Discover how to elevate your podcasting game with the right tools! This episode dives deep into using Zoom for podcast interviews, discusses its pros and cons, and compares it with other tools like Riverside. Learn the settings, tips, and tricks to get the best audio quality and streamline your podcasting workflow.
Welcome to Podcast Answers, the show where I help you start and grow your podcast. All
Speaker:while answering any podcasting questions along the way to help you get started with the craft
Speaker:that is known as podcasting.
Speaker:Because while podcasting is easy to do, it does take some technical knowledge and not
Speaker:everyone is technical by nature. So that's why I'm here. I love answering questions.
Speaker:I love being able to help people start their podcast because podcasting is something that
Speaker:is great to be able to get your word out, to get your knowledge out.
Speaker:People want to hear you and what you have to say. So podcasting is that avenue, that
Speaker:place for you to be able to do what you do. So with that said today, man, if you are not
Speaker:live on with me, you really should be. I do this show on YouTube every week. And I also
Speaker:do this on the new podcast apps.
Speaker:So stream video to YouTube, which is, you know, YouTube live. You've done that before.
Speaker:You've seen that before. And then new podcasting apps allow you to listen to a live stream
Speaker:of audio going on it right in your podcast app. And I'm streaming right now to live podcasting
Speaker:apps such as, as, as pod verse and fountain and all of the new podcasting apps that can
Speaker:take that.
Speaker:If you've not checked out any of those, go to podcasting apps.com or new podcasting apps.com.
Speaker:Either one will take you to there and you can see which ones will allow you to listen
Speaker:to live podcasts. And this is a live podcast. I record this live because I like having people
Speaker:to be able to listen to me at the time.
Speaker:And you get to see some of the things that I do that you don't come into the final product.
Speaker:The fact that I've started this show two times already today and the YouTube audience and
Speaker:the live podcast audience that are with me in the new podcasting apps got to see that
Speaker:because I first forgot to hit record on my road caster.
Speaker:So I wasn't getting audio. And then secondly, I, I forget what I did, but I said something
Speaker:wrong. I, I messed it all up. And so you get to see that if you're with us live, if you're
Speaker:not, you don't get to see what this live. So what are we talking about today? We are
Speaker:talking a little bit about using zoom for your interviews and what that entails.
Speaker:And I've talked a little bit before on this show about using E cam in the new integration.
Speaker:E cam resume to bring in your guests and how easy that is to do that on, on E cam bringing
Speaker:in video. But what if you're not actually doing video? What if you're not using E cam?
Speaker:I recognize that E cam for one is a Mac only program. And while it is the best program
Speaker:ever and they have an awesome community, not everyone has a Mac, Macs are expensive, but
Speaker:if you have a Mac, go ahead and use E cam.
Speaker:But not only that, but E cam is a either monthly or yearly subscription and not everyone can
Speaker:pay for that. And then on top of that, you have to add zoom in there so you can do some
Speaker:of this stuff. Now, what I'm talking about today is going to be mainly just audio and
Speaker:getting audio for your podcast because I am, because the video was zoom, you can get it
Speaker:and you can record it on zoom.
Speaker:You can even live stream on zoom. So zoom is a good option, a good alternative. If you
Speaker:don't really know, like if, if, if you really just want to live stream or if you want to
Speaker:catch your audience, but you don't want to pay for a third party nugget, you're not going
Speaker:to have all of the fancy, dancy schmancy things that you have when you are recording in something
Speaker:like E cam, because you're, you're just not going to have those.
Speaker:But if you are like me and, or if you just want to use zoom, you can use zoom. Now you
Speaker:could just use zoom as a free program. Zoom does allow you to have a free account. And
Speaker:the thing about that is you can have as many people on your meetings. It's limited to 40
Speaker:minutes though. So that is the key.
Speaker:If you're just using zoom and have a free account, your meetings are limited to 40 minutes.
