Imagine a world where every episode you release is flawless, where volume levels are consistent, silence is clipped, and every last nuance is polished to perfection. Sound too good to be true? Well, our guest this week makes that dream a reality.
This week, we chatted with Damian Moore, the brilliant mind behind Audio Audit, a popular innovative platform that ensures your podcast sounds are impeccable each time you hit publish. Join Mathew Passy as he dives into a challenge many podcasters know all too well: the relentless pursuit of quality and consistency.
With his extensive background in software development and a passion for high-quality audio, Damian has developed a tool that can significantly improve your podcast's production process. If you’re growing your podcast this year, this is an episode you don't want to miss!
In this episode, we are chatting with Damian about his journey into podcasting technology, the features and benefits of Audio Audit, and why it’s essential for podcasters aiming for professional quality.
Audio quality is a key determinant of podcast success, and this episode offers invaluable insights into achieving impeccable sound.
IN THIS EPISODE, WE COVER:
Links and resources mentioned in this episode:
**As an Amazon Associate, we may earn commissions from qualifying purchases of podcasting gear from Amazon.com. We also participate in affiliate programs with many of the software services mentioned on our website. If you purchase something through the links we provide, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. The team at Podcasting Tech only recommends products and services that we would use ourselves and that we believe will provide value to our viewers and readers.**
For additional resources and insights visit podcastingtech.com or follow us on social media:
PODCASTING TECH IS POWERED BY:
EQUIPMENT IN USE:
Speaker:
Welcome to Podcasting Tech, a podcast that equips busy
Speaker:
entrepreneurs engaged in podcasting with proven and cost effective
Speaker:
solutions for achieving a professional sound and appearance.
Speaker:
I'm Matthew Passi, your host and a 15 year veteran in the podcasting
Speaker:
space. We'll help you cut through the noise and offer guidance on software and
Speaker:
hardware that can elevate the quality of your show. Tune in weekly
Speaker:
for insightful interviews with tech creators, behind the scenes studio tours, and
Speaker:
strategies for podcasting success. Head to podcasting tech dot
Speaker:
com to subscribe to this show on YouTube or your favorite podcast platform
Speaker:
and join us on this exciting journey to unlock the full potential of your
Speaker:
podcast. How do you know that when you publish a
Speaker:
podcast episode that you did everything right? You feel like you've done it,
Speaker:
you've checked, you've double checked, and yet sometimes things still slip by.
Speaker:
Well, now there's a new platform out there that can actually do that last check
Speaker:
for you and make sure that your podcast is really ready for prime time
Speaker:
delivery. Today, we are chatting with Damien Moore. He's the founder and
Speaker:
CEO of Audio Audit. It's a platform that makes
Speaker:
sure your podcast is perfect each time you publish, and you can find out more
Speaker:
about it at audioaudit.io, which, of course, we'll have a link to here at the
Speaker:
bottom of the show notes. Damien, thank you so much for joining us today. No
Speaker:
problem at all. Thanks for having me me, Matthew. Oh, it's great to great to
Speaker:
meet you and and chat about this platform. So before we talk specifically about Audio
Speaker:
Audit, what was your journey like into developing
Speaker:
a podcast platform? Were you in the space prior?
Speaker:
Do you have a lot of podcast experience? Are you just a big fan of
Speaker:
podcasts? Yeah. I'm from a sort of software developer
Speaker:
background. I've been a massive fan of podcasting
Speaker:
since probably 2,005. So so
Speaker:
quite early on, I've always been listening to them. I found
Speaker:
the good weather in bed and,
Speaker:
weather out running, that sort of thing.
Speaker:
But I'm used to building software and
Speaker:
tools mainly for other people, doing
Speaker:
contracts and building web applications,
Speaker:
front end, back end sort of thing. The,
Speaker:
I guess, the inflection point for me to start audio audit was
Speaker:
when, my first child was on the way,
Speaker:
and I was, doing a lot of decorating.
Speaker:
Had paint all over my hands, had a load of audio books and
Speaker:
podcasts queued up, and then I was getting quite
Speaker:
annoyed because I was hearing lots of
Speaker:
sort of mistakes sort of creep in. One of my
Speaker:
biggest bugbears is, like, the volume levels. So going from
Speaker:
one show to the next and having to turn the volume up or down.
Speaker:
Like, I've got these earphones in. I don't wanna get paint all over them,
Speaker:
and it can be pretty well, it can
Speaker:
be quite a serious change and quite painful,
Speaker:
actually, listening to those
Speaker:
sudden changes. And in the software industry, we have,
Speaker:
sort of test test driven development and, yeah, automated
Speaker:
test suites, those kinds of things. So if we release new code to
Speaker:
production, wanna make sure it doesn't break other things. So I I
Speaker:
felt there was there should be some combination of these two
Speaker:
worlds to create something
Speaker:
to take a lot of effort away from producers
Speaker:
and make the experience better for listeners.
