Sailboats and Cruise Ships, or, How My Work Podcast Was Dwarfed by a Mega Work Podcast
May 20th, 2009 | Posted in Podcasting 9 Comments »
A couple of months ago, I wanted to start a podcast at my work, and so I interviewed someone who has been in our IT department for 28 years about the evolution of the department over the years.
The podcast took about a month to get approved, and the week before it was posted, as I was tracking down the person who controlled our iTunes feed and Feedburner, I found that another department, Digital Media, was in the process of launching a full-scale dedicated radio station with 24/7 programming and more than a dozen new shows, with new episodes published weekly, also downloadable as podcasts. Radio.lds.org allows you to listen to a live stream of programming online or, if you have an HD Radio in certain cities, you can listen in your car. All the shows also have feeds in iTunes, so they double as podcasts on your iPod.
The podcasts at radio.lds.org target a Mormon audience, but you may find the Everything Creative show interesting. Some of the other podcasts include informal conversations with leaders, stories related at conferences, a history of hymns, scripture stories, and other topics. The focus on conversations and stories is right on target.
Seeing this full-scale podcasting effort (I hope they haven’t underestimated the work necessary to keep this going), made me rethink my work podcast. There’s no longer a need, because it is being fully filled elsewhere, through another department.
A few years ago, as I was transitioning from a startup to a large company and feeling a little frustrated by the bureaucracy of approval required for nearly everything, an older colleague explained this metaphor. She told me small companies are like sailboats, nimble, quick and able to turn sharply, without much notice. Large companies, on the other hand, are like cruise ships. Massive and heavy — it takes them half a mile just to turn around. But while slow, they can also do incredibly powerful things.
I apply this metaphor to the podcasts. My little work podcast, which strangely seems the product of an IT startup, even though it is part of the same organization, is buried in the shadows of Radio.LDS.org’s gigantic all-consuming 24/7 radio station/media outlet/podcast deluge.
While on the topic of podcasts, the other day Gordon McLean of One Man Writes asked listeners what their favorite podcasts are. Here’s what I listen to regularly on my iPod right now: IT Author, Wordpress weekly, Boagworld, The WordPress Podcast, This American Life, InDesign Secrets, Brain Sparks, NPR Technology Podcast, This Week in Tech, and Grammar Girl.
My favorite podcast of the week is the IT Author interview of Geoffrey Pullum, an English professor who debunks many assertions in Strunk and White’s Elements of Style and Fowler’s Modern English Usage. I learned some interesting things about grammar from the interview. First, the that versus which rule, using “that” for restrictive clauses and “which” for non-restrictive clauses, appears to be an invention by Fowler in the early part of the twentieth century.
And Strunk and White’s enforcement of singular verbs with certain pronouns (for example, “None of us has an umbrella” rather than “None of us have an umbrella”) also seems to be a rule invention, not in keeping with the accepted grammar of his day.
I consider myself fortunate to live in a time when so much information is available and consumable for free.
Tags: metaphors, mormon, podcasts, radio.lds.org
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Another way the metaphor may apply to your situation: If your sailboat gets on the wrong (downwind) side of a cruise ship, it will take the wind out of your sails (so you can’t move), and then run you over (because it can’t turn).
Just a thought.
Janet, I like how you twisted the metaphor to more accurately describe the situation. Made me laugh.
Awesome to see that WordPress Weekly is one of the podcasts you listen to on a regular basis on your iPod. I get a tingling sensation whenever anyone tells me that. I may have to revisit my favorite podcasts post again to publish what it is I listen to every week on my (cover your eyes) Zune.
Jeffro, what are you doing with a Zune? Just kidding. Your podcasts have excellent content. I also like your cohost’s expertise as well. You guys have an excellent thing going on.
So what’s your favorite episode so far? Do you have any feedback with regards to what you would like to hear more of or less of on the show? Any complaints?
I’m not sure I have a favorite episode. I really like the regularity of the show, the fact that you publish weekly. The audio is decent enough as well. Complaints and suggestions? Nothing stands out right now. But now that you’re looking for more feedback, I’ll try to give you feedback on your wptavern site with the shownotes of each show.
Actually, one thing that would be great is if your wptavern site had a podcast button that aggregated all the podcast posts, so that I could add comments there. I download it through iTunes, and the split with weblogtools collection and talkshoe sometimes confuses me about where the original content is posted. Surely there’s a podcast category of some kind on your wptavern site, right?
Yes. In fact, I just saw you browsing it via Woopra
The split between where the shownotes posts were published is certainly a pain for longtime listeners of the show but that’s what happens when you move from place to place. On the WordPress Weekly information page, I’ve added direct links too all of the shownotes posts which are not on WPTavern.com to make it easy as possible to browse to them.
I believe episode 41 and up are all published on WPTavern as will future episodes/showotes.
If you like This American Life, you might like Radio Lab at http://radiolab.org. They have interesting stories that tend to be unified around some science discovery.
Thanks Harry. I wasn’t aware of Radio Lab. I’ll check them out.