# 3 POWERFUL AI Prompts That Feel Illegal for Podcasters (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini)

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** Libsyn
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tt7vhAwxigQ
- **Дата:** 15.04.2026
- **Длительность:** 13:22
- **Просмотры:** 87
- **Источник:** https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/46166

## Описание

🤖 Steal These 3 Powerful AI Prompts! (Seriously!) -  https://bit.ly/41AxrOZ

Most podcasters are stalling their growth with generic AI outputs, but these three "illegal" prompts will completely revolutionize your workflow. 

First, learn how to turn your transcript into SEO-rich titles and descriptions that actually convert on platforms like YouTube, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify. Next, discover how to use AI to find natural conversation breaks for perfect mid-roll ad placement, maximizing revenue without disrupting your audience's listening habits. Finally, we show you how to analyze your CSV analytics data to uncover growth patterns and predict your next ten breakout episode topics. 

Stop settling for average results and steal these powerhouse prompts to scale your show today!

CHAPTERS: 
0:00 – Why you’re using AI wrong 
1:10 – Prompt 1: High-converting titles & descriptions 
4:55 – Prompt 2: Finding the perfect mid-roll ad slots 
9:43 – Prompt 3: Analyzing data for future breakout t

## Транскрипт

### Why you’re using AI wrong []

AI is literally everywhere. And there's a good chance that you might be using AI right now in your podcast workflow. But here's the thing. Most podcasters are using AI incorrectly. They're getting generic titles and descriptions that don't take into account the podcast's audience or niche, ultimately leading to more time spent fixing AI results. In this video, I'm going to show you three AI prompts that just might be illegal simply due to how powerful they are within a podcast workflow. We're talking about generating high-performing SEO titles and descriptions that actually convert. We're finding the perfect ad slot break within your episode that isn't going to disrupt your audience's listening habits. and of course taking full advantage of your podcast data to help you gain insight on trends and topics that you could use in future podcast episodes. So grab a pen and paper because these AI prompts are totally worth stealing. First up, if you struggle with finding the right title and description for your podcast episodes, you're not alone and this prompt is totally for you. This AI

### Prompt 1: High-converting titles & descriptions [1:10]

prompt will give you excellent titles and descriptions for your episodes by taking full advantage of your episode transcript and context about your podcast audience and niche. Let's see it in action. Your job is to generate high performing podcast titles and descriptions optimized for YouTube, Apple Podcast, Spotify discoverability using a transcript as a source of truth. So it's in essence in that first bit just saying hey I want you to take this information is and treat it like this. Okay. So it's not generalized and then the following is really just what are each of the steps that the prompt is going to take. So first it's actually going to ask me before it even analyzes anything. Hey what's your podcast about? Who's your audience? Who's your niche? because those sort of things are going to give you the better outputs knowing that information before it even analyzes the transcript. So once you go through that first step, then it moves to the transcript analysis where then it's yeah, it's going to go through think about all of the transcript and really distill it down into things like keywords and the compelling hooks and the debate points, all of the things that we know are going to then go into a title and description. Um, then it goes through and actually generates the titles. And what's interesting about this, and this was not something that I came up with. This was something the AI came up with of creating different titles that are centered around different types of of titles. So, for instance, you have like a search first title for SEO value or a curiositydriven title for click-through rate and then kind of a hybrid of the two. But this was the resulting output of our uh that first prompt. Uh so it literally read through my transcript. It asked me some general questions here. It gave me an episode uh topic summary, which is kind of cool. It said that this is the debut episode of the Brian and Alio podcast. It's a conversational show hosted by two media professionals from Lipson. Um and it found some pretty neat titles. Uh, it said, you know, title one, which is, I'd say, kind of the most generic one of them all, is how two podcast pros got their start in film and audio. Okay? Because part of the conversation was me talking about how I got involved with film and movies and how Amelio got involved in uh audio and how it kind of all led to us, you know, getting involved in podcasting, which is an interesting story. Um, title two was a little bit more curiositydriven. uh he made a horror movie in high school and now he runs podcasts, — which I'm like, okay, that is technically true. So, — um it was it's but it's a nice one that if you saw that you go, huh, I want to I think I want to know more. — Uh and then title option three was kind of, you know, favorite actors, ghost research, and how we got into podcasting. So, it's kind of a mixed bag of both. It has some keywordrich stuff there. It has kind of the ending part of how we got into podcasting. So, either of those work. Uh, Amelia, which one do you like? — Uh, let's go with the last one. — The last one. Okay. — Yeah. — So, we're going to go with favorite actors, ghost research, and how we got into podcasting. Uh, and then to go along with those, we have some descriptions that were made, but also it gave me things like thumbnail concepts. Okay, so these are literally descriptions of what I could design for my thumbnail as well as a pinned comment. So these are all nice little things that just from a transcript and just from this prompt we generated. If

