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Podcast Description Tips: How to Write, & Why It’s So Crucial!

 

How to Write a Podcast Description: At-A-Glance.

  • Your podcast description is also known as your podcast summary or show summary.
  • You write this inside your podcast hosting account, and it appears in all the directories your podcast is listed in—for example, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc.
  • Podcast descriptions are vital when listeners weigh up whether or not to hit play.
  • You should write about who your podcast is for, why they should listen, and what they can expect.
  • If you’re unhappy with your current show summary, the good news is that you can edit it anytime.
  • Read on for six tips on how to write the perfect podcast description!

Podcast listeners have millions of potential shows they can listen to. So how can you stack conditions in your favour to help them choose yours?

One of the most critical factors is to have a good podcast description.

Jump ahead to our six podcast description tips

Writing your show’s description or summary is like writing a blurb for a book. You want to sell the show to your potential listeners and encourage them to give you a shot. In this article, we’re going to find out how to do just that. First up, though…

Podcast Description Vs Podcast Episode Description: What’s the Difference?

Let’s clear up any potential confusion surrounding the term.

Some folks refer to single podcast episodes as “podcasts”, but “a podcast” is really the show as a whole.

So a “podcast description” wouldn’t be the text that accompanies one single episode – that’s what we’d call “shownotes”. Here’s our complete guide to writing great podcast shownotes.

Also, if you’ve stumbled upon this post looking for a description of what a podcast actually is, then check out What is a podcast? An explanation in plain English.

All pretty straightforward, but good to make sure we’re on the same page here 🙂

Now, let’s get to the meat of the article.

How to Write a Podcast Description: Where Does It Go?

Your podcast description is written inside your podcast hosting account – the place your show essentially “lives”.

Writing a podcast description in Alitu
Writing a podcast description in Alitu.

That’ll be done when a podcaster creates their show before submitting it to the listening directories, where people will find and follow it.

Unfortunately, many will write their podcast description as an afterthought because they’ve stumbled across a big empty text box. They need to stick *something* in there in order to crack on with publishing the podcast. However, tasks like uploading their artwork and the first episode seem to be the biggest priority.

Overlook podcast descriptions at your peril, though. It’s a mistake to just quickly type something in and leave it at that.

That said, the good news is that you can edit your show summary at any time. When you update any detail inside your podcast hosting account, the changes will usually appear in all podcast directories within a few hours.

Why Is Your Podcast Description So Important?

In our Podcast Discovery Survey, we asked listeners, “When considering a new show, how important to you is…”, followed by various front-facing aspects of a podcast.

They were then asked to grade each one out of five, with five being really important, and zero being not important at all.

As you’ll see from the data in the graph, the podcast description came out on top, above even things like episode titles and frequency of new episodes.

a good podcast description is the most important factor to potential new listeners

What’s more, we also ran a similar survey in 2019 and ‘podcast description’ came out well on top in this question, too. So it’s beyond doubt that this is something worth paying attention to!

Yes and no. In podcast apps, this text does its job once the potential listener has already found your show, but before they hit play. In a listening app, the chances are they found you through a podcast episode title or the show’s name rather than its summary.

Many Apps Search Podcast Episode Titles & Names – But Not Descriptions

Over 33% of podcast consumption occurs on Apple Podcasts. When listeners type a topic into the app, Apple has traditionally only searched podcast names, episode titles, and author/artist names. But search is definitely becoming more nuanced on podcasting platforms, and I think Apple Podcasts is now digging deeper than the aforementioned three. I’d be amazed if it wasn’t taking podcast descriptions into account when throwing up search results.

Even more podcast consumption (37%) happens on Spotify these days, and it has always searched through podcast descriptions, for as long as I can remember.

On the flip side, Overcast is another top-rated listening app that only scans through podcast names. Once you click on a podcast, you can search through its episodes, but it doesn’t seem to search descriptions. To put things in perspective, though, Overcast accounts for around 1.3% of podcast consumption. It’s still a great app, but this isn’t a huge sample size compared to Apple and Spotify.

Choosing a descriptive name for your podcast and publishing episodes with clear and compelling titles are still the top two ways to be found via in-app search. Those will help get you in front of more potential listeners, and that’s where your show summary will be most effective.

Podcast Descriptions & Google SEO

Your podcast description can still be good for SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) outside of the listening apps, on the web itself. This doesn’t mean you should spam it, but adding a few relevant keywords in there will do you no harm as long as it isn’t at the expense of good writing. Remember, your target audience here is humans, not machines, and your episode titles are where the major search juice is found.

6 Podcast Description Tips: How to Write a Podcast Summary

Now that we know why podcast descriptions are important and how they work, how do you write a good one? Here are our top podcast description tips.

1. What Goes In?

Again, start by thinking of it as the text on the back of a book you’ve picked up and are thinking about buying.

Or, if you’re not much of a reader, the text on the back of a video game box. Or the summary of a show on Netflix.

In fact, it’ll be helpful to look at some of these and pick through the way they’re written. Are there common themes, structures, or tones?

Try reading some descriptions in your podcast listening app, too – though this can be more hit or miss because most podcasts don’t go through a publishing process in the way books, TV shows, and video games do.

Alright, how about the things you might want to consider putting in your own podcast summary?

2. Who Is It For?

Who’s your target audience? Speak directly to them in your podcast description. Let them know that this is the podcast for them.

To do this, you need to tell them who they are. This sounds strange, but it works.

“You’re desperate to learn Spanish but only have 10 minutes daily to practice”.

