
Auto-Schedule a Week of AI Clips From One Episode
Turn one podcast episode into a full week of scheduled clips. A concrete day-by-day cadence, which clip goes where, when, that you queue in one sitting.
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Turn one podcast episode into a full week of scheduled clips. A concrete day-by-day cadence, which clip goes where, when, that you queue in one sitting.

Auto vs manual captions, costed by the minute: how long each route really takes per clip, the accuracy gap, and the break-even point where review beats pure auto.

Automotive podcast clips travel on a ranking or one surprising spec or price, not a long debate. Get the opinion-and-spec framework plus the footage trap to avoid.

Add B-roll only on the four moments that lose viewers, lists, numbers, abstract nouns, and long setups, and keep each cutaway under 3 seconds. A placement map for podcast clips.

Downloads count file delivery; listens count actual playback. Here's the exact difference, which platforms report which, and why your numbers never match.

Episode vs season in a podcast: an episode is one published file, a season is a numbered group. The real difference lives in two RSS tags that order your catalog.

Mono vs stereo for podcasts: export spoken-word in mono to halve file size and dodge the one-ear problem on single earbuds. Save stereo for music only.

Pre-roll vs post-roll: pre-roll runs before the episode and reaches nearly everyone; post-roll runs after and is the cheapest slot. How they compare on CPM.

Subscriber vs follower on a podcast differs by app: Apple reserves 'subscribe' for paid, Spotify says follow, YouTube says subscribe. Read your numbers right.

ID3 tags are metadata baked into the MP3 file itself, title, artist, artwork. Here's what they are, and why they fight with your RSS feed over what apps show.

Podcast chapters are time-stamped segments embedded in your audio or feed. Here's the plain definition plus the standards split that decides which apps show them.

Podcast show notes are the text that describes an episode. They do two jobs, human reference and search-indexable text, and the feed version can differ from your site.

Only ~12,000 podcasts have 1,000+ episodes (Podscan). What that tier, mostly daily shows, runs on: production systems, team structure, and archive money.

100th podcast episode ideas that earn their keep: a special-episode format menu plus a two-week press and clip-wave checklist to win new listeners.

Nearly half of podcasts quit by episode 3, and podfade peaks from episode 7 to 25. Why episode 10 proves you're a real show, plus the batching system to get there.

Why 500 weekly podcast listeners beats any total-download number: the retention-cohort checklist, the benchmark context, and why advertisers want this metric.

Only ~11% of shows reach 50 episodes, 500 is far rarer still. What veteran podcasters do about burnout, format drift, and a back catalog nobody can find.

Only ~11% of podcasts reach 50 episodes. Episode 50 is your first real dataset, a back-catalog audit to find what works, cut dead formats, and repackage the best.

How Overcast podcast ads work: the demand-based category auction, realistic cost per subscriber from real campaigns, creative rules, and when the spend pays off.

Active listening in a podcast interview: you can't hear an answer and plan the next question at once. A note-light method and callbacks that prove you heard.

Active listening for a podcast host means building your next question from the guest's last sentence, not your script. The last-sentence pivot, with examples.

Good podcast interview questions are open, single, and short, they hand the guest a story, not a yes or no. A field guide to the four anti-patterns, rewritten.

The 11 podcast interview mistakes that quietly flatten an episode, two-part questions, talking over guests, over-agreeing, each with the exact fix and why it costs the listener.

Body language for a video podcast depends on the frame: webcam crops and wide studio shots reward opposite habits. The hands-in-frame rule, lean angles, and gestures.