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Insights from Buzzsprout's 2024 Backtracks

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Tom Rossi joins us to unpack Buzzsprout's fascinating podcast statistics for 2024. Learn how metrics like minutes produced and episodes created showcase the dedication behind every podcast and how Buzzsprout’s Global Stats page can offer a reality check on your podcast's reach, often revealing that you're doing better than you think!

Be sure to send in your response to last episode's sound-off! We want you to listen to an older episode of your podcast and tell us one thing you think could be improved. 

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Jordan:

All right, so we're hopping on to do a quick cast today. Talk about the Buzzsprout backtracks for 2024. And with us today we have Tom Rossi. Kevin is on the road and he has been banned from recording in his car, so unfortunately he cannot be here. So thanks for joining us, tom.

Alban:

Thanks for having me. Kevin now has podcast immunity because he'll just claim like I'm happy to do it from the car and we're like no. So we're talking about backtracks today. For people who haven't been with Buzzsprout for a while, backtracks are the end of the year. We tell you all these stats about how your podcast performed in the year and obviously, like, the numbers are not success. The success are all the people you reached. But it's kind of powerful when those numbers get aggregated and you see the impact that your show had. I don't know if you felt this way, jordan, but our numbers for this show are mostly, in my mind, pretty modest, somewhere between 1,500 to 3,000 downloads an episode. And then at the end of the year we got it and it's like 82,000 for the year and I was like that's like kind of a big number. I guess when you add the smaller numbers up they get bigger. But I know math still surprised me.

Jordan:

Yeah, I'm one of those podcasters that I kind of avoid looking at stats like as much as possible, and so it's really nice to get that notification where it's like, okay, here's how many downloads you got for the year, and I'm just like, oh wow, well, that's way more than I thought. I didn't even think about it, so yeah.

Tom:

Yeah, I think that the downloads is one number that can be really encouraging. You get that number. You see how many people you know downloaded your episodes from that year. But just seeing the number of minutes too, the number of minutes that you've produced, the number of episodes that you created for the year, like you can forget that man that's a lot.

Alban:

It is a lot, and it's a lot when you think that Jordan's actually editing us down, like to a third of the time we've recorded. Kevin and I just sit here and ramble Jordan's like, all right, got to chop this up.

Jordan:

Yeah, I think our last episode. I chopped an hour off of it.

Alban:

We always have like a good 10 minutes at the beginning where we're all kind of warming up and they end up being like totally off topic. Sometimes it turns into a pre-show or something, but often Jordan's like this makes no sense.

Jordan:

We can't use this.

Alban:

One of the stats that I really like was this like top percentage. We're trying to like quantify how successful a show is in comparison to other podcasts. Yeah, tom, can you tell us, like, what this is? It says Buzzcast is a top 10% show. Is that based on ratings and reviews? What is that?

Tom:

Yeah, really, you don't want to say right, you don't want to say like, this is a measurement of success as much as it's just in terms of the number of downloads, puts you in the top X percentage of all the Buzzsprout podcasts that are out there, and so it's based on the number of downloads that your episode gets in the first seven days. So we look at how many downloads do you get in the first seven days? If you get, say, for example, more than 466, you're in the top 10% of all the Buzzsprout podcasts that are out there. And we really like that number because we think people in their minds they compare themselves to Joe Rogan or they compare themselves to these big podcasts and they don't realize actually most podcasts don't fall into that category and so you may very well find yourself in the top 10, top 25%, without that many downloads. Top 25% is only 111. So we highlight those numbers and we highlight where that podcast falls in that category.

Jordan:

Yeah, I love that we include this, because on social media I interact with a lot of podcasters and a lot of times they'll be like I'm only getting, you know 150 downloads and you know I feel like I want to quit and there's so many podcasters that we have that don't. Know about the Buzzsprout global stats page and buzzsproutcom slash stats. You can look at it. Every month, it's updated. You can look at it every month, it's updated. This is one of those statistics I love sharing with people because it makes them go whoa, wait a second. I am way farther than I thought I was and it just. I know stats aren't everything, but you know, sometimes it feels good to see how you stand against some other podcasters and you kind of go, you know what?

Alban:

I'm actually better at this than I thought I really like it because it's always more impressive to the podcaster than they thought. We have lots of podcasters who go I've got to be bottom, like 2%. And they look and we go you're actually above the 50th percentile and they're blown away because they thought I'm only getting a few hundred downloads an episode. I must be really low. It's just that we only hear about the shows that get the $100 million Amazon deal and you're like, yeah, that's a big show, I'm a nothing show, but really you're probably doing pretty dang well.

Tom:

Even though it's not the only measurement of success, it's definitely something that, like Albin said, can be encouraging If you know that this is compared to more than 100,000 podcasts and you know that your downloads in the first seven days is more than 50,000 other podcasts.

Jordan:

If you're in the top 50%.

Tom:

That's encouraging, and so, even if it's not necessarily the measurement of success, it does help people keep podcasting. It helps them feel encouraged in the work that they're doing, that they're growing, and really that's what you want, right? Is that the downloads that you get in the first seven days is a good measurement of your reach? How have you built that audience that are downloading those episodes as soon as they come out and that will grow and grow over time?

