If you make a podcast, your notes situation has a familiar shape. Guest research lives in browser bookmarks. Prep docs live in Google Docs. Outlines are scribbled in whatever notes app you reached for that morning. Transcripts come back as PDFs from a service you never open again. Episode ideas pile up in a list that you scroll past and forget.

This guide is about putting the parts of a podcast that benefit from being together — guest research, prep docs, episode outlines, transcripts, and the running list of future episodes — into one vault where the agent can do the slow middle work for you.

## What podcast notes are actually for

The good podcast doesn't come from a great mic or a clever intro. It comes from preparation that holds up under conversation. A guest you understand well enough to ask a non-obvious question. A throughline you spotted in their work that they haven't been asked about. A fact you remembered from their book that opens up a real exchange.

That preparation is documents — articles, books, past interviews, your own listening notes. The job of a podcast notes system is to make those documents available to you the morning of the recording, in a shape your brain can actually use.

The four pieces that hold over time:

- A **guest dossier** per upcoming guest, with research, your own observations, and the questions you actually want to ask.
- A **show bible** with format notes, segment templates, and your evolving sense of what works.
- An **episode page** per recording, holding the prep, the audio, the transcript, and the post-publish notes.
- An **idea inbox** where future episodes and guests live before they're scheduled.

If recurring writing is part of your show — newsletter, blog, scripted essays — pair this with our guide on [drafting emails, proposals, and newsletters inside your notes app](/guides/creatives-content/draft-emails-proposals-in-notes/) for the writing-side workflow.

## Guest dossiers: research that earns you the conversation

Open a "Guests" section in your vault. For each upcoming guest, make a page. Drop in the things you've gathered — their bio, recent articles or essays, a couple of past interviews, their most recent book if there is one. PDFs auto-convert to markdown so the agent can search and quote from them like any other note.

Then ask the agent to do the unglamorous first pass: "Read everything on this page and pull the three threads I should ask about that don't show up in any other interview I have here. List the questions other hosts always ask so I know to skip them. Note any contradiction between their published positions over time."

You'll get a starting point that's grounded in their actual work, not in a generic AI summary. The agent isn't replacing your judgment — it's doing the reading you'd do anyway, faster, so you can spend your prep time on the second pass that actually requires your taste.

For recurring guests or people you've researched once before, the page already exists. Add the new material on top. Ask the agent to compare what they've said this year with what they said last year on the same topic. That's where the interesting follow-up question lives.

## The show bible — your accumulated taste, written down

Every podcast develops a set of conventions: how long the cold open runs, how you handle ad reads, the kind of question you've decided you don't ask anymore, the tone you want a closing minute to land on. Most hosts carry that knowledge in their head and slowly drift away from it.

A show bible page in your vault keeps it explicit. Format conventions, segment templates, your current intro and outro scripts, the evergreen questions that work across guests. When a producer or co-host joins, the bible is the first thing they read. When you yourself come back to a planning session after a busy stretch, it reorients you.

Sub-pages under the bible can hold the templates you reach for: a guest interview outline template, a solo episode outline template, a producer brief template. Every new episode page can copy from these. Unlimited page nesting means the bible can be as deep as you want without becoming a tangle.

## Episode pages — the recording's home base

For each episode, one page that lives the whole life of the recording. Before: the outline, the questions, the references you want at hand. During: nothing — you're recording. After: the audio file dropped in for transcription, your post-recording notes, the show notes draft, and the marketing-snippet draft.

The transcript is the load-bearing artifact. With speaker diarization, the transcript shows who said what, so when you go back six months later looking for the moment your guest pivoted on a topic, the agent can find it: "In the conversation with Maya Singh, find the moment she changed her position on remote work. Pull the relevant exchange." That's a five-second answer instead of fifteen minutes of scrubbing. The deeper-dive on transcription mechanics lives at [AI meeting note taker with speaker labels](/blog/ai-meeting-note-taker/).

