Podcast Production Basics

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  • View profile for Bhawna Sethi

    Founder @LetsInfluence | I help D2C & funded startups 3x ROI using Influencer + UGC systems | 200+ brands scaled | Regional & Performance-led campaigns

    15,521 followers

    This is how I've helped big brands launch podcasts that currently have 10 million+ subs without a celebrity host. Creators think they only need star power in the long run, but my framework works without it. In reality, your host needs one core trait, and it's not followers, a big budget, or virality. The best hosts aren't the most agreeable or the most knowledgeable. They're just the most curious. Look at successful business podcasts: Ranveer Allahbadia:  Questions conventional wisdom in every BeerBiceps Media World Private Limited episode. Raj Shamani:  Figuring Out on YouTube challenges guests to share their real entrepreneurship struggles. Here's the framework learned from then and used: 1. Start with the listener journey Map out their current beliefs, fears, and aspirations. Your content should bridge this gap. 2. Design your conversation arc The opening should challenge a common assumption. The middle must explore unexpected angles and then land on actionable insights. 3. Host selection strategy We didn't chase industry experts but instead found someone who: - Asks questions like a 5-year-old - Highlights all the inconsistencies - Steers away from obvious questions 4. Production Approach We recorded 3 episodes before launching only to - Get feedback from target listeners - Iterate on format and flow That's how we created a podcast that isn't about the host or the guest. It's about creating intriguing moments to keep listeners entertained. But most branded podcasts fail because They're platforms instead of solutions. Focus on serving your audience, not showing your expertise. So, what's your favorite podcast and why? #podcast #marketing #influencer #brandbuilding

  • View profile for Jacob B.

    Global Sales Leader | $500M+ in revenue across global brands | Partnerships | LinkedIn Creator

    12,754 followers

    Here’s the thing nobody tells you about speaking on a panel or podcast. Most people are so focused on sounding smart that they forget the ONLY thing the audience cares about. Connection. Real, human, punch-you-in-the-chest connection. After speaking at SXSW, SEAT, and presenting to teams at Disney Entertainment, Live Nation Entertainment, Peloton Interactive, and a few others who definitely didn’t have time to be bored, I’ve learned one truth. Public speaking is not a performance. It’s a service. And when you treat it like service, everything changes. Here are the data-backed habits that actually move the needle. 1. Speak in 12-second blocks. Studies show the average listener tunes out after 12 to 18 seconds. Break everything into short, clean blocks. No paragraphs. Just punches. 2. Start with a story, not a credential. Neuroscience says stories activate up to 7 regions of the brain. Credentials activate one. Make them feel before you make them think. 3. Give one controversial take. Panels are full of "nice" opinions. Be the person who says the thing everyone is thinking. Bold viewpoints create 3 to 5 times more engagement. 4. Make every answer actionable. People remember speakers who solve problems. Not speakers who speak. Every point you make should pass the "can someone use this tomorrow" test. 5. Let your personality leak. Humor increases retention by 20 percent. Vulnerability increases trust by 40 percent. Combine both and you’re basically cheating. 6. Slow your pace by 15 percent. Most speakers rush. Research shows listeners rate slower speakers as more credible, more confident and more strategic. 7. End with a takeaway, not a thank you. Give them the line they quote later. The line they text to a friend. The line that gets screenshotted. If you’re stepping onto a stage or into a podcast, remember this. You’re not there to impress. You’re there to impact. And when you shift your mindset, the audience shifts with you. #sales #publicspeaking #podcast

  • View profile for Ryan Hawk

    NEW BOOK: The Price of Becoming: The Compounding Practices of High Performance. Host of The Learning Leader Show

    16,253 followers

    I've published 599 episodes of The Learning Leader Show over the past 9+ years. A fellow podcaster recently asked how to build a top 0.1% podcast in the world... Here is my response. What would you add? - Some of the commonalities about of my favorite podcasts... The host is obsessed/loves what they’re doing. They are world-class storytellers. Great listeners. Lots of research, super prepared. Additionally, I feel a genuine connection with them. Creating a parasocial relationship with your listeners is a real thing. That only happens when the host is 100% and uniquely themselves, follows their curiosity/obsessions, and cares deeply about the final product. In addition to doing all of that, some other things I try to do: - Reply to all fan emails. - Consistency AND Excellent quality. Don’t publish something just to be consistent. We trash 30% of the recordings we do. Shipping average work (in the name of consistency) is a great way to lose. - Be overly prepared. - Host events, do live podcasts, connect in person with your listeners. - Do things that don’t scale - Talk with your fans. Be curious about them. Ask questions. Call them randomly. - Go on other podcasts. - LISTEN with your eyes. Almost all of the best questions are follow-ups. Be present in the moment. - Become an excellent keynote speaker, charge premium rates. - Build real, genuine relationships with podcast guests – Make them want to tell their friends to do your show without you having to ask. - Be a giver. If someone is looking for a keynote speaker and you can’t do it or aren’t a fit, suggest a podcast guest and sell the booker on why they should hire that person. - Build genuine relationships with PR people – They have access to authors/leaders. Once you prove you can help them, they will beg you to have their clients on your show. - Follow up, follow up, follow up. - Don’t quit – Almost everyone does.

