
Hosted by Justin & Kyle Peters - Podcast Strategy & Growth · EN

Justin breaks down why clarity—not volume, catchy marketing tactics, or the many reasons podcasters think their podcast growth has stalled—is the real bottleneck for most podcasts. Many creators try to grow by doing more: more promotion, more episodes, more outreach. But if a potential listener doesn’t immediately understand what your show is about, who it’s for, and why it matters, none of that effort converts. This episode introduces a practical podcast clarity audit designed to remove friction and make your show easier to discover, understand, and follow. From defining your ideal listener to tightening your show title, topics, and episode framing, Justin walks through the exact checkpoints that separate podcasts that feel scattered from ones that grow consistently. Because when your podcast is clear, everything else works better. Key Takeaways:• Clarity is the #1 growth lever for small podcasts—without it, nothing else works• If a listener is confused about your show, they won’t press play• Defining a specific ideal listener makes every other decision easier• Show titles should clearly communicate what the show is about and who it’s for• Covering too many topics leads to inconsistent growth and listener drop-off• Podcast descriptions should quickly answer what, who, and why it matters• Episode titles must communicate a clear benefit—not just name the conversation• The language used inside episodes should reinforce who the show is for• Guest selection should align with your core theme—not just popularityKey Timestamps:(00:00:00) – Why Clarity Is the Foundation of Podcast Growth(00:01:00) – The Podcast Clarity Audit Explained(00:01:30) – The “Aerodynamics” of Podcast Growth(00:02:30) – Defining Your Ideal Listener(00:05:00) – How to Audit and Improve Your Show Title(00:07:00) – The Problem with Covering Too Many Topics(00:08:30) – Fixing Weak Podcast Descriptions(00:09:30) – Episode Titles as the Final Conversion Point(00:11:00) – Using Language to Reinforce Your Audience(00:12:00) – Choosing the Right Podcast Guests(00:14:00) – How Clarity Attracts the Right AudienceKey Topics Discussed:Podcast Growth Strategy, Podcast Clarity Audit, Ideal Listener Definition, Podcast Branding, Show Title Optimization, Podcast Positioning, Episode Topic Strategy, Podcast Description Writing, Episode Title Frameworks, Audience Targeting, Content Consistency, Guest Selection Strategy, Podcast Marketing Foundations, Listener Conversion, Podcast Messaging, Content Strategy for Podcasts, Beginner Podcast Mistakes, Podcast Audience Growth, SimplePod Studios, Justin PetersTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletter

Kyle breaks down why better podcast audio has far less to do with the microphone you buy—and far more to do with how you use it. Most creators assume upgrading gear will instantly improve their sound, but without the right setup, positioning, and environment, even premium microphones can produce worse results than a basic setup. This episode reframes what “good audio” actually means: removing friction for the listener. Because your audience isn’t evaluating your gear—they’re deciding whether your show is easy to listen to. Kyle walks through a simple, practical framework to help you consistently capture clean, professional audio without overcomplicating your setup. From gain staging to mic positioning to avoiding common recording mistakes, this is a step-by-step guide to sounding better immediately—no expensive upgrades required.Key Takeaways:• Better audio is about usage and environment—not just upgrading your microphone• Poor gain staging can ruin audio, even if it sounds fine during recording• Mic positioning (distance and consistency) has one of the biggest impacts on sound quality• Laptop microphones introduce echo, distance, and background noise issues• Headphones or earbuds are essential for clean remote recordings• Environmental noise (fans, AC, notifications) is one of the most overlooked problems• A simple pre-recording checklist can eliminate most audio issues instantlyKey Timestamps:(00:00:00) – Why Listeners Leave Because of Bad Audio(00:01:20) – The Real Problem with “Upgrading Your Mic”(00:02:00) – Laptop vs USB vs XLR Microphones Explained(00:03:00) – Why Expensive Mics Can Sound Worse(00:03:30) – The 7 Deadly Sins of Podcast Audio(00:04:00) – Step 1 & 2: Mic Connection and Input Settings(00:05:00) – Step 3: Proper Gain and Avoiding Noise Floor Issues(00:06:00) – Step 4: Mic Positioning and Distance(00:07:00) – Step 5: Understanding Pickup Patterns(00:07:30) – Step 6: Why