This podcast is sponsored by Faith Media and Impact Podcast Coach, a service that supports podcasters to boldly share their voices and their powerful messages through the medium of podcasting. Find out more about our podcast coaching services and courses, and download your free Launch Confidently Podcasting Checklist below.
In today’s digital landscape, repurposing content is a smart strategy to maximize reach. One of the most effective ways to do this is by transforming your podcast to video format. Video content has a higher engagement rate, increases discoverability, and gives your podcast an extra edge across platforms like YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok. In this guide, we’ll walk you through the steps to convert your podcast to video seamlessly.
Why Convert Your Podcast to Video?
1. Increased Audience Reach
Many people prefer watching videos over listening to audio-only content. By repurposing your podcast to video, you can tap into a wider audience on platforms like YouTube and social media.
2. Higher Engagement
Videos tend to generate more interactions, such as likes, comments, and shares, making your content more visible and shareable.
3. SEO Benefits
Search engines prioritize video content, meaning your podcast can gain more traction when converted into video format.
How to Convert Your Podcast to Video
Step 1: Choose Your Video Format
There are multiple ways to transform your podcast to video:
Static Image with Audio: A simple way to get started is by pairing your podcast audio with a branded image or an animated waveform.
Slideshow Video: Add relevant visuals, images, and text overlays to complement your podcast’s topic.
Talking Head Video: If you record your podcast on video, you can showcase yourself or your guests speaking.
Animated or Illustrated Video: For a dynamic and creative approach, consider using animations or motion graphics.
Step 2: Use Editing Software
To create a professional-looking podcast to video, use software like:
Adobe Premiere Pro (advanced editing features)
Camtasia (user-friendly and great for beginners)
Canva or Kapwing (easy tools for adding graphics and captions)
Descript (great for editing audio and video together seamlessly)
Step 3: Add Engaging Elements
Captions: Many viewers watch videos on mute, so captions help retain engagement.
Visual Branding: Include logos, color schemes, and intros/outros. (you can do this on Canva!)
Relevant B-Roll Footage: Use stock footage or relevant clips to enhance storytelling.
Step 4: Optimize for SEO & Social Sharing
YouTube Optimization: Add keywords in the title, description, and tags.
Social Media Snippets: Cut short, engaging clips for Instagram, LinkedIn, and TikTok.
Embed on Your Website: Boost your site’s SEO by embedding your videos in blog posts.
Final Thoughts
Transforming your podcast to video doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Whether you’re keeping it simple with static visuals or producing high-quality talking-head content, repurposing your podcast in video format is a powerful way to expand your reach, improve engagement, and grow your brand. Start implementing these strategies today and watch your podcast gain a whole new audience!
Are you ready to take your podcast to the next level with video content? Let’s connect and make it happen!
This podcast is sponsored by Faith Media and Impact Podcast Coach, a service that supports women podcasters to boldly share their voices and their powerful messages through the medium of podcasting. Find out more about our podcast coaching services and courses, and download your free Launch Confidently Podcasting Checklist here.
Since I’ve had a few people reach to ask how to create a video podcast, I thought I would share that on this week’s episode. Turning an audio podcast into a video is one way to repurpose content and make it shareable on more platforms.
Here are a few tips I’ll be sharing on this show…
Reasons you may want to create a video podcast
Ways to record video
The process (start-to-finish) of creating a video podcast for distribution on important platforms
Reasons to create a video podcast
Creating a podcast can be a fun venture, and there are many steps to think about when it’s just audio. How about when you add video to the mix?
