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Podcast Website Builder

A podcast website builder should give you the same design freedom Squarespace or Wix gives you, then save you the part those tools cannot help with: getting your episodes, transcripts, search, and clips onto the site and keeping them current. Podspun is a full website builder. You get themes and color palettes, your own logo and fonts, drag-and-drop blocks on a flexible grid, and your own custom domain, so you can lay out and style every page the way you want. What sets it apart for podcasters is that it also reads the show you already publish and arrives with your whole catalog already in it, plus blocks that general builders do not have: an episode archive, a page per episode, full transcripts, on-site search, and clips. So instead of opening to an empty grid you fill in over a week, you open to your actual show, fully designable, and it stays current as you publish.

Key takeaways

  • Podspun is a full website builder in the same class as Squarespace and Wix: themes, color palettes, your own logo and fonts, drag-and-drop blocks on a flexible grid, drafts, live preview, and your own custom domain.
  • It opens full instead of empty: connect YouTube, Apple Podcasts, or an RSS feed and your whole catalog comes in as pages you can still design and rearrange.
  • It adds podcast blocks general builders lack: an episode archive, per-episode pages, transcripts, on-site search, an AI ask box, clips, playlists, and quote cards, all from your transcribed feed.
  • It syncs nightly, so new episodes appear with their pages, transcripts, and search entries without you opening the editor, while your design stays put.
  • Every episode page carries an indexed transcript and structured data, so the content can rank in Google and be cited by AI answer engines, and any moment becomes a captioned, branded clip in about two clicks.

Quick answers

  • What is the best website builder for a podcast?

    The best one gives you full design control and also handles the podcast-specific work. Squarespace and Wix give you the design control but open empty and have no podcast features, so you would paste every episode by hand and still have no transcripts, search, or clips. Podspun is a builder in the same class, with themes, your own fonts and domain, and drag-and-drop blocks, and it adds the podcast modules and loads your whole catalog for you.

  • Is Podspun a real website builder or just a podcast page?

    It is a real website builder. You pick a theme and color palette, set your logo and fonts, and arrange blocks on a flexible grid with drafts, revisions, and live preview, on your own custom domain. Everything you can do in Squarespace or Wix you can do here. The difference is that it opens with your episodes already in it and includes podcast blocks those builders do not have.

  • How is Podspun different from Squarespace or Wix?

    Squarespace and Wix are general builders. They open to an empty shell, have no podcast features, and only show what you remembered to add. Podspun gives you the same design freedom but opens already filled from your feed and includes podcast blocks: an episode archive, per-episode pages, transcripts, on-site search, an AI ask box, and clips. You still design and arrange every block; you just do not start empty or wire up the podcast parts yourself.

  • Does the site update when I publish a new episode?

    Yes, on its own. Podspun connects to your YouTube channel, Apple Podcasts, or RSS feed and syncs nightly, so a new episode shows up with its own page, transcript, and searchable text without you touching the editor. On a general builder you would add each new episode by hand every time.

  • Do I get my own domain and full control of the look?

    Yes to both. Your Podspun site runs on your own domain, so it is your website, not a profile on someone else's platform. You control the theme, palette, fonts, logo, and the layout of every block, and the episode pages, transcripts, and search all live under your address, which is what lets the content rank in Google and be cited by AI answer engines.

A full builder, in the same class as Squarespace and Wix

Podspun is a website builder with the design control you expect from Squarespace or Wix. You choose a theme and a color palette, set your own logo and fonts, and arrange the page with drag-and-drop blocks on a flexible grid. You get drafts and revisions, live preview, and your own custom domain. If you want a custom hero, a section about the hosts, sponsor logos, or a newsletter signup, you build and style them exactly as you would on any other builder.

So this is not a stripped-down page generator. Anything you would reach Squarespace or Wix for, layout, color, type, structure, you can do here, on a site you own under your own address. The design freedom is the same. What changes is what the builder knows how to do once it has your podcast.

It opens full, and it knows your podcast

General builders open empty. You start with a blank grid and a list of fields, and a podcast is a hard thing to fill that way: you would create a page for every episode, paste a title, a description, a player, and a thumbnail, and then keep doing it for each new release. Even after all that work, Squarespace and Wix still give you no transcripts, no on-site search, no AI, and no clips, because those features are not in the toolbox.

Podspun opens full instead. You connect a YouTube channel, an Apple Podcasts show, or an RSS feed, and it reads your whole catalog and brings it in: a page for every episode, a full transcript on each one, and the text indexed so visitors can search it. Those pages are real blocks on your site that you can still rearrange and restyle, they are just generated for you rather than typed in by hand. The first thing you see is your show, not a placeholder.

The podcast blocks a general builder does not have

On top of the standard blocks, Podspun adds modules made for podcast content, and they pull straight from your transcribed catalog. There is an episode archive that lists your catalog, a page per episode with a real indexed transcript, and on-site search where a visitor types any word or phrase and jumps to the exact moment it was said. There is an AI ask box that answers questions from your own episodes, and cards or carousels of your shows for the home page.

Clips are part of it too. Any moment in any episode becomes a captioned, branded clip in about two clicks, with no separate video editor and no second subscription. Video shows get video clips, audio-only shows get audiograms, and you can export plain audio as an mp3. Playlists, shareable quote cards, key moments with timestamps, auto summaries, smart tags, badges, and analytics come from the same catalog. You drop these blocks into pages you design, the way you would drop any block in Squarespace or Wix.

It stays current after you build it

A site you fill by hand is only as current as your last editing session. Miss a week and the newest episodes are missing; change your show art and the old thumbnails stay wrong until you replace each one. That upkeep never ends on a general builder, and most podcasters quietly fall behind on it, which leaves a site that no longer matches the show.

Podspun keeps itself current. It syncs nightly, so new episodes appear with their pages, transcripts, and search entries already built, and the catalog on the site matches the catalog you publish. Your design stays exactly as you set it; the content underneath refreshes on its own. The time you would have spent pasting episodes into a builder, you spend on the parts that actually need you.

Why a real website matters for a podcast

Your podcast host distributes the audio and counts downloads, but a search engine cannot listen to audio, so an episode that lives only in an app or a feed is close to invisible to search. A website with transcribed, indexed pages gives your episodes text to rank on and structured data search engines can read. Podspun's episode pages include that structured data by default, which is one more thing you would have to build yourself on a general builder.

It pays off across the whole back catalog. An episode from two years ago, with a real page and a transcript, can keep bringing in new listeners who searched for exactly what you covered. That works because the catalog sits on a site built to be found and owned under your domain, with the design in your hands and the podcast machinery already running underneath it.

Ready to put your whole catalog to work?

Podspun turns the episodes you already publish into a website you own, with clips, deep search, and SEO built in.

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