Headphones Are Non-Negotiable(00:08:30) – Step 7: Controlling Your Recording Environment(00:09:00) – The Simple Fix That Improves Almost Every PodcastKey Topics Discussed:Podcast Audio Quality, Microphone Setup, USB vs XLR Microphones, Podcast Equipment Mistakes, Gain Staging, Noise Floor, Mic Positioning Techniques, Podcast Recording Checklist, Remote Podcasting Setup, Headphones for Podcasting, Podcast Environment Control, Audio Editing Basics, Podcast Production Tips, Beginner Podcast Mistakes, Podcast Growth Through Better Audio, Listener Experience Optimization, Podcast Consistency, Content Consumption Friction, Podcasting Best Practices, SimplePod Studios, Kyle PetersTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletter

Justin discusses how if your podcast isn’t growing the way you expected, the problem might not be your content—it’s what happens after you publish. Instead of focusing on creating more content, Justin walks through how to build a lightweight repurposing system that turns each episode into multiple high-impact assets. By leveraging a three-channel approach—newsletter, social media, and your website—you can drive consistent growth without adding hours to your workload.Key Takeaways:• Most podcasts don’t grow because they aren’t promoted consistently after publishing• A simple repurposing system can double (or more) podcast downloads over time• Focus on three core channels: newsletter, one social platform, and your website• Newsletters create direct access to your audience and drive higher conversions• Social media should prioritize value over promotion (aim for 80/20 or better)• One platform done well beats spreading effort across multiple channels• Show notes pages improve SEO and turn your website into a content library• One episode can become 5–7 pieces of content with minimal extra effortKey Timestamps:(00:00:00) – Why Most Podcasts Struggle to Grow(00:02:30) – Introducing the Three-Channel System(00:03:00) – Why Newsletters Drive Engagement & Conversions(00:05:00) – Low vs Medium vs High Effort Newsletters(00:08:30) – Choosing the Right Social Media Platform(00:10:00) – The Value vs Promotion Rule(00:12:00) – Turning Show Notes Into Blog Content(00:14:30) – The Full System: 1 Episode → 7 Pieces of ContentKey Topics Discussed:Podcast Growth Strategy, Content Repurposing, Podcast Marketing, Newsletter Strategy, Email Marketing for Creators, Social Media Strategy, LinkedIn for Podcasters, Content Distribution, Podcast SEO, Show Notes Optimization, Blogging for Podcasters, Content Systems, Audience Growth, Lead Generation, Creator Workflows, Content Marketing Strategy, Founder-Led Content, Business Podcasts, SimplePod Studios, Justin PetersTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletter

Justin breaks down a new industry report analyzing the top 50 podcasts in the U.S.—and flips the takeaway on its head. Instead of blindly copying what the biggest shows are doing, this episode reveals why their strategies often don’t apply to growing creators. From SEO and publishing cadence to episode length and artwork, Justin walks through the data, explains the hidden context behind it, and highlights where smaller podcasters should take the opposite approach. The biggest shows are playing a different game—this episode helps you play your game smarter.Key Takeaways:• The top 50 podcasts rely less on SEO because they already have massive audiences and brand recognition• Smaller creators should maximize metadata (titles, descriptions, keywords) for discoverability• Publishing 3–4x per week works for large teams—but consistency beats volume for most creators• Episode length should match audience needs—not industry averages• Shorter, high-value episodes often outperform long-form content for busy listeners• Podcast growth comes from strategy alignment—not copying top performers• Cover art should prioritize clarity and readability, not just aestheticsKey Timestamps:(00:00:00) – What Makes a Podcast Top the Charts?(00:00:30) – Inside the Top 50 Podcast Report(00:01:30) – Why Short Titles Work for Big Shows (But Not You)(00:03:30) – The SEO Strategy Smaller Creators Must Use(00:06:30) – Publishing Frequency: What’s Actually Sustainable(00:08:30) – Best Days & Times to Release Episodes(00:11:00) – Why Top Podcasts Are So Long(00:13:30) – Short vs Long Episodes: What Performs Better(00:16:00) – Podcast Artwork Trends (And What Actually Matters)(00:18:00) – Ratings, Reviews, and the Real Growth Strategy(00:19:00) – Why You Shouldn’t Copy the Top 50Key Topics Discussed:Podcast Growth Strategy, Podcast SEO, Podcast Metadata Optimization, Episode Titles, Show Descriptions, Podcast Discoverability, Publishing Cadence, Podcast Consistency, Podcast Release Strategy, Audience Behavior, Episode Length Strategy, Short-Form vs Long-Form Content, Podcast Analytics, Listener Retention, Podcast Artwork Design, Branding for Podcasts, Podcast Marketing Strategy, Podcast Monetization, Podcast Industry Trends, Content Strategy for Creators, Founder-Led Podcasts, Business Podcasts, Podcast Workflow, Content Repurposing, Podcast Production, Podcast Strategy Alignment, SimplePod Studios, Justin PetersTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletter

