The Talking Silkworm Podcast

Talking Silkworm

Are you creating podcasts, videos, courses or other content where you use your voice? The Talking Silkworm Podcast is the ultimate guide for coaches and entrepreneurs looking to expand their audiences through the power of their voice. Join us as we share valuable insights, advice, and resources to help you establish a strong online presence and connect with your ideal listeners. Whether you're a podcaster, video creator, course instructor, or anyone utilizing your voice in content creation, our weekly episodes offer the latest strategies to elevate your voice-based content. Are you eager to grow your audience and make a lasting impact? Tune in right now and unlock the true potential of your voice.

  1. 12/23/2025

    Audience or Community? Building Loyalty with Tonya Kubo

    Are we confusing a big, passive audience with a true community, and how do we build a space where people genuinely belong?,, We are talking today with Tonya Kubo, a community strategist, who emphasizes that social media should be a force for connection, not just noise. Many entrepreneurs believe they have an engagement problem, but Tonya helps us understand that a struggling community is often an operations issue in disguise. She provides a clear definition of true community by outlining the "three-legged stool" model: it must allow two-way conversation between the leader and members, provide access to content, and, critically, allow members to interact with each other without the leader driving the conversation. We explore which types of businesses—like education, non-profits, and service-based businesses—benefit the most from this model, especially those that rely on word-of-mouth marketing. Tonya explains that healthy communities are not just for positive feedback; they must tolerate criticism from invested members who want to ensure quality standards. Finally, we discuss how to manage communities sustainably, including the importance of a strong, explicit onboarding process,, and how to use automation for busy work while ensuring a human takes over for personalized responses, maintaining that essential one-to-one connection. Key Takeaways Community differs from an audience by requiring interaction between members without the leader constantly driving conversation.A lack of community thriving is often an operations issue in disguise, not just poor engagement.Start building a healthy community by defining its purpose, promise, and planning for both best and worst-case scenarios.Community size matters less than safety; smaller groups (like 20 members) feel safer and foster the ability for people to be honest.Use automation to handle busy work like onboarding, but always maintain human involvement for personalized conversation responses.Resources Tonya Kubo is a community strategist and fractional CMO/COO who has spent the last decade proving that online communities can be thriving ecosystems. She has designed and managed communities ranging from 200 to 200,000 members across various platforms. Her work focuses on diagnosing operational bottlenecks and aligning offers with audiences.Tonya’s Website: TonyaKubo.comTonya’s Podcast: Find Your Freaks https://www.tonyakubo.com/podcast/ Ready to make your brand shine with a Podcast?: Contact us! We'll help you start a show from scratch -- even if you have no prior experience. We'll also help you manage your existing podcast show. Reach out now! https://talkingsilkworm.com/contact/

    45 min
  2. 12/09/2025

    Turning Experiences into Stories for Your Brand with Sara Lohse

    How can we transform disconnected conversations and dry data into engaging brand stories? We often hear that storytelling is essential for branding and content creation, but nobody actually tells us how to do it. In this episode, we sit down with Sara Lohse, a seasoned marketer and accredited financial counselor, who accidentally fell into the world of storytelling after a bizarre experience on one of the biggest finance podcasts. Sara is the founder of Favorite Daughter Media and the author of Open This Book: The Art of Storytelling for Aspiring Thought Leaders. She explains that real storytelling isn't about creating a fictional world; it's about sharing the experiences that have shaped us. We talk about creating podcast conversations that have a clear thread, starting with a strategy called the Unique Listening Proposition. We learn how to inject stories into traditionally data-heavy fields like law, finance, and real estate, making complex concepts understandable and relevant to our audience. Sara provides practical advice, including the exercise of starting with the message (the "end in mind") and working backward to find the experience that taught that lesson. Finally, we discuss how hosts can avoid "hiding behind the mic" and engage in true, balanced conversation rather than just asking rigid interview questions. This episode is key for entrepreneurs looking to use their podcast to build authentic connection and thought leadership. Key Takeaways Storytelling is sharing the lived experiences that shaped you, rather than trying to come up with or create a story like a novelist.Podcasts need a Unique Listening Proposition (ULP) to create a consistent thread and avoid sounding generic or disconnected.When integrating data, use stories to provide interpretation and explain how the information is relevant and applicable in the real world.To discover your brand stories, begin with the lesson you want to teach and recall the specific experiences that taught you that lesson.Podcast hosts should participate in two-way conversations and share their own thoughts to avoid the tendency of "hiding behind the mic". Resources  Guest's Bio: Sara Lohse is a storyteller, marketer, co-founder of Branded Media, and founder of Favorite Daughter Media. She is also an accredited financial counselor who produces shows in the highly regulated finance space. She coaches people on how to be better storytellers and podcast guests. Her mission is to help people and brands use their stories to connect authentically with their audiences. References: Book: Open This Book: The Art of Storytelling for Aspiring Thought Leaders (by Sara Lohse) https://a.co/d/466m05lFree Downloadable Resource: OpenThisJournal.com (for free journal prompts and writing exercises from the book)Sara’s Website: favoritedaughtermedia.comReferenced Podcast: Stacking Benjamins https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/ (finance podcast platform for storytelling) Ready to make your brand shine with a Podcast?: Contact us! We'll help you start a show from scratch -- even if you have no prior experience. We'll also help you manage your existing podcast show. Reach out now! https://talkingsilkworm.com/contact/

