Couverture de The How To Podcast Series - Revolving Co-Hosts, Actionable Tips, And A Community for Podcasters

The How To Podcast Series - Revolving Co-Hosts, Actionable Tips, And A Community for Podcasters

The How To Podcast Series - Revolving Co-Hosts, Actionable Tips, And A Community for Podcasters

De : Dave Campbell Ontario Canada
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Welcome to The How To Podcast Series — your guide to podcasting success! Join host Dave Campbell and rotating guest co-hosts for practical tips on podcasting. Learn podcast SEO, audience growth, guest booking, audio setup, social media marketing, and hosting platform suggestions. Get real-world advice, Podcasting Tips, creative inspiration, and the confidence to build your podcast community. Podcast smarter — your journey starts here! Join our free Podcast Community on Meetup to meet fellow listeners and podcasters at all different levels - HowToPodcast.ca is your home for podcasting needs.Dave Campbell, Ontario Canada
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    Épisodes
    • E604 - Apple Re-Announces Video Podcasts, The Experts Weigh In and They Don't Always Agree
      Feb 21 2026
      Episode 604 - Apple Re-Announces Video Podcasts, The Experts Weigh In and They Don't Always AgreeApple’s latest video podcast announcement becomes the spark for a much bigger conversation about gatekeeping, platform control, and what “counts” as a podcast, especially for creators who are audio-first or outside the Apple ecosystem.In this episode, Dave reacts to Apple’s “re‑announcement” of video podcasts and uses clips from several industry voices to explore how differently creators are responding. He positions himself as proudly “bubble free,” pushing back against echo chambers where Apple loyalists, or any single camp, ignore other perspectives and platforms. As a lifelong Android user who has never owned an Apple device, he questions how inclusive this future is when most of the loudest opinions assume everyone lives inside Apple’s world.Dave first plays a clip from Neil in the UK, an unabashed Apple fan who celebrates Apple’s move as the moment we finally stop debating what a podcast is: in his view, it’s simply one thing that can be consumed as audio or video with a toggle. Dave appreciates Neil’s production skills and honesty but bristles at phrases like “lower end creators” and at the implication that YouTube RSS ingestion or non‑video workflows somehow sit beneath “real” podcasting. That language, to Dave, smells like gatekeeping and dismisses the thousands of indie creators who rely on simple, accessible tools.He then swings to the opposite pole with Cliff Ravenscraft, who argues passionately that podcasting must remain audio‑first and RSS‑based. Cliff warns that when platforms like Spotify and Apple prioritize video and proprietary delivery paths, they sideline carefully edited audio feeds and train creators to give up ownership of their distribution. Dave echoes these concerns, highlighting examples where apps ignore a podcaster’s polished audio mix in favor of the raw audio track from a video file, undermining the craft and listener experience.James Cridland and Sam Sethi enter the discussion with a more technical look at Apple’s new HLS‑driven implementation, API keys, and limited hosting partners. Dave notes the practical implications: non‑partner apps may never see the video at all, RSS still matters, and a large swath of Android listeners are effectively treated as an afterthought. When James later joins Rob Greenlee, their conversation reinforces Dave’s belief that audio and video require different creative approaches; simply stripping the audio from a visually‑driven video leads to confusing, low‑quality listening.Threaded through all of this, Dave keeps coming back to the human side: new or budget‑conscious creators who are now hearing “video or bust” messaging and wondering if they still belong. He insists that audio‑only podcasting remains powerful, valid, and accessible, that no one should feel forced into debt for cameras and studios just to have a voice, and that podcasting was built to be open, free of gatekeepers, and welcoming to every platform, every device, and every creator.Key takeaway: You do not need video or Apple’s latest features to be a “real” podcaster; protect your creative ownership, honor your budget and bandwidth, and remember that podcasting’s strength is its openness to every voice, not its allegiance to any single platform.Clip 1 - B2B Podcasting Insights - From Listeners To Leadshttps://pod.link/1521914789/episode/ZDk5ZjEzNGMtZTUxZi00OTZlLTlkYzUtOTVhMDY4MTYwOTYzClip 2 - Podcast Answer Manhttps://pod.link/1581494165/episode/S2FqYWJpLTIxNDkxNjgzOTQClip 3 - Podnews Weekly Reviewhttps://pod.link/podnewsweeklyreview/episode/QnV6enNwcm91dC0xODcxNTk5MgClip 4 - The New Media Showhttps://pod.link/392545649/episode/aHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdtZWRpYXNob3cuY29tLz9wPTE5MTQ____Helping Podcasters Everyday! https://howtopodcast.ca/We would love to hear from you - here is our listener survey!https://forms.gle/GbrFv9DGszV8N4PW6
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      46 min
    • E603 - What To Do When You Have Too Many Podcast Episodes - A Guide For Established Podcasters
      Feb 20 2026

      Episode 603 - What To Do When You Have Too Many Podcast Episodes - A Guide For Established Podcasters

      When a podcast has been running for years, an impressive back catalog can quietly turn into a barrier for new listeners. This episode explores what happens when “a wall of content” makes your show feel intimidating rather than inviting, and how to fix that without sacrificing the evergreen value of your earlier work. Using his own shows as examples, Dave walks through the realities of publishing hundreds of episodes, how quickly you forget what you said in the early days, and why very few listeners will ever go back and binge every single installment. The question becomes less about file limits and more about experience design. How do you make it easy for someone’s first encounter with your show to feel clear, focused and welcoming?

