What You Need to Know to Launch a Podcast Successfully

Are you ready to start your podcast? In this post, I guide you through the process of launching your podcast successfully, so that you can make the biggest splash possible on your launch week.

Podcasts are huge nowadays. It seems like there are podcasts for every subject. In this post, I am sharing exactly what you need to know to launch a successful podcast, including:

  • Kicking your podcast journey off right with my podcasting tutorial
  • How to treat your podcast launch like an event
  • Tips for building buzz around your podcast launch
  • Why social media is your friend during your podcast launch
  • How to compile and organize your email list for launch day
  • Why you should submit your podcast to iTunes early, not late
  • Tips for creating a podcast launch team
  • How to pump up that podcast launch day volume
  • Why you should launch with at least 3 episodes, and not 1
  • And why it serves you to hold nothing back and have fun in the processing of launching your successful podcast

 

It’s a wonderful time to be a podcast listener! It’s also a wonderful time to be a podcast creator. I’m here to show you how to make your podcast launch as successful as possible!

Sound like a plan? Let’s get into it!

Tip 1: Your Podcast Launch Is an Event

Creating a podcast takes a lot of hard work and determination. So you want to make sure that the work you’ve put into it gets the proper attention it deserves (there’s nothing worse than working tirelessly to produce a thing only to find that it didn’t have much of an impact). The best way to do that is to make your podcast launch an event—with a big celebration and announcement, fireworks (figurative or real, it’s up to you!) and all. You want to make a big splash. The bigger the splash, the more ears perk up, which leads to more subscribers, higher rankings, and the potential for more customers down the road.

So, how do you do this exactly? The first thing to do is to have a deadline, or a specific launch date that is transparent to your audience. This way they know exactly how you’re progressing and when the podcast will ready to. It can also be pretty self-motivating—if your audience is aware of your launch date, you’ll be keener on meeting your self-imposed deadline.

Tip 2: Build the Buzz

If you want to make sure that your podcast launch is an exciting event, focus on the buzz. And I don’t mean bees (although if your podcast is about bees, then you’re good!). By building buzz, I mean putting pieces in place that will strategically inspire excitement and anticipation leading up to the launch date.

One way you can accomplish this is by working backward from your launch date and determining the other dates that make sense to market and/or promote your podcast. I’d recommend putting together a calendar that includes each of the days you want to highlight the podcast launch on social media, your blog, or elsewhere.

Tip 3: Social Media is Your Friend

Your social media (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc.) followers are part of the community you’ve created. They are naturally an extension of the things that you like, so it makes sense to bring them into the excitement for your next great thing.

A few things you can do to utilize social media:

  • Podcast Graphics/Logo:When you have your podcast logo or graphics completed, you can share those to give people a visual sense of your show. You can even share your work-in-progress versions of your logo and ask your audience to respond with their thoughts. This gives your followers that warm sense of creative collaboration.
  • Podcast Clips:Share short fifteen-second clips of your podcast leading up to your first episode. This also gives your community a sense of the podcast, using a short and sweet preview. Focus on a quality clip that will inspire them to subscribe.
  • Quote Graphics:Similar to podcast clips, you can mine your launch content for valuable little snippets and turn them into eye-catching quote graphics. Include a countdown to launch day in your social media post to keep your audience jazzed.

Tip 4: Compile an Email List

Throughout your preparation for your podcast launch, you should definitely be building an email list. If you haven’t yet started building your email list, check out my post on how to start an email list. Building your email list can be done simultaneously as you build buzz and market your podcast on social media. A few ways you can inspire folks to subscribe to your email list is to send insider information to people on your email list, something exclusive and beyond what they might get by following you on social media.

You could offer up a small glimpse into the structure of your podcast, the main focus of the podcast, upcoming guest appearances, and the reason why you’re creating a podcast in the first place. Remind your audience that, when they do sign up, they’ll be the first to hear about special offers, fun tidbits about the podcast, information about how to access the show, and details about the launch day festivities.

