In January 2024, we optimized our Website, Appaloosa Radio Online, for the iPhone and Android. As I write this, it hosts 167 audio stories created by 16 different writers. We believe that most of our audio stories are experienced on mobile devices. Last year, we had about 4,000 listeners.
While 4,000 listeners in twelve months is not phenomenal by current YouTube standards, it represents, I believe, an audience significantly larger than what I probably would have gotten by publishing print stories on Amazon Kindle.
This week, I researched what other advantages publishing audio stories has over printed publications.
The first advantage to audio stories is the immediacy of the connection between the storyteller and the listener. Audio stories create a tight personal connection between the two. Sometimes when reading a great book, you become so involved that you just can’t put it down. However, that (in my experience) is a rare experience. On the other hand, I have found that a well-constructed audio story nearly always creates both intimacy and intense involvement. I believe there is a unique magic in the spoken word. Hearing a story engages our minds, brings us back to when listening by the campfire was an essential form of human communication.
A second advantage, I believe, is the ability to enhance the story telling with music and sound effects. Listening to a well-crafted audio story is an immersive experience. You are in the moment; in the place. And the experience is in real time. It is happening now.