Time in podcasting no. 16

George Olver
Applaudience
Published in
2 min readJun 21, 2016

The process of creating a very engaging podcast is learning, listening and sharing, its feedback of the best kind. Tone of voice gives a dynamic authenticity that is absent in written word. It is linear so it does take a bit of time to create and listen to, however, this gives it added value.

Me on the Movidiam podcast speaking to Dan Myrick director of The Blair Witch Project.

As widely extolled, the elixir of product development is feedback, shaping feedback, rating it, grading it and acting of the elements of it that punctuate the vision of a project, which is critical. That said, if all feedback is ‘acted on’ your ‘bust’ as well, its a tightrope of filtering and prioritisation. The good product manager is juggling and is a master of productivity, multi-tasking and archiving for future moments on the road map.

Movidiam has released its 16th podcast/interview on the Movidiam podcast and it is a collection of fascinating insights from the Movidiam community. They are people from many different walks of the global industry ‘talking’ about how they organise, build teams and project manage their film, video and increasingly VR productions, across the globe.

Movidiam has been designed as an enabler of quality content production at scale across the globe by connecting talented creators, filmmakers and teams. Today it’s the largest virtual production community in the world, members come to Movidiam looking for opportunities, jobs and the potential to collaborate with the world’s best talent. Members that come for the project management tools, stay for the enhanced experience and connectivity the network offers.

It’s also a real privilege to talk to the people behind the scenes who’s names you just see in white at the end of the film, so talented and creative and have remarkable stories to tell about their process and journey and every one is truly unique.

On you next commute to ‘location’ go ahead and listen in.

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