Content Creation / Podcast Content

Identify high-interest podcast topics based on industry trends, audience pain points, competitor content, and emerging conversations.
Difficulty: Intermediate → Advanced
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: Topic Research, Content Planning, Audience Insights
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most podcast topic research fails because it’s just guessing.

You get:

  • topics you think are interesting (not your audience)
  • repetitive topics (same thing, different guest)
  • no trend awareness (missed opportunities)
  • competitor topics copied without differentiation
  • episodes that don’t align with audience pain points

But topic research is not guessing.

It is data-informed strategic planning.

  • Audience pain points: what they struggle with (survey, reviews, questions)
  • Trends: emerging conversations in your space
  • Competitors: what’s working for them (and what’s missing)
  • Search data: what people are asking online

Without research, you’re guessing.

This framework forces AI to find topics your audience actually wants.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a podcast content strategist who finds topics audiences actually want.

Your task is to generate high-interest podcast topic ideas.

Generate:

1. AUDIENCE PAIN POINT TOPICS (5-7)
   Based on what keeps your audience up at night

2. TREND-BASED TOPICS (3-5)
   Emerging conversations in your industry

3. COMPETITOR GAP TOPICS (3-5)
   What competitors are missing or ignoring

4. SEARCH-DRIVEN TOPICS (3-5)
   Questions people are asking online

5. SEASONAL OR TIMELY TOPICS (2-3)
   Relevant to the current calendar or industry events

PLUS:
- Top 10 topics ranked by potential impact
- Suggested episode formats for each (solo, interview, panel)

INPUTS:

Podcast Niche or Industry:
[INSERT]

Target Audience (demographics, pain points):
[DESCRIBE]

Competitors in Your Space (2-3):
[LIST]

Recent Trends or Emerging Conversations (if known):
[LIST]

What Your Audience Has Asked Recently (if available):
[LIST FROM COMMENTS, SURVEYS, EMAILS]

RULES:
- Each topic must be specific (not "marketing tips")
- Pain point topics must address real struggles
- Trend topics must be timely (not evergreen)
- Competitor gaps must be genuine (not "they don't have this")
- Search-driven topics must be actual questions people ask
- Include suggested episode format for each topic
How To Use It
  • Survey your audience before planning — their answers are your best data.
  • Monitor comments and questions on your social media and podcast reviews.
  • Use AnswerThePublic or Reddit to find what people are asking.
  • Don’t copy competitors — find what they’re missing and fill the gap.
  • Plan topics quarterly, but leave room for timely/trending episodes.
Example Input

Podcast Niche or Industry: Freelancing for creative professionals (designers, writers, developers)

Target Audience: Freelancers with 1-5 years of experience, inconsistent income, struggle with client acquisition and pricing

Competitors in Your Space: “The Freelance Friday Podcast,” “Creative Live,” “The 6-Figure Freelancer”

Recent Trends or Emerging Conversations: AI tools for freelancers, 4-day work week, value-based pricing, quiet quitting

What Your Audience Has Asked Recently: “How do I raise my rates without losing clients?” “What’s the best way to find my first 5 clients?” “Should I specialize or be a generalist?”

Why It Works
Most podcast topic planning is guessing.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • audience pain point topics (relevance)
  • trend-based topics (timeliness)
  • competitor gap topics (differentiation)
  • search-driven topics (demand)
  • ranking by impact (prioritization)

Great podcast topics don’t come from thin air — they come from listening to what your audience is already asking.

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