8 Ways to Improve Your Podcast Description image
The Audacity to Podcast
8 Ways to Improve Your Podcast Description
0 Plays
1 year ago

Your podcast description usually isn't someone's first impression of your show and it often doesn't affect your SEO, but the description does give you the vital opportunity to convince a potential audience to try your podcast.

Here are some ways you can improve your podcast description.

1. Remove unnecessary or redundant details from your podcast description

The title goes in the title, the author goes in the author, and the description goes in the description. When you mix these things together, it creates redundancy and might waste valuable space.

Avoid phrases like:

  • “This is a podcast hosted by [your name]”—Your name is already in the author field and displayed prominently with your podcast!
  • “[Podcast title] is about …”—This is redundant because your podcast description inherently says what your podcast is about.
  • “Looking for a podcast about …?”—People often aren't asking these questions, and this tends to focus on features more than benefits (more on that in #3).

Watch out for information in your podcast description that really isn't necessary to convince someone to hear or watch your podcast, like your contact information or what day you publish episodes.

2. Focus your podcast description on “why” and “WIIFM”

In most places, podcast descriptions don't actually affect your podcast SEO. But even if they did, the most important thing is still to answer two basic questions:

  • “Why should I get this podcast?”—Try emphasizing either the “I” or the “this” in that question!
  • “What's in it for me?” (WIIFM)—In other words, how will your audience get PROFIT (popularity, relationships, opportunities, fun, income, or tangibles) from your podcast?

Whenever someone has clicked through to something they're considering—a podcast, a product, a movie, or really anything else—the core information they're seeking is why they should choose that thing, maybe even in comparison to alternatives.

I highly recommend you read Start with Why by Simon Sinek.

You don't have to use the words “why” or “because” in your description, but I do suggest you imagine someone asking you, “Why should I get your podcast?” and then what follows after “Because …” is a good starting point for your description.

3. Replace features with benefits for a more compelling podcast description

A “feature” is a simple fact about your podcast, like “we talk about [topics].” The first way to improve this is to extend the sentence with “so that ….” Then, shift that benefit to the spotlight.

Here are a couple of examples:

  • “We talk about cake-baking” ➜ “Learn how to bake better cakes”
  • “This podcast shares marketing techniques” ➜ “Grow your audience”
  • “Get communication tips” ➜ “I help you communicate better”

You can loop back through this process to make your benefits even better! Try adding a “so that” either directly or through some rewriting to focus on the outcome you want your audience to get. For example, instead of saying, “Learn how to grow your business,” you could add, “so that you don't have to worry about your bottom line.”

Then co

Recommended