Speaker:And so what that means is that's going to have a little bit of a problem when you try
Speaker:to do a longer interview, because that's the whole thing. And so if you get your guests
Speaker:on your do doing a pre show checklist, and you're doing all the things that we've talked
Speaker:about pre show, and then you start recording, you may have already wasted 10 of your 40
Speaker:minutes.
Speaker:And so then you have 30 minutes left or even heaven forbid, if you use 20 minutes, and
Speaker:you're down to 20 minutes left. And so really the zoom free account is not a good option
Speaker:when it comes to using this for recording your podcast. Yes, you could do it. And yeah,
Speaker:you could, you could definitely do it, but I don't necessarily recommend it.
Speaker:So what you can do zoom is not that expensive for a year long subscription. And the nice
Speaker:thing about it is you get 30 hour meetings. Oh man, if you had a 30 hour meeting, and
Speaker:you were using zoom on your podcast, wow, that'd be a tiring zoom meeting. But you could
Speaker:do a 30 hour meeting with your zoom. And there are reasons you would want to do a long zoom
Speaker:meeting like that. And with the paid account, you get that you also get with a paid account,
Speaker:five gig of storage, recording storage in the cloud.
Speaker:So zoom has a couple different ways that you can record it. So you could you could do this
Speaker:really simply. Let's say you don't even have a nice soundboard. You don't have a setup,
Speaker:you could just use some sort of USB mic, like the pod mic or something like that. And, and
Speaker:not the pod mic, but all the all of the is sure. The sure mics that in things, well,
Speaker:even Yeah, the pod mic does have an SBA oxygen, USB option, you could use that. And you could
Speaker:just go right into zoom, you wouldn't have a whole lot of audio control, but you could
Speaker:do it and record. And the recording options in zoom are really cool, because it allows
Speaker:you to record locally, if you wanted to just use locally, and you wouldn't come up against
Speaker:that limit of the five gig, you could record locally, you don't get as many options for
Speaker:files when you do that. And I'll explain the files in zoom that come with a cloud recording.
Speaker:Or you could record at the cloud, which is great, because then it doesn't have the processing
Speaker:power and you actually get a lot more video recordings and audio recordings that you can
Speaker:use later, while editing your podcast in a third party app like Adobe Audition or audacity
Speaker:or something like that. And so let's let's talk a little bit about the settings that
Speaker:I recommend in zoom first. And then we will go ahead and talk a little bit about what
Speaker:we want to do in zoom. So if you're looking at zoom, and you go into the settings, which
Speaker:I recommend that you do, so you are me go ahead and make that bigger, if I can't, I
Speaker:can't make that bigger. Okay, so in the settings and zoom that I would recommend is you go
Speaker:into the audio tab, and you're going to be able to set your speaker and your mic. And
Speaker:so that's going to be dependent on what you are actually doing with your mic and your
Speaker:speaker. Now, zoom has some audio profiles, because again, zoom is really just a audio
Speaker:conferencing thing. It's really meant for audio conferencing, or audio, but video, audio
Speaker:and video conferencing, it's not really meant for recording. Yes, you can do it, you can
Speaker:do a lot of things with zoom. But because of that it is, it is by default going to try
Speaker:and make the best audio quality for for the for you. And so by default, when you speak,
Speaker:it's going to try and isolate your voice. But if especially if you're doing things like
Speaker:this, where you have a soundboard, or you have things like that, it's going to pull
Speaker:up those things out because it's going to think that, hey, I'm trying to make it so
Speaker:that you can hear Andy's voice. And so audio profiles, zoom background noise removal is
Speaker:usually checked personalized audio isolation or original sound for musicians. And so I
Speaker:suggest that you choose that and again, this is the audio that you're sending out to the
Speaker:to the zoom meeting. And so if you're having people on and you want them to hear your your
Speaker:sound, then you're going to want to turn this on original sound for musicians and same if
Speaker:your guest is playing something other than just their voice. But the nice thing about
Speaker:zoom is it does do a pretty decent job at isolating audio. And so if your guests are
Speaker:in a noisy room and not using a sound, a soundboard and using something like I'm using right now,
Speaker:then then and there is noise around them like my my soundboard is the roadcaster pro. And
Speaker:on the roadcaster Pro, it has an audio gate, it has a noise gate. And so if I'm quiet,
Speaker:you can't hear anything going on at all. If I'm quiet, and the dog starts barking, if
Speaker:I'm on a if I'm on a guest session, or if I'm somewhere, and I'm stopping talking, you
Speaker:can't hear what's in the background. Zoom does that for us a little bit. And again,
Speaker:like I was saying, in these settings, you want to go ahead and go into the original
Speaker:sound for musicians, and I turn off five fidelity music, echo cancellation and stereo mode.
