Pitchworthy with KJ Blattenbauer

KJ Blattenbauer

Pitchworthy is not a traditional PR podcast. Hosted by veteran publicist and two-time bestselling author KJ Blattenbauer, the show explores how founders, experts, and industry leaders become impossible to ignore. Not through louder marketing, but through sharper positioning, stronger ideas, and reputations that travel before they do. Each episode breaks down the hidden mechanics behind recognition, authority, media perception, and industry influence so listeners can stop chasing visibility and start becoming the person people reference, recommend, and remember. This is for ambitious founders, creatives, and experts who are already respected for their work and ready to become known for their thinking.

Tập

  1. 24 thg 6

    Conversation Velocity

    Most people think recognition becomes real when more people start seeing their work. It doesn’t. Recognition becomes real when your name starts moving through conversations you’re not part of yet. Because visibility can still depend on your effort. Recognition can still depend on your presence. But conversation velocity begins the moment your ideas no longer need your direct participation to keep traveling.   That’s when something fundamental changes.   In this episode of Pitchworthy, KJ breaks down one of the clearest signals that recognition has crossed a threshold: the moment your name starts moving ahead of you, and opportunity starts behaving differently because of it. You'll learn: What conversation velocity actually is—and why it matters  Why visibility and movement create completely different outcomes  The difference between popularity, virality, and directional movement  Why some names travel quickly while others stall  The hidden role referability plays in recognition  Why visibility introduces people, but referability carries them forward  How conversation velocity quietly begins Why clarity reduces friction, and friction slows movement  How conversation velocity builds through consistency  Why relevance often spreads faster than novelty  What association pathways are, and why they determine whether your name moves  Why recognition shifts from effort to momentum  The subtle moment opportunity starts arriving earlier  By the end of this episode, you'll stop asking, "How do I get more people to see my work?" and start asking, "How easy am I making it for people to carry my work forward?" Because recognition isn’t built on activity. It’s built on movement. And movement changes everything. If this episode resonated, follow Pitchworthy and send it to someone whose work deserves to reach a wider audience.   Connect with KJ: Follow KJ on Instagram: @kjblattenbauer [www.instagram.com/kjblattenbauer]  Learn more: Hearsay PR [www.hearsaypr.com ] Get the books: Pitchworthy and Pitchworthy Workbook [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H1XD1N1W } Subscribe for future episodes Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pitchworthy-with-kj-blattenbauer/id1896636172    Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/033gnAZDTRGBsQ9DXrMmog

    32 phút
  2. 17 thg 6

    The Algorithm Myth vs. The Room Reality

    For years, professionals have been told the same thing: Post more. Stay visible. Build your audience. Stay active. Stay relevant. And eventually recognition will follow.   Sounds reasonable. Except it quietly assumes something that isn’t true: That recognition forms through exposure. It doesn’t. Recognition forms through placement.   And placement almost never begins inside algorithms. It begins inside rooms.   In this episode of Pitchworthy, KJ breaks down why some opportunities change trajectories overnight while others barely move the needle, and why relationships, introductions, and proximity still shape authority faster than content alone.   You'll learn: Why recognition spreads through rooms before it spreads through algorithms The difference between distribution and placement Why visibility creates exposure, but rooms create context The hidden reason some people accelerate after one introduction or one event What a "room" actually is (hint: not awkward networking with name tags) Why proximity changes recognition speed The difference between audience environments and decision environments Why access to audiences isn't the same as access to opportunity How introductions shorten the distance between trust and action What makes a room a true trajectory room The signals a room changed your placement: Why professionals are often under-placed—not overlooked The difference between activity and trajectory Why opportunity moves toward placeable people, not simply visible people   By the end of this episode, you'll stop asking, "Where should I be more visible?" and start asking, "Where does my name need to be placed next?"   Because algorithms distribute content. Rooms distribute reputation. And reputation changes what happens next.   If this episode resonated, follow Pitchworthy and send it to someone spending too much time optimizing for content and not enough time optimizing for placement.   Connect with KJ: Follow KJ on Instagram: @kjblattenbauer [www.instagram.com/kjblattenbauer] Learn more: Hearsay PR [www.hearsaypr.com] Get the books: Pitchworthy and Pitchworthy Workbook [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H1XD1N1W] Subscribe for future episodes Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pitchworthy-with-kj-blattenbauer/id1896636172    Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/033gnAZDTRGBsQ9DXrMmog

