SirRoxalot said:
...Smart people are in the content creation business, which is somewhat insulated from the delivery method. The big problem is figuring out how to monetize their content, which our current Internet generation expects to receive for free.
Unfortunately, to be successful, content has to be tuned to the delivery medium and the lifestyle of the user. Creating content to be platform-independent compromises its usability.
I discovered, quite by accident, that there's a niche to be exploited in producing spoken-word audio podcast content for specific industry channels, and next month I'll celebrate six years doing it as a full-time living. The monetization scheme has varied, but for the last four years I've worked primarily on a monthly retainer for a news service. There are other ways. But it's probably not ever going to allow focusing on the art while someone else handles sales and admin overhead, which is the luxury so many of us enjoyed in radio careers. And most podcasting is not distributed using RSS, but by users clicking a link on a web page. In fact, the whole RSS thing appears to have never escaped the novelty/geek audience, and may actually be declining as a modality.
The only reason I bring this up is because radio companies, so far, do not seem to be doing a very good job of optimizing their content for other platforms. KNRS here in SLC, a Clear Channel station, promotes what's called the "Rodcast" in association with Rod Arquette's excellent, local afternoon talk show. It's just an uncut aircheck of the first two hours of the show! I guess that serves a purpose as a kind of on-demand radio rerun, but it's certainly not making optimum use of podcasting.
Webcast content can generally attract a salable audience only when it escapes the geographical limits of radio coverage maps, and deals with niche topics of interest worldwide. Local radio stations don't generate this kind of content. Nobody outside Utah cares about the governor's I-15 Corridor Contractor Scandal. I've only made my own thing work by being among a very small pool of providers serving resource investing or aerospace industry news, and dishing it up worldwide.
Another unfortunate truth is that there's no sustainable economic model, now or in the foreseeable future, for webcasts in a format anything like the music/jock formats we all miss, and there's just not enough bandwidth to reach enough mobile devices in real time for an audience of thousands of people.