Justin explores how with Apple expanding its video experience inside Apple Podcasts, many creators are asking the same question: if you’re not doing video, are you already behind? The answer isn’t as simple as yes or no. While video podcasting can unlock new distribution channels, stronger audience trust, and more content repurposing opportunities, it also introduces significantly more cost, complexity, and production friction. Justin breaks down why adding video isn’t automatically the right move for every podcaster. Instead of chasing industry trends, he explains how creators should evaluate video through the lens of strategy, ROI, and capacity. You’ll hear the four types of podcasters who should strongly consider staying audio-only for now and how video can sometimes become a distraction from the real work of podcast growth—clarifying your message, understanding your audience, and consistently publishing strong content. Podcast video can be a powerful tool, but only when it aligns with your business model, strengths, and stage of growth.Key Takeaways:• Video podcasting often costs two to three times more than audio-only production• If creators do not plan to actively participate on social platforms, video’s growth advantage is significantly reduced• New podcasters benefit from focusing on message clarity, positioning, and audience feedback before adding video complexity• Consistency and strategy drive podcast ROI—not the format itself• Video should be treated as a strategic leverage point, not an industry obligationKey Timestamps:(00:00:00) - Apple Expands Video Support in Podcasts(00:01:30) - Should Every Podcaster Add Video?(00:02:30) - Type #1: The Budget-Conscious Business Owner(00:05:00) - Type #2: The “I Don’t Want to Be on Social Media” Creator(00:06:40) - Type #3: The Newer Creator Still Finding Their Voice(00:08:45) - Type #4: The Time-Strapped Operator(00:10:40) - When Video Becomes Friction Instead of Leverage(00:11:20) - Why Audio-Only Can Be the Most Strategic MoveKey Topics Discussed:Video Podcasting, Audio vs Video Podcast Strategy, Apple Podcast Video Expansion, Podcast Distribution, Creator Strategy, Podcast ROI, Podcast Production Costs, Podcast Equipment, Video Editing Workflow, Podcast Budgeting, Podcast Growth Strategy, Short Form Content, TikTok Clips, Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, Social Media Distribution, Podcast Positioning, Creator Clarity, Messaging Strategy, Podcast Learning Curve, Content Repurposing, Podcast Consistency, Time Management for Creators, Founder-Led Podcasts, Business Podcasts, Podcast Workflow, Podcast Strategy Alignment, Content Leverage, Podcast Industry Trends, Podcast Production Friction, Podcast Repurposing Strategy, Podcast Marketing, Podcasting for Business, SimplePod Studios, Podcast Consulting, Podcast StrategyTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletter

Most podcasters think growth means more downloads. But what if the real leverage isn’t in thousands of passive listeners—it’s in 50 to 100 people who genuinely care? Justin introduces one of the simplest but most underutilized tools for business podcasters: a True Fans List. Instead of chasing anonymous reach, he explains how to identify the listeners who consistently engage, how to track them with a simple spreadsheet, and how to make strategic asks that feel natural—not needy. From low-lift requests like ratings and reviews to high-leverage opportunities like referrals and beta program participation, Justin walks through a tiered approach to engaging your biggest supporters. If your show is part of a larger business strategy, this episode will change how you think about audience growth—and help you turn attention into real opportunity.Key Takeaways:• Your podcast doesn’t need a massive audience—it needs 50–100 engaged supporters.• A true fan regularly listens, engages unprompted, and would likely help if asked.• Keep your True Fans List simple—a basic spreadsheet with names, notes, and light tracking columns is enough.