Those who can relate to this statement already feel like you’ve created this show just for them. And for those who disagree, well, they’re not your potential audience…

3. What Will They Get From It?

Are you going to teach them something? Help them solve a problem or struggle? Will you be motivating, encouraging or inspiring them? Or maybe you’ll be offering to entertain them and make them laugh? Whatever they’re going to get from your podcast, tell them about it upfront.

4. Who Are You?

You don’t need to be famous or well-known to run a successful podcast. In fact, our discovery survey data shows that most listeners don’t care if they’ve never heard of you.

That said, you still want to let listeners know who they’ll be listening to. So, write a bit about yourself. If you’re a qualified expert on your topic, then great. If not, let them know you’re on a learning journey, just like they are. In this case, the show’s aim will be for the presenter and the listener to learn together.

5. What Can They Expect?

Will it be interviews? Will you be talking with a co-host? Or flying solo?

Do you release new episodes on the same day every week, or do you podcast in seasons?

Some info here will help set expectations with your potential listeners.

6. How Long Should My Podcast Description Be?

This is a bit like the question, “How long should my podcast episodes be?” – there’s no ideal length. Your show summary should be as long as it needs to be to get the message across.

But you should aim to be succinct without leaving out any good stuff.

Our media hosting pals at Captivate have a 4000-character limit in this field. Honestly, you’d need to have a very good reason to go anywhere near that. Just because you write a huge summary for your show doesn’t mean anyone will read it.

Here are some excellent examples of podcast descriptions by a few successful shows. The longest one is under 600 characters and still manages to say a lot.

Great Podcast Description Examples

I’ve used screenshots from these podcasts inside Apple Podcasts, Podchaser, Spotify, Overcast, and pod.link. Here, you’ll get an idea of how they actually look – as well as read.

Dan Harris is a fidgety, skeptical ABC newsman who had a panic attack live on Good Morning America, which led him to something he always thought was ridiculous: meditation. He wrote the bestselling book, “10% Happier,” started an app — “10% Happier: Meditation for Fidgety Skeptics” — and now, in this podcast, Dan talks with smart people about whether there’s anything beyond 10%. Basically, here’s what this podcast is obsessed with: Can you be an ambitious person and still strive for enlightenment (whatever that means)? New episodes every Wednesday morning.

Ten Percent Happier podcast description in Apple Podcasts
Ten Percent Happier, in Apple Podcasts

Guy Raz dives into the stories behind some of the world’s best known companies. How I Built This weaves a narrative journey about innovators, entrepreneurs and idealists—and the movements they built.

Podchaser podcast summary
How I Built This with Guz Raz, on Podchaser

The longest running (and most popular) podcast for non-venture track startups, this show follow the stories of founders as they start, acquire, and grow SaaS companies. Hear when they fail, struggle, succeed, and take you with them through the tumultuous life of an entrepreneur. If you like Mixergy, This Week in Startups, or SaaStr, you’ll enjoy Startup for the Rest of Us.

Spotify podcast description
Startups For the Rest of Us, in Spotify

Tim Ferriss is a self-experimenter and bestselling author, best known for The 4-Hour Workweek, which has been translated into 40+ languages. Newsweek calls him “the world’s best human guinea pig,” and The New York Times calls him “a cross between Jack Welch and a Buddhist monk.” In this show, he deconstructs world-class performers from eclectic areas (investing, chess, pro sports, etc.), digging deep to find the tools, tactics, and tricks that listeners can use.

Overcast podcast summary
The Tim Ferriss Show, in Overcast

Pocket-Sized Podcasting is the ‘how to podcast’ series for busy people. You’ll get one short sharp tip delivered to your feed Monday through Friday, all aimed towards helping you build and grow your own life-changing show. Brought to you by Alitu, the Podcast Maker, it’s our aim to make the entire process of podcasting as simple and accessible as humanly possible. Find us anywhere you get your podcasts, and be sure to hit follow or subscribe so you never miss an episode!

Pocket-Sized Podcasting, in pod.link
Pocket-Sized Podcasting, in pod.link

You’ll notice that hyperlinks are rare in podcast descriptions. Most listening apps don’t even seem to support them.

Your show summary isn’t the place for links, in any case. It’s the job of this text to tempt people into hitting play. If you want to get them back to your website, then use that as your in-episode Call to Action and add them to your individual episode show notes.

There’s also a separate ‘Website’ field in your media host’s show settings where you can enter a URL. Some listening apps will show this when displaying your podcast. But again, you’re better off keeping listeners on the app so they’ll actually listen!

Can AI Write My Podcast Description for Me?

AI tools like ChatGPT offer a way to create bodies of text in seconds. There’s no doubt that AI tools can help support podcasters and do some of the heavy lifting or less enjoyable tasks for them. In our best ChatGPT prompts for podcasters guide, you’ll find examples of ways podcasters are using AI without handing over control completely.

My own opinion is that, if you’re not an experienced writer, AI can give you a useful first draft to work from. But I’d still recommend editing and tweaking it, and I would never just publish an AI-generated podcast description in its raw form. Sure, the more thorough and better your prompts, the higher the quality of your output will be. But there comes a point where you’ve spent so much time going back and forth with this that you could’ve just written the thing yourself.

You can get an AI-generated podcast description with The Alitu Showplanner
You can get an AI-generated podcast description with The Alitu Showplanner

For a podcast-specific AI tool that will generate a draft description for you, as a personalised launch kit, suggested names, trailer script, and episode ideas, be sure to check out The Alitu Showplanner.

What Next?

You can only write a great podcast description if you’ve nailed down WHY you’re podcasting, and WHO you’re podcasting for.

For more on this, here are some handy resources.

And if you need more help with this, please check out the Podcraft Academy. There, you’ll find access to all our courses, downloadable resources, and podcast feedback tools!

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