Speaker:
So you go ahead and you launch audio audit. Tell us how it works
Speaker:
and, you know, what the experience is like for a podcaster
Speaker:
thinking about using it. Yeah. So I'm trying to
Speaker:
help people to improve the quality
Speaker:
of their their podcasts. So
Speaker:
podcasting's great because anyone can get started. It's easier to create a
Speaker:
podcast than it is, like, a YouTube video, and that's great. I think
Speaker:
people should get out there and start putting
Speaker:
content out right away. But when you get to the point where
Speaker:
you wanna focus a bit more on quality, maybe
Speaker:
well, you probably don't have, like, a sound engineering background,
Speaker:
or you don't know if the producer you're hiring
Speaker:
is doing everything that they can.
Speaker:
You can, at that point at that at that point,
Speaker:
upload one of your episodes to audio audit,
Speaker:
and it'll tell you where you probably wanna be
Speaker:
focusing your efforts. So
Speaker:
you there are 2 ways you can use it. Either
Speaker:
you upload an MP 3 file before you publish, and
Speaker:
you can the other way is you can also connect it up to your RSS
Speaker:
feed and have it automatically send you an email every time
Speaker:
you've released a new episode. Oh, so wait.
Speaker:
That that begs a a very interesting question. So if I'm
Speaker:
using a platform that does dynamic ad insertion, let's say,
Speaker:
and I've connected audio audit to the RSS feed, it's gonna
Speaker:
pull the final version with the ads in there,
Speaker:
and that's gonna tell me not just if
Speaker:
my content is okay, but also if my ads to my content. Right? Like, sometimes
Speaker:
a big problem you have in podcasting is the content's okay.
Speaker:
But then the ads are mixed differently. And so you've got either like super
Speaker:
loud ads to quiet content or or the inverse. So, yeah,
Speaker:
exactly. Yeah. Yeah. That's exactly
Speaker:
right. And the the platforms will often
Speaker:
boost or lower the volume of the audio as well. They're trying to do
Speaker:
normalization or they're doing some AI magic
Speaker:
editing. Like, it's good to see the before you
Speaker:
publish and after publish, I think, at least a couple of times.
Speaker:
I expect people to use it quite a lot heavily
Speaker:
at the start. And then once they've refined their workflow, sort
Speaker:
of built some templating around what they're doing,
Speaker:
then the sort of email
Speaker:
automatic reports will probably be enough, and then
Speaker:
you sort of just keep an eye on those and see if they suddenly dip.
Speaker:
And if you start to have, issues that you weren't thinking of. So a few
Speaker:
things that audio audit can look for in your show is volume loudness, like you
Speaker:
were just talking about. Right? You don't want things being too dynamic, you know, too
Speaker:
many peaks and valleys where somebody turns up the volume because you're too
Speaker:
quiet and then you start screaming in their ear and it hurts. It'll clip out
Speaker:
silence at the beginning and the end, which, you know, sometimes as
Speaker:
somebody who used to work in radio, if I hear 2 seconds of
Speaker:
silence, you know, my panic brain goes off thinking that we're off the air or
Speaker:
something like that. So, I'm sure not everyone has that experience with podcasts,
Speaker:
but I sometimes do interestingly enough, the next to
Speaker:
restarted sentences and profanities and swearing.
Speaker:
How do you program the software to
Speaker:
kinda listen for those and to identify
Speaker:
that? Yeah. Yeah. So this was a problem. I know it's
Speaker:
a lot in audiobooks actually that they're obviously so long, and
Speaker:
they they just fluff a chapter name or they
Speaker:
rerecord it, but the editor forgets to cut the original one
Speaker:
out. What what we're doing basically
Speaker:
is, using transcription
Speaker:
models. So AI comes in and converts everything to
Speaker:
text. Then we have, in the
Speaker:
case of swear words, we've got a list of, swear words
Speaker:
from, yeah, US and UK. So
Speaker:
I've built those up, and it's it's quite simple
Speaker:
searching for the text. But then the nice thing
Speaker:
is it can it gives you a waveform waveform of
Speaker:
your show at the top, and then you've got orange
Speaker:
marks, like, exactly where those, swear
Speaker:
words are. The restarted
Speaker:
love the way you visualize this on your platform. We'll
Speaker:
we'll definitely make sure you go to a link and just check out the homepage
Speaker:
because there is a nice little display of what it's gonna look like. And it
Speaker:
will totally make sense to people as they see it, you know, where the
Speaker:
issues are and how they're labeled. It's it's very well thought
Speaker:
out and very considerate to make it easy for, somebody
Speaker:
using it to be able to use it. Oh, thanks for that. Yeah. And then
Speaker:
restarted sentences is similar. It it
Speaker:
uses the same transcription underneath and then does some sort of
Speaker:
fuzzy matching for restarted sentences. So if it
Speaker:
if it notices there's, like, a sentence and there's 60%
Speaker:
of the words are the same from one sentence to the next, it sort of
Speaker:
highlights those. Like, it might
Speaker:
pull up well, you might
Speaker:
get some false positives, like if someone says,
Speaker:
yeah, when they're interviewing someone and the other person replies with a yeah, that sort
Speaker:
of is not clever enough to detect that those are 2 different
Speaker:
people, but it's very quick to just click on
Speaker:
click on each of those and just double check.
