
What Is a Podcast RSS Feed and Why Does It Matter?
Your RSS feed is what makes your podcast portable, distributable, and genuinely yours. Here’s how it works — and why it matters more than most beginners realise.
In 2024, I was a judge in the first SAPG South African Podcast Awards, specifically in the Business Podcast category. I listened to dozens of shows. Some were technically fine, some were ambitious, some had impressive guests. But only a handful stood out. And the difference wasn’t equipment, or production budget, or who they interviewed.
It was clarity.
The podcasts that won knew exactly who they were talking to.
Meanwhile, other shows opened with things like, “Ladies and gentlemen…” or “If you’re listening to this…”
(Yes, I am listening. That’s how podcasts work.)
The Podcast of the Year, Solid Gold Story Time by Lynn Joffe, was a masterclass in audience clarity. She speaks to a very specific listener: a child who needs stories.
You can hear it in everything — the tone, the pacing, the musicality. The show feels like a safe place built intentionally for one little human, not a vague crowd.
That’s when it hit me again with absolute certainty:
A podcast grows when it knows exactly who it’s speaking to.
Not everyone.
Not “ladies and gentlemen.”
Not “whoever’s out there.”
One person. The right person.
And that is the foundation of growth.
Many creators think they have a marketing problem. They don’t. They have a positioning problem.
You can post on social media seven times a day and still see no growth if your show is unclear.
People don’t follow noise — they follow relevance.
Growth doesn’t start with promotion. It starts with alignment.
Most podcasts struggle because they try to speak to everyone.
They end up speaking to no one.
When we work with creators in the PodMaster™ Startup Program, one of the first things we help them do is define the listener with absolute precision.
Ask yourself:
– Who would stop what they’re doing to hear this?
– What problem am I solving or what experience am I offering?
– What does my ideal listener need from this show?
A niche isn’t small.
A niche is powerful.
Just look at Solid Gold Story Time. That show doesn’t apologise for being laser-focused. It succeeds because it is.
People decide whether to continue listening very quickly.
If your intro drifts, waffles, or buries the hook under chit-chat, you lose them.
The first 30 seconds should:
– Signal tone
– Make a promise
– Tell the listener why they should invest their time
When a listener clicks play, they’re not asking, “Is this interesting?”
They’re asking, “Is this for me?”
Your job is to answer yes — fast.
Titles are often ignored in growth conversations, yet they’re crucial.
A title that is too vague, too clever, or too insider will kill discoverability.
Good titles use:
– Clear language
– Searchable terms
– Emotional or practical value
Listeners scroll before they listen.
Your title is the gatekeeper.
Growth doesn’t require you to publish every week.
It requires you to publish predictably.
Our own Become a PodMaster™ podcast is the perfect example:
– Year 1: 6 episodes
– Year 2: 6 episodes
– Year 3: 8 episodes
It’s not weekly. It’s not even monthly.
But it is reliable, and it aligns with our business structure.
Because each season is planned, produced, and batched intentionally, we can market the episodes all year and still attract new listeners every week.
“Please listen to my podcast” rarely works. But strategic collaboration does.
Ways to grow through others:
– Join shows that share your audience
– Bring on guests who truly fit your listener profile
– Do cross-promotions that make sense
– Offer value before asking for anything
Be selective.
A famous guest means nothing if they attract the wrong audience.
Growth happens when you stop shouting into the void and start showing up where your listener lives.
Some examples:
– Business and leadership listeners respond to LinkedIn and newsletters.
– Story-driven audiences spread word of mouth through WhatsApp groups.
– True Crime grows through Facebook Communities.
– Wellness podcasts grow on YouTube Shorts and TikTok.
– Parenting and child-focused shows thrive on Pinterest and parenting forums.
You don’t need to be everywhere.
You need to be in the right place.
This is the hard truth most podcasters avoid.
If your show isn’t growing, it’s worth asking:
– Is my message clear?
– Is the content genuinely useful or compelling?
– Is each episode structured, paced, and purposeful?
– Would I listen to this?
Often, growth isn’t a marketing problem. It’s a storytelling problem.
And storytelling is a skill — one that improves with coaching, editing, and reflection.
People share things that move them — emotionally or intellectually.
A great episode gives listeners a reason to pass it on:
– A moment that surprised them
– A story that touched them
– An insight that shifted something
– A voice they trust and feel connected to
Your goal isn’t to make an episode that gets clicked.
It’s to make an episode that gets shared.
There is no single lever.
Growth is the cumulative result of:
– clarity
– consistency
– emotional connection
– relevance
– craft
And the humility to adjust when something isn’t working.
Most podcasters won’t take the time to do this.
Those who do will stand out effortlessly.
Your show grows when people talk about it. People talk about it when it means something.
And meaning comes from intention, clarity, and craft — not algorithms.
This is exactly why we built the PodMaster™ Startup Program and the Accelerator:
to help creators align their purpose, voice, audience, and structure so that growth stops being accidental… and starts being inevitable.
If you want personalised help building an audience that actually listens — and returns — we’re ready to guide you.
Your voice is your brand. Your podcast should sound like it.
We help creators, coaches, and businesses make shows that stand out – for the right reasons.
Book a Free Strategy Session and let’s build something powerful.

Your RSS feed is what makes your podcast portable, distributable, and genuinely yours. Here’s how it works — and why it matters more than most beginners realise.

South African podcasting has a production problem — but it isn’t a talent problem. It’s structural. This Industry Insights analysis examines why the gap exists, what it costs the ecosystem, and who is positioned to close it.

Audio and video podcasting are converging. Here’s how South African brands can choose the right format — or combine both — for maximum impact.

Showmax is closing. The audience it served hasn’t gone anywhere. Here’s what South African brands and commissioners should be thinking about next — and what a professionally produced podcast series actually costs to commission.

The question is deceptively simple. The answer, research suggests, is not what the gear guides want you to believe.

Branded podcasts in South Africa are the most underused content strategy for corporates. Here’s why the opportunity is real — and why now is the time.
© Baird Media 2026