      Dave explains that most modern apps and hosts can handle very large catalogs, so the pressure to delete or hide old episodes rarely comes from technical constraints. Instead, he talks candidly about his own temptation to move the first few hundred guest interviews behind a paywall and the ethical and practical complications that follow. Paywalling old guest content can break links authors have shared, damage their visibility and hurt their SEO, even if it might generate a bit of recurring revenue. He suggests that if you do experiment with paid content, it is usually better to offer bonus material like after shows, extended cuts or special feeds while keeping the original guest interviews openly accessible.

      A sizable portion of the conversation focuses on how to make a long running show feel approachable to first timers. Dave encourages podcasters to think intentionally about new listeners, not only the loyal community that already knows the backstory. Concrete ideas include publishing and regularly updating a “start here” trailer that always sits at the top of the feed, using seasons, series, tags or playlists to group episodes by topic or level, and curating “essential” or “best of” episodes on your website so newcomers have a guided path instead of facing hundreds of unsorted options. He also describes techniques for resurfacing evergreen content, such as updating titles and descriptions to be more search friendly, or temporarily adjusting the release date so a strong older episode reappears near the top of the feed without being republished as something new.

      Beyond structure and SEO, the episode underlines the importance of stewardship. Dave urges podcasters to review older episodes to make sure recommendations are still valid, add disclaimers when tools or resources are outdated, and think about how their catalog looks through the eyes of someone arriving today. He closes by sharing community opportunities through his podcaster meetups and offers a practical tip for interview shows that want to stay weekly without doubling their workload: record a short solo reflection right after each interview, turning one guest conversation into two distinct episodes. Throughout, the emphasis is on honoring your past content, serving your guests, welcoming new listeners and designing a catalog that supports the long term health of your show rather than overwhelming the people you most want to reach.

      Key takeaway: Your back catalog is an asset, not a burden, but it only works for you when you deliberately organize, refresh and surface episodes in ways that respect guests, help search engines understand your show and give new listeners a clear, friendly starting point.

      ____

      Helping Podcasters Everyday!

      https://howtopodcast.ca/
      We would love to hear from you - here is our listener survey!

      https://forms.gle/GbrFv9DGszV8N4PW6

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      38 min
    • E602 - One Perfect Episode vs 52 Good Ones - What Wins for Podcasters
      Feb 19 2026

      Episode 602 - One Perfect Episode vs 52 Good Ones - What Wins for Podcasters

      In this episode of the How to Podcast series, host Dave dives into the timeless debate of quality versus quantity in podcasting, sparked by discussions in his podcasting community. Drawing from his ambitious 2026 plan to release 365 daily episodes across multiple shows—while juggling a full-time job, coaching, editing, and more—he shares why he's leaning into high-volume creation without sacrificing value. Episodes are thoughtfully batch-recorded ahead of time, ensuring consistency and preventing burnout, as Dave explains how regular output turns his show into a listener habit rather than a seasonal event that risks audience drift.

      Dave uses his 45-year music background to illustrate the point: musicians don't perfect one song endlessly; they produce volumes of work, with hits emerging from the sheer act of repetition, much like podcasters hone skills through deliberate practice. He references the 10,000-hour principle, noting that weekly creators get 52 chances yearly to refine delivery, topics, and engagement, compared to just 12 for monthly ones. More episodes mean richer analytics data—from Instagram flops to YouTube insights—fueling faster growth and algorithm favor. Yet he acknowledges quality's merits for niche experts with limited time, warning against perfectionism that delays launches or filler content that overwhelms.

      Balancing both, Dave advocates a hybrid: sustainable cadences like weekly 20-30 minute episodes, polished via editing and listener feedback, perhaps with short host reflections post-interview. Track metrics like downloads and time spent listening to iterate. In a bonus for dedicated listeners, he reveals his interview secret—treating guests like band soloists, stepping back to let them shine, informed by live performance dynamics.

      Key Takeaway: Aim for consistent quantity to accelerate mastery and audience habits, but layer in quality through feedback and editing—do what fits your life, as even one great episode done regularly beats sporadic perfection

      ___

      Helping Podcasters Everyday!

      https://howtopodcast.ca/

      We would love to hear from you - here is our listener survey!

      https://forms.gle/GbrFv9DGszV8N4PW6

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      29 min
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