Speaker:
I try and raise raise everything
Speaker:
in in a way that makes it easy just to
Speaker:
to check. Like, I I on the side of caution.
Speaker:
That's fair. And then the other piece that it does is it will handle encoding
Speaker:
and compression. So if you are not skilled in that
Speaker:
or, you know, you don't even know what those words are, this is very helpful
Speaker:
to make your audio sound as rich and as clean as possible and
Speaker:
then adding the metadata to the file. In these
Speaker:
days, is that still helpful to have that information directly in the
Speaker:
MP 3? Yeah. And I'll tell you why. It's
Speaker:
it's if someone shares your show directly, and a lot
Speaker:
of players allow this, you can send the file
Speaker:
to a computer to listen to or someone else
Speaker:
having the the artist name, the the
Speaker:
podcast name, and, you know, the cover artwork
Speaker:
is is always great to just keep that attached.
Speaker:
And more and more search engines are gonna become aware
Speaker:
of audio files. Transcription is
Speaker:
very easy to do now, so I think that's gonna be another
Speaker:
way of sort of indexing that data and
Speaker:
making sure that people know that's your content.
Speaker:
Are you a content creator yourself? Do you make music, video, audio,
Speaker:
anything like that, or are you just a very passionate listener
Speaker:
who wants his experience improved?
Speaker:
My mom was a music teacher. She's retired now, so I kind of guess I've
Speaker:
got that ear for quality, and I've always been playing around
Speaker:
with mixers and making music, that sort of
Speaker:
thing. I'm just starting to get
Speaker:
into content creation myself. So I've I've got
Speaker:
one YouTube video. I've started getting onto
Speaker:
podcasts. Yeah. Got like a a
Speaker:
bit of a playlist curated for my YouTube
Speaker:
channel, which I'm gradually working my way through.
Speaker:
That raises another good question. So it's called audio audit. Does it work on
Speaker:
video as well? Can you upload a video and and
Speaker:
get a similar review?
Speaker:
Not right now. I I think it'd be really good to do that.
Speaker:
Obviously, there's the technical challenges of dealing with video,
Speaker:
just that they require so much space and
Speaker:
processing time. But, yeah, it's definitely something I'd
Speaker:
like to do. It's also a matter of the different
Speaker:
platforms or or where your content is being,
Speaker:
published to. So YouTube will have their loudness standards.
Speaker:
If it's going to, like, broadcast TV, that's gonna be a different loudness
Speaker:
standards. So there's kind of gotta be different,
Speaker:
standards that I bake in and allow people to sort of define their standards
Speaker:
within the system before I get to that point. Gotcha.
Speaker:
Well, I think what we'll do is we'll, we'll do a a episode of
Speaker:
podcasting tech. We'll run it through audio audit. We'll do a nice little screen record
Speaker:
of that so people can kinda see what it looks like, how
Speaker:
we're doing with our audio. I'm I'm afraid to find out how
Speaker:
we're doing with our audio. But, no, this is a a very
Speaker:
cool platform. So, again, it's audio audit dot I o. There will
Speaker:
be a link here at the bottom for folks who want to,
Speaker:
check that out and, you know, have somebody
Speaker:
listen and check out their audio for them,
Speaker:
especially if they're not sure about somebody else who's working on it or if they
Speaker:
themselves are not, you know, proficient audio engineer.
Speaker:
Damien, before we let you go, a couple of questions we'd like to ask everybody
Speaker:
about the space. And since you're more of a listener than
Speaker:
a content creator, I'll be curious to hear some of your answers.
Speaker:
The first one is, is there a place where you'd like to see improvement
Speaker:
in the podcasting space overall other than,
Speaker:
obviously, everybody's audio quality, which, they'll come to you for now?
Speaker:
I think always there's a bit of
Speaker:
a disconnect, isn't there, between different
Speaker:
players. So it's like, I would often
Speaker:
like to sort of leave lies nice,
Speaker:
reviews or friendly feedback for my shows that I
Speaker:
listen to, but as sort of nothing built into the player that I
Speaker:
use, sort of like I would have to go to maybe Spotify
Speaker:
or Apple. Like, nothing.
