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7 Blocks That Stop Entrepreneurs From Podcasting

Ronsley Vaz

It was only when a good friend of mine asked me what my resistances were before I started my podcast that made me go back and think about the blocks that fired off in my brain when it came to podcasting.

  1. I dont know how to

You didnt know how to walk. You learned. You had the right encouragement around you and with the right determination, you walked and have been ever since. Learning anything new is just the same. When learning something new, always make sure you are determined and have the right encouragement around you.

I think more than I dont know how to, the reason that I thought back when I was faced with the same decision was, I dont know if I really want to. Ask yourself if this really is a reason that is stopping you. And, its fine if it is. But instead of making an uninformed decision, learn about the pros and cons so that you can work out if you really want to podcast.

  1. I wont sound good

This is a common reason and it happens to everybody, myself included. We are always too hard on ourselves.In fact, we are the most critical towards our own actions and thoughts. It was only last week I heard this one, You have a great sounding voice for radio, I dont. I sound weird. So I responded with, Really? It is probably the first time that an Indian was complimented for his accent, because your inner critique is telling you that you wont sound good. I still go through these days when I listen to myself and think how ridiculous I sound. But, the show must go on. Also, we dont know how good we sound until someone else tells us we do.

  1. I dont think anyone would listen

I get this one more than any other reason. Every time you are about to produce new art (term coined by Seth Godin), you wonder if anyone would care. Maybe the whole world wont. But, the people that care about the problems you are solving on your podcast will care. That is why taking as much time to clarify your concept is pivotal to the success of getting to those people that care.

  1. Im not sure about podcasting

This one is more of an excuse than a reason. It is not knowing enough about the potential of podcasting to make an informed decision.To be honest, it is not knowing about the disadvantages of podcasting as well. The idea of putting together these articles on podcasting is so that I can help you make an educated decision. If you arent sure, it means you dont know enough. Dont chalk it off the board before you make an intelligent and sensible decision based on possibilities.

  1. It is too technical for me

Yes, I have to agree that this can be a hurdle for some people. But, would technicalities stop you from changing a leaking tap, or getting your taxes filed on time? You would either learn how to do it, or get an expert to help you. And, you dont have to know how a microphone takes sound waves and converts them to a digital mp3 file. You just need to know that it does and what plugs go into what sockets to make that happen. There is enough information out there to make sure you can get the technical side sorted, so dont let this be your reason.

  1. I dont have the time

This one is a good problem to have. If you dont have the time, it probably means that you are busy in revenue generating activities. If that is the case, then you need to talk to your people regularly. There is no better medium to constantly be in your customers ears than a podcast. And, because you dont have the time, you can get an expert to do all the heavy lifting. You can set it up in a way that you only turn up for recording the interview. Everything else is taken care of including hardware setup, recording, guest invitations, production, uploading the final file, and even social media. Its 2015 for god sakes!

  1. Someone told me that podcasting is going to die

That someone sounds like a wise person. When you hear these predictions, ask yourself these 3 questions:

  1. Does this person have a podcast or do they have any one of the reasons above plaguing their inner voice?

  2. Did this person start a badly conceptualised podcast and it didnt work?

  3. And, can they comment on its future within formed certainty?

By no means do I think that a podcast is for everyone. So far, I know that it is for very niched businesses and for those of them that challenge the status-quo.

If you have any reasons that are stopping you from creating a podcast platform, please let me know in the comment section below, and let us all make informed decisions.

faq's

Your Questions Answered

You can also find out more detail on our Methodology on our next webinar.

How long does it take to complete KPI?

The programme is built around a 12-month foundation year. This is the time it takes to build your full authority ecosystem. From there, many clients continue to compound their results year on year. Within 24 hours of joining, you'll get full access to the KPI platform. In your first week, you'll attend a group onboarding session where you'll learn how to navigate the platform, access your resources, subscribe to our event calendars, and book into your first Value Canvas Kickoff.

How long has Dent been doing this?

Over 5,500 businesses across 60+ industries in EMEA, the Americas, and Asia-Pacific have gone through our accelerators.

What is your mission?

Our mission is to produce Key People of Influence who stand out, scale up, and make an impact in the world.

What makes this different from programmes?

The biggest difference is that KPI is a production environment, not a course. You don't watch videos and hope something sticks. You build 15-17 real assets of influence — your book, your scorecard, your productised offer, your lead generation system — in structured 10-day sprints with live coaching. Every asset goes to market as you build it. Real feedback, real results, real revenue impact. And you're doing it alongside 5,500+ founders who've been through the same methodology.

Is Daniel Priestley involved in the programme?

Yes! Daniel is our CEO and Cofounder. He is one of the key minds behind every aspect of the KPI Accelerator. He occasionally runs workshops himself.

faq's

Your Questions Answered

You can also find out more detail on our Methodology on our next webinar.

How long does it take to complete KPI?

The programme is built around a 12-month foundation year. This is the time it takes to build your full authority ecosystem. From there, many clients continue to compound their results year on year. Within 24 hours of joining, you'll get full access to the KPI platform. In your first week, you'll attend a group onboarding session where you'll learn how to navigate the platform, access your resources, subscribe to our event calendars, and book into your first Value Canvas Kickoff.

How long has Dent been doing this?

Over 5,500 businesses across 60+ industries in EMEA, the Americas, and Asia-Pacific have gone through our accelerators.

What is your mission?

Our mission is to produce Key People of Influence who stand out, scale up, and make an impact in the world.

What makes this different from programmes?

The biggest difference is that KPI is a production environment, not a course. You don't watch videos and hope something sticks. You build 15-17 real assets of influence — your book, your scorecard, your productised offer, your lead generation system — in structured 10-day sprints with live coaching. Every asset goes to market as you build it. Real feedback, real results, real revenue impact. And you're doing it alongside 5,500+ founders who've been through the same methodology.

Is Daniel Priestley involved in the programme?

Yes! Daniel is our CEO and Cofounder. He is one of the key minds behind every aspect of the KPI Accelerator. He occasionally runs workshops himself.

faq's

Your Questions Answered

You can also find out more detail on our Methodology on our next webinar.

How long does it take to complete KPI?

The programme is built around a 12-month foundation year. This is the time it takes to build your full authority ecosystem. From there, many clients continue to compound their results year on year. Within 24 hours of joining, you'll get full access to the KPI platform. In your first week, you'll attend a group onboarding session where you'll learn how to navigate the platform, access your resources, subscribe to our event calendars, and book into your first Value Canvas Kickoff.

How long has Dent been doing this?

Over 5,500 businesses across 60+ industries in EMEA, the Americas, and Asia-Pacific have gone through our accelerators.

What is your mission?

Our mission is to produce Key People of Influence who stand out, scale up, and make an impact in the world.

What makes this different from programmes?

The biggest difference is that KPI is a production environment, not a course. You don't watch videos and hope something sticks. You build 15-17 real assets of influence — your book, your scorecard, your productised offer, your lead generation system — in structured 10-day sprints with live coaching. Every asset goes to market as you build it. Real feedback, real results, real revenue impact. And you're doing it alongside 5,500+ founders who've been through the same methodology.

Is Daniel Priestley involved in the programme?

Yes! Daniel is our CEO and Cofounder. He is one of the key minds behind every aspect of the KPI Accelerator. He occasionally runs workshops himself.