While there is little question that podcasting continues to be a platform that is growing in popularity, it may come as no surprise that nearly half of Americans have never listened to a single podcast.
According to Jacobs Media, between 30 and 45 percent of radio listeners say they do not listen to podcasts. The firm conducts three major nationwide surveys each year:
- The Jacobs Media Techsurvey, which measures how commercial radio listeners consume media
- The Public Radio Techsurvey, which does the same for those who listen mostly to public radio
- The Christian Music Broadcasters Techsurvey, which is targeted toward listeners of Christian radio stations
It’s not clear why podcasting lags so far behind its video counterpart — video on-demand. By comparison, about 59 percent of American adults are now using Netflix, according to Statista, which aggregates studies from more than 22,500 sources.
But Fred Jacobs, the president and founder of Jacobs Media, posts that it may have something to do with the quality of centralized platforms. That is, Netflix is easy to navigate — and one can subscribe and begin using it with little friction. If you feel like branching out, the largest alternative platforms — Amazon Prime Video and Hulu — are pretty intuitive, and work very much like Netflix.
The same can’t be said of podcasting, according to media watcher Damien Willis. Even for those accustomed to using iTunes, the platforms for discovery and subscribing can be clunky and fragmented and hard to navigate. There really isn’t a centralized platform through which one can access the best of the medium without much friction. And there’s no doubt that this can be off-putting to some would-be listeners.
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