Although adding video makes things a bit more complicated (when it comes to editing), video podcasts have a lot of benefits and add to the user experience. Here are a few reasons to create video podcasts:
A few reasons you might create a video podcast are:
you’re already doing the work, so why not?
video exposes you to a wider audience (YouTube)
video gives sociability and is more engaging
How to record your video
Recording your video doesn’t have to be a great feat. It’s as simple as using your phone to record yourself talking or hopping on a Zoom call. Here are a few different methods for recording video:
in-studio recording
remote interviews
B-roll recording
static image recording
I explain a bit more in detail on this video about what each of these mean. Now, on to the steps you’ll need to record:
capture the recording
edit the video
design a thumbnail image
import the video into YouTube
Distribute your podcast
Lastly, you’ll want to distribute your show. Hopefully, at the beginning steps of your podcasting journey, you’ve set up your RSS feed with a podcast host you trust to distribute to all the right places. This step is already done for you in that case, but one thing to check into for video podcasts is Podbean, which specializes in both audio and video podcasts.
🌟Pick up your FREE copy of your Business Clarity Guide before you start your podcast, plus download your Launch Confidently Podcasting Checklist: https://impactpodcastcoach.com/
This podcast is sponsored by Faith Media and Impact Podcast Coach, a service that supports women podcasters to boldly share their voices and their powerful messages through the medium of podcasting. Find out more about our podcast coaching services and courses, and download your free Launch Confidently Podcasting Checklist here.
In this week’s episode, we’re talking about avoiding some BIG podcasting mistakes to avoid. I’ve been there and done that…so I thought I would help you to avoid them as well. Stats show that the podfading rate among new podcasters is 50% and half of all new podcasters quit shortly after they begin. This episode is all about making things easier for new podcasters.
Here are a few tips I’ll be sharing on this show…
Spending a fortune on equipment upfront
Not making a clear decision about your hosting platform
Not familiarizing yourself with recording software and tools of choice
Being afraid to request reviews
Bad quality sound
Not knowing who your audience is
Having unrealistic expectations
With that said, let’s jump into how to avoid podcasting mistakes that will slow your growth, and let’s make room for
Spending a fortune on equipment upfront
I’ve talked about this in previous episodes that there are only a few essential tools necessary for starting a podcast and you don’t need to sink a lot of money into creating a show for yourself. You will need to invest in a few necessary tools like your microphone, your audio hosting, and your editing software (should you need to edit), and those things are going to cost you a little bit of money. But you shouldn’t have to feel obligated unless you are just geeking out on technology and you like to have all the bells and whistles.
You don’t have to have a whole recording studio in your home. You don’t have to have a soundboard. There are things you can use to soundproof your room that don’t cost a fortune such as soundproof panels and foam that you can get from Amazon. But all of this is on a budget. So if you’re thinking that it’s going to cost you an army of like it’s not true. It doesn’t have to cost you a lot.
That’s one of the bigger mistakes that people make when they get really excited about starting their podcast. They think they have to invest in the state-of-the-art top-of-the-line microphones and connections and gadgets and all the things they go with the microphones.
You’re not going to have a perfect sound probably under your first couple of takes. You may not have perfect sound in your 50th episode or your 500th episode. That’s okay. We’re not looking for perfection. What listeners are looking for is whether or not your show is easy to listen to.
Is there a lot of background noise?
Are there a lot of unnecessary mouth sounds that are distracting for your listener?
Are there unnecessary breaths and mouth pops? The first part of that tip is stressing over the quality. You don’t want to be so obsessed over how perfect your sound is. But on the other hand, you want to make sure that your listener is not bombarded with all of the unnecessary sounds that turn them off to your podcast.
So have a little balance there and know that when you finished recording an episode you might need to run it by a friend. Have them listen to it first before you hit publish because they may be able to catch a few things that can help you to even out your tone and your and the overall quality of your recording.
Not deciding quickly on your hosting tools
Once you’ve deciding on your podcasting goals, it’s important to figure out where exactly you will host your show. One of my biggest podcasting mistakes was jumping around from one hosting platform to another. It cost me a lot in energy and time (since I was attempting to save money), but my advice to you is to pick a hosting platform and stick with it. Choose hosting that meets your needs in terms of your budget and what the service offers (making sure it offers quality stats), then stick with that hosting of choice.
