editor actually

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has different challenges than the portfolio for

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a graphic designer or a photographer or a a videographer.

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And the reason is because when I go to a website of a photographer and

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I check out their gallery or their portfolio, it's a very fast

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thing. Right? Because the entire picture is there

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at once. And the challenge for a podcast editor is, like, my

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portfolio page is, I think, 3 episodes of different shows that I've

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worked on. Like, if you wanna hear examples of my work, these are things I've

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worked on. They're real shows. They're really shows I've worked on. People paid me for

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this work, but each one is 30 to 45 minutes long. I think

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that speaks to a specific challenge. And I think that there are some potential

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strategies to deal with that. That and the lack of any kind of

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visual representation to go with it is kind of like the 2 big hurdles that

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I see for a podcast editor wanting to do that. And to

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Steve's point, as I'm jumping ahead, the sign of a great editor is you don't

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know they were there. This, I think, is the third challenge if I can go

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there. Right? Is I could post for

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you a show that was recorded perfectly and for which I did

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essentially nothing. But because it was a good recording, right, if I

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use the music industry, if I got great stems to start with

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and all I did was a really quick mix and master, you'd never know that

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I'm actually an idiot and I have no idea what I'm doing. I just managed

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to not ruin it. Whereas I'm gonna throw Zoom under the bus for a

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second. If I get a Zoom recording with 3 people that can't string a sentence

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together to save their life, and I turn into some that into something that's coherent

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and listenable, that's actually a lot more work, but it's probably not gonna get me

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a client because it's still gonna smell and sound. Smell. It's still gonna sound

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like a Zoom recording. Yeah. And so that's where choosing what goes in

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your portfolio is super critical. Right? I think it's not just whether or not you

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have one, but also choosing. I'm gonna shut up because I've talked a lot. Jennifer,

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what would you like to say? Well, my quote portfolio

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is just say my current clients include

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on my website. I think somebody said in the comments something about

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having it before and after. And I had one of those on my website

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while it didn't matter. I mean, it was a challenge

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and I'm still in the no one cares. As far as

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mine. Jennifer says no one cares. We're done. Yeah.

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Not now we're done. I'm listening. I'm listening. And I see I see Patrick

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commented that he just thinks they sound fun. Yeah. And they

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can. This is where I would go with these. It depends. Right?

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If what you have is an hour of, 2

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PhDs talking about a topic that you don't care about, nothing against

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PhDs or a particular topic, but that might be a very disengaging

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portfolio. I don't know how you turn that into a sales pitch.

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Well, I've got some strategies that we might get to later. Were there any other

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comments that stood out to you, Jennifer? There are a lot of comments. Boom. Boom.

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Boom. Steve says he's here to listen to both sides. So that's

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good. Perfect. Tim, for as long as I can remember, a demo reel

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has always been used. They're easy to create. What would be the

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downside to offer? So that's a great point. Right? So we're talking about

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portfolios as though they're a full episode, right, or

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a series of full episodes. The reality is, with

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permission from the client, I suppose they don't have to be. Right?

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Demo reel, a sizzle reel, that's actually something that

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I've considered and I have as a potential strategy. I think it's Steve who

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typically talks about having it before and after. I think Daniel may have written something

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in the notes knowing that he wasn't able to be here just to give us

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something smart to say. That demo reel could potentially have

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I don't know how to build one. Right? I I think about, like, what a

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station a radio station might put together. Maybe it's something like that with

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sound effects and all that stuff, but then also some before and afters. I think

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that could be a really powerful thing. Yeah. I don't know. I I like the

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idea of a demo maybe even more than I like a portfolio page. I don't

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know. What do you think, Jennifer? If it's really like succinct,

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I guess, or like to the point instead of listening to

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talking heads for an hour to see that you made them sound less boring.

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I don't know. Or not.

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Yeah. So, yeah, I mean, the demo reel's a great idea. I think

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there and there I don't know that there is a downside other than just

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especially if you're talking about before and after, making sure that you're not

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throwing your client under the bus and revealing that they actually can't string a

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sentence together to save their lives. That's always kind of the the moral

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hurdle for me is to go. My commitment to my clients is always to leave

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the garbage on the cutting room floor. I really feel weird about putting it back

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into a demo reel. Yeah. So Patrick's asking lots of

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questions. The most recent one, you be couldn't have demos

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in a portfolio? I think you absolutely could. I was thinking full

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episodes. Demos or Demo Reel is absolutely, I think, an

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option to do that. In fact, when we asked this on Facebook,

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because we asked this in the Podcast Editor Mastermind Facebook group, One of

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those things was, I think, Tim in the group actually shared a

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demo reel that he had put together on his website, And

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that's definitely an option. In his case, he just say save some audio to

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SoundCloud, and that was his demo reel right there. But, yeah, I think that's definitely

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an option. Okay. Patrick also says, as a contractor, I need

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to figure out what's involved in using my work as samples.

