About this episode
Episode 635 - Podcasting Is On-Demand Content - Stop Obsessing Over Release Time, Focus on Better ContentShow Notes: Podcasting Is On-Demand Content – Stop Obsessing Over Release Time, Focus on Better ContentIn this episode of The How-To Podcast Series, host Dave tackles one of the most debated questions in podcasting: When is the best day and time to release an episode? His answer challenges the obsession with release schedules and redirects podcasters toward what truly matters—creating valuable, consistent content that fits their own workflow.Dave reminds listeners that podcasting is not appointment radio. Episodes can be released at any time because listeners press play when it’s convenient for them—not the moment your show drops. Podcasts are on-demand content, and audience behavior proves that people fit episodes into their schedules: during commutes, walks, chores, or lunch breaks. Chasing a “perfect” release time only adds unnecessary stress and does little to change listener engagement.Instead, Dave encourages podcasters to base release timing on two key factors—consistency and sustainability. Choose a day that works best for your life and production process. A routine schedule builds listener familiarity, but exact hours don’t define success. He also reminds creators that podcasting reaches a global audience, so your 6 a.m. release in North America might drop during dinner in Asia or midnight in Europe. No single release window can serve everyone; focus on what keeps you consistent and sane.Dave also advises podcasters to think beyond timing and prioritize strong promotion and editing habits. Plan a realistic promotional window around each release, use your analytics to understand download patterns, and adjust only if it aligns with your schedule. He highlights the importance of respecting your audience’s time—trim unnecessary content, focus on clarity, and honor their attention span.To illustrate the global reach of podcasting, Dave encourages hosts to look at their analytics dashboard, sort listener data by city or country, and visualize it on a map. Seeing listeners from around the world can shift perspective—it’s not about your local time zone but your worldwide reach.His ultimate message remains simple: perfect timing doesn’t grow a podcast; reliability and great storytelling do. Frequency, quality, and care create loyal listeners, not a 6 a.m. upload schedule. Finally, Dave closes with a reminder to produce with integrity—never buy downloads or fake engagement for quick stats. Real growth comes from real connection with real audiences.Key takeaway: Your podcast is on-demand content. Stop worrying about the “best” release time and focus on building consistent, valuable episodes that listeners can depend on.