There’s a moment I see all the time. A student or a client says, “I’ve got a podcast idea.” And sure, maybe they do. All ideas have to start somewhere, right? And in my view, when you are in the ideation stage of any creative project, there’s GOT to be a “no bad ideas” policy in place… at least in the beginning.
But often when someone comes to me with what they think is this terrific idea, what I hear is an idea that’s generic, unformed, effectively still in its larval stage. It’s not terrible – but it’s just not ready to survive in the wild.
Here are the early warning signs.
1. You don’t know who it’s for
“Everyone” is not an audience. It’s a shrug.
Who are you actually speaking to?
- What do they already listen to?
- What do they care about when no one is asking them questions?
- What problem, tension, or curiosity might bring them to your show?
And here’s the uncomfortable part: your audience may not be your customer. Or your peers. Or people like you. An audience is typically less homogeneous than people think – and will contain customers, peers, and like minded individuals – but will not be limited to those folks. So knowing how to appeal to the wider interests of an actual audience is critical to creating a show idea with “legs” to travel.
If you don’t know how your target audience spends their attention now, you’re essentially building your show in the dark.
2. Your “why” is vague (or invisible)
Why this show? Why now? And it can’t be “because podcasts are popular.” Not “because we should have one.” Or even “because our competitor has one.” Podcasts are quite a lot of work. And they require strategy. You need to understand your own (or your brand’s) motivation before you start.
- What wrong are you trying to right?
- What change do you want to see?
- What gap are you trying to bridge?
- What should be different, for someone, after they listen or watch?
The best creative work has both intention and exploratory spirit. Even the most curious, observational work has an implicit point of view. This point of view will shape the questions you ask, the stories you choose to tell, and the guests you decide to have on. So it’s critical to get clear on it. What does this show put in the world that wasn’t there before?
If you can’t name that shift, the show tends to drift.
3. You have a topic, but not a point of view
“AI.”
“Climate change.”
“Entrepreneurship.”
These are buckets, not show ideas.
A show starts to come alive when it has a thesis, even a quiet one.
- “AI will reshape visual media more dramatically than the printing press.”
- “Most founders misunderstand what ‘risk’ actually looks like until they’re in it.”
Now we’re somewhere. Now we’re in conversation with something to say for itself.
Alternatively, you may be exploring a central question:
- “What could prompt a 12-year-old girl to lie to the police?”
- “How does the science of genomics help solve climate warming?”
Without this focus, your show risks becoming a series of well-meaning, forgettable conversations, about as memorable as a lukewarm hotel breakfast buffet.
4. You default to the easiest format
Two people. Microphones. Conversation. We’ve all seen these shows, ad nauseum. And look, there’s nothing wrong with a good conversation. Who hasn’t enjoyed the intimacy / voyerism of “listening in”? But it’s the default format for a reason: it’s easy to orchestrate and cheap to film. But it’s also ubiquitous and therefore makes it harder to stand out.
Audio, in particular, can do much more:
- build scenes
- layer voices and music
- move through time and place
- create that strange, intimate feeling of being inside someone else’s experience
If everything is said in one room, in one tone, for 30 minutes, you’re leaving a lot on the table.
And if you’re working in video:
- Do the first 15 seconds earn attention?
- Is there a visual rhythm?
- Would someone click this thumbnail over the five beside it?
Even a decision to make a low-fi, “DIY” feeling show, or a show “hosted” by an AI voice can be the right decision, if it’s made for the right audience, on the right topic, at the right time, and for the right reasons.
Remember: form is not decoration. It’s meaning, and should never be underestimated.
5. You have no plan for consistency
A good, long-running podcast is less like a one-off project and more like a habit you’re asking your audience to build.
That requires:
- a realistic production rhythm
- a clear season plan
- enough lead time to actually make the thing well
Ideas are generous. Schedules are not. And guest chasing takes longer than you think it will 100% of the time.
So if you haven’t reverse-engineered your timeline from your launch date, you’re already behind.
A final note
Most weak podcast ideas aren’t bad ideas.
They’re just underdeveloped.
Given a little pressure, a little curiosity, some creativity around format, and a willingness to get specific, they can become something much sharper and more impactful.






