Proposal - <podcast:acceptsGuests> #474
Replies: 22 comments
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I like the thinking here because just having a guest person tag doesn’t mean that you are a show that has guests. Some shows have guests infrequently, but it’s not part of their main format. On the solicitation side, I wonder if that could be a different tag altogether. Something like |
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I like this idea! I also wonder if we might want to expand it to a bigger |
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I think this idea. As someone who has had to pitch hundreds of podcasts, something else that would be helpful for potential guests is knowing the level of editing Also, but in a separate tag, is knowing whether it's audio only or also video. People need to know if they need to do hair and makeup, or have a potentially hot lighting setup on. Likewise knowing you're on camera the whole time versus just for part of it helps people relax. |
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I like that thought, @HersheyCognosco. I only think that might be more appropriate to communicate on the podcaster's website as part of the "pitching" process. |
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@theDanielJLewis I would agree. I'd even argue whether or not a podcast takes guests is best communicated on the podcast website. I believe the argument implied by @jamescridland (he came comment if I'm wrong) is
The goal is to ensure that promoters of guests do not waste time contacting podcasters with news of their "amazing guest who would be perfect for your show". I think that's a good one. Having it in the RSS feed lets someone quickly filter to only pitch podcasts with guests, saving guests and hosts time. Likewise, some guests may prefer audio only, or may be nervous and only want to do podcasts where there is editing. In another case some podcasts are also done live-streamed. In theory no editing and live-streamed. Some people may be very nervous and want to avoid those. Having all this in the RSS filter lets them select ones that are a fit. In yet another case perhaps they only want shows with preset questions because the guest, who may be brilliant in her field, isn't good on the fly. I like your idea of has since that allows for this more general extensibility. E.g. podcast has video, podcast has full editing, podcast has live Q&A with audience. |
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What about renaming this to |
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@genebean - I'm absolutely fine with that. |
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Do you think it would be helpful to have more than a yes/no value? Like maybe some freeform text for the podcaster to say what kind of guests they want? |
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I'd really like to avoid freeform text. It's impossible for computers to understand. |
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My thinking is that a "yes" value would signal to apps to display the freeform text within an appropriate context instead of indicating only "this show accepts guests." |
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In case it's helpful in the discussion, we at Rephonic try to determine whether a podcast takes guests automatically (by looking for certain keywords and human names in episode metadata) and according to that measure 29% of all active shows take guests. |
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I’m with @jamescridland on the boolean aspect of the field so that it’s machine readable, but could certainly see the value of a sub tag that provided context to the human reading the results of the machine parsing. Another proposal I read yesterday did something similar. |
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Yes, that's what I'm suggesting: an additional attribute or style that can allow freeform text that can be displayed based on the boolean value. |
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Maybe it would help to know if your podcast accepts single or multiple guests on an episode, suggesting whether it would be one to one conversation or panel based (requiring additional facilitation and possibly put people off being in a crowded discussion). |
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@si, that would be good to communicate and I think the right place for that would be in an additional attribute. So here's my suggestion, in code: <podcast:acceptsGuests description="We interview married entrepreneurs, and we love it when your
spouse can join, too!">yes</podcast:acceptsGuests> |
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@theDanielJLewis good idea. That way, all contexts can be provided in the |
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Oh, and probably a URL feed for more information or applying. <podcast:acceptsGuests url="[URL for information or application]" description="We interview married entrepreneurs, and we love it when your
spouse can join, too!">yes</podcast:acceptsGuests> |
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Since we are all heading to no email in feeds, guest booking services will need to do their jobs and start researching shows to see if they have guests versus spamming podcasters with guest bookings. The original inquiry proposal is enough. podcast:acceptsGuestsyes</podcast:acceptsGuests> - this podcast regularly has guests on its episodes podcast:acceptsGuestsno</podcast:acceptsGuests> - This podcast does not have guests on its episodes podcast:acceptsGuests</podcast:acceptsGuests> or an absence of this tag - This podcast may or may not have guests This way we help the booking services understand they do not need to reach out to this show but they still need to research the show and maybe even listen to it. |
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I think the solution here is to show no email address in feeds. Then services like PodcastHawk cannot be used to spam hosts. (I get over 50 emails a day with pitches from people using that service alone.) The RSS I dream of is the one that has LESS information in it, not more. Anything to keep the wrong people away is ideal. The first thing we all need to do is remove the email address from RSS; that's the important one. Going back to the original thought here, "guests y/n" one thing I run into ALL the time is people telling me, "I've not had guests because I didn't know how to, but since meeting PodMatch, I know have a way to find them." So even if people say no to guests today, doesn't mean they won't want them tomorrow. <--- Just a thought! |
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@jamescridland Have you considered inferring this information from the person tags? If you look through the people in the feed and find that there are guests, that would be evidence that the podcast accepts guests. I will consider each of your motivations below just to check that the idea could work:
Yes, I think this could be done with the inference approach, except for new podcasts with few enough episodes to really show any evidence of it, but I think a new podcast probably won't suffer any inconvenience from being discovered and contacted by anyone. Or a problem could arise if the feed only includes a short moving window of the most recent N items and the last guest appearance has already scrolled off that window. But probably this would still work in most cases, since the items that are in the feed could logically be assumed to be representative of the types of episodes we can expect to get.
Ditto.
But wouldn't it be good to include a
I haven't seen the tool, would it not work to infer the has-guests status in this case?
Would this not work with the inference approach? I see the intended use case, but I'm also conscious of feature/tag creep. If we are to get a new tag for each and every boolean fact you might imagine to be useful, that adds to the complexity of the software libraries people need to build and maintain to read and parse podcast feeds, and keep them up to date with the changing standard. So if it is at all possible to exclude proposed boolean tags for facts that can already be derived from other data that is already in the feed, then I suggest we exclude such tags in order to not have the tag set grow out of control. |
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The RSS feed just doesn't feel like the right place to provide this type of information. I think information like this should live on your podcast website, and your feed provides a link to your site. |
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I'd like to withdraw this proposal. The ideal use-case is: "Oh, this podcast doesn't have guests - I'll not bother emailing them with my guests", but this information is already relatively clear from other things anyway, and I don't believe it worth cluttering up the RSS feed with another tag. |
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EDITED:::
I'm not sure this really fixes anything. The existence of the word "guest" in episode notes seems just as easy to work out whether a show has a guest or not. Can we withdraw this proposal?
What:
A simple way to show, in the channel of a podcast RSS feed, whether a podcast has guests.
How:
<podcast:acceptsGuests>yes</podcast:acceptsGuests>
- this podcast regularly has guests on its episodes<podcast:acceptsGuests>no</podcast:acceptsGuests>
- This podcast does not have guests on its episodes<podcast:acceptsGuests></podcast:acceptsGuests>
or an absence of this tag - This podcast may or may not have guestsWhy:
podcast:person
tag)podcast:person
for each show if that show has guests, and otherwise not surface that set of dialogsImpact:
This was edited to change the proposal to
acceptsGuests
rather thanhasGuests
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