    28 phút
  3. 10 thg 6

    When Authority Becomes Reference

    Most people think recognition grows when more people know your name. It doesn’t. Recognition changes when people begin expecting your name before they even explain why it belongs in the conversation. Because there’s a difference between being introduced… …and being referenced. Introductions explain who you are.  References assume what you represent. And that shift changes everything. In this episode of Pitchworthy, KJ breaks down one of the least-discussed stages of recognition: the moment your work stops depending on introductions and starts to become part of how conversations organize themselves. You'll learn: Why authority and reference are not the same thing  The difference between introductions and references  Why reference begins when placement becomes automatic  How names start appearing in conversations before explanations are required  The hidden reason many experts reach authority but never become reference points  Why transferability across voices matters more than visibility  How explanation becomes anticipation  Why recognition shifts from effort to expectation  The subtle signals that reference is forming:  People repeating your language  Your distinctions appear through other people  Conversations beginning from your frameworks  Your name surfacing earlier than expected  Why adoption matters more than exposure  The difference between situational recognition and structural recognition  Why ideas become powerful when they travel independently of you  The moment your explanation starts moving without reinforcement  By the end of this episode, you'll stop asking, "How do I get people to remember me?" and start asking, "What ideas am I creating that other people can carry without me?" Because reference doesn’t happen when people know your work. It happens when conversations begin expecting your perspective before they even realize they need it. Timestamps 0:00:01 When Authority Stops Being Enough 0:05:16 When Your Name Enters the Room Before You 0:10:25 Expectation: The Engine Behind Reference 0:15:51 From Influencer to Infrastructure 0:21:33 Making Your Ideas Travel Without You 0:27:14 Turning Recognition into Inevitability 0:29:55 Recognition as Direction, Not Just Attention If this episode resonated, follow Pitchworthy and send it to someone building authority who may actually be building something much bigger.   Connect with KJ: Follow KJ on Instagram: @kjblattenbauer [www.instagram.com/kjblattenbauer]  Learn more: Hearsay PR [www.hearsaypr.com ] Get the books: Pitchworthy and Pitchworthy Workbook [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H1XD1N1W } Subscribe for future episodes Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pitchworthy-with-kj-blattenbauer/id1896636172

    30 phút
  4. 3 thg 6

    When Recognition Becomes Authority

    Why authority isn't attention, it's influence over interpretation. Most people think authority begins when people agree with you. It doesn’t. Authority begins when people start using your explanation to understand something they were already trying to make sense of. Because recognition helps people remember you. Authority changes how people interpret what they’re seeing. And once that shift happens, your role inside conversations changes. You stop participating. You start positioning. In this episode of Pitchworthy, KJ breaks down what happens after recognition stabilizes and why authority is less about visibility and more about becoming the explanation people rely on before decisions are even formed. You'll learn: Why authority is not visibility, status, or audience size  The difference between attention and interpretive influence  Why authority begins with usefulness, not agreement  How authority changes the way conversations start  Why visibility creates exposure, recognition creates association, and authority creates orientation  The hidden difference between being respected and being relied upon  Why authority forms across environments, not platforms  What happens when people begin thinking with your ideas instead of simply noticing them  Why some people become authorities while others remain recognized  The difference between participation and direction  How explanation becomes infrastructure  Why authority changes timing more than frequency  The signals that authority is quietly forming:  Shorter introductions  Earlier invitations  Familiar language coming back to you  Conversations beginning from assumptions your work helped create  The moment your explanation starts arriving before your introduction  By the end of this episode, you'll stop asking, "How do I get people to notice me?" and start asking, "How do I help people understand what they're already experiencing?" Because authority doesn't begin when people know your name. It begins when they begin using your explanation. If this episode resonated, follow Pitchworthy and send it to someone building visibility when they’re really building influence.   Connect with KJ: Follow KJ on Instagram: @kjblattenbauer [www.instagram.com/kjblattenbauer]  Learn more: Hearsay PR [www.hearsaypr.com ] Get the books: Pitchworthy and Pitchworthy Workbook [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H1XD1N1W } Subscribe for future episodes Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pitchworthy-with-kj-blattenbauer/id1896636172

