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E626 - Your First Love - Coming Back to Why You Started Podcasting

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Episode 626 - Your First Love - Coming Back to Why You Started Podcasting

Podcasting often begins with a spark. It starts with curiosity, excitement, and the simple joy of hitting record for the very first time. In this episode of the How To Podcast Series, Dave reflects on what happens after that spark fades beneath the growing pressure of expectations, advice, and endless “must do” strategies.

Over time, many podcasters drift away from the original reason they started. What once felt creative and energizing can begin to feel overwhelming. Suddenly podcasting is no longer just about recording and sharing your voice. It becomes layered with advice about video, social media, newsletters, SEO, community building, and monetization. While these tools can be useful for some creators, they can also bury the very thing that made podcasting exciting in the first place.

This episode invites listeners to pause and return to their “first love” in podcasting. Dave uses the metaphor of a first romantic relationship to illustrate how we often start something with enthusiasm despite not knowing what we are doing. Just like those early relationships, the experience may be awkward, imperfect, or messy, but the excitement and authenticity are what make it meaningful.

The same principle applies to podcasting. Many creators begin because they love the intimacy of audio, the chance to have real conversations, or the opportunity to share ideas that might help someone else. But as time passes, external pressures can turn that creative outlet into something that feels more like a full time job.

Dave challenges the idea that every podcast must become a business, scale into a media brand, or chase massive growth. Instead, he encourages podcasters to ask a few simple questions: What part of podcasting originally brought you joy? What still feels energizing today? And what parts now feel heavy or draining?

For some creators, the answer might be returning to a simple audio only format. For others, it may mean reducing the number of platforms they try to maintain or simplifying their production process. The goal is not to shrink ambition, but to protect the passion that keeps a podcast sustainable.

At its heart, podcasting is about connection. A message from a listener, a thoughtful comment, or a small community of engaged followers can be far more meaningful than chasing anonymous download numbers. Even a handful of listeners who genuinely connect with your work can be a powerful reminder of why the podcast exists.

Dave also reflects on the mental health side of podcasting. The pressure to constantly grow, monetize, and optimize can lead to burnout. When creators measure success only by metrics, it becomes easy to forget the deeper value of simply creating something meaningful.

This episode offers permission to step back from the noise. You do not have to follow every trend, adopt every new tool, or replicate what large podcasts with big teams are doing. If your first love is simply recording your voice and sharing ideas with the world, that is enough.

Podcasting does not have to be complicated to be valuable. Sometimes the most sustainable path forward is returning to the original reason you started and letting that guide the future of your show.

Key Takeaway

If podcasting has begun to feel overwhelming, reconnect with the reason you started in the first place. Protect your first love for the medium, simplify where needed, and remember that creating something meaningful for even a small audience is more than enough.

_____Helping Podcasters Everyday! 

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