• The list removes hesitation when making asks because you’re inviting supporters, not strangers.• Tier your asks: start with low-effort requests (ratings, follows), then progress to medium and high-leverage opportunities.• Great calendar moments for engagement include show anniversaries, milestone episodes, mid-year reviews, and year-end surveys.• Publicly thanking supporters (like a “Review of the Week” segment) encourages more participation.Key Timestamps:(00:00:00) – Your Podcast Doesn’t Need a Massive Audience—It Needs Relationships(00:01:20) – What Is a True Fan?(00:02:56) – What Is a True Fans List?(00:03:51) – Why a True Fans List Is So Valuable for Business Owners(00:04:21) – How to Tier Your Asks: Light, Medium, and High Leverage(00:06:51) – How Often Should You Ask for Support?(00:09:01) – Using the True Fans Template to Get StartedKey Topics Discussed:True Fans List, Podcast Growth Strategy, Podcast Audience Engagement, Relationship-Based Marketing, Podcast Reviews, Listener Surveys, Podcast Referrals, Business Podcast Strategy, Podcast Milestones, Content Marketing Systems, CRM Simplicity, Podcast Community Building, Listener Participation, Podcast Call to Action Strategy, Audience Loyalty, Podcast Supporters, Engagement Tracking, Email Newsletter Growth, Podcast Anniversary Campaigns, Episode Milestones, Review of the Week Segment, Podcast Templates, Spreadsheet Systems, Podcast Leverage, Business Development Through Podcasting, Justin Peters, SimplePod StudiosTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletterDownload the Free True Fans Template at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/truefans

Justin shares the framework he developed after six years of guest interviews—one built from hindsight, missed opportunities, and the realization that not every guest should be booked for the same reason. He breaks down the five distinct roles a guest can play on a podcast for coaches and advisors. From client case studies to subject matter experts, audience expanders, potential clients, relationship builders, and even the occasional wildcard, Justin explains how to approach each type of interview differently and how each one can strategically support business growth. It’s a clear, practical guide for hosts who want to stop booking guests randomly and start designing interviews with real intention.Key Takeaways:• Not every guest serves the same purpose—define the role before you book them.• Client interviews build powerful social proof when you focus on struggles and turning points, not just wins.• Subject matter experts expand your content depth and position you as a trusted curator.• Audience expanders only grow your show if expectations around sharing are aligned upfront.• Live coaching, audits, and hot seats create ethical, high-value lead generation content.• Relationship builders can lead to long-term collaborations beyond a single episode.Key Timestamps:(00:00) – What Justin Learned After 6 Years of Guest Interviews(00:00:46) – The 5 Types of Guests You Should Have On Your Podcast(00:01:20) – Guest Role #1: The Client(00:03:10) – Guest Role #2: The Subject Matter Expert(00:05:50) – Guest Role #3: The Audience Expander(00:08:31) – Guest Role #4: The Potential Client(00:12:00) – Guest Role #5: The Relationship Builder(00:13:38) – Bonus Role: The Wildcard(00:14:57) – Two Questions to Ask Before Booking Your Next Guest(00:15:30) – Why Listener Experience Still Matters MostKey Topics Discussed:Podcast Guest Strategy, Guest Interview Framework, Client Case Study Episodes, Subject Matter Expert Interviews, Podcast Audience Growth Strategy, Lead Generation Through Podcasting, Professional Service Podcast Marketing, Coaching Podcast Strategy, Advisor Podcast Framework, Podcast Social Proof, Authority Building Through Podcasting, Podcast Networking Strategy, Relationship Building Through Podcasting, Podcast Retention Strategy, Intentional Guest Booking, Content Planning for Podcasters, Service-Based Business PodcastingTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletter

