Having a Podcast Studio (Physical vs. Virtual)

1 year ago
5

I opened Fractal Recording in 2012 in New Jersey. It was a physical podcast studio and I started recording podcasts for local business people. They would come into my studio with their guest and I would record their episodes.

Then in 2015 I moved to Colorado Springs and went virtual. Now I “meet” with my clients and their guests in my virtual recording studio (using Riverside, Zencastr, Squadcast, etc.) to record their episodes.

The physical setup can work really well if you are a local networking all-star. And you could also do virtual sessions from your physical studio as well.

But doing things virtually requires much less overhead, equipment and time, etc.

*Podcast production tips email list signup: http://eepurl.com/geOdAD

*CAREER Option: Learn how to produce podcasts professionally from home and earn a great living doing it! — https://podcastengineeringschool.com/product/pes-online-program/

Loading comments...