Podcast Studio Services

Podcast Studio.
Broadcast-Grade Equipment. Ready When You Are.

Walk in, sit down, hit record. RMG Web Marketing’s podcast studio is built around the same broadcast-grade gear you’d find in any professional production house — Shure SM7B microphones, Rode PodMics, the Rodecaster Pro audio interface, Elgato teleprompters, professional lighting, acoustic treatment, and full multi-camera video capability. Whether you’re recording your first episode or your three-hundredth, you get the equipment, the room, and the engineer that turn good conversations into broadcast-quality audio and video.

The quality of your podcast is decided in the first three seconds. Listeners can’t articulate why one show sounds professional and another sounds like a Zoom call recorded in a kitchen — they just know. What they’re actually hearing is the cumulative effect of a dozen small equipment and room decisions: the microphone’s ability to reject room noise, the preamp’s headroom and clean gain, the acoustic treatment killing reflections off hard walls, the interface’s sample rate and bit depth, the cable quality, the monitor accuracy, the camera sensor for video, the lighting that doesn’t make hosts look exhausted, the teleprompter that lets the host hit talking points without reading off a phone propped against a coffee mug. Hosts can’t fake any of it with a USB mic from Amazon and good intentions. A proper podcast studio is the difference between sounding like a real broadcast and sounding like a YouTube tutorial filmed in a closet.

Building your own studio to professional standards is genuinely expensive and surprisingly slow. A full-quality multi-mic in-room setup typically requires $15,000–$40,000+ in equipment (Shure SM7B microphones at roughly $400 each, the Rodecaster Pro II audio interface, broadcast-grade boom arms, premium XLR cables, in-room acoustic treatment, multi-camera video rigs, professional lighting, Elgato teleprompters, monitors, backup recorders) — plus the weeks of testing, calibration, and trial-and-error to make any of it sound right in the actual room you’re using. For most businesses, churches, agencies, authors, and consultants, the math doesn’t work: investing tens of thousands in gear for a few hours of recording per week is the wrong allocation of capital. The alternative — booking a professional podcast studio for the hours you actually need it — gets you broadcast-quality output without buying, maintaining, or learning the gear yourself.

Based in Fairfield, Texas and serving podcast hosts, businesses, ministries, and creators across the region, RMG Web Marketing’s podcast studio is equipped with the same broadcast-grade gear used by professional production houses, optimized acoustically for podcast and video capture, and staffed with the production engineering to make every recording sound polished from the moment you stop the take. Our equipment list includes Shure SM7B dynamic microphones, Rode PodMic dynamic microphones, the Rodecaster Pro II audio interface, Elgato teleprompters for scripted segments, multi-camera video capture for video podcasts, professional studio lighting, acoustic treatment engineered for the room, comfortable seating that doesn’t generate fabric noise, and an engineer who knows how to dial the gear in for your specific voice and format. We rent the studio by the hour, half-day, or full day — with optional editing, distribution, and full production packages available if you want more than just the room and the gear.

Frequently Asked

Studio Questions? We Have Honest Answers.

Plain-English answers about the equipment we use, capacity, video capability, remote guests, booking and pricing, what to bring, and what separates a real podcast studio from a guest room with a USB mic.

