Great Pods Relaunches With User Accounts and Editorial-Driven Discovery
- frakrac6
- 1 day ago
- 3 min read
Great Pods explains its business case as follows: “Finding podcast recommendations can be difficult. Great Pods is making it easier with one Critic review at a time.”
Podcast discoverability is difficult for avid listeners for two basic reasons. First, there are thousands of podcasts to discover that remain unknown. Second, the sheer number of podcasts precludes a shared repository, although the Apple ecosystem may come closest to a unified, organized roadmap. That’s why a service such as Great Pods offers free GPS settings for the best podcasts in each genre, including some categories you may have never heard of.
Moreover, finding a new podcast is difficult due to immense content saturation — millions of episodes exist — coupled with poor search functionality within apps that favor top charts over niche, independent content. Discovery is hindered by weak SEO, fragmented social media noise, and the difficulty of searching inside audio content to find specific topics.
Great Pods is a podcast discovery platform built on critical transparency, bringing human editorial judgment back to a landscape dominated by algorithmic noise.
Great Pods, the definitive critics’ hub for podcast discovery, today announced the relaunch of its platform with user accounts, smart discovery tools, and a compounding editorial record built around a single goal: helping listeners feel confident about what they choose to hear.
Great Pods has served more than 300,000 podcast listeners organically, without a single paid ad. The platform features 6,300+ expert critic reviews from 132 active critics at 50+ major publications, including The New York Times, Vulture, The Observer, and The Times, alongside independent voices, including Lauren Passell of Tink Media and Keelin of Mentally A Magpie, covering more than 14,000 podcasts. Every recommendation has a byline. Every score has a reason. Unlike algorithm-driven platforms, Great Pods gets more useful the more critics write, and listeners engage, building an editorial record for podcasting that has never existed before.
“I’ve been making and discovering podcasts since before the algorithms existed,” said Imran Ahmed, Founder of Great Pods. “I hosted one of the first South Asian podcast shows, interviewing Hasan Minhaj and Sugar Sammy before most people knew what a podcast was. Great shows were impossible to find then. Not much has changed — until now.”
What’s New• User Accounts and Profiles —
Save podcasts, build a personal library, and track the critics and genres you trust.











Comments