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There's a network host guest or need permission from all parties

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or no? Yeah. So I think this is where I put on my not a

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lawyer hat. My first question would be, is there anything in the

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contract that specifies one way or the other? If you have specified in your

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contract that you're able to do that, then I think the answer would be yes.

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How far that goes? I don't know. If the contract says no, we have a

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nondisclosure in place or we don't reveal work producer that's not,

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like, whatever that would might be, then the answer would be no. If it's not,

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I think it's a conversation. Maybe you're able to go to them and go, hey,

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because I think you've been, I know Patrick, you've been a few months now with

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what I think is probably your first client. Maybe you just go to them and

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say, Hey, are you happy with my work? I'd love to find more clients like

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you. Could I put together a demo reel or put together something

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based on the work that I've done for you to highlight your show and

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also maybe give them, just let them know, Hey, I'll let you listen to it

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first, make sure that I'm not putting anything out that you don't want to go

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out. But, you know, I'd like to highlight your show. I love working on your

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show. I'd like more clients. And maybe there's a way that I hate to use

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the word spin, but maybe there's a way you can frame that up to make

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that valuable for them. That's actually what I did to get permission to put the

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clients on my portfolio page is, hey, do you mind if I feature you on

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my website? My contract says I can do this, but I

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also don't wanna break the relational part of it because I can

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manage to a contract, but I think the relationship is the more important thing to

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maintain. And if they say, no, I'm not comfortable with that, I don't wanna go

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back to them and say, well, the contract says I can, so I'm just gonna

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do it. I wanna honor them because they're valuable people. And

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honestly, if I don't, they won't be a client for a very long time. Okay.

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So I wanna hit Jesse's comment because he says I'm kind of

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thinking prospects are generally looking to see that others have paid

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you to do the work social proof links to your work should be enough, which

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is kind of what I have on my website. It's like, here are

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some shows that people have paid me to do this. I don't think

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any of the non payers are on the website. That's interesting. And I

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appreciate you putting that up, Jesse, because I'd never really thought about just

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linking to the work being enough. I've always wanted to actually

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include the episode on the website, but yeah, that's, I

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think another viable strategy, as long as you have permission to share that

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you work on the show, which you probably do linking there, I think that that

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would be great. And also, you know, if I think about SEO and the

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value for the client, it points them right there. If somebody is coming

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to check you out, you're actually pointing people to that client's website, whether

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they are the ideal audience or not. Maybe there's a connection to be made

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there. So, yeah, maybe that's also a benefit for them. Yeah.

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True. Patrick also said, I think you could just describe what

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the product was before giving the after so you can have

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a different category of samples. I love that.

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And this is where my crazy brain goes a little bit nuts. Because when you

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say describe it, I'm thinking, like, putting up a picture of a dumpster fire.

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Right? I I know that's not what you mean. Some of them are,

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but, you know Yeah. I think that's good. I had a guy say it 11

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times in a row once, and then I cut that out, and it sounded a

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lot better. I don't want to, like, put that original on because he sounded

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so horrible. But I could say, like, hey. This guy said it

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11 times in a row before I cut it to 1. One thing I've

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seen done, and this is sort of like an anti portfolio, and

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I don't remember who it was. And even if I did, I probably wouldn't tell

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this person's name, but they basically made a demo reel

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of only the things that got cut. So it was

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like 2 minutes of silly music with, or

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yeah, yeah, yeah. So, so it was done really,

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really well. And I do wonder as long as you're not throwing somebody

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under the bus, if that might be funny, I know that Mike Wilkerson does

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that for his clients on their first edit. He sends them what was cut.

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So they recognize the value of what they're doing. I don't believe he publishes it.

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He's not the person that I had in mind. Maybe something there is with the

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anti demo reel. Right? This is what's on the floor. Oh, Patrick says he's done

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that before too. I've never done that, but I've always wanted to.

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Because to me as an editor, it's really funny when I sit down and I

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listen to a minute and a half of umms over circus

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music or something. Is that still our, like, official intro music?

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Remember when we first started this podcast, is that still,

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like, like, someone listens to this?

