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After 5 years and 233 episodes, I have recorded the final episode of The RV Entrepreneur podcast.
A little more than seven years ago my friend Sean sat me down right before I married Alyssa and said, âHeath, I love you man. I just want to see you finish something you start. Youâre getting married now and have a bigger responsibility than just yourself.â
This was all in regards to our crazy idea to buy an RV and take a year to visit all fifty states. It was a painful, but honest conversation and one that at the moment stung (because it was true) but I was genuinely grateful he shared with me.
For a long time, I struggled to see things through.
I started a new business, only to let it flounder. I got really excited about a business idea only to abandon it by the weekend.
My main goal when we hit the road was to become a person who sees things through.
When I started the RV Entrepreneur podcast in 2016, my goal was to actually see it through and publish 25 or 50 episodes (tbh Iâm not sure which number it was), but this week I released episode number 233 â and itâs also my last.
Before sharing the reasons why I wanted to just say thank you to anyone reading this.
Thank you to the 514 people who have left reviews on this show and for everyone who has listened, downloaded, or shared the RV Entrepreneur podcast over the past five years.
Also, for all the people who have taken time out of their day to be a guest or sent thoughtful emails and messages to us sharing what the show has meant to them. As a content creator, I canât even begin to describe how much that meant to me. It was literally the fuel that kept me going.
In thinking about what I wanted to share from a learnings perspective on the podcast, there are a million things.
But I didnât want to try and rehash key lessons from 200+ episodes of the podcast, so instead I decided to leave you with the three most meaningful lessons this podcast personally taught me.
My 3 Biggest Takeaways from Hosting the RV Entrepreneur Podcast
#1 You donât have to be an expert to share helpful advice and make an impact in peopleâs lives, but you do have to be honest.
One of my biggest fears when starting this podcast was the fact that at the time I was genuinely struggling to figure out business and how it blended with this crazy life weâd chosen. I told Alyssa that I felt like an imposter starting an entrepreneurship podcast when we were barely getting by with our business.
I feared that naming the podcast âRV Entrepreneurâ would come off like I was trying to be something I wasnât or acting like I was further ahead than I was. So instead of trying to act, I just shared where we really were in business.
I posted episodes where Alyssa and I talked about what we were going to name our blog and how much money we were making (or werenât making) in various endeavors.
In a lot of ways, this approach made everything feel lighter to me. I was never trying to be an expert, I was just trying to be helpful.
This process made me realize that if youâre less concerned with feeling or looking important and more concerned with being helpful â you go further. You donât have to be an expert, you just have to be honest.
#2 An undiscovered niche feels too small to most people when you first tell them about it.
When I first started this podcast, it seemed like a pretty small number of people would ever care about a business from their RV.
People literally laughed when I told them about the show.
However, I knew from starting our Facebook group that there were at least a handful of people who would really care about the content (or at least I hoped so).
If youâre thinking about creating or starting something and you feel thereâs a target group of people out there (even superbly small), Iâd encourage you to chase after it and see what happens.
Donât discount your first-hand knowledge just because it seems unconventional or not proven yet. Prove it.
#3 A fan becomes a friend and subscribers become a community when you bring people together.
One of the best decisions we ever made in regards to this podcast wasnât actually about the podcast â it was about the decision to bring together this community in person at our RV Entrepreneur Summit in 2017.
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This event changed the trajectory of our careers in no small way.
The people we met who had listened to this show became some of our best friends and even business partners. The collective group became a genuine community. Until that moment it was just a podcast with subscribers on a dashboard. The gathering of like-minded people was where the real magic happened.
And as I mentioned at the beginning of this email, weâre putting on our 5th RVE Summit here in Colorado this fall from September 9th through the 12th.
Weâd love to have you join us.
Weâre hosting boondockers at our soon-to-be a real campground property and weâre going back to our OG 2017 RVE Summit size and only releasing a little more than 100 tickets.
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We already have several awesome speakers lined up like Less Junk More Journey, RV Geeks, Joel Holland of Harvest Hosts, and RV Miles who will be sharing their stories this year at RVE.
If youâre interested in attending this year, you can grab a ticket and learn more here.
Why I Decided to Quit Recording Episodes
In a Facebook group Iâm in, someone asked me, âFrom a content creatorâs perspective, why are you ending the show?â
There are a few reasons for wrapping up the podcast.
However, the primary one is that what Iâm most excited and passionate about right now isnât learning how to create a remote business, itâs learning how to create a hospitality experience for our campground.
As an interviewer, what creates energy in a conversation is genuine curiosity. If youâve ever listened to a boring interview, itâs likely in part due to the fact that the interviewer isnât actually interested in the person they are talking to.
When someone takes genuine interest in a conversation, they can make even mundane topics interesting.
This interest is what has fueled me over 5 years and 233 episodes. Iâve loved the conversations Iâve had with nomads from all walks of life and learned something from every episode. And this interest and passion is something Iâm excited to carry over into whatâs nextâour campground.
A parting thought on leaving behind something that feels âsuccessfulâ
Even though I felt strongly it was time to wrap up the podcast, it was still really hard to let it go and took me a couple of months to fully commit to the decision.
The show still has tens of thousands of listeners and I receive regular emails about how meaningful itâs been for nomads and entrepreneurs. Plus, as part of our business, itâs profitable year over year.
Letting it go and moving from focusing on being an RV Entrepreneur to being an RV park owner is a huge shift for Alyssa and me. Weâre leaving behind something we know and love for something completely unknown.
Alyssa is working on her second book right now and it shares the story of our first year on the road and how weânot without some speed bumpsâactually finished our quest to visit all 50 states. Weâve been talking a lot about that first year on the road and the unparalleled excitement and energy we felt diving into RV life when it was a completely unknown adventure. It was terrifying and thrilling all at once.
Thatâs the same excitement I feel when I unroll blueprints for our campground and brainstorm ways we can deliver on a modern camping experience. There is so much passion and enthusiasm in every conversation (which is part of the reason we couldnât wait to host boondockers at an RVE Summit this year!).
Life is short and while itâs easier to stay in our lanes, I donât think it serves us to do so at the expense of growth and joy.
Again, just want to say thank you to so many of you who have listened to RVE over the years or reached out with a kind note about an episode. This has been an incredibly meaningful chapter for both Alyssa and me and weâre excited to gather with this community again (in person!) this September.
Wishing you all the success,
Heath