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April 7, 2026

Podcast Format: How to Choose the Right Structure for Your Show (With Examples)

This is a post about podcast format and how to choose one.

You have decided you want to start a podcast. You have got the idea, maybe even a name. But then comes the question that stops a lot of people before they even hit record: what format should my podcast actually be?

It is one of the most important decisions you will make before launching and one of the least talked about. Most beginner guides jump straight to microphones and hosting platforms. But if you get your format wrong, you can have the best audio quality in the world and still end up with a show that feels hard to make, hard to listen to or hard to sustain.

This guide breaks down the most common podcast formats, the honest pros and cons of each and how to figure out which one is right for your show.

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What is a Podcast Format?

Your podcast format is the structure and style of each episode. It determines how your content is delivered, how long episodes typically run, whether you have guests or co-hosts and how much production is involved.

Getting clear on your format before you start means every episode has a consistent shape. Your listeners know what to expect, you know what to prepare and making the show becomes a repeatable process rather than a creative “crisis” every time you sit down to record.

The Main Podcast Formats

Solo or Monologue

This is you, a microphone and your thoughts. Solo podcast episodes are driven entirely by the host and work best when you have a strong point of view, a clear area of expertise or a storytelling style that carries people along.

The upside is complete control and low hassle. No scheduling guests, no technical issues with remote recordings and no one else to coordinate. You can record whenever and WHEREVER! you want and change direction freely.

The downside is that it puts everything on you. If your energy is low or your script is thin, there is nowhere to hide. Solo formats tend to work best when episodes are either very short (under ten minutes) or when the host has a naturally compelling voice and style. Quite a few educational pods I listen to are solo and I really enjoyed them. What puts me off some of them? Not the fact that it’s solo but low sound quality! In 2026 there’s really no reason to have low quality sound even if you’re recording with just your phone.

Good for: educators, coaches, opinion-led shows and anyone with a strong personal brand.

Examples: Paid to Travel: The UGC Podcast – some of the eps are interviews too

Interview

Interview podcasts bring a guest onto the show for a conversation, usually between twenty minutes and an hour. This is one of the most popular formats and for good reason: it is endlessly varied, you never run out of content and you benefit from your guest’s knowledge, perspective and possibly their audience.

It is also one of the most misunderstood formats when it comes to growth. There is a widespread belief that landing a guest with a million followers will bring a million new listeners. It almost never works that way. The reason someone follows a person on Instagram or TikTok is often completely different from why they would listen to a podcast. If someone follows a celebrity chef for recipe videos, that does not mean they will tune into a forty-five minute conversation about food system sustainability just because that chef is the guest.

The guests who actually move the needle for your show are the ones whose reason for being followed on socials overlaps significantly with your podcast’s topic. A niche expert with fifty thousand engaged listeners in your space will often outperform a famous name whose audience has no particular reason to migrate to audio.

I’ll give you a personal example: on my podcast about AU PAIRING, I interviewed a friend of mine who’s got 100k+ followers on IG. Did I get 100k+ downloads on that episode? Nope, because most of her followers didn’t even know she had been an au pair before! They all followed her for completely different reasons. Around the same time, though, I interviewed someone with just over 1k followers. Did her episode take off? Yes! Because her audience was showing up exactly to find out more about her au pair experience (and a lot of our followers wanted to know about being an au pair in Switzerland, which is where she was).

When this cross-promotion works, it’s one of the best case scenarios! When a guest appears on your show and shares it with their own audience, even a small crossover can bring in genuinely interested new listeners. It is one of the most organic ways to grow.

Good for: shows built around expertise, storytelling, industry insight or community building.

Example: The Witch Wave – in fact, there are many things I love about The Witch Wave. It’s an interview podcast with very diverse guests, it’s structured in seasons (usually Sept/Oct til May/June), it’s divided into segments (an intro/update from the host followed by answering questions from listeners, followed by the interview).

