Distribute a company podcast professionally produced by Handcrafted ’Casts.
A single episode, or a series. Like an old-time radio show or the latest techno mash-up — or your own design. Bring us your idea. We’ll make you business come alive!
Are you unsure of how to use a podcast to dramatize your business?
BusinessPundit compiled a helpful list of fifteen podcasts to hone your money-making skills.
My personal favorite is #6, Duct Tape Marketing.
Check out the list for examples of how a regular audio cast could improve your own business.
Then drop us a line. We’ll bring your business to life.

Whew! What a mouthful that subtitle proved to be.
A question floating over the use of sound as a marketing tool is: how to distribute it?
Old-fashioned legacy broadcast radio is only one distribution channel.
Adding a link to the audio file on your company website is another.
Depending on the content, maybe the iTunes store is another possible channel.
This morning I came across Champion Sound, a company that provides email and mobile marketing tools tailor-made for promoting bands.
And right there is another distribution channel: email. If you regularly publish a company e-newsletter, add a regular item that points customers to your online audio.
If you don’t regularly publish a company e-newsletter, think about doing so. (If you want help producing a company e-newsletter, drop me a note.)

In many ways, marketing through the medium of audio is similar to direct mail because the best results come from pieces designed to speak to each listener, a personal message meant for a single ear.
Harry Walsh, a freelance copywriter who once worked for Ogilvy & Mather, put it this way for direct marketing:
The tone of a good direct mail letter is as direct and personal as the writer’s skill can make it. Even though it may go to millions of people, it never orates to a crowd but rather murmurs into a single ear. It’s a message from one letter writer to one letter reader.
For audio, the tone should be as direct and personal as the scriptwriter’s skill can make it. Speak from one person to another, from your mouth to the listener’s ear.
(Hat tip: Denny Hatch at Business Common Sense.)

Are working Moms a prime target for your product or service? Consider reaching this mobile market through online audio marketing.
An article by Howard Goldberg at MediaPost’s Engage:Moms describes characteristics of working Moms that make them a good audience for podcasts:
Package your service or product in a highly mobile podcast, make the package worth listening to during leisure activities, and include an offer that is too good to pass up — sounds like heaven to a working Mom!

Pat Fallon and Fred Senn are co-founders of Fallon Worldwide, now a subsidiary of the French-based Publicis Groups S.A. Since its founding as Fallon McElligott Rice in 1981, their advertising agency has defined and refined the concept of creative leverage “for companies that would rather outsmart the competition than outspend them.”
Chapter 8 of their book, Juicing the Orange: How to Turn Creativity into a Powerful Business Advantage, tells the story of their marketing campaign for BMW. A collaboration with Hollywood, the campaign turned its back on traditional television and used a series of short well-executed online movies to market the BMW Z3 sports car in late 1995 and early 1996, well before online marketing was accepted as a new and effective marketing medium.
Thirteen years later, marketing online is no longer revolutionary but all too often irritating or boring — and ignored.
If you’re looking for an engaging way to reach your target market online, consider a limited series of podcasts that brings your product or service alive through the most intimate medium, audio.