    35 min
  3. 11/25/2025

    The Book as a Business Tool, Not a Sales Goal with Allyson E Machate

    Are you ready to start leveraging your book as a tool for business growth? Books play a powerful role in building your authority and presence, especially for thought leaders and entrepreneurs. Many executives and business owners struggle to calculate the direct Return on Investment (ROI) from a book, but Allyson E Machate explains that a book is the gift that keeps on giving through indirect ROI and strategic leverage. We explore why books still carry more prestige and trustworthiness than other modern formats like podcasts and social media. Allyson E Machate, the CEO and founder of The Writers' Ally, emphasizes the crucial need to write the right book by thinking about your end goals first—a process she calls "backwards engineering". This strategic approach ensures your book aligns with your business goals, whether that’s lead generation or securing speaking engagements. We also discuss how a book can be leveraged as a tool to build an audience, even if you are new to business, the critical differences between traditional and self-publishing for business strategy, and the fine ethical line between using AI as an assisted tool versus relying on AI generated content. Key Takeaways Books provide deep, one-to-one connection and authority that shorter content formats cannot.Leverage your book as a strategic tool for generating high-value clients, not just meager sales.Use backward engineering by defining your end business goal before finalizing your book topic.If you lack an audience, a strategic book can function as a powerful lead magnet to grow your list.The only ethical and effective way to use AI is as an assistant, a brainstorming partner, not a primary writer. Resources Allyson E Machate’s Website: thewritersally.comFree Gift/Webinar: offers.thewritersally.com/talkingsilkworm Ready to make your brand shine with a Podcast?: Contact us! We'll help you start a show from scratch -- even if you have no prior experience. We'll also help you manage your existing podcast show. Reach out now! https://talkingsilkworm.com/contact/

    54 min
  4. 11/11/2025

    Building Better Courses: ADDIE Model & Cognitive Load with Jackie Pelegrin

    Why isn't your course content landing, even though you have expertise in the subject? We often think that just knowing a subject makes us ready to teach it, but effective instruction requires solid structure and curriculum design. In this episode, we chat with instructional design expert Jackie Pelegrin about how we can transform our expertise into valuable learning experiences. Jackie helps us understand that the proven principles of instructional design transfer seamlessly from formal education (like higher ed and K-12) to informal settings, including online courses. We explore foundational models, such as ADDIE (Analysis, Design, Development, Implementation, Evaluation), and discover why it is so crucial not to skip the Analysis and Evaluation phases. A common mistake course creators make is content dumping—a practice that goes against cognitive load theory. Jackie shares practical tips on how we can properly structure content using scaffolding, break material into manageable chunks, and build in formative assessments like checks for understanding. She also highlights the importance of incorporating learner-centered design. Finally, we tackle the ethical challenges presented by new technologies like AI, recommending the "first draft principle" to ensure we maintain human oversight and deliver genuine value to our customers. By implementing these frameworks, we can create courses that truly engage learners and keep them motivated. Key Takeaways Effective teaching requires a good curriculum structure; expertise in a subject alone is often insufficient.Always start course creation with analysis: identify your target audience's needs and pain points.Avoid content dumping; chunk content and include checks for understanding due to cognitive load limits.Evaluation is paramount for ethical course design, ensuring the consumer achieves the desired learning outcome.Use AI based on the "first draft principle," retaining the human loop to prevent content inaccuracy and hallucinations.Resources Guest: Jackie Pelegrin is an instructor and instructional design expert, primarily working in higher education (Grand Canyon University) and K-12 curriculum design and development. She hosts the Designing with Love podcast.Jackie Pelegrin's Podcast: https://www.designingwithloveblog.com/Jackie Pelegrin's Website: https://www.designingwithloveblog.com/Jackie Pelegrin's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jackiepelegrin/ Ready to make your brand shine with a Podcast?: Contact us! We'll help you start a show from scratch -- even if you have no prior experience. We'll also help you manage your existing podcast show. Reach out now! https://talkingsilkworm.com/contact/