What equipment is in your podcast studio?+
Our studio is built around the same broadcast-grade gear used by professional production houses. Microphones: Shure SM7B dynamic mics (the industry-standard broadcast microphone behind countless podcasts, radio shows, and live broadcasts) plus Rode PodMic dynamic mics for additional positions. Audio interface: the Rodecaster Pro II — the purpose-built podcast production console with onboard processing, multiple mic preamps, sound effects, and multi-track recording. Mounting: Rode PSA1+ broadcast boom arms with proper cable management. Cabling: premium XLR cables with locking connections. Teleprompter: Elgato Prompter for scripted segments, intro reads, and sponsor messages. Video: multi-camera capture with broadcast-quality cinema cameras, professional lighting kits, and chroma-key capability if needed. Headphones: closed-back monitoring headphones for every seat to prevent bleed. Acoustic treatment: engineered room treatment that kills reflections without making the space sound dead. Monitors: accurate studio reference monitors for engineer playback. Plus comfortable seating that doesn’t generate fabric noise, climate control, and a clean, well-lit environment that looks like a real studio in your video clips.
Why does microphone choice matter so much?+
The microphone is the single most important piece of equipment in any podcast — it’s the only thing standing between your voice and the listener’s ear. The Shure SM7B is the industry standard for serious podcasts and radio for specific technical reasons: it’s a dynamic mic (not condenser), which means it rejects room noise dramatically better than the USB condenser mics most amateur podcasts use; it has a tight cardioid pattern that picks up the host’s voice without picking up the keyboard, the HVAC, or the dog in the next room; it has internal shock mounting that rejects desk vibrations; and it produces the warm, broadcast-friendly sound that listeners associate with professional radio. The Rode PodMic is its closest practical alternative — a dynamic mic engineered specifically for podcasts at a fraction of the price, with very similar noise-rejection characteristics. Together they cover every position in our studio. The audible difference between these and a $50 USB condenser mic is dramatic — listeners can hear it even if they can’t articulate why.
What is the Rodecaster Pro and why do you use it?+
The Rodecaster Pro II is a purpose-built podcast production console — not a generic audio interface adapted for podcasts. What it does for our recordings: provides four dedicated mic preamps with clean gain and broadcast-quality A/D conversion, runs onboard processing (EQ, compression, noise gates, de-essing) per channel in real time so audio is already partly mixed at the source, captures multi-track recording so every microphone gets its own isolated track for post-production flexibility, includes sound-pad triggers for intros, outros, and bumpers, supports Bluetooth and USB call-ins for phone or remote guests, and handles all the monitoring routing so every guest hears the mix correctly through their own headphones. What that means for you: faster recordings, less post-production cleanup, fewer technical surprises, and consistent broadcast-quality output session after session. The Rodecaster Pro represents the same kind of upgrade over generic audio interfaces that the Shure SM7B represents over USB mics — specifically engineered for the job.
Why include an Elgato teleprompter?+
A teleprompter solves a problem most hosts don’t realize they have. For scripted segments — intros, outros, sponsor reads, transitions, key talking points, complicated stats or names — hosts who try to memorize end up sounding stilted, and hosts who read off a phone or laptop screen end up with their eyes drifting away from the camera and the mic. The Elgato Prompter sits directly in the camera’s line of sight (behind a half-silvered mirror), so the host reads natural-feeling copy while looking straight into the lens. The result: scripted moments that sound conversational and look engaging on video, intros and outros that hit the marks without retakes, sponsor reads that come out clean every time. Even hosts who plan to record entirely unscripted benefit from having the prompter available for the moments where exact wording matters — disclaimer reads, legal language, specific statistics, brand names that have to be pronounced correctly.
Do you support video podcasts and multi-camera setups?+
Yes — video is increasingly essential and our studio is built for it. Multi-camera capture: broadcast-quality cinema cameras positioned for host close-up, guest close-up, and wide-shot conversation framing, all synchronized for clean post-production switching. Lighting: a full professional lighting kit (key, fill, and back lights, plus practical accent lighting) that makes hosts look engaged and professional rather than washed-out and tired. Background: clean, on-brand backdrop options including the option for chroma-key (green screen) for shows that want full background replacement. Audio-for-video integration: all four microphone channels recorded in lockstep with the video so syncing is automatic and pristine. Output formats: vertical (9:16) for Reels/TikTok/Shorts, square (1:1) for Instagram feed and LinkedIn, and traditional horizontal (16:9) for YouTube and Spotify video — all from the same recording session. We can deliver edited episodes ready to publish, or hand off the raw multi-camera footage if you have an editor in-house.
How many people can record in the studio at once?+
