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Google Podcasts Manager users can now upload their podcasts to YouTube with RSS upload. Learn more here

আপনি যে পৃষ্ঠাটির জন্য অনুরোধ করেছেন সেটি বর্তমানে আপনার ভাষায় উপলভ্য নয়। আপনি পৃষ্ঠার নিচে অন্য কোনও ভাষা বেছে নিতে পারেন বা Google Chrome-এর বিল্ট-ইন অনুবাদ ফিচার ব্যবহার করে আপনার পছন্দের ভাষায় যেকোনও ওয়েবপৃষ্ঠা অবিলম্বে অনুবাদ করতে পারেন।

About podcasting on Google

This website is for podcast publishers
If you have questions about listening to a podcast on the Google Podcasts app (or any other Google product), visit the podcast listener guide.

Learn how to make your podcast available in Google Search, on the Google Podcasts app, and on other Google surfaces.

What are podcasts on Google?

When your podcast is "on Google," listeners can find and play your podcast on many different Google services:

Listeners can find and play your podcast in the Google Podcasting App for Android or iOS

Google Podcasts app on Android


Or on many other Google services

   
 
   

How podcasting works on Google

In order to get the most out of your podcast on Google, you should know how podcasting works on Google.

Google podcasting basics

Google Podcasts is a podcasting directory; this means that podcast listening apps and other podcast listening services use Google Podcasts to find podcasts and enable playback. Google Podcasts does not store your RSS feed or audio files, but rather points to the RSS feed and audio files that you have posted elsewhere.

Google Podcasts powers the discovery and playback of podcasts on many Google services, including the Google Podcasts app for Android and iOS, Google Home devices, The Google Podcasts website in the browser, and more. Additionally, listeners can subscribe on any podcast playback app to any podcast listed in Google Podcasts.

Therefore your RSS feed must be available to, and readable, by Google's crawlers.

How Google finds and presents a podcast

  1. Google constantly crawls the web looking for RSS feeds the same way it crawls the internet to look for new or updated web pages. Publishers can also explicitly tell Google about new feeds (most podcast hosting services automatically tell Google whenever a new feed or episode is published).
    Google searches the web looking for feeds
  2. When Google finds or is told about a new feed, it crawls the feed and creates an entry for the show in Google Podcasts where people can listen to the show on various listening platforms, such as the Google Podcasts app or Google Home, or any RSS-compliant podcast player.
    Google Podcasts on Google Home, desktop, auto, and mobile devices
  3. However, before creating a new show in Google Podcasts, Google first checks whether a new feed describes a show that is already on Google Podcasts.
    Google found a duplicate RSS feed

    Let's talk about that next...

One show, many feeds

In practice, a podcast can have more than one feed. This happens for various reasons: for example, a podcast might have a "Top 10" feed, a "Holiday playlist" feed and a "Latest episodes" feed.

If Google finds multiple feeds that seem to describe the same podcast, Google groups them together. From this feed group, Google selects one feed as the best representative for the podcast, and serves only that feed on Google Podcasts. This is called the served feed. Google Podcasts doesn't disclose the full list of members of a podcast's feed group, only the served feed.

  1. Google finds RSS feeds as it crawls the web
    Step 1: Google finds RSS feeds when it crawls the web
  2. Google groups the feeds that it thinks describe the same show
    Step 2: Google groups the feeds that it thinks describe the same show
  3. Google selects one feed from each group and serves that feed on all Google Podcasts platforms. This feed is called the served feed.
    Step 3: Google selects one feed from each group and serves that feed on all Google Podcasts platforms
  4. Listeners see the served feed for their show in their app or service.

The served feed can change

Occasionally, Google can change which feed it serves for a show on Google Podcasts. There are a few reasons this can happen:

  • Google might determine that a different feed in the group is more representative of the podcast than the currently chosen feed.
  • The feed owner might change the URL of the feed (perhaps moving it to a new host) and Google found the feed in its new location. (Ideally the feed owner tells Google about the move to ensure that Google finds it.)

When the served feed changes, Google will start serving the new feed instead of the previous feed. Listeners subscribed to the show on Google Podcasts will see the show and episode information from the new feed. If episodes from the previous feed are not in the new feed, those episodes will no longer appear in the show playlist (unless the episodes were downloaded). It takes 2-3 days to migrate all Google Podcasts listeners or services to a new feed.

 

 

Next: Get your podcast on Google

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