Speaker:Now one thing to know is, every time you're in a meeting, you have to turn it on and you
Speaker:don't turn on here, this is where you're saying you're allowing yourself the option, but you're
Speaker:not actually turning it on. And so if we go back into the zoom, and I'm going to go ahead
Speaker:and start a zoom meeting, just so you can see what it's like, if you're watching this
Speaker:on, oh, you're gonna get a nice, hey, that's kind of fun. You're gonna get a whole nice
Speaker:thing. So essentially, I'm going to zoom meeting here. It was I had my video on and my video
Speaker:is feeding from my live stream. So it was making that nice little endless loop of video.
Speaker:So up in the right hand corner here, you're gonna see something that's called original
Speaker:sound, it has a little green badge. And it says original sound is free musicians off
Speaker:and you have this is the part you have to do every time you're in a meeting. Click that
Speaker:and now it says original sound for musician on and you get a thing saying original sound
Speaker:is on noise suppression is disabled. And so now, if I talk or if I play my sound effects,
Speaker:people on my zoom meeting are gonna see and hear that because it's sending original sound
Speaker:for musician back in to the meeting. So that's one of the things that's that that is the
Speaker:the major thing that I would I would do for for you and your recording because again,
Speaker:you want to be able to send that musician that sound. Now if your guest is on a soundboard,
Speaker:like the roadcaster pro like the Mac, easy as creator, all those other soundboards and
Speaker:things like that, you're gonna want to have them turn that on too. And so you're gonna
Speaker:have to walk them through that because you want the best sound of coming through that
Speaker:you're, they're already producing a good sound. And so you want that sound to come through
Speaker:to them to you so that you can record it. So again, for me when I do a zoom meeting
Speaker:and I'm recording it, I'm still recording on my roadcaster pro I'm bringing the zoom
Speaker:audio in, you know, on my zoom. So for me, the roadcaster pro, if I had a zoom meeting
Speaker:going there's on the roadcaster pro there's three different USB channels, there's a USB
Speaker:main USB one chat in USB two. And I usually bring I usually bring things where I'm gonna
Speaker:have chat coming through into a chat into the chat channel that by default has the mix
Speaker:minus turned on. And you want that turned on because you don't want to feed that back
Speaker:and if you've never seen a mix minus I have an episode of mix minus so go back and listen
Speaker:to that and see what all mix minus is. You can find that at podcast answers.com but but
Speaker:you're gonna want to have that on for them to so if they're using a mixer board, turn
Speaker:on so for me what I do is an in zoom I have my mic and my speaker set as the USB chat
Speaker:channel on my road caster and then I can still control them coming in I can hear it I can
Speaker:bring a volume up I can bring it down. I do my recording on the roadcaster even if I'm
Speaker:bringing it in through zoom. But you do not have to do that. Because zoom has, like I
Speaker:said, two different recording options recording locally, which allows you to get a recording
Speaker:of the audio and the video. And I believe you don't have any a lot of options in there.