    29 phút
  5. 27 thg 5

    Why Amplification Accelerates Recognition

    Most people think press creates recognition. That stages create recognition. That podcast interviews create recognition. That bigger audiences create recognition. They don’t. Amplification doesn’t create recognition. Amplification accelerates recognition that is already moving. Because visibility isn't the beginning of recognition. It’s often the moment recognition becomes visible enough for other people to notice. In this episode of Pitchworthy, KJ breaks down one of the biggest misunderstandings in modern visibility culture: why amplification changes the speed of recognition, but not whether recognition exists in the first place. You'll learn: Why amplification increases velocity, not meaning  The difference between recognition and exposure  Why amplification feels like a turning point (even when it isn't)  The hidden reason two people can have the same opportunity but wildly different outcomes  Why press, podcasts, speaking, and media don’t automatically create authority  What happens when amplification arrives before repeatability  Why exposure without association creates noise, not momentum  The difference between being visible and being mentally placeable  Why does amplification strengthen memory instead of creating it  How recognition crosses invisible thresholds  Why some interviews become career-defining, and others disappear instantly  The difference between situational recognition and structural recognition  Why recognition becomes more powerful when people begin expecting your name  The moment visibility shifts from activity to alignment  Listen in to learn more: (3:30) – What Amplification Actually Does (9:30) – Why Exposure Without Association Fails (15:30) – Recognition Thresholds and Stability (22:30) – Same Opportunity, Different Outcomes (27:00) – From Recognition to Authority   By the end of this episode, you'll stop asking, "Where can I be seen next?" and start asking, "What recognition is already forming that amplification could accelerate?" Because amplification doesn’t decide what people remember. It increases the frequency with which they encounter what they already remember. If this episode resonated, follow Pitchworthy and send it to someone who’s chasing visibility when they should be strengthening recognition.   Connect with KJ: Follow KJ on Instagram: @kjblattenbauer [www.instagram.com/kjblattenbauer ] Learn more: Hearsay PR [www.hearsaypr.com ] Get the books: Pitchworthy and Pitchworthy Workbook [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H1XD1N1W } Subscribe for future episodes Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pitchworthy-with-kj-blattenbauer/id1896636172    Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/033gnAZDTRGBsQ9DXrMmog    iHeart Radio - https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1323-pitchworthy-with-kj-blatt-333611742/

