Five podcasts course creators play on loop in 2026
Not "the top 50 business podcasts" — five that working course creators keep coming back to. Each one is for a different question, which is why people rotate through them instead of picking a favorite.
Most podcast lists are flat. Twenty shows, all "great for entrepreneurs," no map for when to listen to which. This list is the opposite — five shows, each tied to a specific stage of running a course business.
The thing that took a while to notice: working creators don't pick one. They rotate. The question they're stuck on this week decides which show they queue up.
Below — the five, what each one is for, and the episode profile worth starting with.
One question per show
Each show is best when you have a specific kind of problem. Pick the one that matches what you're stuck on.
One line per show
- Creator Science (Jay Clouse) — interviews with working creators about real launches and real revenue. Tactical, current, narrow.
- Online Marketing Made Easy (Amy Porterfield) — the launch-mechanics show. Funnels, sales pages, email and launch sequences.
- Smart Passive Income (Pat Flynn) — fifteen years of evergreen foundations. Validation, audience, models. The base layer.
- The Knowledge Project (Shane Parrish) — not a creator show. Decision-making and mental models. For when the bottleneck is your thinking, not your tactics.
- Young and Profiting (Hala Taha) — currently #1 business podcast on Apple. Personal brand, scaling, entrepreneurship.
Creator Science — for tactics
Of the five, this is the show closest to what working course creators do all day. Clouse interviews people currently shipping — newsletter operators, course creators, podcast hosts — and the conversations are unusually concrete. Real subscriber numbers. Real launch revenue. Real systems.
The reason course creators tend to listen here first: Clouse's questions cut past the marketing layer. He asks what the guest actually does on Mondays, what their funnel looks like in numbers, what they changed in the last twelve months. The format produces tactics that other shows skip.
When to listen: when you're stuck on a specific tactical question — pricing, list growth, the first launch sequence, whether to run cohorts or self-paced.
Where to start: any recent interview with a creator working in your niche. The catalog runs deep — newsletter operators, course-first creators, community builders all show up.
Online Marketing Made Easy — for launches
If Creator Science is for tactics, this show is for the launch itself. Porterfield has been running launches at scale for over a decade and most of her show is the breakdown of how — webinars, sales pages, email sequences, cart-open and cart-close mechanics, launch debriefs.
The reason operators keep this show in their rotation is that the launch mechanics she covers are not theoretical. She runs the same launches herself, multiple times a year, and most of the episodes come straight out of her own data — what worked, what bombed, what got tweaked.
When to listen: when you have a course built (or close to it) and now you have to actually sell it. Pre-launch, launch week, post-launch — there's a Porterfield episode for each stage.
Where to start: any solo episode in the title pattern "How I launched [X]" or "What I changed about my [launch type]." Those are the unfiltered breakdowns.
Smart Passive Income — for foundations
The longest-running show on the list, and the one that operates at a different layer. Flynn talks about the durable parts of running a creator business — validation, audience-building, the systems that survive trend changes — more than the latest growth hack.
For first-time course creators this is often the show that does the most work. The Creator Science tactics assume you have the foundations in place. SPI is where you build the foundations.
Flynn's 2025 book Lean Learning sharpened the editorial line of the show further. Recent episodes lean toward shipping ugly first versions and iterating, against the perfectionism that traps most first launches.
When to listen: early in the journey, or any time you suspect the problem is foundational — wrong topic, wrong audience definition, no validation done — rather than a tactical fix.
Where to start: recent episodes around Lean Learning. Earlier episodes on validation are also worth the dive — they age well because the underlying logic hasn't changed.
The Knowledge Project — for thinking
This is the show on the list that has nothing to do with course creators specifically — and that is the point. Parrish interviews scientists, investors, military strategists, writers, athletes. Long-form. Two hours per episode. No tactics.
The reason it ends up in the rotation: at a certain stage in a creator business, the bottleneck stops being tactics and becomes decision-making. Which project to focus on. Which platform to commit to. When to scale and when to pull back. The Knowledge Project doesn't answer those questions directly — but it gives you the mental models to answer them yourself.
The biggest mistakes happen at the level of how we think, not what we know. — Shane Parrish
When to listen: when you're stuck on a meta-question — "what should I work on this quarter," "is this the right model," "why am I always feeling behind." The show won't tell you. It will sharpen the way you arrive at an answer.
Where to start: episodes with Naval Ravikant, Daniel Kahneman, Annie Duke, or any of the long-form interviews tagged decision-making.
Young and Profiting — for brand
YAP currently sits at #1 in the Apple Business category. Taha interviews high-profile entrepreneurs, marketers, and executives — and the show is closer to a personal-brand and scaling playbook than to a course-creation manual specifically.
For course creators it lands in the rotation when the question shifts from "build the course" to "build the brand around the course." The episodes lean toward personal positioning, social-media growth, scaling teams — which is where most successful course creators end up two or three years in.
When to listen: when the course business is producing revenue and the next bottleneck is reach. Personal brand, distribution, scaling beyond yourself.
Where to start: recent interviews with creators or operators in the seven-figure range. The episode mix is wide — entrepreneurship, marketing, finance — so it's worth being selective rather than chronological.
Why none of them is "the best"
The five shows don't replace each other. They cover different layers of the same business.
Most podcast recommendations are framed as "which one is the best." That framing assumes you can replace one with another. These five don't work that way.
Creator Science gives you what to do this week. Porterfield gives you the launch structure. Flynn gives you the foundations the launch sits on. Parrish gives you the way of thinking that decides what to launch in the first place. Taha gives you the brand layer once revenue is flowing.
The five together describe a full operating system for a course business. Cutting any one of them produces a real gap. Listening to all of them at once produces noise. The trick is matching the show to the question.
If you're new: Smart Passive Income and Creator Science do most of the work. If you're mid-launch: Porterfield and Creator Science. If you're stuck on what to focus on: Parrish. If you're scaling beyond yourself: Taha. The other shows can wait.
Direct links to each show
All five shows publish on every major podcast app. The links below go to the official home page for each.
- Creator Science — creatorscience.com · Jay Clouse
- Online Marketing Made Easy — amyporterfield.com/podcast · Amy Porterfield
- Smart Passive Income — smartpassiveincome.com/podcasts · Pat Flynn
- The Knowledge Project — fs.blog/knowledge-project-podcast · Shane Parrish
- Young and Profiting — youngandprofiting.com · Hala Taha
Prepared by the Kinescope team
Kinescope is a video hosting platform built for course creators, online schools, and businesses running educational content. The team focuses on three things:
- Host your course videos. Fast adaptive streaming worldwide, on a global CDN tuned for long-form educational content.
- Protect them from piracy. DRM, dynamic watermarking, and download prevention — so your content doesn't end up on pirate sites the day after launch.
- Integrate into any platform. Embed your videos into Teachable, Thinkific, Kajabi, Moodle, Open edX, or your own custom site — through a single embed code or API. No migration required.
If the conversations on these podcasts turn into an actual course you're about to launch, Kinescope is the layer underneath that handles the video so you can focus on the human work.