This is a follow-up to my last article about a different kind of analysis of the podcasting space, one focused more on what entities “serve” podcast media… delivering podcast audio and video files to their audience via the internet.

I am currently working with a database of about 332,000 podcasts (and around 15 million episodes). When shows are grouped by the domain where the last media file originated, most providers of podcast hosting services become visible.

Here are the Top 100:

Pareto Principle

The top 100 entities represent about 82% of all podcasts. The remaining 18% account for about 58,000 entities.

Dormant vs Dead

I have arbitrarily categorized a podcast that has not released a new episode in the past twelve months as Dormant. The RSS feed and media files are still online.

Whether many episodes or few, this might be the case where the podcast has reached completion yet is still fully available to all (like S-Town, which ran seven episodes by plan). Many of these shows remain quite viable… the classic “long tail” folks talk about.

Yet some podcasts fade.

Podcasters lose interest, have changing family and career responsibilities, die. The show comes to an end, by choice or lack of momentum. When no new episode is released for quite a while… it becomes Dormant. Then, at some point, the plug is pulled on hosting the podcast’s RSS feed and media files… it becomes Dead.

Hosting Zombies

NOTE: dormancy rates near 0% are probably due to the methods of my data capture; likely missing data.

No matter how great their service, every business loses customers for various reasons, a certain amount of churn is “normal”. The goal is to establish a solid base of Active customers, knowing that some will become Dormant… passive customers… and eventually stop using the service… Dead.

Especially if it is a paid service.

Any podcast hosting business with an above average percentage of dormant podcasts should be looking for ways to find new customers. Just sayin’.

The podcast hosting business plays an important role in the community. I’d like for it to thrive.