Sunday, March 09, 2025

What You Need to Know About Podcasting on Substack


I started a podcast recently on Substack, and it has been a whole new learning experience, one of which I'd like to share.

I like to keep things simple so I did my research on suitable microphones for beginners and came across the Fifine USB Microphone, which is easy to set up quickly.  I also downloaded some software for recording and editing my voice, called Audacity.  Which I'm still learning about.

The Podcasting Part

You've probably discovered a lot of the same kind of articles telling you how to set up and connect your Substack podcast to various platforms.

But there may be things you haven't thought of or read, so let's take a look.

Useful Information You Need to Know About Substack Podcast Settings

Once you start setting up your podcast you'll quickly discover your settings when you start.

Scrolling down the page you'll find your episodes, top countries and top players.

Scroll back up and click on settings button, and you'll find:

  • Podcast Title
  • Podcast Description
  • Podcast Byline
  • Your Public RSS feed

About Your Public RSS Feed

This is really important in being able to distribute your podcast to each platform.  It should look like this:

Example:

https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/1234567.rss

What You Need to Know About Podcasting Platforms

You're given six platforms you can distribute your podcast to, these are:

  • Spotify
  • Apple Podcasts
  • YouTube Music
  • YouTube Podcasts
  • Pocket Casts
  • Overcasts

Spotify

I found Spotify the easiest to connect to straight away, and had absolutely no problems in getting my podcast URL, which made it pretty simple for marketing on social media.

Apple Podcasts

I found Apple to be a difficult platform to connect to because someone was using the same email address as me when I tried opening an Apple account, which I quickly gave up on.  I may try back at a later date though.

YoutTube Music and YouTube Podcasts

I'm presuming because both of these podcasts are based on YouTube a faceless podcast won't go down very well, so I skipped both of these.

Pocket Casts and Overcasts Podcasts

When I created my podcasts originally I stupidly left out all of the really important information like, descriptions, meta data, episode and series numbers in the settings of each podcast page.

So when I came to connect to Pocket Casts and Overcasts they turned me away.  I quickly went back into my settings on each podcast and updated to include all of the relevant information required on each podcast.

I contacted  help on Substack and am still waiting to discover if I'm doing anything else wrong.  but haven't given up on these platforms.

Extras

Amazon Music for Podcasters

Amazon Music for Podcasters was the first place I went to, but quickly discovered that it doesn't accept podcasts with a pay wall like mine.  So if you're looking to branch out to as many platforms as possible and make money you need to think about whether or not you want to include a pay wall.

Where is My Podcast Today?

So after all of that, I've only been podcasting for about a fortnight, so I'm still learning the ropes, which I think is the best way to learn, and learning from my mistakes as I go along.

For an introvert like me podcasting is hard but not impossible, and there are boundaries I'm still getting over when it comes to listening to my voice.  But, with lots of practice, my goal is to create longer, interesting podcasts that still deal with the things I like to write about.

My podcast is Voice Files on my Substack which is called 1976write On-Topic.

I hope this post will be useful to any beginner podcaster like me, looking for a new way of expressing thoughts, and trying to make a living out of it.

This post contains affiliate links.  This means if you purchase through my links, you're supporting 1976write - and I thank you for that!

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