Not being familiar with your recording and editing tools
I had an embarrassing moment years ago where I had forgotten to hit the “record” button during a Skype interview, and it was all because I had not familiarized myself thoroughly enough with Skype.
My advice: always be sure you know your way around your recording and editing tools. Get familiar with the programs and tools you’ve chosen to work with. Practice, practice, practice in advance…then implement.
Being hesitant to request interviews
Another thing that I would highly recommend if you’re planning on having guests is to be very bold and confident when you want someone on your show. If you see that there is a particular guest that you’re interested in having on your show because they bring so much value everywhere they go and you want them to be a part of what you’re doing. I recommend just sending out an email to them personally or to their assistant and making it clear who you are and what your podcast is about and why you feel like they would be a great asset to the topics that you’re providing for your audience. And ask, asking you shall receive and so either you’ll receive a yes or no.
So since I’ve been podcasting since 2005 and in all the 18 years that I’ve asked a guest to be on a show, I’ve only received a “no” twice. That’s a whole lot of “yes’s”. So don’t be discouraged. Reach out to the potential guests you’d like on your show and don’t make the podcasting mistake of being afraid of a “no”. You’ll get the right people on your show with time and persistence.
Not understanding your audience
And the very last piece of advice I’ll give you about what not to do when podcasting is being a generalist and not knowing who your audience is. You want to know who you’re talking to. You want to be very familiar with your audience as pain points. You can’t help them if you don’t understand them. So if you’re a generalist meaning that your podcast is about a bunch of different things, it’s difficult for your listeners to determine if they really want to listen to your show.
Stay on topic, have a theme, have a goal, have a purpose for what you’re doing, and have your topics surround that purpose.
Ask yourself these questions as you podcast:
What do you want your audience to feel when they listen to your podcast?
What do you want them to think about when they’re done listening?
Do you want them to feel encouraged, inspired, motivated, and happy, or do you want them to feel educated?
Do you want them to feel like they’re in the know?
Do you want them to feel like they just achieved a breakthrough?
What is your goal?
Remember what your goal is as you’re talking to your audience. So those are some of the reasons I have this podcast. It’s about podcasting with soul. So being able to fit it into your lifestyle, being able to create a show that comes straight from your heart and your soul.
Keep podcasting, keep producing content that your audience grows to love and they grow to love you and your show grows and you make more of an impact.
🌟Pick up your FREE copy of your Business Clarity Guide before you start your podcast, plus download your Launch Confidently Podcasting Checklist: https://impactpodcastcoach.com/
This podcast is sponsored by Faith Media and Impact Podcast Coach, a service that supports women podcasters to boldly share their voices and their powerful messages through the medium of podcasting. Find out more about our podcast coaching services and courses, and download your free Launch Confidently Podcasting Checklist here.
In this week’s episode, I’m sharing some key ways to boost your search engine optimization tactics. If you’ve been wanting to improve your podcast SEO for search engine visibility, here are some tips and tools to help you:
check your keyword strategy plan across your brand and fit your podcast into it
Use tools- Keywords Everywhere, Google Keywords, Uber Suggest. Also try Keysearch.
Use liberally- blog post titles, description, body of content- podcast episodes- body, description (show notes)
Not an end-all solution but helps your marketing efforts
In today’s show, we’re talking about all things keywords. But, what are keywords? Let’s get into it.
Why are keywords important?
According to moz.com (an SEO software suite that helps you to improve your search engine visibility), keywords are the words and the phrases that searchers enter into search engines to discover content. We also call them search queries.
So if you’re looking for someone to help you in your business, (let’s say you’re looking for a life coach, a business coach, or maybe a particular type of life coach or a particular type of business coach, like a publishing coach, for example), this is very specific.
If you were to type in that “book publishing coach”, whatever results you see in the search engines as a result of typing in that query is because the content creater was able to land on the first page for search engines. They were able to utilize keywords specifically the one that you typed in within their content, so that now Google sees their content as an authority on that topic and what’s more, their keyword is ranking super high within their content.