    49 min
  5. 10/27/2025

    Human-Centered Marketing: Why Most Advice Sets You Up to Fail with Rachel Allen

    Are we tired of marketing advice that promises foolproof systems but leaves us feeling burnt out and anxious? We dive deep into the world of marketing with Rachel Allen, a marketing strategist and fractional CMO who ensures marketing actually works for her clients or helps them solve big marketing problems. Rachel is a passionate advocate for human-centered marketing because the businesses that survive are the ones that focus on people first and build quality human relationships. In this episode, she exposes several common marketing myths and pieces of advice that often set entrepreneurs up for failure. Rachel argues that most marketing advice assumes we have control over the four factors required for a sale, when in reality, we can only control one factor—which often leads to anxiety when "foolproof systems" don't work. We discuss the dangers of vanity metrics (like downloads and likes) and how true visibility must be tied to our specific business goals, not vague buzzwords. Rachel also shares what she calls "the big lie of marketing": the expectation that a solopreneur should market like a multinational organization. A crucial topic covered is positioning, which Rachel defines simply as "who you are and why anybody cares," noting that it is the keystone of effective marketing that people often skip over. Finally, we discuss the rising influence of AI, which Rachel views as a useful "marketing intern" rather than a replacement for human skill. This episode provides actionable insights to help us build a slow, sustainable, and enjoyable marketing strategy that truly feels like us, maintaining success by building strong human relationships instead of chasing every new trend. Key Takeaways Avoid the "big lie" by recognizing that solopreneurs cannot market like multinational corporations.Sustainable marketing should feel natural and enjoyable, based on specific, measurable, and slow outcomes.Failure of a "foolproof system" is common because you only control one of four factors needed for a sale.True visibility must be tied to specific business goals, not just vague growth buzzwords or vanity metrics.Positioning, defining "who you are and why anybody cares," is the crucial keystone of effective marketing strategy.AI works best as a "marketing intern"—a tool to complement human expertise, not replace it.Building human relationships is what sees businesses through change and uncertain times. Resources Guest's Bio: Rachel Allen is a marketing strategist and fractional CMO who ensures marketing works for clients or helps them solve big marketing problems. Her tagline is "human-centered marketing." Rachel's Contact Information: Website: https://www.boltfromthebluecopywriting.com/Email: hello@boltfromthebluecopywriting.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rachelallenwrites/Instagram: @boltfromthebluecopywriting  Ready to make your brand shine with a Podcast? Contact us! We'll help you start a show from scratch—even if you have no prior experience. We'll also help you manage your existing podcast show. Reach out now! https://talkingsilkworm.com/contact/

    30 min
  6. 10/14/2025

    Podcasting: Leverage Your Time to Dominate Your Niche with Dennis Mader

    Are you focusing your marketing efforts on gaining respect from your peers, or on winning the clients who truly need you? We sat down with Dennis Mader, an entrepreneur and expert in podcasting for businesses and authority building. Dennis has a wide range of experience, particularly in providing turnkey podcasting solutions for the legal community. He explains that many people confuse thought leadership—which is about earning peer respect—with authoritative positioning, which is about meeting specific client needs. Dennis argues that business owners should shift their mindset away from pursuing viral hits or high vanity metrics like huge download numbers, which often translate to wasted time and money. Instead, we should concentrate on creating highly niche content for our specific client archetype, leading to extremely high conversion rates. We also discuss how Dennis’s turnkey service makes content creation nearly effortless for busy professionals, requiring as little as a half-hour of their time per month to produce content for multiple distribution channels. Crucially, we talk about the importance of authenticity and vulnerability in building trust online, as "perfection is the new plastic". Dennis emphasizes that rehumanizing corporate America through founder-led marketing allows clients to confirm trust by seeing that the professional is who they say they are offline. Key Takeaways Authoritative positioning is about reaching people with specific needs and positioning yourself as the solution to their particular problem.Ignore the temptation to go viral; niche content tailored for your specific client archetype ensures conversion is extremely high.Podcasting is the machine used to drive an overall content ecosystem, leveraging 30 minutes of time into hundreds of marketing actions across multiple outlets.For professionals with implied authority, building client relationships hinges on proving approachability and confirming the “know, like, and trust” factor.Vulnerability and humanity build connection, whereas striving for perfection repels; show your earned trust by interviewing successful clients.Resources Guest’s Bio: Dennis Mader is an entrepreneur and expert in podcasting for businesses and authority building. As a pioneer in legal marketing with more than 25 years of experience, he´s passionate about transforming the way attorneys connect with their ideal clients. At Diem Media, he founded the “Legal Podcast Network”, a first–of-its-kind platform that turns lawyers into trusted local thought leaders through the power of podcasting. Denis Mader´s website: https://www.thelegalpodcastnetwork.com/ Denni´s Mader personal website: https://www.dmondemand.expert/ Dennis Mader´s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dennismeador/ Ready to make your brand shine with a Podcast?: Contact us! We'll help you start a show from scratch -- even if you have no prior experience. We'll also help you manage your existing podcast show. Reach out now! https://talkingsilkworm.com/contact/

