『The Jake Hallman podcast』のカバーアート

The Jake Hallman podcast

The Jake Hallman podcast

著者: Jake Hallman
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Welcome to The Jake Hallman Podcast, the show where I share my insights and stories from nearly 19 years of running Stouthouse Media, a successful production house. If you're a videographer who wants to learn practical tips on how to grow your business, improve your skills, and have fun along the way, this podcast is for you. Every Wednesday, I'll cover topics like freelancing, marketing, editing, equipment, and more. You'll also get to hear some of my personal experiences and challenges as a videographer and a business owner. Whether you're a beginner or a pro, this podcast will help you take your videography to the next level. So hit that subscribe button and join me on this journey. And don't forget to leave a rating or a review if you enjoy the show. Thanks for listening!2023 アート マネジメント・リーダーシップ リーダーシップ 経済学
エピソード
  • Why I Stopped Asking for a Human Reviewer
    2026/05/15

    In the last few months, I've submitted over 130 job applications. Somewhere around number 30, I started noticing a checkbox at the bottom of most forms. Something like: "I'd like to opt out of automated screening and request a human reviewer."

    I used to check it every time. I thought I was being smart.

    I wasn't.

    In this episode I dig into what that checkbox actually does, where it came from (spoiler: lawyers, not HR), and why checking it almost always moves you out of the working pile and into a waiting room nobody's staffing.

    I cover:

    • Why the opt-out exists — NYC Local Law 144, built for employer liability, not candidate protection
    • What actually happens when you check it — the three most common outcomes
    • The documented AI bias that makes the opt-out tempting — and why opting out doesn't fix it
    • The five specific cases where opting out is actually the right call
    • What works better instead

    If you're job searching right now, this one's for you.

    Full post: https://jakehallman.com/opt-out-box-ai-screening-trap/

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    13 分
  • Raise Your Rates and Watch Who Disappears
    2026/05/12

    You raised your rates. A client you'd worked with for years went quiet. No blowup, no email — just gone.

    And somehow, you felt relieved.

    That's where this episode starts. When I bumped my prices 25%, a steady client disappeared within three weeks. On paper it looked bad. In reality it exposed something I should have seen coming: they weren't loyal to me. They were loyal to the old number.

    In this episode:

    • Why your price isn't just a transaction — it's a diagnostic tool that tells you who actually values your work
    • What good clients are really buying (it's not hours or deliverables)
    • Why cheap prices send the wrong signal and train clients to treat your time as elastic
    • How to raise rates without apology — give notice, say it once, stop talking
    • What happens to your calendar and stress level when the wrong clients leave

    If you're still charging what you charged two years ago, this one's for you. Spoiler: the ones who leave were already gone.

    Full post: https://jakehallman.com/expensive-clients-are-just-clients-who-didnt-quit-yet/

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    6 分
  • You're Using Your Own Joy as a Discount Code
    2026/04/28

    You're good at something. You actually enjoy doing it. So when someone asks what you charge, your brain does a thing — and the number that comes out of your mouth is too small. You know it's too small. You say it anyway.

    That's what this episode is about.

    There's a trap built into loving your work. The internal logic goes something like: "I enjoy this, so it doesn't really cost me anything, so I should give them a deal." It feels generous. It feels humble. It is quietly costing you thousands of dollars a year.

    In this episode, I break down:

    • Why creative people and educators systematically underprice their work (and there's actual peer-reviewed research on this)
    • The "passion paradox" — how caring deeply about your craft becomes a lever in someone else's hands
    • The real math: a $400 project that eats 20 hours isn't meaningful work, it's $20 an hour
    • Why teachers are especially primed for this trap, and why the same logic that gets exploited Monday through Friday follows them into their weekend freelance gigs
    • How to price based on time and skill instead of how the project makes you feel

    You can care deeply about what you do and also get paid fairly for it. Those two things coexist just fine.

    This one is for every educator running a side hustle, every creative saying "it's not a big deal" when they know it is, and every freelancer who's done the math afterward and cringed.

    Read the full article: https://jakehallman.com/the-lie-you-tell-yourself-about-charging-for-work-you-actually-like/

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    6 分
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