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So Yeah.

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That's our very short umura reel from an episode that had a lot

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more umms in it than Yes. What made it into the intro. I was like,

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I never go back and listen to this podcast. I'm just on it, and I

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know what happens here. I'm like, are we still even using that?

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I'm wondering. We've talked about building a portfolio as though it's a thing that

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goes on your website, but maybe that's not the only option.

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Okay. I think that's an option. And honestly, that would be my

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preferred option. Right? I wanted to send people to my website, have all the things

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there. But let's be honest. If you are

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working on a platform like Fiverr or

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Upwork or some other marketplace, that body of

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work that you've worked on so long as it's available for other people

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to see, that can be your portfolio. And that's

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a living, breathing list of all the stuff that you've

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done. I didn't even know that was a thing. The other thing, especially

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for editors like you and me, Jennifer, would be if we're on a service

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like Podchaser, making sure that we're credited for

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all the work that we've done. Right. I think Steve brought that up

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as an option where he just points people to Podchaser and

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said, hey. This if you wanna see what I can do, this is where it

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goes. I actually took Steve's idea, and I updated my website.

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So I've got 3 episodes. And then basically, if you want more, go here, and

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it lists everything I've done in Podchaser. Now the unfortunate thing about

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that is when it goes there as a person who hosted a couple of

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shows that have gone away, has been a guest on a number of shows, and

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also has edited across a variety of shows. I

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have probably 1500 editor, and not all of

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them are episodes that I've edited. If I hosted

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a show and I edited the show, I've credited myself twice. And

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so what I haven't figured out is how to go to just the editing part,

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but that is a way that you can show your body of work for sure.

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The other thing, and whether it's on a website or not, I think that

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sizzle reel or that demo reel is a viable option. Right?

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That's something that I wanna do. High speed video of you doing work. Oh, I

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love that, Patrick. I have done those for Instagram. I have

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not put one of those on my website. For those that are watching or

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listening and don't know what we're talking about, I have, on occasion,

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set my iPhone on the desk, pointed at my monitor, and set it to

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record a time lapse. So it takes a snapshot every however often it

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does. And I'll record 30 minutes of me working on an episode. And when you

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play it back, it takes, like, 90 seconds. And it's just all this scrolling around,

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cutting, moving, pasting stuff. I had never thought about that

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as a portfolio. There's no sound with it, but you could certainly

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put sound under it in a video editing program, but it wouldn't be what you're

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actually editing, which also means you're not throwing any clients under the bus. For those

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that are watching later or listening later, and you, if you wanna reach out to

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us, just email us info at podcasteditorsmastermind.com. We'd love to

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hear from you on that because this, I think, is one of those things

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that can potentially set us apart. And I think my implementation currently

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is not. And so I'm taking this as a learner as much as

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a person who's brainstormed about this. Well, I'm gonna throw it to Daniel

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who's not here, but one of his comments in our our notes was

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to include client testimonials in your portfolio,

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have clients record testimonials, and turn them into audiograms for the

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website, which goes on, like, to what I was saying that and what Jesse

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was saying more like the social proof and the referrals or

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Yes. So maybe we've been too focused on calling it

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a portfolio page. Maybe it's a why should you hire me

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and how can I prove to you that I can actually do what I can

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do? I like that. I don't think that's gonna fit in a website header bar,

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so we'll probably need need to figure out a different word. Jennifer, can you can

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you do that for us? I had typed that into chat gpt,

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drink and ask. Yeah. So now powered by AI already.

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Jennifer is gonna generate for us a website title, hopefully.

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So yeah. The basically the why should you hire me page. I love that

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because portfolio, social proof testimonials potentially

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sizzle reel or demo reel potentially links to all the things you've

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done. I like calling it the why should you hire me page. All because

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of something that Daniel typed into something and I never read it that way until

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you did. Well, thank you. Yeah. I think the question I would have for those

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that are joining us in the chat, have you heard anything so far that you

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think you might implement? And if so, how are you planning to do that? For

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me, I'm planning to change mine to something more like a

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why should you hire me page. And I'm probably gonna go for the testimonials before

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I do a demo reel. I don't know. Jennifer, what about you? Agreed.