    31 phút
  6. 21 thg 5

    Why Repeatability Creates Recognition

    Most people think recognition grows because more people discover you. It doesn’t. Recognition grows because more people can repeat you. Because recognition doesn’t spread through visibility. It spreads through conversations. And conversations move quickly. People do not carry entire frameworks forward. They carry sentences. Associations. Shorthand. Language that they can remember long enough to repeat later. That’s what travels. That’s what gets referenced. That’s what gets introduced. In this episode of Pitchworthy, KJ breaks down one of the most overlooked forces behind authority: repeatability, and why recognition starts changing the moment your ideas become easier for other people to carry forward. You'll learn: Why recognition grows through repetition, not exposure  The difference between speaking often and being repeated often  Why visibility creates awareness, but repeatability creates association  Why some people stay highly visible yet remain difficult to place  The hidden reason recognition keeps "restarting" instead of compounding  The difference between work that stays respected and work that becomes recognized  Why conversations carry sentences—not complexity  The three characteristics repeatable ideas almost always share:  Clear enough to explain Short enough to remember Specific enough to attach to a situation  Why smart experts accidentally make their ideas difficult to repeat  The difference between complete explanations and portable explanations  Why category creators become recognizable faster  The three elements that make ideas travel:  Clarity  Consistency  Placement  Why opportunities often begin with recall, not discovery  The signal that recognition is actually beginning to form  Timestamps : [0:00:03] Recognition Requires Repeatability [0:02:10] Ideas That Travel Without You [0:04:45] Exposure vs Association [0:07:20] Why Visibility Alone Stalls [0:09:55] Conversations Carry Sentences, Not Resumes [0:12:30] Respect Stays Local, Recognition Travels [0:16:05] Category Creators Name What Others Feel [0:19:40] Accuracy Without Structure Kills Spread [0:23:10] Stabilize Your Explanation, Don’t Shrink Your Thinking [0:27:00] Choose the First Sentence Your Name Should Mean [0:31:15] Clarity, Consistency, Placement as Recognition Engine [0:36:00] Opportunities Follow Recall, Not Discovery [0:40:20] Structural Recognition Outlives Your Posting Schedule [0:44:10] Repeatability as the Infrastructure of Momentum [0:48:30] Repeatability First, Amplification Next By the end of this episode, you'll stop asking, "How do I get in front of more people?" and start asking, "What about my work can someone else carry forward?" Because recognition isn't built on how often you speak. It's built on how often your ideas are spoken. If this episode resonated, follow Pitchworthy and send it to someone whose ideas deserve to travel further than their current audience.   Connect with KJ: Follow KJ on Instagram: @kjblattenbauer [www.instagram.com/kjblattenbauer ] Learn more: Hearsay PR [www.hearsaypr.com ] Get the books: Pitchworthy and Pitchworthy Workbook [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H1XD1N1W } Subscribe for future episodes Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pitchworthy-with-kj-blattenbauer/id1896636172  Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/033gnAZDTRGBsQ9DXrMmog  iHeart Radio - https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1323-pitchworthy-with-kj-blatt-333611742/

    29 phút
  7. 21 thg 5

    Why Some People Become Known (and Others Stay Invisible)

    Most people think visibility creates opportunity. It doesn’t. Visibility can amplify what already exists, but visibility alone doesn’t create authority, trust, or momentum. Recognition does. In this first episode of Pitchworthy, KJ Blattenbauer breaks down one of the biggest misunderstandings in business today: the belief that being seen automatically leads to being known. Because some people become recognized long before they become widely visible. Their names move ahead of them. Their ideas get repeated in rooms they’re not in. Their reputations start traveling before they do. In this episode, KJ introduces the foundation of Recognition Intelligence™ and explains why recognition isn't attention; it's association. You’ll learn: Why visibility and recognition are completely different things  The hidden reason talented people stay overlooked  Why exposure creates awareness, but recognition creates opportunity  The difference between someone seeing you and someone explaining you  Why introductions, referrals, and trust all begin with association  The three mechanics behind recognition:  Clarity  Repeatability  Conversation movement  What "portable ideas" are, and why they travel further than expertise alone  Why some careers suddenly accelerate seemingly overnight  The moment recognition quietly begins forming  The difference between local recognition and directional recognition  Why becoming referable matters more than becoming visible  How recognition changes the way opportunities move toward you  Listen in to learn more : [0:00:02] Visibility vs Recognition as the Real Engine of Opportunity [0:02:45] Recognition as Association, Not Just Attention or Exposure [0:05:30] Clarity Before Momentum: Making Your Name Easy to Explain [0:08:15] Repeatable, Portable Ideas That Other People Can Carry Forward [0:11:00] Conversations Over Platforms as the Driver of Trust and Authority [0:13:45] Local vs Directional Recognition and How Names Travel Beyond Your Network [0:16:30] Referability Beats Reach in Creating Compounding Opportunity [0:19:15] Placement Inside Decisions: Getting Your Name Into the Right Conversations [0:22:30] Decide What You Want to Be Known For as the Starting Point of Recognition   By the end of this episode, you'll stop asking, "How do I become more visible?" and start asking, "What do people associate with my name?" Because that question changes everything. If you enjoyed this episode, follow Pitchworthy and share it with someone whose ideas deserve to travel further. Connect with KJ: Follow KJ on Instagram: @kjblattenbauer [www.instagram.com/kjblattenbauer ] Learn more: Hearsay PR [www.hearsaypr.com ] Get the books: Pitchworthy and Pitchworthy Workbook [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H1XD1N1W } Subscribe for future episodes Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pitchworthy-with-kj-blattenbauer/id1896636172  Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/033gnAZDTRGBsQ9DXrMmog  iHeart Radio - https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1323-pitchworthy-with-kj-blatt-333611742/

