The bantha in the room\u2014or the Zoom, to be exact\u2014was how a podcast about podcasting can be considered a technology podcast. (With podcast host Mark Asquith\u2019s love of <\/span>Star Wars<\/span><\/i>, we couldn\u2019t talk about the \u2018\u201celephant\u201d in the room, so I of course needed to find a reference from that world!)\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Mark and I quickly went down the rabbit hole of how the reduction in podcast categories by Apple made it more challenging to determine categories for shows that might not fit the usual and accepted definition of a particular category.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n True to the nature of the disruptor he has become, Mark is even shaking up podcast categories as we know them to find the right fit for his podcast\u2014<\/span>The Podcast Accelerator<\/span><\/i>. Finding it in the technology category might seem like <\/span>\u201csquare peg, round hole\u201d <\/span><\/i>as he puts it, but it works\u2026 just like the multi-color nail polish he let his niece paint on his nails shortly before our interview.<\/span><\/p>\n Mark, aka \u201cThe British Podcast Guy,\u201d is guided by two things when it comes to business decisions: instinct and pop culture. First, he has learned to trust his intuition when it comes to seeing opportunities and what can be done with them. Second, if \u201cpop culture\u201d isn\u2019t top of mind when you think of Mark, just take a look at his company name: Rebel Base Media. <\/span><\/p>\n Rebel Base Media is an apt name for a company run by a man who is determined to disrupt the media and podcast industry by making it easier for the unique voices that make up independent podcasters to create content and, if desired, find a way to monetize it.<\/span><\/p>\n How did this rebel get into podcasting? Back in 2013, he and a friend were doing a blog about DC Comics when his friend said, <\/span>\u201cLet\u2019s do a podcast.\u201d<\/span><\/i> Mark initially declined, because like many others in the UK at the time, he had an image of podcasters as guys who sat in their basements in their underwear talking about Superman<\/span> and Batman and other topics, because as he said, <\/span>\u201cThat\u2019s how podcasts were painted in the UK, because we were so far behind.\u201d <\/span><\/i>But eventually, he relented, and that podcast led to his co-hosting the <\/span>Spark of Rebellion, A Star Wars Show <\/span><\/i>with Garry Aylott.<\/span><\/p>\n And <\/span>that <\/span><\/i>podcast led him to start a podcast about business, <\/span>The 7 Minute Mentor<\/span><\/i>, because as a successful owner of a design agency in a <\/span>\u201ctiny mining town that no one had ever heard of,\u201d<\/span><\/i> he was asked a lot of questions about business.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n When I asked him how all the dots came together to get him where he is today, Mark said,<\/span> \u201cI am a \u2018do-a-thing-first-and-think-about-it-later\u2019 kind of guy. It\u2019s like being a kid who climbs a tree and doesn\u2019t worry about falling. When I started in podcasting, I was that kid. I saw an opportunity that was ripe for new solutions.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n Mark is definitely a solutions guy, too. When he sees a problem, something inside of him lights up, and he dives right in to solve them. He loves to research and go \u201call in\u201d to learn what is out there, what is needed, and what people don\u2019t even know they need yet. One might even say that is his \u201csuperpower.\u201d (Yup, I had to go there. I mean I started this article out with a reference to banthas, so why not hit the superhero reference, too?)<\/span><\/p>\n After investing tens of thousands of pounds (remember, Mark is from the UK) and years researching the medium by attending and speaking at conferences and asking lots of questions of existing podcasters and the vendors who support them, Mark launched the first-ever growth-oriented host platform, Captivate. As a marketer and tech geek, he wanted to make sure that Rebel Base Media solves the problems he sees happening in the industry.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The suite of products he has since created help change the way podcasters create, produce, and distribute their content and how listeners find the shows they want to hear.<\/span><\/p>\n But that is not his only superpower. Mark is all-in when it comes to the industry of podcasting. He doesn\u2019t care if you sign with another company to host your podcast. He feels it\u2019s important to<\/span> \u201cFind someone you get on with, because you\u2019re going to be working with that person every day.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n Mark\u2019s motto: <\/span>\u201cWhatever I can do to help.\u201d<\/span><\/i> Why? Because relationships matter to him. All those years of researching the podcast medium taught him two things: that relationships are what drives him, and that the trick to finding out what the problems and struggles are is to ask.<\/span><\/p>\n I love that thought as well. With each new announcement of a show joining a podcast publisher, or a publisher being bought by a distribution platform, I think of Mark\u2019s words I shared with you in this article and Todd Cochrane\u2019s in my feature article in the November 2020 edition. I am thankful that Mark and others are there to keep the independent voice creating, and to keep that personal relationship between podcasters, their peers, and listeners alive and vital.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n January 2021 Issue<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" The bantha in the room\u2014or the Zoom, to be exact\u2014was how a podcast about podcasting can be considered a technology podcast. (With podcast host Mark Asquith\u2019s love of Star Wars, we couldn\u2019t talk about the \u2018\u201celephant\u201d in the room, so I of course needed to find a reference from that world!)\u00a0 Mark and I quickly went down the rabbit hole of how the reduction in podcast categories by Apple made it more challenging to determine categories for shows that might not fit the usual and accepted definition of a particular category.\u00a0 True to the nature of the disruptor he has<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":21,"featured_media":9658,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[48],"tags":[666,667,576,665,664],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nInterviewing him via video illuminates several other pop culture references in his office, and they\u2019re not just related to <\/span>Star Wars.<\/span><\/i><\/h3>\n
And make no mistake\u2026 to many podcasters, Mark <\/span>is<\/span><\/i> a superhero.\u00a0<\/span><\/h3>\n
Mark said he loves being able to <\/span>\u201ctalk to any founder of any given hosting platform over a beer and act like friends, talk like friends, and be friends, because that\u2019s the type of industry that podcasting is. It\u2019s a genuinely personal business.\u201d<\/span><\/i><\/h4>\n