Thoughts on using video to grow your podcast

Published: Aug. 18, 2021, noon

b'In the last episode we talked about Tom Webster\'s approach to using YouTube for growing your podcast.\\nA quick recap of that is:\\n\\nUse Youtube because it\'s a powerful search tool for topic heavy podcast episodes.\\nMake your show more shareable; leverage something other than audio to do that.\\n\\nAfter shipping that episode, I felt like, while it was great I said we should be considering video -- I didn\'t really get into how you could that for your show. More specifically, if you\'re already neck deep in producing your weekly audio show, how the heck are you going to find time to do video.\\nI think for a lot of us, and I\'m guilty for encouraging this, the "just ship it" method is great. Grab your phone, grab your earbuds, start recording and get your content out there. Once you can start to measure your shows success, that\'s when many us start investing in better audio tools. Wether that\'s an upgrade to your microphone or spending $300+ on Hindenburg or a Descript subscription. Both tools, by the way, I cover on our YouTube channel, youtube.com/castos\\n\\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4U_g8a9aNFA\\n\\nWhere am I going with this?\\nThe novice audio creator, you and me, find ourselves tasked with creating better audio and better shows as time marches on and suddenly Edison research data says\\u2026hey, do video too!\\nIt\'s a big lift. So what can we do, the solo creator, do to help make this whole video thing easier and why?\\nBack to the Why for a second\\u2026\\nAside form the quick key points mentioned earlier, I think it\'s healthy to make your why all about the audience. Why do we want to augment audio with video? To make the experience better for the listener, give them content in a different context, and build a deeper connection. The second why is to give your podcast the opportunity to punch into the best moments of each show and get that out into the world -- in video.\\nIf you ran up to someone on the sidewalk and said "hey listen to this 45 minute long audio episode" they\'d probably laugh at you. That\'s what it\'s like dumping your episode on to social media. But a 30 second video or audiogram clip? Much better chances.\\nSo what type of video is the best for podcasters, at least in the year 2021.\\nAudiograms\\nAudiograms are probably the most commonly used video clip you can produce for your podcast. You\'ve seen them before, they generally display your show\'s cover art and an animated waveform as the video plays. There are a lot of tools available to create audiograms, a very popular tool called Headliner will make your job easy. Bonus for Castos customers, if you\'re on our Pro plan and above, you have access to this for free. Descript another one of Castos integration partners also creates audiograms in their software.\\nVideo clips with subtitles\\nIf you\'re looking for more full-length synergy between your podcast and YouTube channel, i.e. everything in your video is engaging to share, adding subtitles to your video clips works great too. Lots of tools can help you generate an SRT file -- a file that houses a timestamped closed caption -- and add it to your video clip export. I\'ll recommend Descript again because it kills two birds with one stone: the transcript and the video edit.\\nCombine the best of both worlds\\nIf you spend any time in the marketing or business world, chances are you\'ve come acro'