Speaker:And so you wouldn't be able to you wouldn't be able to have things go in there and have
Speaker:all sorts of different different settings. So with with that, what I want to do is I
Speaker:want to, I want to take you into this is the zoom settings. So if you are in zoom, and
Speaker:you go to your settings for your account, and you go to the recordings tab, you'll see
Speaker:a cloud recording. And it says allow hosts to record the following to the cloud. And
Speaker:there's a zoom meeting is what you want you want to allow that and then you can say these
Speaker:are the settings that you actually want to set record active speaker with shared screen.
Speaker:So when you're if your guest shares screen, then you're going to also shoot shoes and
Speaker:see active speaker record gallery view with shared screen, turn that on. So you get the
Speaker:gallery view with the shared screen on. If you want to go back and actually have video
Speaker:edit where you can see everybody in the mix and stuff like that. You're going to want
Speaker:all these check record active speaker gallery and shared screen separately. So this is active
Speaker:speaker, you'll get a file for the active speaker, you get a gallery view, and you get
Speaker:shared screen. So you'll actually get three different files of those things. And then
Speaker:here's the key, especially if you're going to be recording audio, and want this in maybe
Speaker:in post production, especially if you're not going to be recording on a roadcaster like
Speaker:I am, I'm, I'm recording, I just use the zoom as a backup recording, in case I need to have
Speaker:that. But what you would do is record one audio for all participants. So you get one
Speaker:audio file, it's a mix down, record a separate audio for each participant. What that does,
Speaker:is, is that allows you to have a mix minus, you can have a separate audio, not mix minus
Speaker:sorry, a separate audio file for everybody. So in case they're Doug, they're Doug, their
Speaker:dog starts barking, then you can actually turn their channel down while somebody else
Speaker:is talking or what you're talking or something like that. And so that's, that's really the
Speaker:ones you want. You can also choose save chat messages from the meeting and webinar. And
Speaker:so that that allows you to go ahead and see any chat messages that are, you know, into
Speaker:your recording also. So those are the settings that you're going to want to record when zoom
Speaker:and you and what's great is again, you record to the cloud, it's going to record all of
Speaker:those things, it's going to have an audio file, one audio file for every participant
Speaker:recording separate audio tracks for each participant. So that way you can go ahead and use those
Speaker:separately later. If someone was talking or forgot to mute their mic or whatever you can
Speaker:post production can take them and dip their audio volume down and then you don't hear
Speaker:that in the final the final mix. And then if you are doing video, you know, you're gonna
Speaker:want separate audio recordings for active speaker gallery views shared screen. I want
Speaker:all the recordings that I can get because I want to be able to if I want to go in later
Speaker:and see, let's say I have 35 people on a zoom call, and I'm recording that now again, this
Speaker:is probably not going to be for a podcast. But if I have 35 people on a zoom call, and
Speaker:I'm recording that I want to have the gallery view and active speaker separately, that way
Speaker:I can be mixing in the video in the audio if I want to have whoever speaking but then
Speaker:I want to go to like a audience shot, if you will, then I can see the gallery. I have that
Speaker:I can mix that in later, it's it's going to be something that I can I can use. So again,
Speaker:zoom is a good option. Now again, there are other options that are maybe better than zoom.
Speaker:If I'm thinking you know, there are there are some that do what they call a local recording.