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The only thing about my website is that I pay somebody

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to, update it for me and I haven't, I don't wanna pay

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them. So I'll have to figure out something that doesn't involve updating my

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website, like doing a time lapse video for

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a reel somewhere. Time lapse video of a reel. Yeah. I

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love that. Steve also mentioned, and I hadn't thought about this,

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supplying a PDF download of your portfolio to prospects or on your website is

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high level professionalism. I don't have a PDF of mine. Jennifer, do

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you have a PDF of yours? I have an ebook, but it's

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not about it's about how to start a podcast. It's not about my portfolio.

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What I send prospective clients is a series of

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8 questions to think through before you hire a podcast editor, and they work whether

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you're gonna hire me or not. But it's basically just helping them start thinking about,

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like, what does success look like? Why am I doing this? What's my budget?

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That's what I send. I like the idea also of having a

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PDF portfolio or something like that. How do you

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PDF audio? We wouldn't PDF audio, but you can

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build links in. Right? You can put a click here button. So if you go

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to Canva, right, you create an element, you attach a link to it.

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Let's see. I'm not sure what order to take these. Okay. Did this do it

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in the order in which they came? Tim says, for me, I like to be

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able to showcase my recording, editing, and original theme music producer,

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and a short 5 to 7 minute demo. Well, you're doing a lot of

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things there, Tim. I think that's the one that we had on the Facebook group

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from ProTech Music where he had the demo reel or the

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the demo was loaded into SoundCloud and had a couple of

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different things there. It was really, really, really well done.

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So, yeah, I think that's a good one. Jesse says,

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I shy away from why should you hire me and focus

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more on how can I help you and don't start with saving

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them time? They already know that. Yeah. I don't have anything to add

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to Jesse's. He's dropping the mic as usual. I love that.

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So, Jesse, would you literally call it the what can I help you

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page, or would you call it something else? Protechmusic.com/examples.

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Thank you, Tim. We will have links to all this stuff in the, episode

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notes. I'd never considered the client testimonials page being

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part of my portfolio, but I have heard

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of, I think I took some sort of sales training once when they

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were talking about getting video testimonials of your

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clients and like calling them on a zoom call and recording

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the 2 of you talking about it together.

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Okay. And, then using that for reels

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and stuff. But I've never tried that either. I just have, like, little

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quotes. My favorite testimonial I have is

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we believe in God because Jennifer came work miracles.

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That's awesome. It was a Christian podcast, but that's what they

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said about me. Jesse says case studies work well

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too if you have a bigger story to tell. Yeah. So I think

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this one could be really powerful, especially with client

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permission. Right? So whether you're working on a storytelling show and

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talking people through the process of how you developed a storyline and how you worked

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with a client, this could also be this was the audio

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we started with. This is how we approached the repair. This was the thought

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process that went into the editing and then sort of the before and after. I

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think that could be really powerful as well. That's one that makes me

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personally a little bit uncomfortable because I feel like I'm kind of airing the

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client's dirty laundry if we talk about the challenges. So

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I would tread lightly on a personal level. But, hey, case studies

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are a big deal. Right? And people don't come to you because they don't have

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a problem. Nobody comes to a podcast editor and says, I'd like for you to

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edit for me because I've got everything working perfectly and I don't need anything to

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change. Right? Right. Patrick says, I mean, really,

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your entire website could kinda be considered your portfolio.

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It served lots of purposes, I suppose. It does.

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Yeah. So have a website, people. Have a website. Yeah. I think

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this is where Carrie would normally insert her. If you don't have a

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website, set up your basic domain and your basic website.

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Mine's on WordPress. Jennifer's is on WordPress. It doesn't have to be right.

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It can be a one page website if that's what you need. If what

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you have is nothing, that will probably be better than what you have.

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Jesse says how you've helped improve their audio through equipment

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and training, I guess, going back into case studies and testimonials and

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stuff. Yeah. Especially so, Jennifer, this would be great for you with launch clients.

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Right? Because you're you're doing a lot of launches right now. This could be

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huge because then you can demonstrate that you're not giving the

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same advice to every person. Right? A solo show

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doesn't necessarily get the same equipment list as a co hosted

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in person show versus a co hosted over the Internet

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show. They get a little bit different guidance. Yes. Yeah. In

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person show, you're probably gonna get them an interface, a proper interface.

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And you might give them the same microphones, but you're not gonna say, hey, plug

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in 2 USB mics and go to town. No. I I don't tell them that.

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Nope. Because you know that. That doesn't work. I love that.

