Many businesses, conference organizers, and educational institutions see podcasting as a way to distribute recordings of their lectures and classes online. This has its uses and its problems, and I’d like to take a look at a few of them.
Before I lay out my views on the subject, I want you to take a minute and think about what it is like to sit in an auditorium listening to a lecture. Do you imagine an exciting experience? For many people, the answer is no.
Now, think about listening to the same lecture without the “live” component of the experience. This live component is very important, so think about it carefully. A “pros and cons” question arises right here: a good lecture is made far better by being there, but an average lecture could benefit from a pause or fast-forward button.
I have been to many lectures, most of them mediocre ones. However, even among the best of them, there is only one that I would have enjoyed as much in a recording as I did in person (it is luckily available as a download). It is telling that this lecture was given by a veteran radio correspondent — almost nobody else could pull it off.
The point is that not every recording makes a good podcast. If a lecture has been recorded, by all means post it online. But posting it online doesn’t mean you have to make it a podcast (with an RSS feed and a listing on iTunes). It is great to open up access to these resources and expand their reach beyond the “one room, one time” audience (this is the premise of the popular site IT Conversations). Ideally, these lecture recording wills be edited slightly to clean up mentions of PowerPoint glitches and pauses for sips of water — just this small amount of work will improve the listening experience tremendously
However, just posting the audio of a lecture isn’t a very good way to gain or maintain an audience. If you truly want to engage your audience, I would advocate podcasting an interview or edited “audio profile” of the speaker to give your listeners a good feel for the content. If you have also posted the complete lecture, invite them to download it from your site if they want more information on the topic. This way, you entertain and invigorate your audience with well-produced content, then drive the most interested group of them to your site for the full story.
It takes extra work to do this, but that work could make the difference between a podcast with a few casual listeners and one with a large number of loyal fans. Not only are you producing a podcast series that people will actually want to subscribe to, but you are also serving the smaller number of people who do want to hear recorded lectures by making those recordings available as well.