Co-hosted Conversation

Two or more hosts discussing a topic, reacting to news or working through ideas together. Think of it like a very good conversation between people who know their subject. The dynamic between hosts is what makes it compelling.

The chemistry has to be real. Co-hosted shows that feel forced or where one person consistently dominates are difficult to listen to. But when it works, this format is incredibly sticky. Listeners feel like they are part of an ongoing relationship with the hosts and that sense of familiarity keeps them coming back.

The main challenge is logistics. You need to record together consistently and your schedules have to align. If one host goes quiet for a few weeks, the whole show stalls.

Good for: shows with built-in chemistry, commentary formats and anything where debate or contrast between perspectives adds value.

Example: Sounds Like a Cult – I only binged the earlier episodes with two co-hosts and their chemistry was excellent. Plus, they each had very different takes and perspectives on the subjects.

Narrative or Storytelling

This is the most produced format on the list. Narrative podcasts tell a story across an episode or a series, often combining interviews, sound design, narration and research into something that feels more like a documentary than a conversation.

Think true crime, investigative journalism or deeply reported human interest stories. The production bar is high and the time investment per episode is significant. But the payoff is a show that feels genuinely different from most of what is out there.

This format is not the right starting point for most beginners. It requires editing skills, research time, STRICT FACT CHECKING and often multiple sources per episode. That said, if storytelling is your background and you have the capacity for production, it can produce some of the most shareable and memorable content in podcasting.

Many narrative shows are also structured as limited series. Remember Serial? The format (how the story is told) and the structure (how the show is released) are separate decisions that often work best in combination.

Good for: journalists, researchers, documentary-style shows and limited series.

Examples: Scamfluencers – this is a co-hosted one that’s part storytelling, part commentary (with a dash of comedy!)

Limited Series

A limited series is a podcast with a defined beginning and end, usually between four and twelve episodes built around a single theme, story or question. Think of it like a television series rather than an ongoing show.

This format is underused and underrated. Because there is a clear endpoint, listeners are more likely to commit. There is no open-ended obligation to keep up with an ongoing show. You can promote it as a complete thing, which makes it easier to pitch and easier to share.

It is also significantly less daunting to make. Instead of committing to an indefinite weekly schedule, you plan a season, make it well and release it. Then you can decide whether to make another. Many shows that feel ongoing actually operate as back-to-back limited series internally, even if the audience never sees it that way.

Good for: topic-specific deep dives, educational courses in audio form and anyone who wants to start podcasting without committing to a permanent schedule.

Examples: The Dropout, Fake Heiress (great for scammer stories!)

Bite-Sized or Micro Episodes

Short, focused episodes, typically between five and fifteen minutes, that tackle one idea at a time. No meandering, no lengthy intros and no padding.

The case for this format is strong in a world where attention is scarce. People can fit a ten-minute episode into a commute, a dog walk or the gap between meetings in a way they simply cannot with a forty-five minute interview. The production time is also lower per episode even if the discipline required to stay tight and focused is higher.

The risk is underestimating how hard it is to be genuinely valuable in a short time. A padded ten-minute episode that says one thing three different ways is more frustrating than a well-paced thirty-minute conversation. If you go short, be ruthless about what you include.

Good for: educational shows, daily or weekly tip formats and hosts who want to build a consistent habit without long recording sessions.

Examples: 6-Minute English for quick, weekly lessons

How to Choose Your Format

Rather than asking which format is best, ask which format you can sustain. The shows that grow are the ones that keep showing up. Burnout is the most common reason podcasts disappear after ten episodes.

Think about how much time you realistically have per week, whether you enjoy solo speaking or need the energy of a conversation and whether you have access to interesting guests or whether you would be scrambling to fill that pipeline.

Also think about what your audience actually needs. Someone searching for quick daily inspiration wants something different from someone researching a complex topic. Let the purpose of the show guide the format rather than copying whatever is most popular.

You are not locked in forever. Many successful podcasts start with one format and evolve. But starting with a clear structure means you can focus your energy on making good content rather than reinventing the show every time you record.

