E70 Embracing Authenticity: The Beauty of Minimal Editing in Podcasting - podcast episode cover

E70 Embracing Authenticity: The Beauty of Minimal Editing in Podcasting

Sep 21, 20239 minEp. 70
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Episode description

We all know podcast editing can be time-consuming. If you're meticulous about removing every filler word or perfecting every word, it can add extra hours to your editing process. When I first started editing, I was nervous to edit other people's podcasts and wanted them to sound perfect. But then I realized that the extra time I was spending removing just a handful of words wasn't worth it. Today we talk about how not taking every filler word out can actually save time and make your podcast sound better. Taking a minimalistic approach and only removing the things that truly disrupt the flow of the conversation can save you a lot of time. It's about doing what's best for the conversation. A minimalistic approach allows you to focus on the aspects that truly need attention and not waste time on unnecessary edits.

Remember, your podcast doesn't need to be perfect. Embracing a minimalistic approach to editing can save you time, maintain the human element, and keep the energy of the conversation intact. By spending less time editing, you can create your podcast more efficiently. That's what it's all about at the end of the day.

  • Saving time by avoiding excessive editing
  • Maintaining the human element of your podcast
  • Embracing your authentic voice
  • Save time in your post production 
  • Creating a good podcast without aiming for perfection


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Transcript

Welcome to Help Me Podcast, a show designed to help you launch and grow your podcast. I am your host, Gino and twice a week I will release a new episode with different tips and tricks for launching and growing your podcast. From audio engineering to planning intentionally to growth tactics, each episode will be a bite sized tip to help you podcast. Welcome back to the show. Welcome back. Thank you so much for tuning in once

again today I want to talk about editing a podcast. And for a lot of people, editing a podcast can be a new skill that you're trying to learn and maybe it's something that you just picked up. I just want to talk a little bit about editing, not specifically how to do it, but I want to talk about not over editing and not editing to perfection. I've heard a lot of people say that

editing is the biggest time suck when it comes to podcasting. What I want to talk about is embracing minimalist podcast editing and what I mean by that is not over editing. And I think as a new podcast and I can say this from experience, that I think you can kind of get sucked into this trap of not thinking that you're speaking perfect and you want to hide it in editing or you want to fix

everything in editing and make yourself sound perfect. So that way when you release, you think it's the best product and there's nothing wrong with wanting to be good at something or to be the best at it. But I think there's a point of diminished returns with podcast editing and I think there can even be a little bit of a beauty in a minimalistic approach to editing where you leave in some UMS or you leave in

some stutters and stuff like that. I think sometimes if you over edit your podcast, you can take a lot of the voice or the character out of it. And I think there's a few benefits to having a minimalistic approach to your podcast editing. The first thing is just simply saving you time. We all know podcast editing can be the most

time consuming part of creating a podcast. And if you're in there and you're listening to every single word and making sure they sound perfect and removing every single or every single filler word, that can add up as far as time. And you can easily have a 30 minutes. Podcast take you 2 hours to edit if

you're super detailed. And I remember when I first started editing, I was really nervous to edit other people's podcasts and I wanted them to sound perfect and I would literally go through it once and edit it and then I would go through it again and reedit the first edit. So I would do a second pass at the editing and I did that for almost a year and I thought that I was being perfect with it and removing every single word that I needed

to. And then I kind of stopped and thought what I was doing and I was actually keeping track of how many more words I removed. And it was like a handful of words. It was probably like five words for a 45 minutes episode. And I was like, Is that really worth the time? Is anybody noticing this? So what I did was I didn't tell, and maybe not ethically, but I didn't tell my clients that I was switching from the

two edits to the one edit per episode, right? I didn't tell them I wasn't doing a second round anymore, which, to be fair, I never told them that I was doing two rounds to begin with. But anyways, the point of the story is that they never noticed and they didn't say anything. And then that kind of was like a hard lesson

for me. And it was like, wow, I was doing all of these episodes twice and charging the same rate, and I was just doubling my amount of work that I had for myself for, again, the diminished returns, there's hardly any more benefit for doing it a second time. So that was like the start of my minimalistic approach. And nowadays, I think maybe I've gotten into a groove of just like, being able to do it kind of without thinking about it, but I think doing whatever is best for

the conversation. Like, sometimes you try to remove an um and it's blended into another word, and if you remove it, you can hear the cut or you can hear a stutter or something and it's like, just leave it, right? If it doesn't come out easy, just leave it in and keep moving, because then you don't have to spend time making that cut, listening to it five times to make sure the fade is right and everything

like that, it's like, just leave it in. And I could go on and on about how this could save you time, but taking a minimalistic approach and only removing the things that really sound not good or really interrupt the flow of the conversation, get rid of those things and then leave everything else, I think, could be a huge time saver when you're actually editing your podcast. Now, the next thing that having this minimalistic approach could also help is maintaining

the human element of a podcast. I think sometimes people go in there and they remove every single um. They remove the breaths even, or like laughter or every single thing that doesn't sound like a robotic person speaking. And you kind of like, take the human part out of it, right? Like, nobody's really perfect. And with a podcast and a conversation, it's not like you're doing multiple takes at it, right? You're not having a

conversation or an interview with somebody until it's perfect. You're just having a conversation. So sometimes if you do stumble over your words, I think it is helpful to leave that in there to remind people that like oh, these are people talking. It's not Siri talking to me, it's people having a conversation. And sometimes they trip over their words, sometimes they laugh or make funny noises and sometimes it's okay to leave that

in there. Learning things like genuine reactions or a little bit of spontaneity can help give your podcast some sort of human element to it. And then lastly, I think this kind of goes in hand in hand with the human element. But I think if you over edit a podcast you can kind of take the energy out of the conversation. Like I was saying before with the breaths and things like that, you can

almost change the energy of the conversation. For example, I know sometimes if there's somebody having a serious conversation or a serious discussion and there's really long pauses, my first instinct anyway is to like okay let's shorten that pause. It's too long, you're going to bore people shorten that thing up. But by doing that, you're changing kind of the energy of the conversation.

Because instead of hanging on the word and then 4 seconds goes by and then they say their next phrase, it's like just a normal conversation, and there's no big pause like leaving that space, and that pause in there changes the energy dynamic of the conversation. And I think sometimes that's

a good thing to have in there. Maybe sometimes it's not. But having again this minimalistic approach at editing I think can help you keep the sort of original energy of the conversation or to help your listener connect more with what the person's saying and sense more of the raw moment. So

I hope that that's helpful. And maybe you needed somebody to tell you like, hey, you don't need to edit that much because if I'm talking to myself when I first started editing podcast, within the first year I would have liked somebody to come and tell me like, hey, you know what, you don't need to be perfect. You can edit

and make a podcast sound good without being perfect. And I think a lot of times, especially for people who have perfectionist tendencies, I think you can try to make your podcast sound perfect and there's never going to be a perfect and if you can spend less time in editing then

that's going to help you out immensely, right? And not even the other benefits of having your conversation sound more natural or more human, it's also simply just saving you time and allowing you to create your podcast more efficiently. And at the end of the day, I think that's a win. And hopefully whoever needs to hear this episode today is listening and maybe you can loosen the restraints on your editing and give yourself permission to not be a perfect editor.

Take that for what it is and I will see you all in another episode. Thank you again for tuning in. We've reached the end of the episode and if you enjoyed this podcast or you got something from it, you might be interested in my weekly newsletter that I send out every Monday morning, full of podcasting tips, tricks and news. So if you like this show, you might like this news letter. To sign up, just go to the show notes and click the link. Thanks for listening and happy podcasting.

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