  • View profile for Kobi Omenaka

    I turn B2B founders into podcast-powered authorities | £500K+ revenue from one tiny show | Side quest: building AI tools in public for growth, marketing and for fun | Co-founder Stripped Media | #Dadjokes

    20,822 followers

    Most podcasts die by episode 7. Here’s how to THRIVE all the way to 100. I’ve launched podcasts for founders, brands and myself. Some worked. Some didn’t. These 11 lessons are what kept the good ones alive. 1) Our first platform looked good. But it told us nothing. ↳ We couldn’t see what content landed or where listeners dropped off. ↳ Megaphone changed that instantly. Clean setup. Clear insights. ↳ A good platform helps you grow, not just publish. 2) Your mic is your first impression. Make it count. ↳ If your sound is bad, people bounce fast. ↳ Squadcast gave us studio-level audio without tech headaches. ↳ Good audio also shows your guest you’re serious. 3) People judge your show before they hit play. ↳ Our first logo looked like a student project. ↳ Canva turned me into a designer in 30 mins! ↳ Visuals are the first layer of trust. Don’t skip it. 4) I wasted money chasing the best gear. Don’t do that. ↳ A solid mic, headphones and decent lighting are all you need. ↳ Fancy kit doesn’t make better content. ↳ Reliable gear = confidence on the mic. 5) I found our first 10 guests in my DMs. ↳ Your network already knows your voice. Start there. ↳ I emailed a few podcast hosts too. Most said yes. ↳ Good conversations start in familiar places. 6) I thought consistency was about discipline. It wasn’t. ↳ I didn’t need more willpower. I needed better systems. ↳ Templates, shared docs and Google Sheets removed all friction. ↳ When the backend flows, so do the interviews. 7) Editing nearly made me quit by episode 4. ↳ I was stuck in perfection mode, tweaking waveforms at midnight. ↳ Descript and a pro editor gave me my evenings back. ↳ Outsourcing isn’t cheating. It’s how I scaled. 8) We turn every episode into 10+ pieces of content. ↳ Reels, audiograms, carousels Canva makes it quick. ↳ Guests get assets too, so they actually share. ↳ This is how one episode lasts all month. 9) Our top-performing episode almost got binned. ↳ Downloads were flat, but it kept getting shared in DMs. ↳ We listened to the feedback and leaned into that topic. ↳ Early patterns > early numbers. 10) Guesting on other shows grew our audience faster than anything else. ↳ No ads. No funnels. Just honest conversations. ↳ It built trust fast and sharpened our own positioning. ↳ Borrowed audiences are the shortcut no one talks about. 11) Having 15 episodes banked saved me from failure twice. ↳ Launches are exciting. Burnout is real. ↳ Guests trust you more when you’re prepared. ↳ Momentum comes from rhythm, not hype. Every mistake above? I’ve made it. Every win? Earned through trial, error and staying in the game. 👇 Yes or No: Have I saved you from at least one of these mistakes? ♻️ Repost to save someone from a 7-episode burnout 👣 Follow me, Kobi Omenaka, for sharp insights on podcasting, content and trust

  • View profile for Marc Baselga

    Founder @Supra | Helping product leaders accelerate their careers through peer learning and community

    26,327 followers

    Podcasting is brutal. Most shows never get off the ground. Last week, Ben and I hit episode 35 and approached 10k downloads. Here are 7 counterintuitive lessons I wish I knew when starting out: 1/ Be okay with the worst-case scenario Podcast growth is notoriously difficult, so being excited about the worst-case scenario removes the pressure and makes the process enjoyable. Even if nobody listens, we still get to: ↳ Have deep conversations about topics we're passionate about ↳ Improve our public speaking and conversation skills ↳ Learn something new from every single guest ↳ Build deeper relationships with interesting people 2/ Choose your metrics carefully They shape every decision you make. As Charlie Munger said, "Show me the incentives, and I'll show you the outcomes." We only track two things: ↳ Are we having fun? ↳ Are we being consistent? That's it. No download targets. No subscriber goals. No pressure to hit arbitrary numbers. By focusing on enjoyment and consistency, we've built something sustainable that keeps getting better. 3/ Less is more We started trying to cover everything in each episode. Big mistake. The result? - Superficial questions - Rushed conversations - Constant pressure to "move on" - Missing the best insights Now we pick ONE topic to go deep on and let the conversation flow naturally. The magic happens in the unexpected tangents and follow-up questions. You can't plan those. 4/ Find your unique style Don't copy other shows. In the beginning, we tried to sound like a "proper" interview podcast. The result? Stiff, awkward conversations that felt like job interviews. We realized we wanted to create the feeling of friends chatting over coffee. No high-stakes interviews. No rigid structures. Just authentic conversations where everyone (including us) can be themselves. 5/ Create for yourself first Our best episodes? Not the ones we thought would perform well. They're the ones where WE learned the most. When we finished recording thinking "Wow, that was fascinating!" Trust your taste. The audience will follow. 6/ Double down on what you enjoy Want consistency? Focus on the parts you love. Delegate everything else. We love having the conversations and curating the guest, so we delegated everything else. This creates a virtuous cycle: Energy → Consistency → Growth → More Energy 7/ Find a great co-creator Having Ben Erez as a co-host made all the difference: ↳ Built-in accountability when life gets busy ↳ Someone to learn from and bounce ideas off ↳ More energy and fun in every episode ↳ Shared excitement about growth ↳ Different perspectives that make conversations richer ↳ Someone to celebrate the wins with What did you learn from your creative projects this year?

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