Justin addresses a universal challenge for podcasters: capturing great episode ideas before they vanish. He explains why scattered notes across apps, sticky notes, and random notebooks create stress on recording day rather than helping. The solution? A content idea bank—a single, mobile-friendly system for collecting raw ideas as they strike, separate from your content calendar. Justin walks through the exact characteristics that make a content idea bank effective, from ensuring it's frictionless (15 seconds max to capture an idea) to keeping it accessible offline. He shares the four essential fields to track (idea summary, links, notes, and priority), explains why Google Forms paired with Google Sheets is his preferred setup, and provides a free template listeners can copy and customize. Plus, he covers the often-overlooked practice of regularly reviewing and pruning your idea bank to avoid decision fatigue.Key Takeaways:• Ideas never arrive at convenient times—they hit while driving, in meetings, or making dinner• Scattered episode ideas across multiple platforms create stress and decision fatigue on recording day• A content idea bank should be a single source of truth, separate from your content calendar• Your idea bank is for raw ideas; your content calendar is for ideas in motion (planning, recording, editing)• A great content idea bank must be mobile-friendly and accessible offline• The capture process should be frictionless—15 seconds maximum to save an idea• Track four essential fields: idea summary, links (for source material), open notes, and priority (high or low)• Google Forms + Google Sheets combination is free, mobile-friendly, works offline, and requires no learning curve• Regular reviews prevent decision fatigue—prune stale ideas or move them to an "old ideas" tab• A content idea bank helps you create better, more personal content that resonates with your ideal listenerKey Timestamps:(00:00:00) - Stop Capturing Episode Ideas on Sticky Notes(00:01:44) - Building a Content Idea Bank(00:03:03) - The Difference Between a Content Idea Bank & Content Calendar(00:03:53) - Features to Include in a Content Idea Bank(00:05:01) - Four Fields to Include in Your Content Idea Bank Spreadsheet(00:06:41) - How to Build Your Content Idea Bank on Google(00:08:18) - One Final Best Practice for Maintaining a Content Idea Bank(00:09:07) - Get Your Free Content Idea Bank TemplateKey Topics Discussed:Content Ideation, Episode Ideas, Content Planning, Content Idea Bank, Content Calendar, Recording Day Stress, Decision Fatigue, Mobile-Friendly Systems, Offline Access, Frictionless Capture, Google Forms, Google Sheets, Episode Planning, Content Organization, Single Source of Truth, Priority Tagging, Idea Management, Podcast Workflow, Content Strategy, Raw Ideas, Ideas in Motion, Episode Outlines, Podcast Consistency, Content Quality, Ideal Listener, Audience Engagement, ChatGPT Prompts, Generic Content, Hyper-Specific Episodes, Content Templates, Idea Storage, Note-Taking Apps, Sticky Notes, Spreadsheets, Inbox Management, Random Ideas, Client Conversations, Reading Inspiration, Online Scrolling, Prep Time Reduction, Recording Efficiency, Publishing Consistency, Content Review, Idea Pruning, Stale Ideas, Working Titles, Episode Summaries, Source Links, Episode Notes, Guest Ideas, Freebie Creation, Episode Series, High Priority Ideas, Low Priority Ideas, Free Template, Google Account, Content Systems, Podcast Production, Business Podcasters, Justin Peters, SimplePod Studios, Content Creation, Podcast ResourcesTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletterDownload the Free Content Idea Bank Template at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/contentideabank

Justin and Kyle break down a simple four-point framework that helps podcasters stay concise, natural, and on-topic—without scripting every word. They address the two common extremes most creators fall into: over-preparing and sounding robotic, or hitting record and rambling. By centering each episode around a clear pain point, crafting a compelling hook, structuring the body like chapters in a book, and ending with a strong call to action, this framework creates clarity for both the host and the listener. They also share a powerful bonus strategy that can dramatically speed up your production workflow and improve your marketing reach.Key Takeaways:• Every strong episode starts with a clearly defined audience pain point• The first 3–5 minutes determine retention—your hook must reinforce the title and promise a solution.