Jordan:

So another thing that we have on our backtracks is the number of episodes that you published in the year. This is another one of those things that's really fun to see at the end of the year, because you go, holy cow, I published way more episodes than I even thought I had For Buzzcast. It reminded me that it was this year that we went weekly with the Quick Cast and Snapcast and experimenting with that, so we had so many more episodes this year than we did last year, and that was kind of a fun thing to see too.

Tom:

Jordan, I'm curious did you do the math of how many episodes you produced across all of your podcasts?

Jordan:

No.

Tom:

If you add them all together, that's really incredible.

Jordan:

Oh my gosh, If I added them all together. I don't even want to think about it. I try not to think about how many podcasts I produce, to be honest with you.

Tom:

It'll stress me out. And how many minutes? How many minutes? Because you figure the number of minutes that actually make it into the episode. Let's say that's 50 to 75% of the actual recording, maybe less than that, and that's how much material you had to go through to edit. I mean that's a lot.

Jordan:

Okay, tom, I think that this is actually going to be a really fun thing for me to do. I think I'm gonna have to post a check in or something. This is editing Jordan, interrupting your episode to let you know that I did in fact, go back and total up everything after this recording. I recorded a total of 4206 minutes in 2024. And I published 2827 minutes, which means I cut over 1,300 minutes. So, basically, 67% of the content I record makes it to publishing. Yikes.

Alban:

We always do these stats around the locations. I have a few questions about locations. This is just turning into me questioning Tom about my backtracks. But 157 countries, which is really exciting. But like half of those downloads are all in one country, united States of America very US centric show. But you know, it's funny that I think of so many of our listeners that we interact with are based outside the US.

Jordan:

I know yeah.

Alban:

And so that made me really happy. I'm like I know there's a few percent in the United Kingdom, a few percent in Canada and Australia, but then I'm looking and I'm like well. I know a few of the people in Australia, I know some of the people in the UK, so you know it's fun to see like those numbers and then realize like there are real people behind those numbers.

Jordan:

I think it shows that our UK and Australia listeners are the actually engaged ones, like the US ones need to step it up here because we're not hearing from them.

Alban:

Specifically the listeners in Ashburn, virginia Do you see this, Tom?

Tom:

Is this showing up in a bunch of stats? Let's not talk about Ashburn, Virginia?

Alban:

Is this another like Lake Stevens?

Tom:

Yeah, yes, where there was like an AWS server or a VPN or something. Yeah, it's a data center and so it could be a VPN. It could be a service. It's really hard. I mean one. You have VPNs, so VPNs will hide the location and so sometimes it'll show up as the data center and then sometimes they're clearly bots but they're not clear enough that we can actually filter them out. We filter a lot, but still it's really hard to tell. A good bot looks like a real download.

Alban:

That would be a really fun stat to get next year. Tom, how many we blocked. Here's how many bots we blocked from your podcast. One of the things that jumped out to me was top episodes. Me too, I was pretty surprised by which of these were near the top Now number one. Do you know why? What Makes a Good Podcast is our number one episode for the year?

Jordan:

I mean to me it seems like a very SEO rich title Like what makes a good podcast. People are going to be like what makes a good podcast? That's going to pop up. That seems pretty simple, right.

Alban:

It's actually a little more gamed than that. What makes a good podcast? I'm pretty sure that's the episode we embed in our embed player on the Buzzsprout website so that people can see what our embed players are like, and so people play that episode a lot, and if you click into its specific stats, most of those are the embed player plays.

Jordan:

Well, it sounds like we need to do that with more of our episodes. I got to find different places to stick these.

Tom:

That's true. That's what we need More click farms, yeah we absolutely do.

Alban:

But the number three was when we talked about Acquired, the Acquired podcast, and we kind of went deep into their episodes and what they were doing. That was different in podcasting and that got a really strong response.

Jordan:

It did.

Alban:

Lots of people listened to it and that was an episode I really enjoyed. I think our last episode was probably the best of the year.

Jordan:

Easily yeah, but the Acquired one is really interesting to see so many people still going back and listening to it months later well, and the episode that actually surprised me was the answering tons of fan mail, coming in second under what makes a good podcast. That actually shocked me because I thought we had so many other episodes that were so much better. And then I was like, well, actually you know what? That was our highest, highest listener engagement episode, other than the one that we just did last week. But to me that says listeners were like yeah, sweet, they're going to be just responding to us and talking to us and I think that that really helped with the engagement of the episode.

Tom:

All right, well, this has been fun. Thanks for having me on. It's always fun to be with you guys.

Jordan:

Thanks, tom, thank you for hopping in. We appreciate it and for our listeners, our sound off question last episode was to listen back on an older episode of your podcast and let us know one thing that you'd like to improve. I will say we have had one response, so that tells me that you are not doing your homework, and so I hope that you are able to do that over the weekend and get back to us so that we can include it on our next episode of Buzzcast.

Alban:

I have an answer. I just didn't want to send it in because I don't want you and Kevin to know what it is until I say it. But I listened to the episode, I really enjoyed it and there's something about me that stuck out.

Jordan:

So I'll have an answer for you, Jordan. All right, well, we like to hear your responses, as always. Thanks for listening and keep podcasting.

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