Cut the Fluff, Keep the Gold: How to Edit for Your Audience

FEB 16, 202637 MIN
School of Podcasting: Expert Tips for Launching and Growing Your Podcast

Cut the Fluff, Keep the Gold: How to Edit for Your Audience

FEB 16, 202637 MIN

Description

In this episode, I’m walking you through why great podcast editing doesn’t start with software, plugins, or secret shortcuts — it starts with knowing your audience. Once you’re crystal clear on who you’re talking to and what they value, editing becomes a lot easier: you simply remove anything that wastes their time or doesn’t deliver value.Editing For ContentI’ll share examples from real interviews (including Amy Poehler’s “Good Hang” and conversations with my friends Daniel J. Lewis and Katie Krimitsos) to show how to tighten up questions, trim rambling answers, and keep the pace moving so your listeners stay engaged from start to finish.If you’ve ever listened back to your show and thought, “It’s fine…but something feels off,” this one’s for you.---Where To start?Editing starts with your audience, not your software Why the first question is, “Who am I talking to and what do they want?” How knowing your audience’s problems, language, and attention span guides every cut. The “vegetarian at dinner” analogy: if you know who’s coming, you know what not to serve.Did they actually answer the question?Using Amy Poehler’s friend and Jennifer Lawrence as an example of a non-answer answer.How to spot when guests talk *around* a question instead of answering it.When to follow up, when to re-ask more simply, and when to just fix it in the edit.Cut the fluff, keep the valueTrimming long-winded questions where the host gives too much backstory.Shortening guest answers that wander, repeat, or add no value to the listener.Why you don’t need to include your guest “thinking out loud” to get to the point.Friends, comfort, and wasted timeHow being comfortable with guests (friends, colleagues) can lead to bloated conversations.Why “fun to say” isn’t the same as “valuable to hear” for your audience.The discipline of deleting entire questions and answers that just don’t land.Content editing vs. cosmetic editing Why removing bad questions is more powerful than removing ums and uhs. When it makes sense to leave in human imperfections for a natural feel. The mindset shift from “How do I make this cleaner?” to “How do I make this stronger?”Basic audio cleanup that actually matters A practical order of operations: repair first, then shape the sound. What plosives, noise gates, compression, EQ, and de-essers do in plain English. Why “listenable” beats “perfect,” especially for guest recordings.Testing popular cleanup tools on bad audioWhat happened when I ran intentionally bad audio through different tools.How tools like Voice Regen, Auphonic, Descript Studio Sound, Adobe Enhance, and others compare in real use.Why the cheap, simple option sometimes wins for everyday podcasters.Know your audience, know your cutsHow hanging out where your audience hangs out (YouTube, Facebook groups, Reddit, etc.) tells you what to keep.The simple question to ask of every segment: “Does this deliver value to *my* listener?”How better audience understanding leads to faster editing and stronger episodes.Key Takeaway:Editing isn’t about showing off your software skills. It’s about respecting your listener’s time. When you know exactly who they are and what they care about, the decisions of what to cut — and what to keep — almost make themselves.Links Mentioned In This EpisodeThis content may contain affiliate links, meaning I earn a small commission if you purchase through these links at no additional cost to you. I only recommend products or services I trust and believe will provide value to you. Thank you for your support!School of PodcastingPodpageHow to Pitch a Podcast Show (submit your show)Good Hang Jennifer Lawrence EpisodeWomen's Mediation NetworkPodchaptersPodgagementSamson Q2U MicrophoneVoice Regen from WavesAuphonicDescript Studio SoundAdobe EnhanceAccentize Dxrevive ProCheck Your Loudness at https://loudness.app/enYouTube Demonetizing Shows (30K Goodbye!)Big Lash Energy's Jayna Marie is Next Week.Mentioned in this episode:Question of the Month: Sacrifices and ShortcutsEmily Kate (live from a conference hallway) wants to know "I want to know in the beginning, throughout your story, what sacrifices and shortcuts did you take? Did they work out well? The ones that worked out well and made you a success? What were they? Don't forget to tell us a little bit about your show, and your website address. I need your answer by February 20th, 2026. Go to schoolofpodcasting.com/questionQuestion of the MonthHelp Us Fight Back Against Spam and Get Some ExposureHow to Pitch a Podcast is a show I'm launching that NEEDS your stories of good/bad pitches. Read your bad/good pitch (I'll remove the guilty names) and explain why it's good or bad. Then (if it's bad) explain what your perfect guest would be, tell us about your show and your website. Don't over-think it. I need your stories by 2/28 to launch. Go to pitchapodcast.com/storyPitch a PodcastJoin the School of PodcastingMark from Practical Prepping had been podcasting for a while, but after joining the School of Podcasting, his podcast grew at a faster rate. His Facebook group has over 30,000 members! Join the School of Podcasting and get access to: Step-by-step tutorials An amazing podcast community Unlimited One-On-One Coaching Join today worry-free with a 30-day money-back guarantee!School of Podcasting