    26 phút
  8. 21 thg 5

    Why Recognition Begins With a Decision (and Why Most Experts Delay It)

    Most people think recognition begins when someone else notices them. It doesn’t. Recognition begins when you decide what you want to be known for. And that decision? Most people delay it for years. Because deciding what you want your name attached to can feel bigger than choosing a niche, writing a bio, or updating your LinkedIn headline. It feels personal. Final. Vulnerable. So people stay broad. They stay flexible. They stay in professional "maybe." But recognition doesn’t begin when the market decides who you are. It begins when you decide what explanation other people are meant to carry forward. In this episode of Pitchworthy, KJ breaks down why talented experts often stay under-recognized, not because their work lacks value, but because their meaning lacks stability.   You'll learn: Why recognition begins internally before it becomes visible externally The real reason smart people delay deciding what they want to be known for Why clarity feels vulnerable (and why broadness feels safer) The difference between being impressive and being recognizable Why people don't refer complexity—they refer clarity The hidden cost of staying broad professionally Why explanation matters more than totality The "Sentence Test" that instantly reveals whether recognition is forming The difference between local recognition and directional recognition Why strong work alone is not enough How unclear positioning slows referrals, trust, and momentum Why identity lag keeps people introducing themselves from an old chapter The signs that your recognition decision still hasn't been made What recognition actually needs at the beginning (hint: not perfection) Listen in to learn more :  [0:00:01] Recognition Begins With Your Decision [0:03:30] Clarity vs Confinement [0:07:10] Impressive Is Not the Same as Recognizable [0:10:45] The Power of a Single Clear Sentence [0:13:50] Broadness Feels Safe but Blurs Recognition [0:16:40] Recognition Starts Before Consensus [0:18:55] When Your Work Evolves Faster Than Your Identity [0:21:05] Choosing the Clear Sentence for This Season [0:22:30] Authority as Legible, Transferable Expertise [0:23:30] How Recognition Compounds Outward By the end of this episode, you'll stop asking, "How do I explain everything I do?" and start asking, "What do I want my name to mean?" Because recognition doesn’t start with exposure. It starts with explanation. And explanation begins with a decision.   If this episode resonated, follow Pitchworthy and share it with someone whose work is strong but still feels difficult to explain.   Connect with KJ: Follow KJ on Instagram: @kjblattenbauer [www.instagram.com/kjblattenbauer ] Learn more: Hearsay PR [www.hearsaypr.com ] Get the books: Pitchworthy and Pitchworthy Workbook [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H1XD1N1W } Subscribe for future episodes Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pitchworthy-with-kj-blattenbauer/id1896636172  Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/033gnAZDTRGBsQ9DXrMmog  iHeart Radio - https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1323-pitchworthy-with-kj-blatt-333611742/

    24 phút
5
/5
6 Xếp hạng

Giới Thiệu

Pitchworthy is not a traditional PR podcast. Hosted by veteran publicist and two-time bestselling author KJ Blattenbauer, the show explores how founders, experts, and industry leaders become impossible to ignore. Not through louder marketing, but through sharper positioning, stronger ideas, and reputations that travel before they do. Each episode breaks down the hidden mechanics behind recognition, authority, media perception, and industry influence so listeners can stop chasing visibility and start becoming the person people reference, recommend, and remember. This is for ambitious founders, creatives, and experts who are already respected for their work and ready to become known for their thinking.

Có Thể Bạn Cũng Thích