How to make a Podcast Onesheet

Your Podcast One-Sheet Isn’t Just a Pitch—It’s a Compass

What I learned about purpose, clarity, and voice while creating one—and how you can, too.

Writers don’t start out dreaming about marketing. We dream about sentences that sing, stories that matter, readers who get it.
But every author reaches that uneasy moment when passion meets promotion—when the question isn’t what we want to write, but how we’ll share it.

That moment found me while finishing my new book and its proposal. I thought I was done. Then a friend asked, “Are you pitching podcasts yet?”

My stomach dropped. I hadn’t even thought about that.


The Reluctant Start

I’ve spent years speaking to students, readers, and listeners.
I’ve taught in college classrooms and writing workshops, read essays on public radio, and even done a national tour of radio interviews for my earlier book.

So technically, I’ve been “on air.”
But guesting on podcasts. That felt different.

Still, I knew it was time to learn this new form of storytelling—one that could carry my work, and my message, to people I’d never meet otherwise.


The Framework That Changed Everything

To figure out where to start, I turned to Ashley Mansour, publishing professional and author of The Author’s Success Code, who helps writers finish their books and get them into the world. She listened as I listed every reason I wasn’t ready—and then told me how to get ready.

“Before you pitch anyone, make a one-sheet. It’ll show you who you really are as a guest—and your unique message”

One Sheet for Podcast Guest on Womens empowerment Amy Lou JenkinsAshley broke it down into four key elements that make or break a guest pitch:

  1. Photo + Tagline – your first impression: face, energy, promise.

  2. Short Bio – who you are in a few lines that sound human, not rehearsed.

  3. Experience + Proof – the credibility that earns trust.

  4. Signature Topics + Juicy Questions – the conversations that connect your writing to what matters most.

It should be easy, one afternoon, maybe two.
But as I began filling the page, I realized the questions behind each section weren’t logistical; they were existential.

What’s my message? Who am I talking to? Why does this matter?

That single sheet of paper became a mirror. See my one sheet.


The Tension: Marketing Meets Meaning

Somewhere between revising my bio and crafting my tagline, the resistance cracked open.
I wasn’t avoiding marketing; I was avoiding exposure—the kind that demands I stand behind what I write.

Writing the one-sheet forced me to define my story, message, and mission: helping others reclaim authenticity, integrity, and voice.
Every sentence that didn’t serve that core fell away.

By the time I finished, the page didn’t look like marketing material. It looked like a distilled version of my mission statement.

And that’s when I understood what Ashley meant.
A one-sheet isn’t just an invitation to hosts; it’s a recommitment to yourself.


The Research Rabbit Hole

Once the words felt right, I wanted to know how to use them.
Who sees this? How do guests even get booked?

That led me into the world of podcast-matching platforms—digital meeting places for hosts and guests.
I tried a few, but the one that fit best was PodMatch, a smart, intuitive service that connects you with shows aligned to your expertise and values.

👉 Explore PodMatch

Full disclosure: this is an affiliate link that helps support the work of LitFriends and my author services—the growing community where writers amplify authentic voices and purposeful storytelling.

PodMatch turned cold outreach into warm connections. It gave structure to what had felt like shouting into the void.


The Value: A One-Sheet as Compass

Here’s what I didn’t expect: creating that one-sheet didn’t just prepare me to speak; it also prepared me to write. It clarified why I write.

When you sit down to summarize your message, you find out fast what truly belongs to you—and how easily you can slip into saying what might please others.
You strip away pretense until only conviction remains.

That’s the hidden gift of marketing work done with intention: it turns your focus outward and inward at once.

If you’re an author staring down the world of podcasting—or just the idea of telling your story out loud—start with one page.
Could you write your one-sheet?
Please be sure to face the hard questions.
Let them tether you back to the reason you began this whole wild process: to say something true.


Research, Creation, Breakthrough

Then it happened—an alert in my inbox.
A few podcast matches. Real invitations.

My hands stilled on the keyboard.
For years, my work has spoken through pages—Every Natural Fact, and now The Alchemy of Sass.
But seeing those matches felt different. The ideas that had lived in print suddenly moved, finding new expression through voices in conversation.

My podcasting journey begins.

Your turn.
Your purpose.
Your one-sheet.

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