Episode 89

full
Published on:

29th Dec 2025

Building Your Podcast Editing and Support Business - Finding the Right Shows to Help for Free

Episode 89 - Building Your Podcast Editing and Support Business - Finding the Right Shows to Help for Free

Finding your first “free” clients is less about blasting offers everywhere and more about intentionally placing yourself where the right podcasters already are, then serving them in a way that feels relational, not transactional. This episode of the Podcast Editing and Support Show zooms in on how to do that well so you attract the kind of clients you actually want to keep working with later.

Begin by shifting how you think about “where” to look. You are not hunting random podcasts; you are looking for specific types of people in specific kinds of communities. New or overwhelmed podcasters tend to cluster in places like beginner-friendly Facebook groups, podcasting subreddits, indie creator communities, and even local networks such as business associations, nonprofits, and churches. These are the spaces where people are actively trying to figure things out, often juggling content, tech, and promotion all at once. When you show up consistently in those environments, you start to see patterns: who is committed, who is struggling, and who would genuinely benefit from support.

Once you are in the right rooms, you need to know what to look for. Ideal “free first clients” are not the ones who have posted one trailer and vanished. You are looking for hosts who are publishing regularly but clearly wrestling with their audio: harsh background noise, wild volume swings, abrupt cuts, or inconsistent intros and outros. You will also see people complaining that editing takes them forever or that production is the reason they are close to quitting. Others will openly ask for feedback on their latest episode or layout. These are golden opportunities, because they have two things you cannot manufacture: momentum and motivation. They are already doing the work; you are helping them do it better.

The way you approach them matters just as much as who you choose. Instead of dropping a generic “I’ll edit for free, DM me” comment that looks spammy, listen to an episode and offer one or two concrete, respectful suggestions. For example, you might say, “Around the 5-minute mark your guest is much quieter than you, a little compression and level balancing would make that part easier to follow. If you’d like, I’d be happy to edit one episode for you so you can hear the difference.” Now you are leading with value, not a pitch. You have shown that you listened, understood their show, and can solve a specific problem they already feel.

At the same time, free work is not “anything goes.” This is where red flags come in. If someone is vague about timelines, expects you to be on-call, or immediately pushes for endless revisions on a free sample, that is an early warning sign. Similarly, if they speak dismissively about your time or skills, or treat you like a button-pusher rather than a partner, they are unlikely to become a healthy long-term client. Free does not mean your boundaries disappear. Doing early work for free should build your portfolio and relationships, not drain your energy and confidence.

To make this practical, give yourself a simple assignment after the episode. Choose a platform or two where your ideal podcasters hang out and search for shows that fit your skills and interests. Then make a list of ten hosts or creators you would genuinely be excited to support. For each one, jot down a short, personal connection message that includes three things: proof you listened (a detail from their episode), one specific suggestion, and an invitation to try a free edit for a single episode. You can adapt this template as you go, but the key is that every message feels like it was written for a person, not a demographic.

The heart of this whole approach is relationship-building. When you find the right shows to help for free and serve them well, you are not just giving away time; you are investing in testimonials, referrals, confidence, and clarity about the kind of podcasters you most enjoy working with. Over time, those first ten connections can become a web of future clients, collaborators, and friends in the podcasting space.

Key takeaway: Treat free work as a strategic partnership, not a desperate discount. Go where motivated podcasters already gather, offer specific help, watch for red flags, and intentionally choose ten shows you would be proud to support—because the right free work now can lay the foundation for a sustainable editing and support business later.

___

https://podcasteditingandsupport.com/

Our new home for this podcast - Captivate.fm

We are proud affiliates of Captivate.fm, our recommendations are based on our knowledge and experience with them and their services - using this link will earn us a commission at no extra cost to you

https://www.captivate.fm/signup?ref=zwmxowy

Listen for free

Show artwork for Podcast Editing and Support - True Media Solutions

About the Podcast

Podcast Editing and Support - True Media Solutions
How to find or become a Podcast Editor
Are you looking for a Podcast Editor? What if your next Podcast Editor had a podcast instead of just being a random name on a discount services site? What if you could hear examples of that Podcast Editor before you reach out, and before you sign a contract or hand over your hard earned money? But I am "just" a hobby podcaster, I don't have a big budget like the bigger shows do - I am a one person operation!! Maybe you want to work with a Podcaster Editor that could teach you from the very basics to the more indepth - go from zero to hero with tips, tricks and tools and do it yourself!

Leave me your thoughts, comments or suggestions
https://www.speakpipe.com/HelloDave

About your host

Profile picture for Dave Campbell

Dave Campbell

Active podcaster with 9 different podcasts including this show! I produce podcasts for clients around the world. If you want to meet other great podcasters, check out our regular podcaster meetups

https://www.meetup.com/how-to-podcast-community/