Remote Interview Recording
Capture professional-quality remote interviews using double-ender technique and dedicated recording platforms for podcasts, media, and content production.
When to Use This Skill
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Setting up remote podcast interviews with guests
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Recording media interviews across distances
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Creating customer interview content
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Producing expert interviews for thought leadership
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Conducting research interviews with high audio quality
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Planning equipment recommendations for interview guests
Methodology Foundation
Source: NPR Engineering Standards + Remote Recording Best Practices
Core Principle: "Local recording is key." The gold standard for remote interviews is the "double-ender" technique—both participants record locally on their own devices, then tracks are combined in post-production. This eliminates internet compression, lag, and connection issues that plague Zoom-style recordings.
Why This Matters: Internet-based audio suffers from compression artifacts, dropouts, and quality degradation. By recording locally at each location, you capture broadcast-quality audio regardless of connection quality. Platforms like Riverside, Zencastr, and SquadCast automate this process while maintaining professional standards.
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
Claude Does You Decide
Structures production workflow Final creative direction
Suggests technical approaches Equipment and tool choices
Creates templates and checklists Quality standards
Identifies best practices Brand/voice decisions
Generates script outlines Final script approval
What This Skill Does
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Selects optimal recording approach - Platform vs. manual double-ender
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Prepares guest technical setup - Equipment, environment, troubleshooting
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Manages recording workflow - Pre-checks, backup systems, session flow
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Ensures quality capture - Audio levels, monitoring, issue prevention
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Handles post-production sync - Aligning tracks, editing, export
How to Use
Plan Remote Interview Setup
Help me set up remote interview recording. Interview type: [podcast/media/research] Guest technical level: [savvy/average/low] Quality requirements: [broadcast/professional/good enough] Budget: [range]
Prepare Guest Instructions
Create guest preparation guide for remote interview. Platform: [Riverside/Zencastr/SquadCast/manual] Recording date: [date/time] Expected duration: [minutes] Guest equipment: [known setup or unknown]
Troubleshoot Recording Issues
Help diagnose/fix this remote recording issue: Problem: [describe issue] Platform: [which platform] Guest setup: [what we know]
Instructions
When setting up remote interviews, follow this methodology:
Step 1: Choose Recording Approach
Select the right method based on needs and constraints.
Recording Approach Decision
Option 1: Dedicated Platform (Recommended)
Best for: Regular podcasters, non-technical guests, convenience
Platform Comparison (2026):
| Feature | Riverside | Zencastr | SquadCast |
|---|---|---|---|
| Video Quality | 4K | 4K (paid) | 1080p |
| Audio Format | Lossless WAV | High-quality | High-quality |
| Local Recording | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Max Participants | 8 | 12 | 10 |
| Livestreaming | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
| AI Editing | ✅ | ✅ (ZenAI) | Via Descript |
| Hosting | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ |
| Free Tier | 2 hrs/mo | Trial only | 1 hr/mo |
| Best For | Quality-first | All-in-one | Descript users |
Recommendation by use case:
- Podcast + Livestream → Riverside
- Podcast + Distribution → Zencastr
- Already use Descript → SquadCast
- Budget-conscious → Zencastr trial or Riverside free
Option 2: Manual Double-Ender
Best for: Maximum quality, technical guests, existing equipment
Setup:
- Host: Records on DAW (Logic, Audition, Audacity)
- Guest: Records on Voice Memos, Audacity, or phone app
- Sync: Manual alignment using clap or verbal cue
- Communication: Zoom/Meet for video only (audio muted)
When to use:
- Guest has professional setup already
- Maximum control over quality needed
- Platform doesn't support your use case
- Free/budget priority
Option 3: Backup Recording (Zoom)
Best for: Casual interviews, fallback capture
Limitations:
- Compressed audio (not broadcast quality)
- Single-track or limited multitrack
- Connection-dependent quality
When acceptable:
- Informal interviews
- Backup alongside primary recording
- Guest absolutely cannot use dedicated platform
Step 2: Equipment Hierarchy
Recommend appropriate equipment for guest's situation.