Show notes get drafted from the transcript by the agent, then edited by you. The draft is rarely the final — but it gives you something to react to instead of a blank page. Marketing snippets — three pull quotes, two clip suggestions, a thread idea — come out of the same source material in another minute.

## Episode planning: the season-shaped view

A single episode is one page. A season — or whatever your release cadence is — benefits from being tabular. An inline database of episodes, embedded directly in a planning page via the `:::database:::` directive, holds a row per episode with status, recording date, publish date, guest, and a working title.

That database lives inside a planning page that has prose around it. The prose holds your strategic thinking — what you're trying to do this quarter, the throughlines you want to develop, the kinds of guests you're underweight on. The database holds the actual schedule. Both update as the quarter unfolds.

Filter the database by status to see what's recorded but not yet edited, by guest type to see whether you've leaned too hard on one kind of voice, by month to see your release rhythm. Sort by recording date when prep season starts. The same data, viewed however the moment requires.

## The idea inbox — and how it stops being a graveyard

Every podcast host has a list of episode ideas and potential guests that never gets touched. The list isn't broken; the system around it is. Ideas need somewhere to land fast and a regular pass that decides which ones to advance.

A "Future episodes" page with a simple inline database — title, type, source of idea, status — handles the landing part. Adding a row takes ten seconds. The pass is something you do once a month: open the page, ask the agent to pull every row added in the last thirty days, look at the list, decide which two to advance into a guest dossier or an outline. Archive the rest with a note. The graveyard problem is mostly about not deciding fast enough; the regular pass fixes it.

The agent can also help with the upstream side. Ask: "Read my last twenty episode pages and the post-recording notes. What topics keep coming up that I haven't done a dedicated episode on?" The recurring thread that you noticed three times but never named becomes the next episode.

## Reusing the back catalog

A long-running podcast accumulates a real archive. Hundreds of hours of recordings, transcripts, and notes that sit in storage and rarely get looked at again. That archive is a research asset — you just need to be able to query it. The same archive becomes a content-repurposing engine when you connect it to your other work — see [content repurposing across platforms](/guides/creatives-content/content-repurposing-across-platforms/) for the multi-channel version.

With the transcripts in your vault as plain markdown, ask the agent: "Find every time a guest in the last two years has talked about parenting and a creative career. Pull the relevant exchanges with the episode and timestamp." You get a list of moments you forgot existed. That's the spine of a clip episode, a written reflection, or a follow-up conversation with one of those guests.

For specific operational questions: "What did I commit to following up on with Sara Vance after our last episode?" The agent reads the episode's post-recording notes and your own follow-up doc and tells you. You stop dropping the loose ends.

## Solo episodes and essay drafts

Not every show is interview-driven. If you do solo episodes or scripted essays, the workflow shifts. The episode page becomes a writing page. The outline becomes an actual draft that you record from. The agent helps with the structural work that's hard to do staring at the page — pulling your previous treatments of the same theme, finding the half-finished essay from three months ago that fits this week's idea, suggesting where the script slows down too much.

Working from your own back-catalog of notes, demos, and earlier essays gives you a voice that sounds like you, because it was grounded in you. Generic AI prose has a flat tone you can hear in three sentences. Notes-grounded drafting doesn't.

## A vault you actually open

The system only works if you open it. The habit that makes it stick is small: ten minutes the day before a recording — open the guest's dossier, skim the agent's first-pass questions, pick the three you actually want to ask, edit the outline. Five minutes after — drop the audio, type three lines about how it went and what surprised you. Over the run of the show, those debriefs become the most useful pages in the vault. They're the only place where you've honestly recorded what you learned.

The agent doesn't make the show. It reads what you've gathered, transcribes what you've recorded, and pulls back the things you've already noticed. The recording, the questions, the taste — those are still yours. The chores around them get smaller, which is the whole point.

Try Docapybara free — [sign up](/accounts/signup/), drop in your next guest's bio and one of their past interviews, and ask the agent for the threads no other host has pulled.