How to Find the Perfect Music and Podcasts, Faster

The reason you’re not listening to what you want to when the mood strikes is because you can’t get to it fast enough. Whether you know it or not, you’re drowning in listening choices. Audio options abound. Often the time it takes to dig through songs, podcasts, or audiobooks is the thing that actually stops us from listening when we decided we wanted to listen.

I know I’ve thought about putting on some soft, background music during family dinner, but with only two or three minutes between when I think of it and when the timer goes off, I’ve given up. Making the perfect playlist isn’t hard, but it can take some time. The same goes for finding a new podcast episode or audiobook that can match the mood as well as a certain listening duration. It’s not hard, it just takes time.

Take these few steps now to set yourself up to listen faster in the future.

Make Playlists for Lots of Moods

When it’s time to dance, cook, study, or sleep, you want to have the music queued up and ready to go.

Having playlists across a broad range of moods is key to soundtracking those moments fast, and not just starting the first playlist you find that matches your keyword search. The best way to do that is to add songs and albums to various playlists at the same time you add them to your music library.

If a song doesn’t fit into an existing playlist, consider making a new one around how the song makes you feel or the time of day you would want to listen to it in the future.

Creating dozens of playlists is great for very specific moods, but also consider making a few very broad ones. For example, making playlists called simply “Morning,” “Afternoon,” and “Evening” is one way to always have a go-to selection of songs ready. “Lying Down,” “Up and About,” and “Blood Pumping” is another way to broadly group songs and cover various listening times that will arise in the future.

While you’re at it, get rid of redundant playlist names too. If you have five lists all named “Good Songs New,” it creates indecision and uncertainty later on. You can also use emoji in playlist titles if this helps you identify them quicker.

Backup Podcast Episodes

The beauty of listening to podcasts is that there is one for every topic of interest. There are millions out there, from big-budget narratives to casual conversations between friends. The volume of content is great, but it can also be a curse.

Personally, I like listening to weekly tech-news podcasts most of the time. The ones I listen to most are usually between 45 and 90 minutes. This is the perfect length for my daily run and helps me kill two birds with one stone. There have been occasional times when I didn’t have any new episodes available, and it actually kept me from running that day.

To combat this problem, I’ve kept around a few episodes from shows I’ve unsubscribed from. There are just too many good podcasts and not enough time. From time to time when I’m losing the battle with my listening queue, I’ll unsubscribe. It’s nothing personal but helps retain my sanity.

But instead of deleting shows I’ve unsubscribed from in my podcast player, I’ll keep a few episodes from those shows so I always have one available to listen to, even if my regular ones run out for the week. The ones I keep as backups are evergreen episodes from Revisionist History, Hidden Brain, and the TED Radio Hour.

Emergency Sounds

There are times when you just need sound. Whether it’s an approaching deadline or just unexpected moments of stress, sometimes it helps to have background sound. Honestly, in these instances it doesn’t matter what the sound is—it just needs to be one tap away.

Source

Author: showrunner