Revenue Rehab

Download Numbers Don't Matter #ChangeMyMind


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This week on Revenue Rehab, Brandi Starr is joined by Jonas Woost, media entrepreneur and co-founder of Bumper. He believes that “more downloads do NOT equal more business value” and is ready to prove it. In this episode, Jonas challenges the industry’s obsession with podcast download numbers, making the case that B2B revenue leaders should focus on true listener engagement and quality of audience over vanity metrics. From dismantling outdated measurement practices to revealing actionable strategies for aligning your podcast with business outcomes, Jonas urges CMOs and CROs to rethink how they evaluate and leverage audio content before wasted efforts drain ROI. Will you stick to conventional wisdom, or does Jonas have it right? Join the debate! 

Episode Type: Problem Solving - Industry analysts, consultants, and founders take a bold stance on critical revenue challenges, offering insights you won’t hear anywhere else. These episodes explore common industry challenges and potential solutions through expert insights and varied perspectives.  

Bullet Points of Key Topics + Chapter Markers: 

Topic #1: “More Downloads” Do Not Equal Business Value [02:07] 

Jonas Woost directly challenges the conventional wisdom that higher download numbers automatically translate to more value for B2B podcasts. He argues, “The download is actually very, very poor way to measure podcast success because a download means basically nothing. A download is not a listen.” Brandi acknowledges how entrenched this mindset is among marketers, sparking a debate on what metrics really matter for revenue leaders. 

Topic #2: Measuring Podcast Consumption, Not Just Reach [10:14] 

Jonas reframes success metrics for B2B podcasts, insisting that podcasting is not a “reach medium” but an “amazing engagement medium.” He urges CMOs and CROs to focus on deep audience engagement—“how long did they stick around”—rather than chasing vanity metrics like total downloads. Brandi explores how this approach impacts real editorial decisions, making the case for aligning podcast topics more tightly with business outcomes. 

Topic #3: Data-Driven Podcast Decision-Making—But Don’t Forget Your Mission [19:10] 

Jonas outlines a bold, data-first approach to evolving podcast strategy, advocating for constant, insight-driven pivots in content, marketing, and business objectives. However, he warns revenue leaders not to let data be the only driver: “If we only do stuff based on data and sort of chase the best number...it doesn’t lead to great storytelling.” The discussion centers on how to balance hard metrics with purpose-driven episodes—even when certain topics (like climate or DE&I) don’t deliver the highest completion rates. 

The Wrong Approach vs. Smarter Alternative 

The Wrong Approach: “The first thing that most people get wrong is that they don't actually know what they want to measure. This is the first step. What do you actually want? No one wants downloads. No one wants a number. People want business results, especially your audience, B2B podcasters. They want some sort of result. At the end of the day, we need to start there with result. What do you want? This is about reputation. This is about lead generation. This is about whatever. And then go backwards from there. As opposed to starting with like we want downloads in order to maybe have something else in the past.” – Jonas Woost 

Why It Fails: Measuring podcast success by downloads alone is fundamentally flawed because downloads do not equate to real engagement or business impact. Companies often default to chasing higher download numbers rather than focusing on the outcomes that actually matter, like genuine audience consumption, influence on reputation, or contribution to lead generation. This results in misaligned investments and missed opportunities to connect with the right audience. 

The Smarter Alternative: Companies should start by clarifying the real business result they want from their podcast—whether that’s reputation building, lead generation, or something else—and then work backwards to design their measurement approach. Instead of defaulting to download counts, focus on actual listener engagement and platform-specific consumption metrics that align with your strategic objectives. 

The Most Damaging Myth 

The Myth: “More downloads always equal more business value for a B2B podcast.” – Jonas Woost 

Why It’s Wrong: Jonas explains that downloads are a poor way to measure podcast success because a download is not a listen, nor does it indicate actual engagement. Most downloads don’t translate to real audience interaction, and chasing bigger numbers often distracts companies from connecting with their true target audience—especially for B2B marketers with niche offerings. 

What Companies Should Do Instead: Focus on measuring real consumption and engagement across listening platforms like Spotify, Apple, and YouTube. Prioritize understanding who is listening, how long they engage, and whether you’re reaching the right audience rather than blindly driving up download counts. Use these insights to inform editorial, marketing, and business decisions to drive meaningful business value. 

The Rapid-Fire Round 

  1. Finish this sentence: If your company has this problem, the first thing you should do is _ “Start by clearly defining what business result you actually want—not just downloads or numbers, but the real goal like reputation or lead generation.” – Jonas Woost
  2. What’s one red flag that signals a company has this problem—but might not realize it yet?  “If you don’t know what you actually want to measure, or you’re defaulting to downloads, you’re already off track. Focus on desired outcomes, not vanity metrics.”
  3. What’s the most common mistake people make when trying to fix this? “Trying to be perfect and capture data from every platform. With podcasts scattered across many players, obsessing over 100% accuracy becomes overwhelming. Instead, focus on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube for the bulk of your data.”
  4. What’s the fastest action someone can take today to make progress? “Build a simple spreadsheet to manually track engagement stats from the major platforms. It doesn’t need to be fancy—six key numbers, updated monthly, will give you the clarity to make better decisions right away.”  

Links: 

  • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonaswoost/ 

  • Website: https://wearebumper.com/ 

Subscribe, listen, and rate/review Revenue Rehab Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts , Amazon Music, or iHeart Radio and find more episodes on our website RevenueRehab.live  

 

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Revenue RehabBy Tegrita