Our studio comfortably accommodates up to four hosts or guests in-room with dedicated SM7B or PodMic microphones for each, individual headphone monitoring per seat, and clear sight lines for video framing. Solo host: ideal for monologue-style shows, scripted content, and audio-first interview episodes. Two hosts or host plus single guest: the most common configuration; produces clean conversational audio and easy two-camera video framing. Three or four people: panel-style shows, multi-host formats, or interview episodes with two guests — each gets a dedicated mic, individual track recording, and proper isolation. Larger groups: we can configure for up to six speakers with notice, though video framing and audio isolation get more complex past four. Remote guests joining in-room hosts: fully supported via Riverside.fm, Squadcast, or Zoom integration through the Rodecaster Pro, so a remote participant can join two or three in-room hosts seamlessly.
How do remote guests join when I’m recording in your studio?+
Three options, depending on the guest’s setup and quality needs. (1) Riverside.fm or Squadcast double-ender: the highest-quality option — the remote guest records full-quality local audio (and video) on their own device, then those local files upload after the session. This produces the cleanest possible remote audio, indistinguishable from in-studio quality once mixed. Best for serious interviews and important guests. (2) Direct call-in through the Rodecaster Pro: Bluetooth or USB call routing brings the guest in live through the console, with proper monitoring routing so the in-room hosts hear them in their headphones and the call audio gets recorded on its own track. Faster setup, slightly lower audio quality than the double-ender approach. (3) Zoom integration: the simplest option when guests aren’t technically comfortable with Riverside or Squadcast — we still route their audio through the Rodecaster on its own track. We help you pick the right approach per guest, and our engineer handles all the technical setup.
How much does it cost to book the studio?+
Studio time is billed by the hour, half-day, or full day with transparent pricing and no surprise fees. Hourly rates cover the room, all equipment, and a production engineer running the session — typically in the low-to-mid three-figures per hour depending on whether the session is audio-only or full multi-camera video. Half-day blocks (4 hours) and full-day blocks (8 hours) carry meaningful discounts off the hourly rate — most efficient choice for hosts batching multiple episodes in one sitting. Ongoing podcast clients who book a regular monthly cadence can lock in retainer pricing that’s lower still. Add-on services available at the time of booking: editing per episode, transcription, show notes, short-form clip production, full distribution, hosting setup. Every booking includes setup, breakdown, the engineer’s time, recording files delivered immediately after the session, and proper backups. We provide a clean, line-itemed quote up front — no per-mic fees, no surprise gear charges.
What should I bring to my session?+
Less than most first-time hosts expect. Definitely bring: your outline, notes, or script (printed or on a tablet — we’ll mirror it on the teleprompter if helpful); any pronunciation notes for guest names, brand names, or technical terms; water (we provide it but bring your favorite if you have one); and the calmest version of yourself you can manage. You do not need to bring: a microphone, headphones, an audio interface, a laptop for recording, any cables, anything for video lighting, an SD card, a teleprompter, or any production gear. All of that is in the studio, configured and tested, ready when you arrive. For video sessions: dress for camera — solid colors usually outperform busy patterns, avoid all-black or all-white if possible, no logos other than your own brand, and check yourself for jewelry or watches that might catch light awkwardly. We’ll walk you through everything else when you arrive, including how the gear works, how the engineer handles the technical side, and what the workflow looks like from “hit record” to “here’s your file.”
What’s included with every studio booking?+
Every booking includes: the full equipment list — Shure SM7B microphones, Rode PodMics, Rodecaster Pro II audio interface, Elgato teleprompter, multi-camera video capture, professional lighting, acoustic treatment, monitoring headphones for every seat, and broadcast boom arms; the production engineer running the session (level checks, troubleshooting, recording management, basic real-time monitoring); the full studio space with comfortable seating, climate control, and clean on-camera backdrop; pre-session technical check to verify equipment and audio levels for your specific voice; raw multi-track recording files delivered immediately after the session (each microphone on its own track for maximum post-production flexibility); separated video files for each camera angle if recording video; and proper file backup and delivery. Not included by default but available as add-ons: editing, transcription, show notes, clip production, distribution to directories, hosting setup, and any of the broader podcast services from our Podcast Creation and Podcast Distribution offerings. Most clients book the studio standalone for the recording session, then choose which downstream services to add based on what they’re handling in-house.
Equipment That Matters
SM7B
Shure SM7B — the industry-standard broadcast microphone behind countless podcasts and radio shows
Pro II
Rodecaster Pro II audio interface — purpose-built podcast console with onboard processing per channel
4 mics
comfortable in-room capacity — up to four hosts or guests with dedicated mics and headphones each
Multi-cam
multi-camera video capture with professional lighting and Elgato teleprompter for scripted segments
Why It Matters