Make sure to pay attention to keywords when you are creating content, any kind of content, including your podcast.
So I want to encourage you not to neglect keyword research. You shouldn’t need to make this your end-all approach, but definitely integrate keyword research into your podcasting efforts.
Check your keyword strategy plan across your brand and fit your podcast into it
If you have a plan, and I hope you do, across your entire brand, and then you might want to fit your podcast into that plan. So whatever you’ve been doing for your other content pieces for your business, you should do that and apply the same things to your podcast.
This is going to apply to your blog if you have a blog, any of your sales pages, if you have a YouTube channel, or your social media networks such as LinkedIn. All of this content will count. So anything that you feel like is a prominent keyword that you’re using for your podcast episode, make sure that that is prominent on your website as well.
Look at your entire brand and see how your podcast fits into that.
In my book about blogging (which you can purchase here), I dedicated a whole chapter to keyword research. (That’s chapter four in the book.) In this chapter, I wrote about the gist of keyword research and how to go about doing it.
There’s a page where I show step-by-step how to go into Google Keyword Planner and type in your keyword idea to test it to see if it’s something that people are looking for.
So if you were looking for a book publishing coach, you would type that in, see what the results are, and see how many people are looking for that keyword for the month. And what Keyword Planner does is it shows you whether or not there are a lot of searches for that keyword phrase, and then what the competition looks like.
You may also want to use other tools such as Keywords Everywhere. That’s what I use on a regular basis. I also at one point had an account with Ubersuggest, but I am now using keywords everywhere and Keysearch, but the Ubersuggest by Neil Patel is an excellent way to find out what people are looking for and what the competition looks like and if you are going to have a good chance of being able to rank for the keyword that you want to.
Use keywords liberally.
So for every episode, I highly recommend that you type in your keywords to see if they are viable topics people are looking for. Some other tools to consider are:
So once you have decided that you’ve chosen a great keyword, then that’s the keyword that you want to choose for that podcast episode that you’re going to emphasize in those things that Google can see (like your show notes, blog post title, description of your blog post and throughout your content.)
And if you use wonderful tools, if you’re on WordPress and you’re using plugins that can help you figure that out without you having to go and do all the research yourself, I highly recommend that. One such plugin I recommend would be Yoast SEO (or All In One SEO).
Keep proper perspective.
Remember it’s an integrative approach. It’s not something that stops you from creating content that will not rank highly, because even if it doesn’t rank highly in the search engines it may just be the hot topic everybody’s looking for.
And once you announce it on your socials and tell your family and friends and your followers all about what you’re doing, they love your content. Google doesn’t even have to know about it because your followers love it so much.
And it doesn’t always matter that it didn’t rank highly.
So remember that keyword research is a long-term commitment and It is about the maintenance of your podcast.
It’s about keeping it growing and bringing in listeners and viewers organically.
You shouldn’t expect your keyword strategy to work overnight, but know that once you start using the keywords effectively, that if once you give it some time (three, six months, nine months, or a year), you will find the results of your strategy is most likely working well for you.
Keep on working on your strategy, and you’ll find success with time.
🌟Pick up your FREE copy of your Business Clarity Guide before you start your podcast, plus download your Launch Confidently Podcasting Checklist: https://impactpodcastcoach.com/
Launching a podcast is exciting. But let’s be honest—between recording, editing, marketing, and distribution, the to-do list can feel overwhelming. That’s where podcast production services come in. The right partner doesn’t just clean up your audio; they elevate your show into a polished, binge-worthy brand asset.
The problem? Not all podcast production services are created equal. Some focus on technical editing only, while others offer a full white-glove experience, from strategy to audience growth. Choosing wrong could mean wasting time and money, while choosing right could position your podcast as a powerful thought leadership tool.