### Prompt 2: Finding the perfect mid-roll ad slots [4:55]

you are enrolled in our automatic podcast ads program, you know that placing midroll ad slot markers is key to generating revenue for your podcast. But placing midroll markers can be a timeconsuming task that has to be done on each episode. Let alone the fact that you don't want to place an ad slot marker within a moment in your episode that might disrupt the audience flow. Fortunately, I made an amazing AI prompt that harnesses the power of your episode transcript to literally cut the time it takes to place ad slots within your episodes in half. So, uh, the context for this one is you are an experienced podcast producer and audio editor. Your job is to analyze a podcast episode SR transcript in SRT format with time codes and identify the best locations for midroll ad slot markers. Now, this part here is interesting. This is the magic sauce here. Uh, the context and constraints. These are midroll ad opportunities only, not pre-roll and not post roll. The goal is to place two to three mid row ad slots total depending on the episode flow. Ad slots must not interrupt the active conversation or thought. That is a key thing here. We got to make sure that we're not putting them right smack dab in the middle of a conversation. Ad slots must occur at a natural conversation break. So things like clear transition between segments, topic changes after concluding a major discussion point, before introducing a new section, or after transitional phrases like, "All right, let's move on. Next up, switching gears. " Okay, so I ran it through Google Gemini over here. What I got was this. Okay, now keep in mind that our test episode was only around like 15 minutes or so. I ran that prompt on it, uploaded an SRT file, and got two spots that it picked, and it was smart enough to actually only give me two because it recognized it was a 15-minute episode. Okay. — Yeah. — So, it gave me this first time stamp, which is going to be at 3 minutes and 32 seconds. And it actually picked up someone saying, "Got it. Nice. " Yeah. So, all right. I got a question for you. So, it's right before that first question is going to come in. All right. — Yeah. — And then it gave me the reasoning. It said, "This is a textbook conversational pivot. " Amelio has just finished wrapping up his first question about his favorite actors, concluding a fun piece of trivia about Sam Ramy and Bruce Campbell. Bragging acknowledges the end of the thought and explicitly announces that he is turning the tables to the next question. So, dropping an ad right before Brian asks about how Amelia got into podcasting will feel like a natural broadcast style commercial break gave me a confidence of high. Okay, so I can go in now knowing full well that hey, this is a good spot to put an ad slot in. So, here in the advertising tab here, um, after the episode details, it went to the assets advertising and so we're looking for one at around 331, right? So I can kind of zoom in here. — 33 332 — 332. Okay. So we'll go 332. And that is this little section here. This break. — Yep. And uh again, you can always audition this. So you can go ahead and play it and make sure that's in the right spot. If it if you feel like it works better here, you can go ahead and do that. Um and then again, you can choose the number of ads that you want in this slot. So uh the ads are going to be between 15 to 30 seconds. So, if you have two ads, you know, it's not going to be longer than a minute, right? Um, so you can choose how many you want in the slot. For now, we'll go with just one. And we can go ahead and add that slot. — And if you want to audition that, this play button is going to let you hear that. And then you just click save to move on to scheduling um or to save as draft if you want to save that for later. And then those slots have now been saved within that episode for you. One thing I do want to mention that I thought was really helpful that you put in there was the confidence level. So I did I did this for like a twohour episode um which was really long and I wanted a lot of markers in there and so it gave me a bunch of different ideas and uh it worked really well. Like the ones that were high confidence I knew and I auditioned all of them but I knew like okay this is really working and then the ones that were like kind of medium high were usually good suggestions. the ones that were lower, I checked them out anyway to see if they would be a good place. But just having that to kind of refer to uh like was a even a quicker way for me to be like, "Okay, I only want three even though it gave me five. I need to look for the high confidence ones. " — Our final prompt is all about podcast stats and data. At Libson, we pride

### Prompt 3: Analyzing data for future breakout topics [9:43]

ourselves with providing podcasters the data they need to assess the success and health of their podcast. But what if that data could be combined with context about your specific podcast to help you gain insights into trends and topics that you could cover on future episodes? So, this one right here is all about uh using your host CSV file to analyze data. Given a system context, you are a podcast growth strategist, audience researcher, and data analyst. Your task is to analyze my podcast episode analytics and metadata to uncover patterns that explain why certain episodes outperform others, what topics resonate with most my audience, and what episode formats perform best, and what content strategy can grow the podcast over the next 3 to 6 months. It is basically saying, okay, use pattern recognition within your AI based around the data I'm going to give you and try to pick out those trends that maybe will work for my audience. It does ask for your podcast context. What is your podcast niche? What is your target audience? What is your podcast tone? So, it takes into account a lot of different elements to kind of come to the conclusion. So, this was the prompt that I ran with my CSV file. And this right here, this doc is what it spit out. Okay. What I really found was this outlier analysis. So, it actually looked at my episodes that really were outliers uh and picked them up and said like why this broke out. Well, it's a list roundup plus a guest. um or this one that I did on the most recent version of Dracula that went out. Uh it said, "Hey, this is a horror review, but you framed it within a question. " So, it was smart enough to really try to build a reasoning why it picked out these and why they're outliers. But I think my most favorite part is this 10 predicted breakout episode topics section here. So, these are episodes I haven't done. It's just saying that, hey, based off of the data you're giving me, based off of my knowledge of your show, and based off of the knowledge of your audience, these are some titles you might want to tackle. I ultimately know my audience and my show better than the AI does. But it's interesting that just with this single prompt with my CSV file and a little bit of information about my podcast that it was able to come to these conclusions, which is just nuts. These three prompts are just a small sample of the power that AI can have within a podcasting workflow. And the truth is, these prompts didn't take hours to make. As I discussed in my previous video about using AI within the marketing of your podcast, I literally turned on the microphone with my chatbot and discussed the types of outputs I would want in generating these prompts and then I iterated upon them until I got a prompt that worked for me.

### How to build your own powerhouse prompts [12:54]

Fortunately, you won't need to build these three AI prompts from scratch. I seriously want you to steal these. So, click the link in the description to download these three powerhouse AI podcasting prompts and use them within your workflow today. Hey, thanks for watching. Be sure to grab your copy of my free AI prompts in the link in the description. And if you need more help launching, growing, or monetizing your podcast, do me a favor and check out this