Speaker:
That's that's a bit of a disconnect. And then a lot of the
Speaker:
time is sort of discovering podcasts.
Speaker:
I think that whole area is quite quite ripe to
Speaker:
be improved upon.
Speaker:
Any any thoughts on solving that problem yourself or one thing
Speaker:
at a time? Yeah. One thing at a time.
Speaker:
Fair enough. Is there any tech that is
Speaker:
on your wish list, especially as you are starting
Speaker:
your content creation journey? Is there something that you know you wanna buy
Speaker:
or even something that isn't out there that you wanna see
Speaker:
created and available for content creators?
Speaker:
In terms of hardware, I think
Speaker:
it's kind of
Speaker:
all very usable.
Speaker:
Like, I'm I've got quite a a technical background, but the
Speaker:
things that really get me down are the
Speaker:
time for editing. And I've played around with,
Speaker:
software tools that allow you to
Speaker:
sort of reorganize your the audio in your
Speaker:
podcast as if it's a text document and that sort of thing, but
Speaker:
then I've not found the quality to
Speaker:
be as great. And I'm trying to also
Speaker:
repurpose that content to make use of the video. And I
Speaker:
found finding a bit of it's a bit
Speaker:
tricky to go between video and audio back
Speaker:
again and trying to keep the audio quality high,
Speaker:
but I'm not able to do that within the video tools.
Speaker:
So, yeah, I think there needs to be some
Speaker:
joining up in in that space, or maybe I just haven't found the right
Speaker:
tools yet. It's interesting you say that. That's
Speaker:
a that's a area that we're doing some research and development into,
Speaker:
and I will take your notes into mind as we are, plotting out,
Speaker:
our little plan there. And lastly, because you already mentioned that you have a whole
Speaker:
bunch on your playlist, is there a podcast or 2 that
Speaker:
you absolutely cannot miss? Right? As soon as that
Speaker:
new episode hits your feed, you're like, oh, stop what I'm listening to. I'm going
Speaker:
over to this show. I
Speaker:
think for me, it's gonna be a show called the
Speaker:
clean energy show, the clean energy show. It's by a couple
Speaker:
of guys in Canada, and
Speaker:
I'm someone who's very involved in sort of the environmental movement. But what
Speaker:
they do is always bring the
Speaker:
positive news stories about that and
Speaker:
practical things that you can do and sort of debunking a lot of myths.
Speaker:
They always have new things that I've not heard of.
Speaker:
And, yeah, I think it's been really encouraging for me.
Speaker:
Oh, nice. Yeah. I think we could all use a bit of,
Speaker:
optimistic, you know, potentially
Speaker:
positive news in our lives. So Yeah. Sounds like a good one to check out.
Speaker:
Well, we've been chatting with Damien Moore. He's the founder and CEO of
Speaker:
Audio Audit. You can check it out again at audioaudit.io.
Speaker:
And if you wanna see more of the stuff that Damian's up to, we'll have
Speaker:
links to, all the social media handles that we have. So, Damian, thank
Speaker:
you so much for taking some time today to tell us about Audio Audit. No
Speaker:
problem. It's been a pleasure. Thanks for joining us
Speaker:
today on Podcasting Tech. There are links to all the hardware
Speaker:
and software that help power our guest content and podcasting
Speaker:
tech available in the show notes and on our website at podcastingtech.com.
Speaker:
You can also subscribe to the show on your favorite platform, connect with us on
Speaker:
social media, and even leave a rating and review while you're there. Thanks, and
Speaker:
we'll see you next time on Podcasting Tech.
Founder & CEO
Damian Moore is the innovative founder and CEO of Audio Audit, a groundbreaking platform that ensures the highest quality for every podcast episode before it hits the airwaves. With a solid background as a software developer and a fervent passion for podcasts since the early 2000s, Damian has seamlessly merged his technical prowess with his love for audio content to create a tool that addresses one of the most common frustrations among podcast listeners: inconsistent audio quality.
The inspiration for Audio Audit struck Damian during a pivotal moment in his life. As he prepared for the arrival of his first child, often with paint-covered hands, he grew increasingly frustrated by the jarring volume changes between podcast episodes and the creeping in of audio mistakes. Leveraging his expertise in automated testing from the software industry, Damian envisioned a solution that could preemptively detect and correct these issues, thus enhancing the listening experience. He currently resides in the UK and continues to champion for improvements in the broader podcasting industry, while slowly dipping his toes into content creation himself. His visionary approach not only promises to enhance the technical aspects of podcasting but also aims to improve the overall accessibility and enjoyment of audio content for listeners worldwide.