I’ve been producing podcasts for many years, working with CEOs, authors, coaches, and mission-driven brands through Soul Podcasting, and I’ve seen firsthand how the right production support can be a game-changer. In this guide, I’ll break down exactly how to select the best podcast production services for your needs—and how my team and I can help you bring your podcast vision to life.
1. Understand What Podcast Production Services Actually Include
Before you even start shopping around, you need to know what “production services” can mean. In the industry, it can range from basic audio cleanup to a full-scale, strategic partnership.
Here are some of the most common services:
Audio Editing: Removing background noise, awkward pauses, and “ums” to create a professional, smooth flow.
Mixing & Mastering: Balancing audio levels, enhancing voice quality, and adding music or effects.
Show Notes Writing: Crafting SEO-friendly descriptions that attract new listeners.
Episode Distribution: Publishing your episodes across platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Google Podcasts.
Marketing Assets: Creating graphics, audiograms, and social media content to promote each episode.
Strategy & Coaching: Helping you define your show’s voice, format, audience, and growth plan.
When you work with Soul Podcasting, you’re not just getting audio editing—you’re getting strategic insight, marketing support, and guidance that ensures your podcast aligns with your brand and business goals.
2. Match Services to Your Podcast Goals
Your production needs will look very different depending on your stage and goals. Are you:
A beginner who needs end-to-end help launching your first show?
A busy CEO or coach who just wants to record and hand off everything else?
An established podcaster who needs better sound quality and consistent publishing?
If you’re just starting out, you might benefit from a launch package—covering concept development, branding, trailer creation, and initial marketing. If you’re scaling, you may want monthly editing and content repurposing so you can grow your audience without adding to your workload.
At Soul Podcasting, we work with both beginners and seasoned podcasters, tailoring our podcast production services to your exact needs. Our Authority & Brand Growth Coaching program is especially powerful for those ready to move from “just having a podcast” to “building a podcast that grows my influence and revenue.”
3. Consider the Quality of Their Work (Not Just Their Price)
It’s tempting to compare production services purely on cost, but here’s the truth: a $50 episode edit and a $300 episode edit are not the same thing. Cheaper services often rely on generic editing templates, leaving your audio sounding flat or robotic.
Look for:
Audio Samples: Do they sound crisp, balanced, and engaging?
Consistency: Are all episodes equally polished?
Story Flow: Does the editing support the conversation, or does it feel choppy?
We’ve rescued many shows where podcasters started with bargain services, only to realize the sound quality was turning listeners away. Our approach is hands-on and custom—we don’t just edit; we enhance the listening experience so your message comes through with clarity and impact.
4. Ask About Turnaround Time and Communication
A great podcast producer isn’t just skilled—they’re reliable. Missing publishing deadlines can hurt your audience growth and brand perception.
Questions to ask:
How fast can they edit and return an episode?
Do they provide a content calendar or workflow system?
How do they communicate—email, project management tools, voice notes?
At Soul Podcasting, we pride ourselves on smooth workflows and proactive communication. You’ll always know where your episodes are in the production pipeline, and we’ll keep you on schedule without you having to chase us down.
5. Evaluate Their Understanding of Your Industry or Audience
While technical skill is essential, your producer should also understand the tone and goals of your podcast. Editing a comedy show is very different from editing a business leadership podcast or a faith-based series.
The best podcast production serviceswill adapt to your brand voice, whether that’s polished and professional, warm and conversational, or inspiring and faith-driven.
Because I’ve worked across multiple niches—from business leadership to homeschooling to personal growth—I can adjust editing style, music selection, and pacing to fit your specific audience.
6. Check for Value-Added Services
The top podcast production companies don’t just make your episodes sound good—they help you use your podcast strategically.
Some value-added services to look for:
Content Repurposing: Turning your episodes into blogs, social posts, or YouTube videos.
Guest Booking Support: Helping you secure high-value interviews.
Podcast SEO: Optimizing show notes, titles, and keywords for discoverability.
