Why we built auto-generated show notes into Podcastr
Last spring, a creator emailed us at 11 p.m. on a Friday. She'd just finished recording a four-person remote episode with guests flying in from three countries. The recording was solid. The editing took two hours. Then came the show notes, and she stared at a blank text editor for another ninety minutes, manually typing out timestamps, guest names, links mentioned in passing, topics covered. She hit send to her editor at 1 a.m. and wrote: "There has to be a better way."
The fragmentation problem we kept hearing about
When we started building Podcastr, we interviewed dozens of podcast creators. Not the ones with sponsorships and a team of three. The ones running shows alone or with one other person, paying £100 or more each month to stitch together five different tools. A recording app. A transcription service. A hosting platform. A clip-generation tool. And usually, a text editor for show notes, or worse, doing it all by hand.
What struck us wasn't the cost, though that mattered. It was the mental overhead. Every tool had a different interface, a different login, a different export ritual. A creator would record on one platform, wait for transcription to finish somewhere else, download a file, upload it somewhere else again, then manually extract the good bits for show notes. The friction multiplied with every step.
Show notes were often the last thing done, the most rushed, the easiest to half-finish. And yet they matter. They're how listeners find what you talked about. They're how your episode ranks in search. They're what a guest can share to drive traffic back to the show.
A transcription without purpose is just busy work
When we integrated OpenAI Whisper transcription into Podcastr, we weren't just checking a box. We'd already chosen to record, host, and distribute from one place. Adding transcription made sense. But transcription alone felt incomplete. You'd have this beautiful, accurate text of everything said on your episode. And then what? Read through it all over again? Copy and paste snippets manually?
The answer was obvious in hindsight: if we're transcribing the episode anyway, we should extract the useful parts automatically. Timestamps. Guest introductions. Key topics. URLs mentioned in the conversation. The structure your listeners actually want to see.
Show notes generation became the logical next step. Not a separate service you pay extra for. Not a feature you have to learn how to use. Just something that happens as part of recording and publishing your episode inside Podcastr.
Time saved compounds differently than money saved
The creator who emailed us at 1 a.m. sent another message three months later. She'd switched to Podcastr and was now publishing show notes in about ten minutes, including editing and customization. Ninety minutes down to ten. That's eighty minutes back in her week.
Multiply that across twelve episodes a month, and she's recovered sixteen hours. That's not insignificant for someone running a show solo. That's time for better promotion, better guests, better planning. Or just time to breathe and do something else.
Most creators don't frame it as hourly savings. They frame it as sanity. They're not thinking "I just earned £25 of my time back." They're thinking "I can actually go to bed on a reasonable schedule now." The psychological lift matters more than the math.
Auto-generated notes are a starting point, not a finish line
We were careful not to oversell this. Podcastr's auto-generated show notes aren't perfect. They're generated from the transcript, so they're accurate to what was said. But they sometimes miss context. Sometimes a guest mentions a link in conversation, and Whisper transcribes it as a garbled string. Sometimes you want to add personality or emphasis that the text alone doesn't capture.
The feature works because creators can edit. We build the framework. You add the polish. It's the difference between starting from a blank page and starting from something half-finished. Most people choose the latter every time.
We've also included the NFC Guest Passport in our Pro tier for exactly this reason. Guests tap their phone during a recording session, and their bio, links, and social handles auto-populate the show notes. One less thing you have to chase down via email or LinkedIn after the fact. But it's still optional. You can edit it, ignore it, replace it.
One app instead of five changes how you think about production
The deeper shift is subtler. When show notes generation is built into the same app where you record and host, they stop feeling like a separate production step. They're part of the pipeline. You finish recording, you review the auto-generated notes while the episode is fresh in your head, you make a few tweaks, and you publish. The cognitive load drops because you're not context-switching between five platforms.
That's why we built Podcastr the way we did. Not as a premium add-on. Not as a gimmick. As a core piece of the workflow. Recording, transcription, show notes, hosting, distribution, and short-clip generation all in one place. Free tier includes publishing and recording. Creator tier adds the full suite of AI features, including the notes generation. Pro and Studio tiers expand from there for teams and advanced use cases.
For solo creators and small teams, the point isn't to have the fanciest feature. It's to move from "I run a podcast" to "I run a podcast without losing my mind in the process."
If you're currently chasing show notes across three different applications, ask yourself what you'd do with the time you get back. Better yet, ask what you'd do with the mental space.