Allow Enough Editing Time
If you want to create valuable podcasts, you’ll probably have to spend some time in editing. This is the part of podcast production that most newcomers don’t budget for. You will need to mix in all of your acualities (field interviews, etc.) along with your music beds, intros, outros, promos and any other audio or visual asset you’re planning to add to your podcast. You will also want to consider cleaning up flubs, stuttering, “ahs” and “ums” that are recorded by the announcers.
Let’s say you want to do a 20-minute show. In my experience, you should budget at least three times that long for editing and more time if its your first show or you haven’t built a basic audio template or are not familiar with your editing software.
Beyond my own experience, it looks like other podcasters are spending significant time editing. Podcast Alley recently conducted a poll of podcast producers. While it’s hardly scientific, the results are believable to me. 40% of the podcasters responding to the poll said they spend between two to four hours editing each show.
So don’t forget to allow time for editing - this might change your desire to do a daily show into a weekly show quicker than you thought.
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Scott Bourne is an author, lecturer, teacher and new media pioneer, and the president of Podango Productions in San Francisco, CA. He is the founder of the world's first Internet-only radio network, Netradio, and is a co-host on several prominent podcasts including MacBreak Weekly, Apple Phone Show, the iLifeZone and GMT. Bourne has also been a featured speaker at events such as Macworld Expo and the Podcast & Portable Media Expo.