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Overview Production The Reality Reflection

The Grid Gurus

The Journey and Fall of a Formula 1 Podcast

The Grid Gurus Poster
Role: Co-Host, Producer, Editor
Year: 2024
Format: Podcast
Platforms: YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, All Major Streaming Platforms
Co-Hosts: Atharv Gopaluni, Aditya Jain
Episodes: 6
Description: A Formula 1 podcast that ran for three months in early 2024, offering thoughtful race recaps, news, and analysis in an oversaturated market. While ultimately unsuccessful, it was a valuable lesson in understanding audience dynamics, market saturation, and knowing when to exit gracefully.

Overview

The Grid Gurus was a Formula 1 podcast I ran with my friend Aditya Jain for about three months in early 2024. As massive F1 fans, our goal was to discuss Formula 1 and put in our insights in a sea of hate and people with very polarizing opinions. We wanted to contribute thoughtful analysis and measured takes in a space increasingly dominated by sensationalism. We covered race recaps, rumors, news, and special topics, hoping to offer a more relaxed atmosphere compared to the typical F1 content landscape.


Production

We both used professional-grade microphones and audio setups, connecting over Zoom to record episodes remotely as Aditya and I lived 400 miles apart. I used Logic Pro to edit the podcast audio and Final Cut Pro to edit the video version for YouTube. The production quality was solid, but the logistical challenges of remote collaboration and maintaining a consistent schedule during my second semester of college proved difficult.


The Reality
Understanding Market Saturation

The Grid Gurus was ultimately a failure, but an instructive one. I came to understand that the market was already oversaturated with F1 content created by people whose entire job this was. They were quicker than us, operating at a bigger scale, and far more experienced. Additionally, the podcast became quite tight in my brand new college schedule as this was only my second semester, and balancing academic demands with consistent podcast production proved unsustainable.


I learned when to bow out. It wasn't working, and we weren't in a place to make it work. We lived 400 miles apart and didn't have the knowledge or the time to compete at the level required. I did not want to do something half-baked. After six episodes, we made the decision to end the podcast rather than continue producing subpar content.


Reflection
Lessons Learned

I learned a lot from this experience. Beyond developing skills even more in podcast video and audio editing, this was the first time I did dedicated promotion on social media, and I saw thousands of views as a result. This was also early in the F1 boom, so I predict, had I done this today, I could have leveraged social media even more effectively, especially in the age of massive hate and anger among F1 fans. I could have capitalized on our much more relaxed atmosphere and measured takes.


However, these are all lessons learned, and they continue to help me today. The Grid Gurus taught me about understanding my audience, recognizing market saturation, and knowing when to exit a market that's already crowded. Sometimes the most valuable projects are the ones that teach you when not to proceed, and that's a lesson worth more than any successful podcast episode.

Listen to Episodes →



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