By Junaid Ahmed
Here's a question I keep asking people who guest on podcasts: where do your appearances live?
The answer is usually a shrug. One's linked in a LinkedIn post from last year. Two are in an email signature. The rest are wherever the host put them.
You did the work. You showed up, told your best stories, gave away your best thinking. And then the episode aired and floated off into someone else's feed.
After 700+ episodes of hosting, I've watched this happen from the other side too. Guests bring everything to a conversation and walk away with nothing they can point to.
So we built the address.
Every guest on PodGlue now gets one public page: podglue.com/@you. Not a profile buried in an app. A real page on the open web with your name on it.
Your photo, your headline, your bio. Every appearance with artwork, dates, and a player so people can listen right there. Links back to the original shows, because the hosts who gave you a platform deserve the traffic.
And you control the layout. Pick a featured appearance to pin at the top. Add a button that says "Book Me to Speak" and goes wherever you want. Reorder the sections. Hide what's not ready yet.
Here's the part that matters more than it sounds: the page is rendered on the server.
That's a technical detail with a very practical payoff. When you paste your link into LinkedIn, or a text, or a pitch email, the preview actually shows you. Your face, your name, your headline. Search engines can read the whole page too.
Before this week, that wasn't true. The link worked, but to every preview robot on the internet, the page looked blank.
Think about what you do with an address like this.
You're pitching yourself to a show. Instead of writing "I've been on several podcasts" and hoping they believe you, you send one link. The host sees twelve appearances, hits play on one, and hears exactly how you talk.
That's the difference between claiming experience and showing it.
What's next: topics pulled from your actual transcripts, a wall of your best quotes, and sections for sponsors and offers when you're ready to monetize. The page grows every time you make an appearance.
This is the part of PodGlue I'm most excited about right now. We've spent years helping hosts get more from their episodes. Now we're doing the same for the people sitting on the other side of the mic.
If you guest on podcasts, your work deserves better than a shrug. Give it an address.
Ready to make every episode compound?
PodGlue is the operating system for relationship-driven podcasters.
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