    41 min
  7. 09/30/2025

    Quality Over Quantity: Measuring Podcast Conversions with, Nathalie Doremieux

    Are you tired of seeing high download numbers without any actual clients or ROI? We had a fantastic conversation with Nathalie Doremieux about the most important topic for entrepreneurs using podcasts: converting listeners into customers. Nathalie, a problem solver with a background in tech, explains that many business podcasters have the wrong focus by chasing download numbers. She argues that downloads are only great if you want sponsors; if you want clients, you must focus on quality over quantity. We need to shift our strategy by creating episodes that are deliberately designed to speak to our ideal listener and be actionable. Nathalie emphasizes that publishing an episode is just the start; it should be treated as a valuable asset for repurposing and relationship building. We learned that success isn't measured by platform metrics like Apple or Spotify, but by controllable key performance indicators (KPIs) on our own website, such as page visits and sign-ups. She shares the power of her tool, Podcast Lead Flow, which uses AI to analyze an episode, ask the listener questions about their current situation, and provide a unique, customized piece of advice—like a tailored lead magnet. This process pre-qualifies potential clients and initiates a direct, one-on-one conversation via email. We discuss the importance of having a unique, actionable call to action repeated often, guiding the person who is ready to take the next step now. Key Takeaways Downloads are primarily a metric for attracting sponsors, so for client conversion, prioritize quality engagement over sheer quantity.For business podcasts, reverse engineer your content strategy to ensure every episode addresses what your ideal listener needs to hear.Publishing an episode should be viewed as the beginning of leveraging an amazing asset, not the final end goal of creation.Key performance indicators (KPIs) for conversion must be measurable, which means directing listeners to your owned website for sign-ups and tracking visits.Use Artificial Intelligence (AI) to amplify personalization by creating custom lead magnets relevant to the specific episode and listener input.Resources Guest's Bio: Nathalie Doremieux helps coaches, course creators, and podcasters turn their audience into paying members and clients—without the tech headaches or endless content creation. Her business life has involved building websites, membership sites, and online course platforms. She and her partner developed Podcast Lead Flow after realizing they couldn't connect their own podcast to their businessWebsite: https://podcastleadflow.com/Nathalie Doremieux’s Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathaliedoremieux/  Ready to make your brand shine with a Podcast?: Contact us! We'll help you start a show from scratch -- even if you have no prior experience. We'll also help you manage your existing podcast show. Reach out now! https://talkingsilkworm.com/contact/

    40 min
  8. 09/16/2025

    Why Human Connection Matters More Than Ever, with Wes Towers

    Is AI eroding trust in your brand? In this episode we talk about how to balance AI with real human connection in your branding and content marketing. David, shares his experience of losing trust when he sees AI-generated content or ads. Our guest expert Wes Towers discusses how we can make our brands more human, either by using AI tools smartly or, more importantly, through real human interaction. Wes brings a unique perspective from his long career in marketing for the construction industry, where human connection is super important. He explains why keeping that human touch is key in today's AI world, how to find a good balance between AI's efficiency and your brand's unique voice, and common mistakes businesses make when they let AI run their marketing. You'll get tips to help your brand stand out and build real relationships in our digital world Key Takeaways AI-generated content often devalues brands and erodes trust due to its lack of authenticity and uniqueness.Human connection fosters stronger bonds through personal stories, vulnerability, and genuine interaction, much like appreciating original art.Utilize AI as an enhancing tool, not a dictator of your message, to maintain your unique and authentic brand voice.Define your brand's voice and core values clearly in a document before integrating any AI tools for consistent communication.Face-to-face interactions and in-person networking are gaining value as a counterbalance to the growing prevalence of AI.Resources Guest Bio: Wes Towers is a marketing and branding expert with extensive experience, particularly in the construction industry. He focuses on humanizing brands and helping businesses balance the use of AI with maintaining authenticity. He is the founder of Uplift 360.Wes Towers' Website: uplift360.com.auWes Towers' LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/westowers/ Ready to make your brand shine with a Podcast?: Contact us! We'll help you start a show from scratch -- even if you have no prior experience.  We'll also help you manage your existing podcast show.  Reach out now!  https://talkingsilkworm.com/contact/

    39 min
5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Are you creating podcasts, videos, courses or other content where you use your voice? The Talking Silkworm Podcast is the ultimate guide for coaches and entrepreneurs looking to expand their audiences through the power of their voice. Join us as we share valuable insights, advice, and resources to help you establish a strong online presence and connect with your ideal listeners. Whether you're a podcaster, video creator, course instructor, or anyone utilizing your voice in content creation, our weekly episodes offer the latest strategies to elevate your voice-based content. Are you eager to grow your audience and make a lasting impact? Tune in right now and unlock the true potential of your voice.