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You know, we started talking about portfolios. Now we're just talking about all the things

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we should I should have on my website. Oh, is that what

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these little notes are? Bryan's taking notes in his shared

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Google Docs, and I'm like, what's he doing? He's he's Yeah. I'm taking notes of

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all the things that I'm telling myself I might do after we get done

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because like I said at the beginning, we didn't come into this thinking we

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were experts. Right? We're we're coming. We're bringing what we've got. And some of

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you have really brought something to the table tonight as we've been recording this live.

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This has been great. What else about portfolios? What what are we not thinking

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about? Are there any pitfalls to having a portfolio? I don't

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think there would be a pitfall unless you had someone who got mad about

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you throwing them under the bus in it. So get permission if you're

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gonna do before and afters, I guess. But I don't

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see what, like, from a client facing

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perspective or whatever. I think the only pitfall

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that I see would be and we talked about this with,

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Tom Kelly. Tom Kelly. We talked with him about that where when he

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started his first editing his first show or a few shows,

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they were so bad. The audio quality was so bad even after he got

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done that he didn't want them to go on to a any kind of

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portfolio. So I think just being careful what you choose

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to go in your portfolio can be a really big deal. That's something with a

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couple of clients that I have on my portfolio that I had to

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wait until I had an episode that I was comfortable putting on my

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portfolio. Jesse says pitfalls to before and

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after is you could attract clients with unrealistic

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expectations or wanting to deliver low quality

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audio so you can spend a year working on it.

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Yes. I would never publish anything where I'm showing that

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I took out goat sounds from an episode. It happened. Right?

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But I'm not gonna not gonna create that expectation. That is certainly

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something to be careful with. The photographer who decided to

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document her whole episode by having throughout the

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whole thing. Well, every time the flash went off. Yeah. I don't wanna

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encourage people to do that. Yeah. Or maybe when you've got a a metronome

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going off in a band, Editor

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has some skills with metronomes. Let's hit Steve's comments.

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So Steve's comment is that what he's gathering is that portfolios don't matter as

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much as having a website, a media kit, and or testimonials and

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client recommendations. I think for the bulk of us,

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I would agree with you, Steve. I think the only time when a

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portfolio might be more important than testimonials or recommendations

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might be when you're not getting referrals, when it's

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somebody coming and saying, hey, I need to check you out, And I don't have

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any other way to do that. But I don't think that's most of us. And

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as Patrick says, he thinks it's obviously probably more valuable or worth the time and

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effort if you're a new editor needing clients.

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Declining over the last year as multiple shows, let let themselves

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go. And you're currently working on brand strategy. Do we know someone like

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that? We know one person like that. And, honestly, he's kind

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of not moving very fast, but he's been very thankful for all the

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help he's gotten so far. And that's me. Jennifer, anything else we

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need to hit on portfolios? We've gotten all of the thoughts that I

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had and several that I didn't have. Yeah. And several Daniel had.

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So thanks for being with us in spirit, Daniel. Yeah. For those

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that have commented, we're very thankful. We're now going to move on to the

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powered by AI portion of this show. Jennifer, do you wanna explain what's

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happening and why? As you may or may not realize, if you've

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listened to the show for any amount of time, we typically when we get to

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this point, we go to our pod decks question of the day. We have

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been through the deck, and we're getting repeats and having to throw out questions

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because they're not appropriate and all the things. So we have

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decided to come up with the chat

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GPT question of the day instead powered by AI.

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If you are currently drinking a water like I am, this is your this is

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your chance to take a drink because we said AI and chat GPT. Jennifer is

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the chat GPT maven, so she's gonna tell us what our question

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is. Well, I editor chat GPT, give me a

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random question. And here's the question. What

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would you do if you found yourself in possession of a

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mysterious antique key with no idea what it

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unlocks? Those of you joining us live, we're interested in what you would

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do, especially if you host a show about creepy and

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mysterious things. I don't host one of those shows,

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but I'm thinking that I would probably have to take that key

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and put it in a wooden case with a velvet lining and very

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carefully close the clasp and put it on a shelf where I

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could view it and be interested in it. And if I ever got

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the courage, maybe start walking around and take the key very carefully

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out of the wooden case with velvet lining and stick it into

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various locks until I find out what it opens. And then probably runaway

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screaming realizing that I wouldn't want to see what's behind that door anyway.

