You know her, you love her.
She’s Steph Smith, and earlier this month she published a tweet that asked, “What’s an innovation or industry that seems distant, yet inevitable?”
The post attracted dozens of interesting responses, and this week we’re breaking down 2: Audio SEO, and D2C biohacking.
Audio content is growing much faster than websites did in the early 2000s: The number of podcast episodes rose by 60% from ~30m to ~48m in the last year alone.
But the way that audio content is found on the web is different from written content, making traditional SEO techniques obsolete for the growing podcast industry.
For example, most of Google’s 200+ ranking factors for websites (e.g., choice and use of keywords, number of page links, etc.) don’t apply to audio content, unless it’s transcribed.
Audio SEO -- how well audio content ranks on search engines -- is set to follow in the footsteps of the traditional SEO industry, which has ballooned to ~$80B in just 25 years.
As audio search engines emerge, there will be opportunities to build tools and platforms to support the new industry, including:
Investment and interest in longevity has continued to increase since Laura Deming started the $100m Longevity Fund.
But before immortality comes biohacking -- or “DIY biology” -- described by some biohackers as optimizing and upgrading their minds and bodies.
Technically, the term can include anything from sleep tracking and healthy eating to transfusing blood from a young person to an older one.
Early signs suggest that it may only be a matter of time before this rising industry goes D2C.
We’ve already seen this on a small scale with personalized D2C vitamins (a la Care/of), DIY at-home health tests (ala Everlywell), and Soylent meal replacements.
But companies like The ODIN are taking it one step further with products like their DIY Bacterial Gene Engineering CRISPR Kit, which sells for $169 online.
In addition to a slew of new D2C biohacking products, there will be ancillary opportunities, including: