Podcasting
Podcasting lets you share your voice, your stories, and a lifetime of expertise with the whole world, all from a comfortable chair at home. It is social, creative, and costs very little to start.
What you need to start
- A computer or laptop
- A USB microphone
- Free recording software
- A quiet room to record in
At a glance
Your learning path
Three stages, taken at your own pace. Start at the top, get comfortable, then move down as you grow. There is no rush, and no wrong place to begin.
Start here. These four short videos walk you through starting a show, planning your topic and format, choosing a good USB microphone, and recording your very first episode.
How To Start A Podcast (The Ultimate Beginner's Guide!)
Justin Brown - Primal VideoSetting Up Your Podcast in Buzzsprout — Buzzsprout Essentials
Buzzsprout — Learn How to PodcastBest Podcast Microphones in 2026!
Think MediaRecording Your First Podcast Episode
CastosNow that you have an episode, let's make it shine. These cover editing in free software, publishing and hosting your show, interviewing guests well, improving your sound, and creating cover art and show notes.
Audacity Podcast Tutorial - QUICKLY Edit a Podcast and Sound Great!
Mike RussellHow to Upload & Distribute Your Podcast to Spotify, Apple Music, & More!
Think Media7 tips for conducting better podcast interviews
Buzzsprout — Learn How to PodcastHow To Make Your Podcast Sound Professional
Javier MercedesHow to Design Great Podcast Cover Art
Buzzsprout — Learn How to PodcastReady to grow? These cover building your audience, earning money from your show, recording guests remotely, advanced editing and sound design, and adding video to your podcast.
How to Grow Your Podcast and Build an Audience | Podcast Marketing & Audience Development
RSS․com - Start & Grow a PodcastHow to Monetize Your Podcast with Buzzsprout
Buzzsprout — Learn How to PodcastHow to Help Remote Guests Sound and Look Better on Riverside
RiversideAdvanced Podcast Editing Techniques [Editors DON’T Do This]
PSS Creative MediaAdding Video to Your Podcast: Beginner Tips + Gear Ideas
B&H Photo Video Pro AudioWhy podcasting is wonderful after 50
Podcasting is a wonderful pursuit after 50 because it turns a lifetime of stories, opinions, and hard-won expertise into something you can share with the whole world. You have decades of experience worth hearing, and podcasting gives it a stage. It is deeply social, whether you interview old friends, chat with your grandchildren, or build a community of listeners who look forward to your voice. It is endlessly creative, on any subject you love. Best of all, it costs very little to start, it is done sitting comfortably at home, and there is no deadline but your own.
Your first month, week by week
Decide what your show is about and who it is for. Pick a simple format, solo talking, interviews, or a mix, and choose a name. Watch the starting and planning videos, and jot down ideas for your first ten episodes.
Order a USB microphone and a pop filter, and set up in a quiet, soft-furnished room. Download free recording software like Audacity. Practice speaking into the mic until you feel comfortable hearing your own voice.
Record your first real episode, just ten to fifteen minutes introducing yourself and your topic. Do a simple edit to trim the start and end and remove long pauses. Do not aim for perfect, aim for finished.
Design simple cover art, write short show notes, and set up a hosting account to publish your episode to Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Share the link with a few friends and family, and start planning episode two.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Buying too much expensive gear before you have recorded a single episode. A simple USB microphone is all you need to start.
- Recording in a room with hard, bare walls, which makes your voice echo. Add a rug, curtains, and soft furnishings to soften the sound.
- Starting without a plan, so episodes wander with no clear point. Jot down a few talking points or questions before you hit record.
- Publishing on no fixed schedule, so listeners forget about you. Pick a realistic rhythm, weekly or every two weeks, and stick to it.
- Rambling on for too long. Keep early episodes short and focused, and edit out the long pauses and tangents.
- Waiting for everything to be perfect before you launch. Done and published always beats perfect and never finished.
Make it easier on your body
Simple ways to keep podcasting comfortable and safe with arthritis, low vision, or limited mobility.
- Podcasting is done entirely seated at home, so there is no travel, no standing for long periods, and no heavy gear to carry.
- A microphone on a desk stand or small tripod sits right in front of you and needs no holding, which is easy on the hands, arms, and shoulders.
- Editing software can be enlarged on the screen, and you can use voice dictation to write your show notes if typing is tiring.
- Remote-recording tools like Riverside let you interview guests anywhere in the world from your own chair, with no need to leave the house.
- A comfortable, supportive chair and a good pair of headphones let you record and edit for as long as you like in complete comfort.
- Keep episodes short and simple to start, so a single session is never tiring, and record in short stretches whenever your energy is best.
Words you'll hear
- Episode
- A single instalment of your podcast, one recorded show that listeners can play on its own.
- RSS feed
- A special web address that automatically delivers your new episodes to apps like Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
- Hosting
- An online service that stores your audio files and sends them out to podcast apps whenever you publish.
- Editing
- Cleaning up your recording afterwards, trimming mistakes, removing long pauses, and evening out the volume.
- Intro and outro
- The short, often music-backed opening and closing that top and tail every episode with a familiar sound.
- Show notes
- A short written summary of the episode, with links and key points, that appears beneath it in podcast apps.
Where to find your people
- Podcasting groups on Facebook and subreddits like r/podcasting are full of friendly people answering beginner questions every day.
- Local podcast meetups and recording clubs, often listed on Meetup, are great places to learn in person and make recording friends.
- Online courses on sites like Udemy, YouTube, and Skillshare walk you through every step at your own pace.
- Podcast host communities, such as the forums and groups run by Buzzsprout and other hosting services, offer support built right in.
- YouTube tutorials from channels like Buzzsprout, Riverside, and Think Media are a free, endless source of how-to help.
Start learning Podcasting
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