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Editor. My daughter's favorite movie is Coraline. So

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that's the key key that went to my head, first of all, and

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and it took her to creepy other dimension. So I'm

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like, Yeah. I don't know. She ended up throwing it into a

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well. But in

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reality, I'd probably throw it in a drawer with all the extra keys and forget

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about it. Jesse says that he would sell it on eBay as a lost

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relic. Patrick's gonna throw it in the junk drawer. I think with that, we'll go

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ahead and close this episode down. We're done a few minutes early. But our

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commitment to you is we will try to bring as much value as we can

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and then go away once we're not doing that anymore. And I feel like we've

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crossed that threshold. We could talk about thresholds and how they got their name, but

Speaker:

that's not the purpose of this show. Well, you know, they ask how

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long a podcast should be. Right? You get this question all the time? 2

Speaker:

minutes shorter than ours. Right? No. As long as it

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takes to tell the story, not a moment longer nor shorter.

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Yes. So for those of you that joined us live, thank you so

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much. We really appreciate you being here. Those of you in the comments, we appreciate

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your questions and your suggestions. Great stuff coming out of the

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comments section. Really glad that you could be here. If you're joining us later

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listening, we're glad that you could do that. You can always join us live. We

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would love to have you here. Jennifer, if somebody wants to be a guest on

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the show or has a suggestion for a topic that we should cover, what would

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they do? They could go to podcasteditormastermind.com, click be

Speaker:

a guest, or find us in the Facebooks because, I mean,

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this topic came out of the Facebook chat. Behind the scenes, we

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do have a running list of possible topics. This was 1, but because

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somebody asked, that's why we talked about it. With that, I'm Bryan

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Entsminger. If you want to, you can find me at toptieraudio.com, and you can

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check out my portfolio there. I'm

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Jennifer Longworth. You can find me at BourbonBarrelPodcasting.com.

Speaker:

For those that are wondering, both Daniel and Carrie were not able to join us

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tonight. Daniel is at Rothmedia.audio and Carrie is

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at carrie.land. And we would love it if you would check them out as well.

Speaker:

You haven't already subscribed to the show, podcasteditorsmastermind.com is

Speaker:

the place for all of that. We love you, and we're really glad that you

Speaker:

were here. And now I'm going to try to hang up. So bye. Thank you

Speaker:

very much. Bye.

Speaker:

So How much is that?

Speaker:

Think it's hanging up. I think it's hanging up. There we go.

Show artwork for Podcast Editors Mastermind

About the Podcast

Podcast Editors Mastermind
For Podcast Editors, by Podcast Editors
Are you a Podcast Editor? Or trying to be?

This is the show for Podcast Editors, by Podcast Editors. We mastermind topics with your peers, with industry leaders, and even have a little fun along the way.

Growing a business as a Podcast Editor is challenging. It can also be lonely.

Follow or subscribe to the show, get involved in the Podcast Editors Club Facebook group, and stay in touch with the latest events and news through the newsletter at https://www.PodcastEditorAcademy.com/newsletter.

About your hosts

Steve Stewart

Profile picture for Steve Stewart
Steve has been editing professionally since 2016 and founded the Podcast Editors Club Facebook community.
He also co-founded the Podcast Editor Academy - which helps individuals build their own podcast services business. When he's not online talking about editing podcasts, you'll find him staring out his home office window at the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in southern Colorado.

Mark Deal

Profile picture for Mark Deal
Mark is a nationally recognized expert and local leader in Podcasting. He serves as the Organizer of Podcast Atlanta, the Founder of Podcast Guest Academy, and leads various communities in the podcasting industry. His primary focus is showing people how to take their podcast guest appearances from boring to soaring with measurable impact.

Jennifer Longworth

Profile picture for Jennifer Longworth
Bourbon Barrel Podcasting was founded in 2019 when Jennifer Longworth, with 14 years of audio editing experience, decided to get serious about editing podcasts for Central Kentuckians. Jennifer edits podcasts for established podcasters and helps new podcasters get started with the basics.

Bryan Entzminger

Profile picture for Bryan Entzminger
Analyst by day. Podcast editor by night. Usually caffeinated. Husband, father, Jesus-follower all the time. Cohost The Podcast Gauntlet, former host of Engaging Missions, and former cohost of Podcast Editors Mastermind.

Carrie Caulfield Arick

Profile picture for Carrie Caulfield Arick
Carrie Caulfield Arick is a nerd for sound, stories, and listening. She’s learned from and worked with the industry’s best producers in her role as writer, editor and sound designer. Carrie is a co-founder of the femxle podcast post-production community, Just Busters and co-host of Podcast Editors Mastermind. Oh, and she likes cats… a lot.

Daniel Abendroth

Profile picture for Daniel Abendroth
Hi, I’m Daniel and my podcast editing services will make your podcasts sound smooth and professional, while saving you time and money.