Why a Real Studio Sounds Different

The first thing a real studio gives you is audio that doesn’t broadcast “amateur” in the first five seconds. The most common reason business podcasts sound unprofessional isn’t the host’s voice, the topic, or the editing — it’s the microphone and the room. A condenser USB mic in an untreated bedroom picks up every reflection off the walls, the keyboard, the dog, the HVAC, and the neighbor’s lawnmower, then renders it all with the same flat, slightly hollow tonal character that listeners instinctively associate with amateur podcasts. A Shure SM7B in a properly treated studio room captures only the host’s voice with the warm, present, broadcast-friendly character that listeners associate with professional radio. Same host, same words, same intelligence — dramatically different perceived quality. And perceived audio quality directly drives whether listeners stick around for the second episode.

The second thing it gives you is video that actually looks like you’re running a real operation. With YouTube emerging as the most-used podcast platform and short-form video clips driving most discovery on Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, and YouTube Shorts, the video side of your podcast now matters as much as the audio. A real studio brings broadcast-quality cameras, professional lighting that doesn’t cast you in shadows or make you look exhausted, a clean and on-brand backdrop, an Elgato teleprompter for scripted moments, and multi-angle framing that gives editors options. The visual contrast between a podcast filmed in a real studio and one filmed in a home office with a webcam is enormous — and viewers make snap judgments about business credibility from it within seconds of clicking play.

The third thing it gives you is time, focus, and the kind of session that actually produces usable recordings. Recording in your office means battling email, Slack notifications, walk-ins, ambient HVAC noise, fluorescent buzz, kid noise, dog noise, and the temptation to check just one quick thing between takes. Recording at home means similar interruptions plus the awkwardness of asking your spouse to please stop loading the dishwasher for the next hour. Recording in a real studio means the gear is dialed in, the engineer is handling the technical side, the room is purpose-built for the work, and your only job is to show up and have the conversation. The result is consistently better takes, faster sessions, less wasted time, and recordings that come out usable on the first attempt instead of requiring three retakes to fix problems that never should have existed in the first place.

What You Gain

What Our Studio Delivers for Your Recording Sessions

Shure SM7B + Rode PodMic

Industry-standard broadcast dynamic microphones at every seat — the same gear used by professional podcasts and radio shows. Dramatic rejection of room noise, warm broadcast tonal character.

Rodecaster Pro II Console

Purpose-built podcast production console with onboard processing per channel — EQ, compression, gating, and de-essing applied at the source so recordings come out partly mixed.

Elgato Teleprompter

Camera-mounted teleprompter for scripted segments — intros, outros, sponsor reads, complicated names and stats — so hosts look directly into the lens while reading natural-sounding copy.

Multi-Camera Video Capture

Broadcast-quality cinema cameras positioned for host, guest, and wide-shot framing — with professional lighting and clean backdrops — in 9:16, 1:1, and 16:9 formats from one session.

Acoustically Treated Room

Engineered acoustic treatment that kills harsh reflections without making the room sound dead — paired with climate control and comfortable seating that doesn’t generate fabric noise.

Engineer Running the Session

A real production engineer handling levels, monitoring, troubleshooting, and file management in real time — so hosts focus on the conversation, not the gear.

How Bookings Work

Two Ways to Book the Studio: Hourly Session or Day-Rate Batch

Most podcast hosts use the studio one of two ways — booking individual hourly sessions for episode-by-episode recording, or booking half-day or full-day blocks to batch-record multiple episodes in one sitting. Both include the full equipment package, the engineer, and the room — they differ in time, cost-efficiency, and which workflow fits your publishing rhythm.

Option One

Hourly Studio Sessions

For episode-by-episode recording

Book the studio for a single recording session — typically 1 to 3 hours depending on episode length and guest count. Ideal for hosts publishing weekly and recording one episode at a time, or for one-off projects that don’t need a recurring block.

  • Full equipment package included
  • SM7B and Rode PodMic microphones at every seat
  • Rodecaster Pro II audio interface
  • Elgato teleprompter for scripted segments
  • Multi-camera video capture (optional add-on)
  • Professional lighting and acoustic treatment
  • Production engineer running the session
  • Pre-session level check and equipment test
  • Raw multi-track recording files delivered same day
  • Separated video files per camera angle (if video)
  • Transparent hourly rate — no per-mic fees
  • Easy online booking through our calendar

Best for: weekly podcasts, episode-by-episode workflows, one-off interview projects, and hosts who don’t need a recurring block.