Tip 5: Early Access to iTunes

In the many years that I’ve been podcasting, one of the coolest things I’ve learned is that you can actually submit your podcast to iTunes before your launch date. I recommend doing this so that, when your launch day arrives, everything is ready to go. The last thing you want to do is not prepare in advance, have your launch date set but no show to promote because it hasn’t yet been accepted by iTunes. It’s even okay if iTunes accepts your podcast before your launch date. As long as you don’t market it publicly yet, you’re good to start early!

You definitely want to make sure you give at least forty-eight hours for your show to appear on iTunes. When it does appear on iTunes, share an email with your list announcing that your podcast is live and ready for them to enjoy.

Tip 6: Create a Launch Team

One tip that I wish I would have known about when I started my own podcast is the amazing contributions a podcast launch team can add to your push.

Launch teams typically include people you trust and whose opinions you respect. They are folks who are part of your community, eager to help support your creative output, and thrilled to get exclusive and early access to it. For your podcast, you can do the same.

Gather a group of people who are excited about you and your podcast. Give them early access to the podcast so they can listen to it, critique it, and be involved in your tweaking of it. This makes them part of the creative process. You could even ask them to provide feedback on which episode should go first, who the guests should be, and things of that sort. You could also ask them to share their honest feedback with an iTunes review.

Bonus Tip: Reward a member of your launch team with a guest spot on your podcast! You could talk about the launch team, its purpose, and how the guest contributed to the launch.

Tip 7: Pump Up the Launch Day Volume

Similar to how you want to build buzz before your launch date, the focus should be on making as much noise as possible on the launch day itself. This helps iTunes rankings and leads to greater exposure for your podcast.

A smart way to do this is to compile as many podcast-promoting assets as you can prior to the launch day and have them at the ready to post on social media, your blog, and anywhere else that makes sense. These can include audio clips, quote graphics, testimonials from folks on your launch team, iTunes reviews/ratings, and so on. As I mentioned before, the bigger the splash, the better!

But why?

Well, iTunes rankings are based on the number of subscriptions, downloads, reviews, and ratings collected in the short period of time following your podcast launch on iTunes. So, if you can plan it properly and pack all that activity immediately after your iTunes launch, you’ll see greater results.

Also, don’t be afraid to ask your audience for honest ratings and reviews in iTunes.

Bonus Tip: One amazing way to really boost your podcast is to try to be a guest on other podcast shows. This will allow you to build relationships with the podcasting community as well as allow you to promote the launch of your own podcast. It’s best when your guest spot is on a podcast that is a good fit for your audience too.

Tip 8: Launch with Multiple Episodes

When you launch, make sure that have multiple episodes to show. It gives your listeners more to chew on, more to respond to, and ponder. There’s more of a discussion there, which can lead to some great social media back and forth. I once launched a podcast with a single episode and actually received negative reviews from people who had listened to the first episode and were upset that there was only one. When people love your stuff, they’re going to want more of it, so give them what they want. I recommend launching with three to five episodes.

Sound overwhelming? It doesn’t have to be! What helps me is to plan ahead so that both you and your audience know what’s coming. Add your multiple launch-day episodes to a content calendar so that you can preview what’s on the horizon (that has worked out incredibly well for me!).

Hold Nothing Back and Have a Blast

Yes, that’s right. The nine tips that come before this don’t amount to much if you’re not giving it your best shot and having fun while doing it. Your podcast is the result of countless hours of hard work and creative toil. You should be proud of it. Now get out there and make it as successful as can be!

I look forward to hearing about your podcast launch stories. Let me know it goes! If you’ve launched a podcast before, what tips have worked for you?

 

And if you haven’t yet grabbed yourself a copy of my totally 100% free Podcast Cheat Sheet, it’s a no-brainer add-on for your podcasting success! Sign up below to get yours!

 

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(Have thoughts or questions?)

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To Your Success!

Martine

 

 

 

 

About Martine Alphonse

Martine Alphonse is the founder of Success Revolution, a go-to hub for bloggers and entrepreneurs who want to learn how to stand out and make an authentic income on the web. Through workshops, ebooks, and ecourses, Martine offers community and expertise for budding online rockstars. As a former web designer and blog coach, Martine also has experience working one-on-one with over 150 creatives. And if we're being honest, she’s also obsessed with fashion and cooking.