Speaker:So it's essentially a double ender. And if you're not familiar with a double ender, what
Speaker:it is is it means if we're doing an interview, and let's say I was on the phone, so this
Speaker:goes this goes way back before internet and everything like that. What you would do is
Speaker:if I was talking to you in an interview, I would record on my machine locally. I would
Speaker:have my track local. I would be talking to you on the phone. But you would record local
Speaker:so I have a high quality of me and I have a high quality of you. I'm using the phone
Speaker:as the transport, the connect if you will, so we can hear each other. But at the end
Speaker:of the show, you send me your file. So I have a local copy, a good copy of mine and a good
Speaker:copy of yours. I mix those together. It sounds like we're in the same room. There are products
Speaker:that do this now. So you have a local copy of yourself and you have a local copy of the
Speaker:guest and then they upload it actually uploads as you're talking but the recording happens
Speaker:locally on the machine. And the reason that this is important is because if you don't
Speaker:have a great internet, if you don't, if you have an internet dropout, if your internet
Speaker:is is kind of wonky, the delivery is wonky. Zoom, you'll start to get this artifacting
Speaker:robot sound type of a thing. And so that works. It's okay. It doesn't happen very often. But
Speaker:it does happen sometimes because the internet is a big pool of computers. And sometimes
Speaker:it takes a while to get from one to the other. And, and that audio quality can be degraded.
Speaker:So if you're using something like Riverside, then it records locally for you and it records
Speaker:locally for the guest and it brings them, uploads them to the internet. It makes the
Speaker:devil enter a whole lot easier because back in the day, when you did this, you record
Speaker:it and you have to use something like Dropbox or some other way to get the file to them.
Speaker:Riverside actually just uploads it seamlessly and then you can download it. The one issue
Speaker:that I had with Riverside is even though I didn't, I was using it because I didn't have
Speaker:super great internet. I still found it being an issue where my files wouldn't complete.
Speaker:I wouldn't get the full thing. It just didn't work out for me. So I started using Zoom for
Speaker:my interviews. And while it does artifact and does have some issues, sometimes for the
Speaker:most part, it's a good product for the most part. It works well. And especially since
Speaker:I'm doing their producing and I have a local copy of my own voice because I am recording
Speaker:locally on my computer. So I do have my own voice locally. So I get the highest quality
Speaker:I can from me. People are going to be more likely to put up with a not quite as high
Speaker:quality from your guests because they know it's a guest. And so if it does artifact for
Speaker:a few seconds, it's probably not that big of a deal. I just find that Zoom is an easy
Speaker:thing to do. People have used it. People use Zoom all the time. People... Since the pandemic,
Speaker:people have gotten used to using Zoom. People know what Zoom is. People have Zoom on their
Speaker:computers already. It's really easy for them to join a link. They don't have to go, "Okay,
Speaker:you need to go to this website. You need to allow your camera. You need to do this. You
Speaker:need to do this because it's a website based thing." They know Zoom. They've used Zoom.
Speaker:And so it's easiest to say, "Let's just jump on a Zoom call together. I'm going to record
Speaker:it and let's just talk. Let's just have an interview face to face over Zoom." It works
Speaker:great. So guys, Zoom, yes, it does cost something, especially if you have the pro level or business
Speaker:level account. It is going to cost you some. And the more you pay, the better, the more
Speaker:features you get with Zoom. But for the most part, a pro account is going to be good for
Speaker:what you're doing. It gets 5GB worth of recordings. And for me, I record it and I download it.
Speaker:I get rid of it off the cloud once I'm done. And that way, I don't take up my cloud recording
Speaker:in Zoom. So yes, it does cost something, but it is well worth it to make good quality,
Speaker:good sounding interviews in Zoom.
Speaker:Guys, thank you so much for listening, for hanging out. If you got questions, I would
Speaker:love to hear your questions. I'd love to answer your questions. You can go to podcastanswers.com/contact.
Speaker:Again, that is podcastanswers.com/contact. And you can contact me and ask your question.
Speaker:And I would love to answer your question for you.
Speaker:Guys, I'm going to be switching my recordings. Right now, I'm recording usually Tuesdays
Speaker:or Thursdays at noon Eastern. I'm going to go ahead and record. I think I'm going to
Speaker:switch to Tuesday evenings. I haven't decided on the time yet, but I would love to get more
Speaker:people on live. And I think people are going to be able to watch live more likely if we
Speaker:are not doing this during the day. So next week, look for a change in schedule. Have
Speaker:a great week guys and keep podcasting.