Podcasting in 2026 looks different from 2020. YouTube overtook Apple and Spotify combined as the dominant podcast platform. Video became table stakes. Niche specialization beats horizontal entertainment shows. The good news: barriers to entry remain low and a focused show can still reach 10k listeners on patience and consistency.
What changed in 2026
- YouTube became the #1 podcast platform by listener count and discovery.
- Spotify still pays better per ad-stream but listener growth is slower than YouTube.
- Apple Podcasts continues to lose share — flat growth, fewer new subs.
- AI tools (Riverside, Descript) collapsed editing time. Solo podcasts are easier to maintain.
Step 1: niche, not horizontal
Same advice as SaaS: pick a niche, not a horizontal. "Tech podcast" loses to "AI engineering ethics podcast". "Business podcast" loses to "Bootstrapping SaaS for designers". The niche has to be: (a) underserved, (b) populated by people who'll subscribe, and (c) something you can sustain content on for 100+ episodes.
The 100-episode test: if you can't list 50 episode topics in advance, the niche is too narrow. If you list 200 with no overlap, it's probably too broad.
Step 2: video-first production
Record on Riverside or Streamyard with multiple camera angles (your shot, guest shot, screen share). Publish:
- Full video to YouTube, optimized for the algorithm with chapters, end screens, decent thumbnails.
- Audio extract to Spotify, Apple, etc. via Anchor / Buzzsprout.
- Short clips (60-90s) to TikTok, Reels, YouTube Shorts.
The clips are where 60-70% of new listener acquisition happens in 2026. They're not optional.
Step 3: cadence over polish
Weekly is the sweet spot. Bi-weekly works for slower-paced shows. Monthly is too sparse — algorithms treat you as inactive.
Production polish matters less than people think. Listeners care about the content; they tolerate a hum or a less-than-perfect cut. Spend the time on better questions and better guests, not on fancier post-production.
Step 4: guest strategy
Guests bring two things: audience cross-pollination and substantive interest. Pick guests who:
- Have an audience aligned with yours (not 10x bigger; 1-3x).
- Will share the episode on their own channels.
- Have something specific to say (not a generic celebrity).
Cold outreach: a thoughtful email, named-the-host-and-show, one specific question you'd ask, and a clear time commitment ("45-60 minutes, recorded, fully edited"). 30-40% response rate is normal for B-tier guests.
Step 5: clip and reuse
Edit the full episode into 3-6 short clips per episode. Each clip ~60-90 seconds, with a hook in the first 3 seconds and a clear takeaway. Post to:
- TikTok (1.5-2 clips/day)
- YouTube Shorts (same clips, repackaged)
- Instagram Reels (same)
- LinkedIn (1 clip/episode for B2B podcasts)
Tools: OpusClip, Klap, or manual editing in Descript. AI clip-finder tools have gotten genuinely good in 2026.
Comparison: podcast platforms in 2026
| Platform |
Growth |
Monetization |
Best for |
| YouTube |
Highest |
Mid (CPM-based) |
Discovery + video |
| Spotify |
Slow |
Best per-stream |
Audio loyalists |
| Apple Podcasts |
Flat |
OK (subscriptions) |
Established hosts |
| TikTok / Reels (clips) |
Highest discovery |
Low direct |
Awareness, traffic to main |
Common mistakes to avoid
Audio-only in 2026. You're missing 60% of the addressable audience.
Inconsistent cadence. Episodes 1-15 weekly, then a 2-month gap. Algorithm treats this harshly.
Premature monetization. No ads/sponsors before 2-5k regular listeners. Below that you're just polluting your own feed.
Skipping show notes. Episode descriptions with timestamps and quoted highlights drive both SEO and YouTube algo.
Treating guests as transactions. Build relationships. Guest exchanges convert into long-term cross-promotion.
FAQ
How long does 0 → 10k take?
12-24 months for a focused, weekly show in a niche. Faster if you start with an audience (newsletter, Twitter following). Slower if you're truly starting from zero.
Should I pay for ads?
Not until you've earned 1-3k organic listeners. Paid acquisition before product-market-fit burns money.
What about Patreon / paid subscriptions?
Once you have 1-2k listeners, ~3-5% will pay for bonus content. That's $300-1,000/month at modest pricing.
Can a solo show reach 10k?
Yes. Many of the top podcasts in niches (My First Million, Indie Hackers, Acquired) are solo or duo shows with no celebrity hosts.
Where to go next
For related guides see How to start a podcast in 2026, How to start a SaaS in 2026, and AI prompts for marketing in 2026.