One pain point I keep hearing from podcasters: « We’re publishing consistently, the content is good, but growth on the platforms just isn’t happening. »
Here’s what’s usually going on. The show exists on the platforms, but it’s essentially invisible. Why? Because there are millions of shows out there, and many podcasters believe that publishing on every listening platform will naturally bring in listeners. The reality: publishing on the platforms is essential, but it’s not enough. You need to actively manage how your show gets discovered.
Here’s the stat that should reframe how every professional podcast operation thinks about platform strategy: 50% of podcast listeners open their listening app specifically to find a new show. Not to listen to something they already follow. To discover something new.
That means Spotify and Apple Podcasts are true acquisition channels, treating them as a simple content library would be a mistake.
This article is a practical playbook for building a platform growth system that actually compounds, one that combines organic discoverability with paid amplification, in the right order, for the right reasons.
| Strategy | Definition | Example actions |
|---|---|---|
| Organic Strategy | Build long-term visibility on listening platforms by making your podcast easier to find in search results. | Optimize your keywords, update your metadata, publish consistently, and track your rankings on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. |
| Paid Strategy | Amplify what is already working by promoting your podcast to a targeted audience on platforms like Spotify or YouTube. | Choose a strong episode to promote, define your campaign objective, set your budget, and measure the impact on follows and rankings. |
In my experience, most podcast strategies fall into one of two traps.
The first is organic-only inertia. You publish consistently, the content is genuinely good, and you assume the algorithm will figure out the rest. Sometimes it does. Most of the time, without intentional optimization, a show stays invisible to the exact audience it’s built for.
The second is paid-only dependency. Runs ads for a new season launch, gets a spike in downloads, and calls it growth. The moment spend stops, so does the momentum.
What actually works is simpler than it sounds: build organic discoverability first, so your show has a real foundation. Then use paid to pour gas on what’s already working. One feeds the other.
Before you touch anything, your team needs to understand how discovery actually works inside a listening app. Let’s open Apple Podcasts. Inside the app, listeners have access to four main interfaces:
The real implication: a show can dominate Search and never touch the Charts. It can get editorial love and still have no keyword visibility. These aren’t variations of the same problem, they’re separate problems that need separate thinking.
Where to focus your energy? Search, without hesitation. It’s where you have real control, where progress is measurable, and where improvements stack over time. Strong Search work lifts your chances on other surfaces.
You’ve probably heard the basics of Podcast Search Optimization: put your keyword in your title, write a clear description. Good start, but that’s just the entry fee. In a competitive category, rankings are driven by a compound signal. Here’s the full stack.
The most common mistake? Picking one keyword per show and calling it a strategy. What you actually need is a three-level map, and each level serves a different purpose.
The logic is the same as in traditional SEO: you’re building authority across a subject, not just chasing a single query. A show that covers a topic from multiple angles signals depth to the algorithm, and gets surfaced for a wider range of searches.
One thing most teams skip: finding the right keywords in the first place. The best sources are your audience. Google search suggestions, listener reviews, Reddit threads, the DMs and emails you get from your community. That’s where the actual language lives. Start there before you touch any platform.
Once you have candidates, validate them before committing. Ausha’s Live Search shows you in real time, the ranking of podcasts in Apple Podcasts and Spotify search results for any keywords you choose.
📖 Want to go deeper on keyword research? Ausha’s Academy has a full lesson on how to identify, evaluate, and prioritize your keywords, including a free resource with 100+ high-performing podcast keywords sorted by category, search volume, and difficulty score. Read Lesson 3.
Once you know which keywords to target, the next question is: where exactly do you put them? Not all metadata fields carry the same weight, and Apple Podcasts and Spotify don’t even index the same ones.
| Field | Apple Podcasts | Spotify |
|---|---|---|
| Show title | Yes | Yes |
| Show description | No impact | Yes |
| Episode titles | Yes | Yes |
| Episode descriptions | No impact | Yes |
| Author name | Yes | Yes |
| Copyright | No impact | No impact |
Keywords and metadata get you found. But there’s a third factor that quietly determines whether you stay visible: how regularly you publish.
The data is pretty clear on this. According to Ausha’s study, conducted on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, analyzing 1,000 keywords, 100,000 search results, and 7.6 million episodes, 65% of podcasts appearing in the top 10 search results have published at least one episode in the last 30 days. On Spotify, that window tightens: two-thirds of shows appearing in search results have released something in the last 15 days. And on Spotify specifically, publishing at least once every 15 days correlates with an average gain of 5 positions in search results.
The takeaway isn’t « publish more. » It’s « publish consistently. » An active show always outranks an inactive one, regardless of content quality.
A PSO strategy without tracking is just a series of assumptions. Here’s what to keep an eye on, and when. :
Running this across a multi-show network manually isn’t sustainable. Ausha’s PSO Control Panel handles the keyword tracking layer across platforms automatically, which is how network teams run PSO at scale without it becoming someone’s full-time job.
Paid promotion on listening platforms amplifies existing signals. That changes the order of operations: build the organic foundation first, then use paid to accelerate it. Think of it the way you’d think about Google Ads, the moment you stop paying, the traffic stops. Organic is what compounds permanently. Paid is what gives it velocity at the right moment.
Paid works best when:
Spotify’s self-serve platform gives you direct access to the largest podcast advertising inventory available, with genuine targeting depth, demographics, interests, behaviors, real-time listening context, custom and lookalike audiences. Placements span Now Playing, Browse/Search, and in-feed. Formats include audio, video, and display. Minimum entry is $15/day or $250 total.
Spotify Ads Manager is a full media-buying platform. You’re building an ad strategy from scratch, choosing campaign objectives, managing targeting, handling bids, and optimizing performance yourself. It’s powerful, but it assumes a level of advertising fluency that most podcast teams don’t have. That’s where Ausha’s Visibility Ads comes in.
For podcast teams that want a platform-native workflow, or don’t have dedicated media buying resources, Ausha’s Visibility Ads, powered by Base for Creators, is built specifically for podcasters. No advertising expertise required, you select what to promote, set your budget, and experts handle the rest.
The practical differences:
Visibility Ads works best as the amplification layer on top of a PSO foundation that’s already in place. Your keyword rankings are solid, your catalog gives new listeners a reason to stay. The campaign puts your show in front of a precisely targeted audience on Spotify or YouTube, and because the organic work is already doing its job, those listeners are far more likely to convert into followers.
Here’s how to run this as an actual system, not a series of one-off efforts, with a rhythm your team can maintain indefinitely.
Growing a podcast in 2026 takes more discipline than it used to. Simply being everywhere isn’t enough. What works is building a real podcast growth strategy on listening platforms, one that’s hybrid by design: organic growth to lay the foundation, paid to amplify what’s already working.
Start with the audit. Build the foundation. Then put fuel on what’s already working.
And if you want more information on how to implement this strategy today, book a demo with our team.
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