Why Podcast and Creator Awards Matter | Cameron Stack, Recognized.fm #675
In Episode 675 of the New Media Show, host Rob Greenlee welcomes Cameron Stack, founder and curator of Recognized.fm, for a conversation about podcast awards, creator credibility, industry recognition, and the growing business behind awards, nominations, platform distinctions, editorial selections, and career honors.
Podcast awards can be easy to dismiss as another trophy or promotional exercise. Credible recognition can have a much larger impact on a creator, a show, a network, or a media company.
An award nomination or win can strengthen a media kit, support sponsor conversations, attract better guests, generate press coverage, and give prospective listeners another reason to take a show seriously.
The difficult part is deciding which awards deserve the investment.
Podcasting now has a wide recognition ecosystem that includes juried competitions, audience-voted awards, editorial selections, regional programs, platform honors, niche-category awards, professional distinctions, and lifetime-achievement recognition such as the Podcast Hall of Fame.
Cameron created Recognized.fm to organize this expanding market and help creators understand their options. Recognized currently tracks more than 100 audio and podcast awards, with information that can be filtered by factors such as geographic scope, entry fees, voting format, and prestige.
They discuss why creators should begin with a clear objective before paying to submit. A widely known international award may bring general visibility, while a smaller award focused on a creator’s profession, region, language, or subject category may carry more influence with the people they most want to reach.
Example 1: A medical podcast may receive greater credibility in healthcare than from a broad entertainment competition.
Example 2: A true-crime show may benefit more from an award respected by that community than from competing across every podcast genre.
Submission fees also need to be considered. Independent creators may only have the budget to enter one or two competitions, while networks and larger publishers can treat award submissions as part of a broader marketing strategy.
Cameron explains why creators should compare costs against potential returns in visibility, authority, business development, audience growth, and professional validation.
The judging process matters just as much as the entry fee. Creators should understand who operates the award, how judges are selected, what criteria are used, whether the process is transparent, and how much weight the recognition will carry with the intended audience.
Every award has its own purpose and incentives. Some are selected by industry juries. Others rely on fan voting, editorial judgment, platform data, or a combination of methods. Recognized.fm is building a clearer taxonomy so creators can understand those differences before committing their time and money.
Awards also function as social proof. Audiences already use ratings, reviews, trailers, artwork, recommendations, and visible audience activity to decide whether a show deserves attention. A respected award or nomination adds another outside signal that the work has been evaluated and recognized.
The recognition can strengthen sponsor decks, improve outreach to potential guests, support speaking opportunities, and help creators position themselves as credible voices within a category.
The impact can continue long after the ceremony, as recognition becomes part of the creator’s biography, website, introductions, and business materials.
We also explore the larger “recognition economy”. Awards are one part of an industry that includes trophy manufacturers, submission platforms, consultants, event producers, sponsors, judging systems, media organizations, and the businesses that support professional recognition.
As creator-led media grows, new awards will continue to emerge around podcasts, YouTube shows, livestreaming, newsletters, social video, and other online formats. Established awards will also need to adapt as audiences and media habits change.
Artificial intelligence will bring another layer of change.
Cameron expects AI-related categories and dedicated AI awards to emerge as organizations seek ways to recognize new forms of production and technological achievement.
Rob raises the trust questions that will accompany that shift, especially when established human-centered awards begin considering synthetic or substantially AI-generated work.
The episode closes with a look at the physical trophies themselves. Cameron shares examples from the Webbys, Signal Awards, iHeartPodcast Awards, international design competitions, and other recognition programs. A memorable trophy can become a visible symbol of the award and extend its value through videos, studio sets, social posts, and public appearances.
For creators, producers, networks, and media companies, Episode 675 provides a practical framework for deciding when awards are worth pursuing, how to evaluate them, and how credible recognition can support broader media and business strategies.
Topics Covered in This Episode
* Why credible podcast recognition matters
* Cameron Stack’s background in podcast production
* The development of Recognized.fm
* Juried, fan-voted, editorial, regional, and platform awards
* How creators should decide which awards to enter
* Submission fees and potential return on investment
* Broad awards compared with niche recognition
* Awards as social proof for listeners and sponsors
* Strengthening media kits and guest outreach
* Podcast Hall of Fame and career recognition
* Judging standards, transparency, and organizational bias
* The larger recognition economy
* AI-generated content and future award categories
* Creator-native awards and legacy media ceremonies
* Why memorable trophy design matters
Chapter Time Stamp Markers:
00:00 Why podcast awards and recognition matter
02:05 Cameron Stack and the origin of Recognized.fm
04:08 Recognition expands beyond traditional podcast awards
05:47 Building a comprehensive guide to audio awards
07:34 Should every creator submit to awards?
10:23 The full podcast recognition ecosystem
11:56 What creators gain from recognition
13:33 Broad awards compared with niche awards
15:00 Editorial selections and platform recognition
17:16 Awards as credibility and social proof
19:03 Measuring the return from an award
21:39 Mapping the taxonomy of podcast awards
24:52 Inside the Recognized.fm platform
26:03 Events, jobs, and recognition-industry resources
28:09 Future award discovery and submission tools
29:54 Niche communities and the demand for recognition
31:52 Judging standards, transparency, and trust
34:15 Submission fees, bias, and due diligence
38:23 How AI may reshape awards
40:59 AI categories, positioning, and possible backlash
43:22 The growing recognition economy
46:01 Creator-native awards and legacy ceremonies
48:06 Why the physical trophy matters
52:27 The Webbys, Lovie Awards, and digital recognition
53:31 iHeartPodcast Awards and major-industry trophies
54:53 Signal Awards, the Ambies, and podcast trophy design
56:00 Recognized.fm and closing thoughts
58:49 End of episode
Guest Links: Cameron Stack, Founder and Curator, Recognized.fm
Recognized.fm: https://recognized.fm
Podcast Awards Taxonomy: https://recognized.fm/podcast-awards
About Recognized: https://recognized.fm/about-recognized
Recognized Newsletter: https://recognized.substack.com
Cameron Stack on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cameron-stack
Recognized.fm, curated by Cameron Stack, focuses on making the awards and recognition industry easier to understand and navigate.
Rob Greenlee and New Media Show Links
Rob Greenlee Website: https://robgreenlee.com
New Media Show: https://newmediashow.com
New Media Show Audio on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/new-media-show-audio/id392545649
New Media Show on YouTube: https://youtube.com/@TheNewMediaShow
Rob Greenlee on YouTube: https://youtube.com/@RobGreenlee
Podcast Hall of Fame: https://podcasthall.com
About Trust Factor Lab
Trust Factor Lab helps creators, media leaders, executives, and brands build stronger audience trust across AI, video, podcasts, and creator-led media. Founded by Rob Greenlee, it focuses on media positioning, content strategy, authority development, AI transparency, audience growth, and trust-centered business outcomes.
AI Disclosure Note:
I used AI tools to help organize and edit this episode and its description, then create chapter markers from the episode transcript. The editorial direction, final review, industry perspective, and responsibility for the published content remain mine. The discussion reflects the views expressed by my guest and me during the recorded conversation.
The post Why Podcast and Creator Awards Matter | Cameron Stack, Recognized.fm #675 first appeared on New Media Show.