E629 - Tell Your Face - You Think You Are Connecting With Your Audience, But Are You - Your Face Might Be Misleading

E629 - Tell Your Face - You Think You Are Connecting With Your Audience, But Are You - Your Face Might Be Misleading

34:37 Mar 18, 2026
About this episode
Episode 629 - Tell Your Face - You Think You Are Connecting With Your Audience, But Are You - Your Face Might Be MisleadingIn this episode of the How To Podcast Series, host Dave works with a new podcaster eager for feedback on their upcoming launch. They want their show to sound natural, engaging, and authoritative, even as a beginner. Dave praises their commitment to quality, contrasting it with podcasters who resist improvement and live in a fantasy of perfection without effort. Listening to their recording, he notices it sounds more like an audiobook than a podcast, with rigid delivery tied too closely to the script. He clarifies the difference: audiobooks faithfully read written words, while podcasts prioritize direct audience connection, even if scripted.Dave stresses that podcasters, whether scripted or not, must “tell your face” to match the intended emotion. Facial expressions subtly shape vocal tone and energy, translating through the microphone even in solo audio-only sessions. A genuine smile lifts pitch and warmth, drawing listeners in, while tense or neutral faces create monotonous, distant delivery. Listeners subconsciously detect these cues—a furrowed brow adds gravity, raised eyebrows convey surprise, and thoughtful squints signal reflection. Drawing from his music studio experience, Dave recalls producers urging singers to smile during choruses, proving emotion is audible regardless of visibility.He warns against common pitfalls: scripting without audience focus turns episodes into predictable reads, where written pacing clashes with natural speech rhythms. Overly formal vocabulary or deadpan delivery prioritizes the script over connection, causing listeners to disengage. Dave urges podcasters to picture one specific listener, react naturally to their own words, and anchor emotions—grinning for uplifting parts, softening for vulnerability, leaning in for emphasis. Practical tips include using a mirror for practice, visual cues like listener photos, and short expression breaks to combat fatigue.The episode ends with a bonus confession: Dave fears only what interests him, like meeting his wife Jen over 30 years ago, not irrelevant things like sharks. He reframes podcasting nerves as excitement, a sign of genuine curiosity that drives improvement.Key takeaway: Tell your face to show up and match your message, even in audio-only podcasts. Your expressions breathe emotion into your voice, turning scripted reads into engaging conversations that truly connect with listeners.____Helping Podcasters Everyday! https://howtopodcast.ca/We would love to hear from you - here is our listener survey!
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