Final Thoughts

There is no universally correct podcast format. There is only the format that fits your content, your capacity and your audience. The best podcast you can make is one you will actually keep making, so choose the structure that removes friction rather than the one that sounds most impressive on paper. You can read my past post about how to plan a podcast schedule to help you out.

If you are still figuring out the foundations before you choose your format, the guide on how to plan a podcast covers the full strategy from concept to launch. And if you are ready to start making your show and want someone to handle the production side, contact me here.

This was a post about podcast format.

Posted In: Podcasting · Tagged: how to start a podcast, plan a podcast, podcast for beginners, podcast format, podcast production

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  1. Why Does Everyone Have a Podcast? (And Why You Should Too) - Good Season says:
    April 15, 2026 at 3:25 pm

    […] There’s a more detailed guide to podcast formats here if you’re stuck on this decision. But don’t let it become the thing that delays you indefinitely. Pick a format, test it for a few episodes and adjust. […]

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☀️ Making content feel less like a chore and more like you
📱 Social media strategy • podcast • UGC
🎧 Ex-music industry
📍 UK-Brazil | Working Globally

I’m gonna be honest with you… Good Season has bee I’m gonna be honest with you…

Good Season has been live for two months and my analytics are pretty flat. My likes come mostly from me, my various accounts (am I right?! 😂) and my best friend. My new followers are mainly other SMMs starting their own accounts as well.

By the metrics many people look at, nothing is working. But I’m not most people and, like many of you, know better than to structure my strategy around those. 

Social media results almost never move in a straight line and they almost never arrive on your timeline. Someone sees your post today, forgets you exist, stumbles across another one three weeks later, saves it, and DMs you two months after that. That whole journey is completely invisible to you. All you ever see is the post that got four likes.

You may have heard that it takes Instagram three months to “understand” your content (I heard it through the grapevine). There’s no actual confirmation of that. Instagram actually evaluates accounts on a rolling monthly basis, constantly learning rather than building to one big moment. But the broader truth holds: building trust with an algorithm and with an audience takes longer than most people expect and longer than most people give it. (Especially since, for many reasons, I’m not yet doing everything I should be doing here! But that’s a future post)

The mistake I see all the time (which I’ve definitely been guilty of!) is treating each post as a standalone test with a verdict. It’s not. It’s one data point in a much longer story you can’t read yet.

What I’m actually watching: saves, profile visits, reach patterns across different formats, enquiries, clicks to my website…Not likes, not follower count. Those are vanity metrics and I have no business letting them determine whether this is working.

Two months is not enough data.

Ask me again at six.

In the meantime, I’ll be here posting my little carousels… sharing my views, the knowledge I’ve accrued from over 15 years of experience, analysing my data and adjusting where I see fit.
I unfollowed someone recently. She gave a lot of g I unfollowed someone recently. She gave a lot of good advice but EVERY SINGLE POST was a sales pitch! It’s like everything she said the one goal was to get a customer.

I had enough. And not because selling is wrong, of course it’s not! Everyone’s here to build something, everyone’s hustling. But because the every post felt like a vehicle for the sale rather than something actually given.

People notice that. Maybe not consciously but they feel it and, as a customer / member of an audience, it’s not great… 

The accounts I’ve seen build loyal, happy audiences aren’t the ones with a bunch of CTAs. They’re the ones who showed up week after week with something useful: free advice, honest opinions, real experience…and let the trust built organically.

When they mentioned their products and services, it didn’t feel like a sales pitch either. They mentioned it naturally. Whether it was a podcast episode or a YouTube video giving advice, they casually mentioned their course where you could learn more. Or their IG showed how they used her own product and how it helped their day to day. Get the gist?!

That’s the formula. It’s nothing new btw! Give first and consistently. The rest follows.

If you want to know more about giving free stuff as a business model, I’d recommend the book The Long Tail by Chris Anderson or the more updated version, The Longer Long Tail. Have you read either? 

