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Podcast Production

name: podcast-production

description: Podcast editorial production covering episode planning, show notes writing, guest research and preparation, interview question development, episode structure, sponsorship integration, and audience growth. Use when planning podcast episodes, preparing for interviews, writing show notes, developing distribution strategies, or growing podcast audiences.

Podcast Production

Instructions

Manage the editorial side of podcast production — from episode concepting through post-publication promotion. This skill covers content strategy and storytelling, not audio engineering or feed infrastructure (see podcast-feed-reader-player for technical RSS/player concerns).

Episode Planning

Plan episodes with a structured pipeline:

  1. Topic selection — maintain a running topic backlog scored by audience interest, timeliness, guest availability, and alignment with the show’s editorial pillars
  2. Format decision — solo commentary, interview, panel, narrative storytelling, or hybrid; match format to topic
  3. Research — gather data, background material, and prior coverage of the topic; identify what’s already been said and what angle is fresh
  4. Outline — build a segment-by-segment outline with timing estimates before recording
  5. Asset preparation — guest briefing docs, question lists, reference clips, sponsor copy

Episode Structure

A well-structured episode keeps listeners through to the end:

Segment Duration Purpose
Cold open / teaser 30–60s Hook with the most compelling moment or question
Intro + theme 15–30s Brand the show, set expectations
Context setting 2–3 min Why this topic matters now; what the listener will learn
Main content 15–40 min Core discussion, interview, or narrative (break into 2–3 segments for longer episodes)
Mid-roll sponsor 60–90s Integrated ad read (see Sponsorship section)
Key takeaways 2–3 min Summarize the most actionable insights
CTA + outro 1–2 min Subscribe, review, share, visit show notes link

Total target length depends on format: 20–30 min for solo/commentary, 30–60 min for interviews, 15–20 min for news/briefing shows.

Guest Research and Preparation

For interview episodes:

  • Background research — read/watch the guest’s recent work, interviews, social media, and any books or projects they’re promoting
  • Identify unique angles — find questions they haven’t been asked in their last 5 interviews
  • Guest briefing document — send the guest a one-page overview: show description, audience profile, episode topic, 3–5 sample questions (not the full list), logistics (recording time, platform, duration)
  • Pre-interview call — optional 10–15 minute chat to build rapport, confirm topics, and flag any off-limits areas
  • Technical check — confirm the guest’s mic quality, internet stability, and recording environment before the session

Interview Question Development

Build questions in three tiers:

  1. Foundation questions — establish context and credibility (who they are, why this topic, what’s their experience)
  2. Core questions — the meat of the conversation; open-ended, follow-up-ready, designed to elicit stories and insights rather than yes/no answers
  3. Signature questions — unexpected or thought-provoking questions that create memorable moments (e.g., “What’s the worst advice you’ve received in your career?”)

Question-writing principles:

  • Start with “how” and “why” more than “what” or “when”
  • Prepare 2x the questions you expect to use — let the conversation flow naturally
  • Write follow-up prompts for each core question (“Tell me more about…”, “What happened next?”, “Why do you think that is?”)
  • Avoid compound questions — one question at a time

Show Notes Writing

Show notes serve three audiences: listeners skimming for key points, search engines indexing the episode, and potential listeners deciding whether to play.

Structure:

  1. Episode title — descriptive and keyword-rich (not just “Episode 47”)
  2. One-paragraph summary — what the episode covers and why it matters
  3. Key timestamps — major topic transitions with clickable timestamps
  4. Guest bio — 2–3 sentences with relevant links
  5. Resources mentioned — books, tools, websites, studies referenced in the episode
  6. Notable quotes — 1–2 pull quotes that capture the episode’s best moments
  7. Subscribe/follow links — all platforms where the show is available

Sponsorship Integration

Sponsor reads that sound authentic perform 2–3x better than scripted ad copy:

  • Host-read ads outperform pre-produced spots — use the host’s natural voice and phrasing
  • Personal experience — whenever possible, the host should use the product and share genuine experience
  • Natural transitions — lead into sponsor reads from related content (“Speaking of productivity tools…”)
  • Placement options: Pre-roll (before content, lower CPM), mid-roll (during content, highest CPM), post-roll (after content, lowest CPM)
  • Disclosure — always identify sponsored content clearly

Distribution and Growth

  • Multi-platform presence — Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube (video or audiogram), Google Podcasts, and at least one additional platform
  • Episode promotion cycle: Teaser clip 1–2 days before release → launch-day post with audiogram → pull-quote graphics during the week → “in case you missed it” reminder at end of week
  • SEO — optimize episode titles and show notes for search; transcripts improve discoverability
  • Cross-promotion — guest shares with their audience; swap promos with complementary shows
  • Consistency — publish on the same day and time every week/every two weeks; consistency builds habit
  • Audience engagement — solicit questions and topic suggestions; feature listener feedback in episodes

Podcast SEO

  • Include target keywords in episode title, description, and show notes
  • Publish full transcripts on the show’s website
  • Use descriptive, keyword-rich file names for audio files
  • Submit to all major directories and keep listings current
  • Encourage ratings and reviews — they influence platform algorithms

Examples

Episode outline: Title, format, estimated duration, 4–6 segments with timing and key points for each, sponsor placement, and CTA script.

Guest prep package: One-page briefing with show overview, audience demographics, episode angle, 5 sample questions, recording logistics, and technical requirements.

Show notes: Episode title, summary paragraph, 6–8 timestamps, guest bio with links, 4–5 resources mentioned, 1–2 pull quotes, and platform subscribe links.

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