Topic: Podcast Titles

3 chapters across the catalog

What Happens If You Do Nothing
Episode 10 6:19 - 9:00

10: What Happens If You Do Nothing

Maya's Self-Correction on Podcast Discoverability

Maya admits three areas where she was wrong during the season. First, she underestimated the energy required for discoverability work. Second, she was overly confident about AI chatbots surfacing content, noting the system is noisier than implied. Third, she sometimes prioritized search optimization over voice in episode titling, making content less engaging.

Stop Writing Bad Show Notes
Episode 6

6: Stop Writing Bad Show Notes

Podcast Show Notes: Labels vs. Pitches for Discoverability

The hosts introduce the episode's focus on "easy wins" for podcast discoverability, specifically improving show notes. One host confesses to writing terrible, one-sentence show notes for three years, viewing them as mere "receipts" or labels. The key argument is that show notes are the second thing potential new listeners see (after the title) and should be written as pitches, not just labels, to encourage playback.

Stop Writing Bad Show Notes
Episode 6 5:07 - 8:42

6: Stop Writing Bad Show Notes

Podcast Episode Titles: Avoiding Common Pitfalls

Podcast episode titles often fall into three ineffective categories: "cute" (in-jokes, wordplay), "lazy" (Episode 47), or "keyword-stuffed" (over-optimized for search engines that don't work as expected). A fourth, more effective category is proposed: descriptive titles that tell a human what the episode is about, potentially with a guest name or a "voice bit" for added hook. The goal is to write for the stranger, trusting regular listeners to tolerate less "cute" titles.