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            really  notice  it,  let  alone  discuss  its  impact  on  coffee.   busy making ends meet. Sponsorships and memberships
            However, after the episode was released, Harper sudden-  are  the  two  most  common  ways  coffee  podcasts  keep
            ly saw conversations happening around his community   themselves  alive.  For  example, Filter  Stories’  business
            about adjusting the volume of cafe stereos or modifying   model primarily is sponsorships. The podcast collaborates
            cafe spaces to dampen noise. “It’s interesting how quick-  with  coffee  companies  who  would  both  assist  with  a
            ly  I  see  everybody  around  me  kind  of  rethinking  and   story and also want to create free educational content.
            reshaping their thoughts on the matter,” he said.  However,  according  to  Harper,  it  is  a  difficult  model
                Whether doing it all for free or making it a business,   because to make it happen, he devotes a lot of time to
            no matter conducting it as various interviews or pursuing   getting  sponsors  interested,  and  then  negotiating  the
            high-quality documentaries, coffee folks are all using their   partnership. For others like I’M NOT A BARISTA, it is a
            own ways to contribute to the community to make it a   purer version of support. Micky shared that the start-up
            better place. And podcasts have become a powerful me-  capital  for  his  podcast  came  from  a  coffee  equipment
            dium to conquer the mission.                  company called LilyDrip, only because the brand shares
                                                          the same value with him and wants to help.
            David And Goliath: The Coffee Podcast             Besides sponsorship, membership is customary for
            Business                                      coffee  podcasts  to  keep  their  projects  going.  For Boss
                                                          Barista, the podcast adapted a paid subscription model
                “But also, frankly, there are only so many episodes   through  the  newsletter.  However,  with  spendings  like
            I  can  make  in  a  year.  I’m  limited,”  said  Harper  when   hosting  platforms,  taxes,  and  production  fees,  the  rest
            telling me the challenges he is now facing with his podcast.   generally goes to upkeep.
            “It’s hard to scale what I create. If I want to scale it, I need   Even though it is a struggle for many coffee podcasts,
            money. And how much is enough money? Even though   it has potential. Taking the Chinese podcast Tipsy Proof as
            the whole podcast market is big, coffee media is a small   an example, it covers topics from wine and beer to coffee,
            industry.”                                    tea, chocolates, and more. It tries all interesting forms,
                What Harper said is true, as many interviewees have   not limited to interviews, analyses of Drops of Gods – a
            confessed that the market for coffee podcasts is still small,   Japanese comic book about wine, as well as documentaries
            and it might take years for it to grow. Micky told me in   and more. The two-year-old food & drink and lifestyle
            the interview that even though he hopes to reach a wid-  podcast has already attracted big cheese such as the Chi-
            er audience, the backstage stage of his podcast shows that   nese e-commerce giant T-mall by Alibaba as well as RED,
            most of his listeners are still people in the industry. There
            are people who are interested in coffee, but they might
            not  necessarily  want  to  dive  into  it.  “You  might  drink
            Starbucks every day, but that doesn’t mean you want to
            know  more  about  specialty  coffee  through  a  podcast.”
            Said Micky.
                According  to  recent  podcast  reports  by  Nielsen
            and BuzzSprout, the most popular podcast genres in-
            clude history, comedy, true crime and news. Food and
            drink is not the favored choice for most podcast listen-
            ers, let alone the coffee podcast under the segments.   However, before the
            Some of my interviewees shared with me their average
            volume for each episode, and most well-performed ones   boom comes, the
            are hardly surpassing 10,000. Even though the overall
            podcast  market  is  big,  it  doesn’t  mean  that  everyone   biggest challenge
            can get a piece of the cake.
                The relatively small scale of the market means few-   for most coffee
            er business opportunities. Almost all interviewees told
            me that their podcasts get spread mainly and only through   podcast hosts is to
            word of mouth. Sometimes it is through the guests on
            their podcast. Other times, it is through friends and peo-  avoid the so-called
            ple they know in the industry.
                And  for  many  coffee  podcasts,  they  are  also  still    “pod-fade”.


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