In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:
- New David McCullough book. (Wall Street Journal)
- How streaming changed music and us. (Financial Times)
- The Lord Lucan Murder case still fascinates. (Financial Times)
- Harper Lee lives on. (New York Times)
In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:
In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:
In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:
In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:
In this episode, I visit with Jonathan Armstrong a topic which does not seem to garner the attention that it deserves in data protection; that being passwords. Some of the issues and highlights are:
For more information on Cordery Compliance, go their website here. Also check out the GDPR Navigator, one of the top resources for GDPR Compliance by clicking here.
In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News:
Compliance into the Weeds is the only weekly podcast which takes a deep dive into a compliance related topic, literally going into the weeds to more fully explore a subject. In this episode, Matt Kelly (the coolest guy in compliance) and I take a deep dive intothe role of the Chief Risk Officer in overall Enterprise Risk Management. Some of the highlights include:
Some of the highlights include:
For more reading check out Matt’s blog post “The Chief Risk Officer Role”. Also listen to the Radical Compliance podcasthere.
Today we’re going in a fairly different direction with the podcast. We’re chatting with Ben Adelberg, host of The Back of the Range Golf Podcast, and today he’s sharing his processes, tips, and tricks for innovation and moving forward with whatever it is you’re working on.
Ben’s approach
Ben interviews a wide variety of people, so before he ever gets on the phone with them, he does a deep dive. He goes through all of their social media channels, websites they might have been on, books they’ve written — anywhere that might have information on them — and finds out every single thing he can that could potentially lead him to different and unique questions to ask his guests. His goal is to go through the entire episode and ask questions they’ve never been asked, which makes The Back of the Range unique and stand out among all the other golf podcasts.
Publicizing the podcast
Publishing a podcast episode is just half the job. It could be the most entertaining episode, but if nobody really knows about it, it’s just going to sit there. So for every episode, Ben promotes it to his Facebook page, Twitter, Instagram, and uploads every episode on YouTube.
He takes a 30- to 60-second long snippet of the episode and transforms it into what’s called an audiogram: a static picture with audio over it. It goes onto all his social media channels with a link to the episode.
He’ll also make sure to tag the person the episode is featuring, and mention anybody else that might have been mentioned in the snippet, so it shows up on anyone following those feeds as well. This increases your reach and gets that 60-second clip in front of as many people as possible.
Leveraging tools
In this business, you’re trying to capture people’s attention. A post that just says “click on this link” isn’t giving a big reason to listeners or followers to click on the link. So create a captivating photo or video, maybe something comical, or create a poll question on Twitter or a contest on Instagram. Just like anything in life you want to accomplish, you’ve got to put the work in.
Showing value
Ben read Joe’s autobiography twice, did a deep dive on all his events, and fortunately loved baseball and golf, so he was extremely well-prepared for the episode. With every single guest, he tries to show value and his legitimacy right away by asking different probing questions that show he’s done his research. Once you do that, they respect the fact that you’ve done your work, and armed with that and a clean phone line, the episodes turn out well.
Resources
The Back of the Range Golf Podcast
In today’s edition of Daily Compliance News: