E647 - The Declarative Interview - Declarative Techniques for Unforgettable Podcast Episodes
Episode 647 - The Declarative Interview - Declarative Techniques for Unforgettable Podcast EpisodesIn this episode of the How to Podcast Series, host Dave explores declarative sentences and questions as game-changers for podcasters. He defines declarative statements as complete thoughts that inform, explain facts, or share opinions, always ending in a period—not a question mark—like "The sky is blue" or "Chocolate is the best flavor." These build confidence by dropping pitch at sentence ends, avoiding upspeak habits that undermine authority. As guests, use them to advance conversations smoothly; as hosts, they lead with intention rather than passive questioning.Dave shifts to "declarative questions," urging hosts to stop lazy, broad queries that yield surface answers. Frame specifics from prep to spark depth: swap "How did you get started?" for "You built this podcast from the ground up with limited resources, and it took real commitment." Or "What was your biggest failure?" becomes "That setback seems like it became the turning point for everything that came next." Follow with hooks like "Tell me more" or "How did that shape what happened next?" Examples include "You've interviewed hundreds, but this conversation changed your perspective" or "Podcasting helped you find your voice again—what did that first episode feel like?"He reframes hosting as guiding a discovery, not checklist interrogating: frame reality, reflect shared truths, invite expansion. This makes interviews natural, confident, and listener-focused—guests feel understood, audiences get richer stories over generic Q&A.Bonus guest tips: match answer length to question time (e.g., 10-second query gets concise reply), leave space for host follow-ups, and use closing mic time to tie up missed points without salesiness.Dave encourages practice, invites new podcasters as co-hosts via his calendar, and promotes listener support through Buy Me a Coffee or sharing the show.A declarative sentence is the most common sentence type, used to make a statement, provide information, express an opinion, or state a fact. They typically follow a subject-verb structure and always end with a period. Examples include "The sky is blue," "She loves to read," and "Dogs are mammals". Key CharacteristicsPurpose: To inform, explain, or state facts/opinions.Punctuation: Always ends with a period ().Structure: Usually Subject + Verb + Object.Frequency: The most common sentence type in EnglishExamples of Declarative SentencesFact: The Earth revolves around the Sun.Observation: The coffee is cold.Opinion: Chocolate is the best flavor.Statement: She is coming home.Description: It is a nice day.Declarative sentences are standard communication tools used in both writing and speech to share information, distinguishing them from interrogative (questions), imperative (commands), or exclamatory (emotions) sentencesKey Takeaway: Lead with declarative statements and questions to frame context boldly, draw deeper responses, and create memorable flow—stop chasing answers, start illuminating stories.____Helping Podcasters Everyday! https://howtopodcast.ca/We would love to hear from you - here is our listener survey!https://forms.gle/GbrFv9DGszV8N4PW6