What is Zoom
Zoom is a widely recognised cloud-based video conferencing platform that has become a popular, accessible option for podcasters recording remote interviews. Its built-in recording features allow hosts to capture audio and video locally or to the cloud, and a dedicated setting lets each participant’s audio be saved as a separate track — making post-production editing significantly easier. The platform also generates automated transcripts of cloud recordings, which podcasters use for show notes and content repurposing, and supports live-streaming to YouTube for video podcast audiences.
While Zoom was not originally designed for podcast production, its ubiquity means guests rarely need onboarding, and joining via a browser link requires no app download. Reviewers and podcasting guides note that with the right settings — such as enabling ‘Original Sound for Musicians’, HD audio, and per-participant audio files — recording quality can be meaningfully improved. However, because Zoom uses VoIP technology, audio and video quality are dependent on a stable internet connection, and the platform applies compression that can reduce fidelity compared to dedicated podcast recording tools.
Zoom Workplace, the broader product suite, bundles meetings, team chat, phone, whiteboards, AI Companion, and an app marketplace into one platform. The free Basic plan limits group meetings to 40 minutes, while paid plans unlock longer sessions, cloud recording storage, automated transcripts, and AI features. Alternatives purpose-built for podcasting — such as Riverside.fm, Zencastr, and SquadCast — offer local recording that bypasses internet-quality issues, but Zoom remains the recommended free entry point for podcasters on a zero budget.
Key Features
- Local and cloud recording with per-participant separate audio tracks
- Automated cloud recording transcripts (Business/Education/Enterprise plans)
- HD audio and video with 'Original Sound for Musicians' mode
- Screen sharing, virtual backgrounds, and breakout rooms
- Live-streaming to YouTube directly from a meeting
- AI Companion for meeting summaries and notes (paid plans)
- App Marketplace integrations with third-party tools
Why we like it
- Recognised as the best free option for simple remote podcast interviews by independent podcast production reviewers
- Per-participant separate audio track recording praised by podcasters as 'incredibly helpful' for post-production editing
- Automated cloud transcripts valued by podcasters for generating show notes and repurposing quotes for promotion
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Extremely familiar to guests — most people already have Zoom, reducing onboarding friction
- Guests can join via browser link without downloading the app
- Easy to set up recurring meetings and manage past recording files
- Free plan allows podcast recording with local storage at no cost
Cons
- Audio and video quality suffer on poor internet connections due to VoIP compression, making recordings less professional
- Free plan limits group meetings to 40 minutes, which is restrictive for full podcast episodes
- No native podcast hosting or distribution features — recordings must be exported and uploaded to a separate platform
Who is using Zoom
Beginner and budget-conscious podcasters who record remote interviews and want a free, widely recognised tool their guests can join instantly without setup.
- Beginner podcasters recording remote interviews on a zero budget
- Podcasters whose guests are already familiar with Zoom and need no onboarding
- Teams recording internal training sessions or webinars for repurposing as podcast content
- Video podcasters who want to live-stream episodes to YouTube
- Podcasters needing automated transcripts for show notes (Business plan and above)
Zoom Pricing
Freemium
Free (Basic): 40-min group meeting limit, local recording, up to 100 participants; Pro: $13.33/user/month (billed annually) or $16.99/month, 30-hr meetings, 10 GB cloud storage, AI Companion; Business: $18.33/user/month (billed annually) or $21.99/month, up to 300 participants, recording transcripts, SSO; Enterprise: custom pricing, up to 1,000 participants, unlimited cloud storage
Pricing details may change. Check the official website for the latest information.
What makes Zoom unique
Zoom's primary differentiator for podcasters is its near-universal adoption — guests almost always already have an account or can join via browser without downloading anything, removing a common friction point. Dedicated podcast recording tools like Riverside.fm record audio and video locally at the source (bypassing internet quality issues), while Zencastr and SquadCast offer similar local-recording approaches. Zoom lacks these local-capture capabilities and has no built-in podcast hosting or distribution, but its free tier, broad device support (Mac, PC, Android, iOS, Chrome, Firefox), and integrated AI Companion for transcription and summaries make it a practical, low-barrier starting point that dedicated tools cannot match on familiarity alone.
Zoom Alternatives
Riverside.fm, Zencastr, SquadCast, Cleanfeed, StreamYard
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