• The body of your episode should follow a clear concept (framework, steps, chapters) to stay organized and concise• You don’t need to script everything—bullet points, examples, and stats are enough to guide you• Strong transitions help listeners feel like they’re moving chapter-by-chapter through a book• Every episode should end with a single, intentional call to action• CTAs can be beginner (simple outreach), intermediate (conversation-driven), or advanced (lead magnet)• Planning repurposed content during pre-production dramatically improves efficiency and reachKey Timestamps:(00:00) – Why Podcasters Either Over-Script or Ramble (And How to Fix It)(01:10) – Step 1: Identify the Central Pain Point(02:48) – Step 2: Craft a High-Retention Hook(06:00) – Hook Styles: State-and-Go, Standard Intros, and Why Trailers Often Miss(12:30) – Step 3: Build the Body Around a Clear Concept(15:41) – Step 4: Conclusion and Strategic CTA(16:30) – Beginner, Intermediate, and Advanced Call-to-Action Framework(19:20) – Bonus: Planning Repurposed Content Before You Record(22:30) – Full Framework RecapKey Topics Discussed:Podcast Outlining Framework, Podcast Hook Strategy, Podcast Retention Metrics, Podcast Episode Structure, Education-Based Podcasting, Podcast Production Systems, Content Repurposing Strategy, Podcast Marketing, Podcast Calls To Action, Lead Magnets For Podcasters, Podcast Pre-Production Workflow, Short-Form Content Strategy, Podcast Authority Building, Podcast Growth Strategy, Podcast Monetization Foundations, SimplePod Studios, Justin Peters, Kyle PetersTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletterDownload the Free Episode Outline at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/episodeoutline

Justin tackles the critical question every podcaster should ask: is your content actually resonating with listeners? Moving beyond surface-level feedback from super fans, he introduces a data-driven approach centered on retention metrics—the one metric that's nearly impossible to manipulate or buy. Justin breaks down the three essential retention measurements he tracks on every episode: average consumption (the baseline content quality score), opening retention (whether your intro hooks listeners in the first two minutes), and episode completion rate (who's still there to hear your call to action). He provides specific benchmarks for each metric, explains what high and low scores reveal about your content, and shares actionable strategies to improve performance across all three areas. Plus, he walks through exactly where to find these metrics in Spotify for Creators, Apple Podcasts for Creators, and YouTube Studio.Key Takeaways:• Retention is the most valuable podcast metric because attention is the hardest resource to capture and nearly impossible to fake• Average consumption of 70%+ means your content is strong and ready for growth• The biggest drop-off happens in the first two minutes—opening retention above 75% indicates a strong hook• Episode completion rates put your call-to-action strategy in perspective—only 1-5% of end-listeners take action• Making episodes tighter and focusing on one main takeaway per episode improves average consumption• Standard intros over 30 seconds are likely too long and hurt opening retention• Shorter episodes (20-30 minutes) are trending as listeners prefer content that fits within single activities• Access retention data through Spotify for Creators, Apple Podcasts for Creators, and YouTube Studio analyticsKey Timestamps:(00:00:00) - Is Your Podcast Content Really Resonating with Listeners?(00:00:51) - Is Retention the Only Podcast Metric That Matters?(00:03:45) - Retention Metric #1: Average Consumption(00:05:35) - Retention Metric #2: Opening Retention(00:07:46) - Retention Metric #3: Episode Completion Rate(00:10:58) - How Can Podcasters Improve Their Episode Retention?(00:14:29) - How to Access These Podcast Analytics(00:16:33) - Retention is Proof Your Podcast Is WorkingKey Topics Discussed:Podcast Retention, Retention Metrics, Content Quality, Average Consumption, Opening Retention, Episode Completion Rate, Podcast Analytics, Listener Engagement, Podcast Data, Audience Attention, Content Performance, Rating and Reviews, Social Media Followers, Podcast Downloads, Download Quality, Content Marketing, Podcast Strategy, Listener Retention, Episode Pacing, Storytelling, Podcast Intros, Hook Strategy, Call to Action, Conversion Rates, Podcast Benchmarks, Content Improvement, Pattern Breaks, Episode Segmentation, Standard Introductions, Episode Length, Spotify for Creators, Apple Podcasts for Creators, YouTube Studio, YouTube Analytics, Video Podcasts, Retention Charts, Podcast Growth, Super Fans, Audience Growth, Listener Loyalty, Content Value, Episode Structure, Podcast Hosting, Justin Peters, SimplePod Studios, Retention Graphs, Analytics Tutorial, Business Podcasters, Content Creators, Podcast ConsultationTransform Your Podcast from Time-Suck to Lead Generator at https://simplepodstudios.comReach Out at justin@simplepodstudios.com or kyle@simplepodstudios.comGet Podcasting Tips Straight to Your Inbox at https://www.simplepodstudios.com/newsletterHow to Check Analytics on Spotify for Creators and Apple Podcast Connect: https://www.simplepodstudios.com/metrics