The Credibility Minute

53 - Treating your listener like a co-worker, vocally at least

4 min · 1 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio 53 - Treating your listener like a co-worker, vocally at least

Descripción

"Status" determines the power dynamic between you and your listener. In improv, performers consciously play high or low status to shape a scene. In podcasting, we often unconsciously drift into one of two extremes: the "Professor" (high status, talking at the listener) or the "Apologist" (low status, undermining one's own authority). The most effective dynamic lies in the middle. Instead of lecturing from above or hedging from below, you should aim to stand beside your listener. Treat them like a peer or co-worker who simply needs information you happen to have figured out. This approach creates "joint attention," where you look at the topic together rather than performing for them. In this micro-episode: 1. How to spot if you are being "too high status" (lecturing) or "too low status" (hedging) 2. The danger of undermining your own expertise with apologetic language 3. Why treating your listener like a colleague builds better rapport Resources: Episode #21 discusses "joint attention": https://player.captivate.fm/episode/c61d2113-2fe9-4305-b4e8-27695e6ddefd/ [https://player.captivate.fm/episode/c61d2113-2fe9-4305-b4e8-27695e6ddefd/] Episode #48 discusses joint attention mechanics: https://player.captivate.fm/episode/024e7de4-896f-4e0a-a45e-5c1373e4a732/ [https://player.captivate.fm/episode/024e7de4-896f-4e0a-a45e-5c1373e4a732/] Find more episodes and subscribe at stereoforest.com/minute [https://stereoforest.com/minute].

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Credibility Minute!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

56 episodios

episode 55 - When more options are actually good in your episode artwork

55 - When more options are actually good in your episode

Choice overload is real, but it isn't universal. While the "Jam Study" (discussed in Ep. 54) shows that too many options can paralyze decision-making, context matters. Research indicates that the impact of choice depends on four factors: complexity, difficulty, certainty, and goals. For your content, the critical distinction lies between what you show and what you ask the listener to do. You can offer multiple examples or perspectives to help a listener understand a concept because these are not choices—they are illustrations. However, when it comes to the "action step" (what they must do next), you must still narrow it down to one specific path to avoid cognitive friction. In this micro-episode: 1. The four factors that determine if choice overload will happen 2. Why experts might prefer more options while novices need fewer 3. The difference between "showing" (examples) and "doing" (calls to action) Resources: Episode #54 about jam study and our shows: https://player.captivate.fm/episode/e4f5ca9e-72ce-4372-a703-e8caa23055eb/ [https://player.captivate.fm/episode/e4f5ca9e-72ce-4372-a703-e8caa23055eb/] Choice overload: https://thedecisionlab.com/biases/choice-overload-bias [https://thedecisionlab.com/biases/choice-overload-bias] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1057740814000916 [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1057740814000916] Find more episodes and subscribe at stereoforest.com/minute [https://stereoforest.com/minute].

3 de abr de 20263 min
episode 54 - The jam study: a lesson in listener psychology artwork

54 - The jam study: a lesson in listener psychology

A famous experiment involving a jam tasting booth revealed a counter-intuitive lesson: while a table with dozens of options attracted more attention, the table with only six options generated ten times the sales. This is the "Paradox of Choice." In podcasting, we often clutter our episodes with multiple calls to action... like follow me, subscribe, download this, share that. When a listener (who is likely multitasking) is confronted with too many options, the easiest choice becomes doing nothing. To drive real results, you must reduce cognitive friction by offering one clear, specific next step. In this micro-episode: 1. The "Jam Study" and what it reveals about decision-making 2. Why multiple CTAs lead to "choice paralysis" for listeners 3. How to increase conversion by simplifying your requests Resources: Jam study: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1057740814000916 [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1057740814000916] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11138768/ [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11138768/] Conversation on decision/choice: https://thedecisionlab.com/biases/choice-overload-bias [https://thedecisionlab.com/biases/choice-overload-bias] Paradox of choice: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Paradox_of_Choice [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Paradox_of_Choice] And more about this will be in the NEXT episode (#55). Find more episodes and subscribe at stereoforest.com/minute [https://stereoforest.com/minute].

2 de abr de 20263 min
episode 53 - Treating your listener like a co-worker, vocally at least artwork

53 - Treating your listener like a co-worker, vocally at least

"Status" determines the power dynamic between you and your listener. In improv, performers consciously play high or low status to shape a scene. In podcasting, we often unconsciously drift into one of two extremes: the "Professor" (high status, talking at the listener) or the "Apologist" (low status, undermining one's own authority). The most effective dynamic lies in the middle. Instead of lecturing from above or hedging from below, you should aim to stand beside your listener. Treat them like a peer or co-worker who simply needs information you happen to have figured out. This approach creates "joint attention," where you look at the topic together rather than performing for them. In this micro-episode: 1. How to spot if you are being "too high status" (lecturing) or "too low status" (hedging) 2. The danger of undermining your own expertise with apologetic language 3. Why treating your listener like a colleague builds better rapport Resources: Episode #21 discusses "joint attention": https://player.captivate.fm/episode/c61d2113-2fe9-4305-b4e8-27695e6ddefd/ [https://player.captivate.fm/episode/c61d2113-2fe9-4305-b4e8-27695e6ddefd/] Episode #48 discusses joint attention mechanics: https://player.captivate.fm/episode/024e7de4-896f-4e0a-a45e-5c1373e4a732/ [https://player.captivate.fm/episode/024e7de4-896f-4e0a-a45e-5c1373e4a732/] Find more episodes and subscribe at stereoforest.com/minute [https://stereoforest.com/minute].

1 de abr de 20264 min
episode 52 - Why you need a "pile of cold pancakes" in your story to resonate artwork

52 - Why you need a "pile of cold pancakes" in your story to resonate

There is a principle in improv that sounds backward until you see it in action: the more specific you get, the more universal the reference becomes. We can use this in our educational podcasting. A scene about "a person in a restaurant" is understandable but forgettable. A scene about "Linda at Waffle House serving cold pancakes after her partner left her" is highly relatable because it taps into a specific feeling of frustration and loneliness. The same applies to business content. When you share the specific anxiety of hiring your first employee or the jitters of your first public speech, you create a deeper emotional resonance than if you simply discussed generic "growth strategies". In this micro-episode: 1. The "Waffle House" analogy for storytelling 2. Why broad, relatable concepts often fail to connect emotionally 3. How to use specific details to make your content universal and commit to a specific audience Resources: Find more episodes and subscribe at stereoforest.com/minute [https://stereoforest.com/minute].

31 de mar de 20263 min
episode 51 - Your imaginary audience is holding your solo podcasting back artwork

51 - Your imaginary audience is holding your solo podcasting back

"Who am I to talk about this?" It is a common question that plagues content creators. We often assume that our audience is filled with experts and skeptics waiting to expose us as frauds. In solo podcasting, we cannot see our audience, so our brains naturally fill the gap with a "worst-case scenario" listener. We imagine our bosses or industry leaders scrutinizing every word. In reality, these people are likely not listening at all. The actual person who clicked play did so because they have a problem and hope you can solve it. They are looking for value, not reasons to judge you. In this micro-episode: 1. Why the lack of visual feedback in podcasting triggers imposter syndrome 2. The reality check: Experts are too busy to "hate-listen" to your show 3. How to shift your focus from the imagined critic to the hopeful learner Resources: Find more episodes and subscribe at stereoforest.com/minute [https://stereoforest.com/minute].

30 de mar de 20263 min