High-quality podcast archive episodes will pay download rewards long after their initial release
The real question is which podcast archive episodes should you choose to feature?
Given your show\u2019s back catalog, you need to identify the episodes most deserving of the spotlight. That is, the episodes that are more likely to give you the best bang for your promotional efforts.
First, start with insights from your podcast hosting platform dashboard. Pay special attention to an episode\u2019s first 60 days.
The great thing about your podcast archive episodes is that you already have real-world audience data about each episode's strength and effectiveness. A quick look at your podcast hosting platform analytics dashboard gives you detail from most, if not all, distribution channels.
Plus, you can dig even deeper by analyzing Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify and Stitcher numbers by logging into your account.
Next, answer these questions...
You may feel the knee-jerk reaction of wanting to delete episodes from your podcast archive as you go through this process. Especially ones that didn't do well in downloads, shares, or may not fit your podcast tone or format. My suggestion to my clients, don't do it.
People Who Surf The Web Are Always In "Research" ModeWhen potential new listeners are discovering your podcast episodes that might be outdated, you have to consider listener research habits.
When a listener is looking for specific information and find your podcast because it contains that information that would be useful to their search, it's very possible they are going to dive deeper. That deep dive can result in them listening to another podcast episode if you're including the right calls-to-action.
So you have your list of top high-quality podcast archive episodes. What next?
Update Podcast Archive DescriptionsAfter answering the previous five questions, all you may have to do is update the podcast description.
Revisit your keyword-optimization for each individual episode. Optimize the titles, keywords, and descriptions of each episode for their topics of relevance. Over time, keywords can change. Changing or modifying your keywords and keyword phrasing can make it easier to be found by potential listeners.
And how can you find better keywords and keyword phrasing to update your podcast archive selections? Google.
Let's use this example, and say your podcast is about fishing. If I Google the phrase "how do I learn to fly fish," these are the phrases that populate the screen.
What Google is displaying are phrases that also have been used recently around the phrase "how do I learn to fly fish." These are example phrases and terms you can use to help in revising your podcast description.
Another free tool is Keyword Surfer