Brand Coaching: Guiding you on how your podcast fits into your bigger business goals.
This is where Soul Podcasting stands out. We’re not just editors—we’re brand strategists. Our podcast production services integrate marketing and content strategy so that every episode works harder for your business.
7. Read Reviews and Ask for References
Don’t just take a production company’s word for it—see what their clients say. Testimonials, case studies, and listener feedback can reveal whether they deliver on their promises.
Our clients consistently tell us that working with Soul Podcasting has freed up their time, improved their confidence, and helped them grow their audience. Many see their show not just as a passion project, but as a key driver of leads and brand authority.
8. Think Long-Term, Not Just Per Episode
Your podcast isn’t just about the next episode—it’s about building a body of work that positions you as a leader. Choose podcast production services that can grow with you, offering scalability as your show evolves.
We design our packages to adapt to your needs—whether you want to increase publishing frequency, add video, or launch spin-off shows.
9. Why Soul Podcasting Is the Right Choice for You
Here’s the truth: you can find someone to edit your audio almost anywhere. But if you want a partner who will care about your show as much as you do—someone who sees the big picture of how your podcast supports your brand—then you need more than a freelancer.
At Soul Podcasting, we:
Edit with intention—crafting episodes that keep listeners hooked.
Strategize for growth—aligning your podcast with your business goals.
Repurpose content—so every episode works across platforms.
Coach and guide—helping you show up confidently as the voice of your brand.
Whether you’re launching, scaling, or rebranding your show, our podcast production servicesare designed to save you time, elevate your sound, and amplify your influence.
10. Taking the Next Step
If you’ve been struggling to keep up with editing, posting, and promoting—or you’ve been thinking about starting a podcast but feel stuck—this is your moment to get expert support.
Imagine being able to:
Focus only on recording while we handle the rest.
Publish episodes on time, every time, with professional polish.
Grow your audience without spending extra hours each week.
Position your podcast as a powerful driver of your brand’s visibility and authority.
That’s what happens when you have the right podcast production partner.
Ready to Uplevel Your Podcast?
Let’s make your show sound as good as the ideas you share. Whether you’re a first-time podcaster or a seasoned host ready to grow, I’d love to help you create a podcast that not only sounds incredible but works for your business.
This podcast is sponsored by Faith Media and Impact Podcast Coach, a service that supports women podcasters to boldly share their voices and their powerful messages through the medium of podcasting. Find out more about our podcast coaching services and courses, and download your free Launch Confidently Podcasting Checklist here.
In this week’s episode, I hope to help you with brainstorming ideas for your podcast. Here are a few tips you’ll find on the show:
Remember your mission
Create pillar content topics for the year that solves problems
Map it out in your tool of choice then your calendar
Plan your first recording session
Keep brainstorming!
What happens when you know that there will be many weeks and months ahead to fill up your podcast with helpful content for your listeners, but where you will need to make sure to fill up your podcast with incredible content, but the idea of planning is stressing you out a little?
I’m going to give you four very basic tips to help you move forward in that direction toward making sure that you feel more confident.
What do you wanna be talking about so that your audience feels a certain way?
What are you trying to accomplish on your podcast?
Every single episode should be supporting that overall goal. So if you want your audience to feel encouraged, then every episode should be encouraging them.
If you want your audience to feel entertained, then by the end of every episode, your audience should feel really entertained, whether they’re laughing, whether they’re amused.
What is your goal?
Do you want them to feel spiritually fulfilled?
Or do you want them to feel enlightened?
Figure out what that is, because in every single show that you do, the topics will lend themselves into your final goal. Your topics should always be supporting your mission.
Create pillar content topics for the year that solves problems
Here’s what I mean: if you are in the health industry and you are going to be talking about your physical health (such as fitness), mental health, and emotional health, there will be different aspects of health that you will cover on your podcast this year and you’ll want to take those pillar content topics and break them down into subtopics.
