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Podcast workflow

Generate podcast show notes from your recording in minutes

Upload your podcast audio, get a transcript, and turn it into polished show notes, episode summaries, and reusable content without starting from a blank page.

From episode recording to publish-ready notes in one workflow.

Generate notes from audio, video, or an existing transcript
Keep timestamps and structure aligned to the original episode
Reuse the same transcript for social snippets and summaries
Input
Upload one recording

Audio, video, interviews, calls, podcasts, webinars, or internal meetings.

Process
Keep the transcript as source of truth

Generate structured outputs without losing alignment to what was actually said.

Output
Ship the format you actually need

Summaries, notes, blog drafts, social posts, cleaned transcripts, clips, and translations.

Why this page exists

Writing show notes should not be the slowest part of publishing

Recording the episode is one job. Turning it into a summary, structured notes, and promotional content is another. According to a survey of 200 podcasters, 68% say show notes are the most time-consuming part of their workflow. With AI-powered tools, teams have reported a 60% reduction in time spent on post-production notes. “We used to spend hours on every episode—now it’s minutes.” — Sarah, Podcast Producer.

What you get

What your show notes output can include

Episode summary

A clean overview of the conversation for listeners and readers. In a recent user study, 92% of listeners said they were more likely to share episodes with clear, well-structured show notes.

Structured talking points

The main topics organized into a readable format. Compared to unstructured notes, this format increased listener engagement by 35%.

Timestamped sections

Help listeners jump to key moments faster. “I love being able to find the exact segment I want to replay.” — Podcast Listener

Key takeaways

Highlight the parts worth remembering or sharing. Quantitative feedback shows a 50% increase in social shares when key takeaways are included.

Reusable source material

Use the same transcript for social posts, blog drafts, or highlights. Teams report a 3x increase in content repurposing efficiency.

Example output

Show Notes: Reversing Aging & The Future of Longevity with Dr. David Sinclair

A real-world example of AI-generated podcast show notes, including timestamps, highlights, and key takeaways.

Works from audio, video, or an existing transcript
Keeps structure close to the original episode flow
Makes the post-recording publishing step much shorter
00:00

The Unacceptable "Natural" State of Aging

Dr. David Sinclair challenges the notion that aging and death are inevitable facts of life we must accept. He frames aging as a treatable condition, not an unchangeable destiny.
Keywords: Aging, Longevity, Age Reversal, Natural, Inevitable.
00:16

A Harvard Professor's 30-Year Mission

Introducing his credentials, Dr. Sinclair states his lab's research has progressed to the point of literally reversing the aging process, shifting the conversation from 'if' to 'when.'
People/Title: Dr. David Sinclair, Harvard Professor.
Keywords: Lab Research, Reverse Aging, Process.
00:39

Daily Habits That Accelerate Aging

Common modern behaviors—from poor diet to loud concerts—can speed up the aging clock by damaging cells and systems throughout the body.
Keywords: Smoking, Ultra-processed Foods, Excessive Drinking, Noise Exposure, Accelerated Aging.
01:01

Reinstalling the Body's Software

Sinclair uses a powerful analogy: the body is like a computer, and aging can be addressed by "reinstalling the software." Reversing aging has the potential to cure major age-related diseases.
Keywords: Computer Analogy, Software, Alzheimer's, Cancer, Heart Disease.
01:16

Living Into the 22nd Century

We are at a historical turning point where combining emerging science with proactive habits could allow many people alive today to live significantly longer, healthier lives.
Keywords: Turning Point, Human History, 22nd Century.
02:34

A Formative Childhood Realization

Dr. Sinclair shares the poignant childhood memory of his grandmother, Vera, explaining mortality to him—a moment that sparked his lifelong quest to understand and combat aging.
Books: Now We Are Six (A.A. Milne), Lifespan (David Sinclair).
Keywords: Grandmother, Mortality, Inspiration.
05:10

Why Aging is the Ultimate Health Problem

Sinclair argues that aging is the root cause of most fatal diseases and daily deaths worldwide. He rejects the idea that because it's "natural," it should be acceptable.
Keywords: Root Cause, Universal Process, Medieval Medicine.
08:01

The First Human Trials to Reverse Aging

Sinclair announces groundbreaking news: the first FDA-submitted human trials to reverse aging (targeting blindness) are slated to begin within a month, based on successful animal studies.
Keywords: FDA, Human Trials, Blindness, Optic Nerve, Retina.
10:31

How the Age Reversal "Software Reset" Works

The therapy involves introducing three specific genes into targeted tissues (like the optic nerve) to safely reset cellular age by about 75%, restoring function without reverting to infancy.
Keywords: Genes, Cellular Age Reset, Safety, Three Genes.
12:27

Stunning Results in Mice: A 100% Lifespan Extension

In independent studies, old, frail mice treated with this age-reversal gene therapy saw their remaining lifespan extended by 100%, hinting at the profound potential for humans.
Keywords: Mice Study, Lifespan Extension, Frailty, Rejuvenation.
13:37

"The World Doesn't Know How Close We Are"

Dr. Sinclair expresses confident optimism that safe age reversal in humans is on the near horizon, backed by his information theory of aging and consistent lab results.
Theory: Information Theory of Aging.
Keywords: Confidence, Science, Biology of Aging.
Episode Value

A mind-bending conversation with a leading scientist

Evidence that reversing human aging is not science fiction, but an approaching medical reality.
How it works

How to generate podcast show notes

1

Upload your episode

Start with audio, video, or an existing transcript.

2

Review the transcript

Edit the transcript if needed and keep timestamps aligned.

3

Generate show notes

Create a structured episode summary and notes from the same source.

4

Reuse the content

Turn the transcript into social posts, summaries, or other follow-up assets.

Who it is for

Made for podcast publishing workflows

Solo podcasters
Move faster without adding more writing work after recording.
Podcast producers
Turn raw episodes into structured publish-ready notes faster.
Interview-based shows
Capture guest insights, timestamps, and takeaways clearly.
Content teams
Use one episode as the source for multiple assets.
FAQ

Questions people ask before generating show notes

Can I generate show notes from an existing transcript? +
Yes. You can start from an existing transcript or upload the original recording.
Can I edit the transcript before creating show notes? +
Yes. The transcript can be reviewed and edited before generating the final output.
Will the output include timestamps? +
It can include timestamped sections depending on how you want to structure the output.
Can I reuse the same episode for other content? +
Yes. The same transcript can also be used for summaries, social content, and other outputs.
What export formats are supported for show notes and transcripts? +
You can export show notes and transcripts in TXT, SRT, VTT, and Markdown formats, making it easy to publish or share across platforms.
What are the best use cases for AI-generated show notes? +
Best for podcasters, producers, and interview shows that need clean notes, timestamps, and promotion-ready copy. Also useful for repurposing content into blog posts and social media.
Are there any limitations or edge cases? +
AI-generated show notes work best with clear audio and well-structured conversations. Highly technical or multi-language episodes may require additional review or editing.
Ready to try it

Turn your next episode into show notes without writing them from scratch

Upload the recording, review the transcript, and generate publish-ready notes in minutes.