#marketingtip 
#digitalmarketing 
#socialmediamarketing 
#socialmediamarketingtips
If you missed my previous post, I was talking abou If you missed my previous post, I was talking about podfade and how the majority of new podcasts disappear before episode 3. 

Today here’s the practical fix to avoid that.

The one thing that kept me sane and helped me stick to my podcast schedule was *PLANNING* (and that goes for SO many things in life and work tbh!).

Here’s the system:

* Decide your episode count before you start: pick a number that feels achievable given your actual life and commit to it before you do anything else.
* Plan every episode running order and make sure you have enough to say in each (if you don’t, just reduce the number of eps in a season, it’s totally fine) 
* Batch record everything. Not necessarily all episodes in the season but at least 3 or 4 to stay ahead. Recording and publishing weekly is the quickest way to burnout, a messy publishing schedule or both! This way you stay in control instead of constantly chasing the next episode.
* Be honest about your frequency. Weekly sounds doable until week four when you have a job, a life and zero recorded episodes left. Fortnightly and consistent beats weekly and chaotic every time. 
* Set your launch date and work backwards from it to make sure you’ll actually kickstart it! 

Planning doesn’t need to be a super fancy Notion with a million pages, it can literally be a simple spreadsheet where you can see all the information in one glance. 

The difference between podcasts that last and ones that disappear is almost always planning.

#podcastplanning 
#howtostartapodcast 
#podcasttips 
#podcastmanager 
#podcastproducer
There are 4.6 million podcasts in existence. Fewer There are 4.6 million podcasts in existence. Fewer than 500k are still active.

It’s called podfade and it happens to almost everyone. 

Studies vary on the exact figures tbh! Some say 47%, others closer to 90% but the pattern is the same regardless of which number you believe (and I’ve seen it one too many times...).

Most podcasts don’t survive the first few episodes. According to some of these studies, if you get to episode 21 you’re in the top 1% of all podcasts ever made. That’s not a high bar!

This is what happens when people start without a plan.

I’ve seen it again and again and not even just in podcasting!

One of the main reasons I’ve noticed is that people treat podcasting like social media: create when inspired, post when ready, work out the strategy at some point (socials also need a plan + strategy for longevity fyi!). We all know how that goes... that “some point” never comes.

I ran my own podcast while working a full time job and then added a masters degree course on top of it. So weekly episodes were definitely not possible for me after that...I remember trying to work out a schedule to fit everything in around my job and it was ridiculous. It’s not just an expression, there were literally not enough hours in a day!

So I switched to fortnightly, built a simple spreadsheet with every episode, every recording date, every guest, every running order and some episode notes.

Nothing fancy, just something I could easily glance at without having to click a million tabs. 

That spreadsheet kept my podcast alive and my nervous system in check. My friend kept saying “aaah it’s ok, if there’s no ep this week we’ll do it another time” but that’s what people do when they don’t have a plan. And if you want to grow your podcast like a business, you need to treat it as such. (cont. in comments)
I’ve seen so many people with such great content t I’ve seen so many people with such great content to share completely paralysed because they’re so worried about what others will say. Or they post about something important ONCE and never again because they don’t want to be annoying.

They are their own harshest, most attentive audience.

They agonise over captions, worry the post is too similar to one they did a month ago, wonder if posting three times this week is too much. They read it back seventeen times before hitting publish and then spend the next two hours regretting a word choice. In the meantime, their actual followers have scrolled past it, double tapped if they liked it and gone back to thinking about dinner (that is, if they’ve seen the post at all! Because, ya know…algo…)

The imaginary judgmental audience in your head is so much harsher than the real one. Most people are rooting for you or, at worst, completely indifferent. And if someone IS being awful…well, that’s what blocking is for (unless it’s constructive criticism that means well). 

Nobody is tracking your posting frequency or reading your archive for inconsistencies.

Hit post already! Tweak it next time if you want to, but post it. And let me know if you need an extra pair of eyes for reassurance.
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