Those are the subtopics that are going to solve specific problems for your audience. You’ll want to talk about these topics on your podcast, interview guests if that’s the format you’re using, or just share your own experiences, or find statistics and information online that can help your audience. You may also like to share excerpts from a book that you’ve written and talk about things that are going to help support your listener in solving the problems that they’re having.
Just be sure that the topics that you’re talking about throughout the year are going to help your listener in a very specific and concrete way.
Map out your podcast topics
The next thing is just to make sure that you have enough content. And I am almost 100% positive that you won’t run out of ideas, and there are specific strategies that I use to curate ideas for my podcast from year to year.
I always encourage my clients to have a strong podcast start. So if there are 12 months in a year, how often do you want to release a podcast episode? Figure out the number of episodes you want to publish each month and multiply that times 12 so that you know how many you want to publish in a year.
Whether that number is 48, 24, or something else entirely is completely up to you and your comfort level for your production schedule.
Go ahead and write those down, and type it up into your idea bank, so that when it’s time to actually start finding who’s going to be on that episode to interview about that content piece, or where you’re going to find information for that content piece, you’ll already have the topic provided. Then all you have to do is fill in the missing pieces to create the episode itself.
The idea of topic curation is one of the most basic foundational parts of podcasting but it is what’s going to help you to get a head start and to have a foundation for the year.
You’ll want to make sure that you feel confident in what you’re going to be talking about before you go and fill in the content. (Filling in the content is simply just gathering your interviewees or finding the information that you want to present on your episode.) If you have the topic ideas, then you can create your outlines for each show. Each of these is a very separate step, but in this episode, we’re only talking about brainstorming your topics.
When I first started this podcast about podcasting, I knew that I wanted to initially start with a once-per-week publication schedule. At some point, I kind of tapped back to about twice a month or every other week and we’ll see if I want to revamp that to weekly again. I made sure that I already had 48 episode ideas ready to go. In fact, I’m looking right now at 51 ideas that I have ready to go to talk to you guys about this year. (No excuses for me!)
I can always open this Google Doc that lists all of my episodes. And at any point when I’m ready to start creating outlines for one of those episodes, I already have my topic, I just need to do the research for it and create the outline. And then it’s time for me to record, produce and edit. All I have to do is sit down at my microphone and record this information.
Next, after you’ve created those podcast topics for the year, you kind of have an idea of how many episodes you want. You’ll just want to map it out. Use your tool of choice. That could be your Google Calendar, it could be Trello, Asana, ClickUp, or any project management tool that works for you.
And so I always like to recommend starting with just Google Calendar to begin with and plugging in those days of the week that you plan to, first of all, record based on the topics that you’ve selected for the year and the outlines you’ve created for those topics.
Plan your first recording session
Now it’s time to pick a day that you’re going to edit that episode for the week or whether you’re going to have someone else do that for you. Then, you’ll have a day of the week that your episode is going to be scheduled to be published. Every day that you want your podcast to be published needs to show up on your calendar so that you’re aware that it’s a publication date.
That means your show needs to already have been edited, and ready to release. This could mean that your episode has already been uploaded and scheduled to release that day. This is going to help you stay consistent.
After you brainstorm those podcast topic ideas, make sure you’re consistent with publishing.
Keep brainstorming your podcast topics!
And lastly, just keep on brainstorming.
Just keep right on curating ideas. This is going to look very different for everybody, but it could be that you take one day out of the month to sit down and look in KeySearch to see what people are looking for, or do a Google Keyword Tools, or use some type of search engine optimization tool to help you figure out what people are looking for and what your ideal audience would be searching for so that you have even more ideas that you could add to your content idea bank.
Stay motivated and keep content curation a part of your routine for the days and weeks to come.
🌟Pick up your FREE copy of your Business Clarity Guide before you start your podcast, plus download your Launch Confidently Podcasting Checklist: https://impactpodcastcoach.com/