Option Two

Half-Day & Full-Day Blocks

For batch-recording multiple episodes

Reserve a 4-hour or 8-hour block to batch-record three to eight episodes in one sitting. The most efficient way to build a publishing pipeline — record once, publish for weeks. Carries meaningful discounts off the hourly rate.

  • Everything in Hourly Sessions, plus:
  • Half-day (4 hours) and full-day (8 hours) blocks
  • Meaningful per-hour discount vs hourly rate
  • Wardrobe change capability between episodes
  • Guest scheduling coordination support
  • Lunch/break room for between-episode resets
  • Pipeline-friendly approach — record a month of episodes in one day
  • Ideal pairing with our Podcast Distribution service for batch publishing
  • Ongoing-client retainer pricing available for regular monthly bookings
  • Priority calendar access for recurring clients
  • Backup recording redundancy on every track

Best for: hosts building publishing pipelines, multi-host shows, panels and interview-format shows, agencies producing multiple shows, and any host who values time efficiency.

Add-on services available at the time of booking include audio editing per episode, transcription, show notes, short-form video clip production, full distribution to every major directory, and complete podcast hosting setup or migration — essentially everything from our Podcast Creation and Podcast Distribution services, plugged in around the studio time. Most clients book the studio standalone for the recording itself, then layer in the downstream services they don’t want to handle in-house.

Is This Right for You?

Who Uses Our Podcast Studio

Our studio works for almost any host who values professional production quality without the capital expense of building their own room. If your situation looks like any of the following, booking the studio is almost certainly the right call:

  • Business owners launching their first podcast
  • Established hosts upgrading from a home-office setup
  • B2B executives recording authority-driven shows
  • Authors, speakers, and consultants building personal brands
  • Agencies producing podcasts for clients
  • Churches and ministries with sermon or teaching podcasts
  • Real estate, legal, healthcare, and financial professionals
  • Coaches and trainers recording educational content
  • Multi-host shows that need multiple in-room mics
  • Hosts batch-recording weeks of content in one session
  • Anyone interviewing high-profile in-person guests
  • Out-of-town visitors needing studio access for a project

If you’ve been recording on a USB mic in your home office, hesitating to invest tens of thousands of dollars in studio equipment, or losing time to technical issues every session, a properly-equipped studio is the highest-leverage upgrade you can make to your podcast in a single afternoon. Walk in for the first time, hear the playback through professional monitors, and the difference is immediate and obvious.

Our Difference

Why Choose RMG Web Marketing’s Podcast Studio?

There are a few podcast studios available to rent within driving distance — most are coworking spaces with a USB mic in a phone booth, or photography studios with a microphone awkwardly bolted onto a desk. Far fewer are equipped with genuine broadcast-grade gear, a real production engineer, and the multi-camera video capability serious podcasts need. Choosing RMG Web Marketing’s studio comes down to three things: professional broadcast-grade equipment, a production engineer running every session, and full integration with our podcast creation and distribution services if you want more than just studio time.

Based in Fairfield, Texas and serving hosts from across the region, we don’t hand you a key and a USB mic. We don’t run the studio as a glorified Airbnb. We don’t charge per-mic fees, per-camera fees, or surprise gear charges. Every session includes the full equipment package, an engineer who knows the gear cold, and a clean workflow from arrival to file delivery. Here’s what working with us looks like:

  • Shure SM7B and Rode PodMic microphones throughout
  • Rodecaster Pro II console with onboard processing
  • Elgato teleprompter for scripted segments
  • Multi-camera video with professional lighting
  • Acoustically engineered room treatment
  • Production engineer running every session
  • Transparent hourly and day-rate pricing
  • Optional bundling with our creation and distribution services

We treat the studio as a professional production facility, not a coworking accessory. The equipment, the room, the engineer, and the workflow are all engineered for one job — turning your conversations into broadcast-quality recordings that sound and look like the shows you actually enjoy listening to.

Book the Studio

Ready to Sound Broadcast Quality?

Whether you’re recording your first episode or your three-hundredth, our studio delivers the equipment, the engineer, and the room that turn good conversations into broadcast-quality output. Contact RMG Web Marketing today to book a studio tour, a single hourly session, or a half-day block to batch-record your next month of episodes.

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