Equipment Recommendations
Tier 1: Professional (Best Quality)
- Microphone: XLR mic (Shure SM7B, RE20, AT4040)
- Interface: Focusrite Scarlett, Apollo, RodeCaster
- Headphones: Closed-back monitoring (Sony MDR-7506)
- Environment: Treated room or vocal booth
- Result: Broadcast quality, professional sound
Tier 2: Prosumer (Excellent Quality)
- Microphone: USB mic (Rode NT-USB, Blue Yeti, AT2020 USB)
- Headphones: Any closed-back or good earbuds
- Environment: Quiet room, soft furnishings
- Result: Professional enough for most podcasts
Tier 3: Minimum Viable (Good Quality)
- Microphone: Lavalier/clip-on mic ($25-50)
- Headphones: AirPods or standard earbuds
- Environment: Quietest room available
- Result: Clearly better than laptop mic
Tier 4: Emergency (Acceptable)
- Microphone: Smartphone (Voice Memos, close to mouth)
- Headphones: Wired earbuds with inline mic
- Environment: Closet full of clothes (seriously)
- Result: Salvageable, may need heavy processing
Tier 5: Avoid
- Laptop mic: Distant, echoey, picks up typing/fans
- AirPods mic: Inconsistent, compression artifacts
- Speakerphone: Echo, room noise, unusable
Equipment Quick Guide for Guests
"For the best audio quality, here's the hierarchy:
- Best: USB microphone (Rode, Blue Yeti, AT2020)
- Great: Wired headset/earbuds with mic
- Good: AirPods/wireless earbuds
- Last resort: Phone close to face
Please avoid using your laptop's built-in microphone if possible."
Step 3: Environment Preparation
Guide guests to optimize their recording space.
Environment Checklist
For Guests (Send Before Interview)
Room Selection: □ Choose smallest room with soft furnishings □ Bedroom or closet > living room or kitchen □ Avoid rooms with hard surfaces (tile, glass, concrete) □ No background noise sources (AC, appliances, traffic)
Sound Treatment: □ Close all windows and doors □ Add soft materials (blankets, pillows) if room echoes □ Position away from walls (not in corner) □ Test for echo: clap hands, listen for reverb
Technical Setup: □ Use wired internet if possible (Ethernet > WiFi) □ Close all other applications □ Disable notifications (phone on silent, computer DND) □ Charge devices or plug in □ Restart computer before session
During Recording: □ Keep phone on airplane mode □ Don't touch desk/table (transmitted as rumble) □ Mute when not speaking (if platform supports) □ Keep water nearby but pour quietly
Common Issues to Prevent
| Problem | Cause | Prevention |
|---|---|---|
| Echo | Hard surfaces | Add soft materials |
| Background noise | AC, fans, traffic | Turn off, close windows |
| Rumble | Desk vibration | Mic on boom arm or separate stand |
| Plosives | "P" and "B" sounds | Pop filter or angle mic |
| Mouth noise | Dry mouth | Water, green apple before |
| Interruptions | Family, pets | Lock door, schedule quiet time |
Step 4: Pre-Session Checklist
Steps before hitting record.
Pre-Recording Checklist
30 Minutes Before
Host: □ Test platform is working □ Create/test room link □ Check your audio levels □ Prepare backup recording (Zoom, phone) □ Review questions and flow □ Set up notes/questions visible
Guest Communication: □ Send join link with instructions □ Remind: "Please use Chrome browser" □ Remind: "Use headphones if possible" □ Remind: "Choose quiet location" □ Share expected duration
10 Minutes Before
Tech Check with Guest: □ Test audio—ask them to speak, check waveform □ Test video (if applicable) □ Confirm they hear you clearly □ Check for background noise □ Verify recording is actually capturing
Start of Session
Sync Protocol (for double-ender):
- Both start recording
- Host: "3, 2, 1, clap" (or snap)
- Both clap simultaneously
- This creates sync point for post-production
Level Check: □ Ask guest to speak at normal volume □ Verify levels not peaking (aim for -12 to -6 dB) □ Adjust if needed
Backup Confirmation: □ Verify primary recording running □ Start backup recording (Zoom, phone) □ Announce: "Recording has started"
Step 5: During Recording
Manage the session for optimal capture.
Recording Session Management
Monitor Throughout
Watch For:
- Audio levels (not too hot, not too quiet)
- Connection warnings from platform
- Background noise appearing
- Guest technical issues
If Issues Occur:
- Brief technical problems: Continue, can edit later
- Major issues: Pause, troubleshoot, resume
- Unrecoverable: Stop, reschedule affected portion
Interviewer Best Practices
For Clean Edit:
- Don't talk over guest (wait for them to finish)
- Use non-verbal acknowledgment (nod, smile) instead of "mm-hmm"
- If you must react verbally, do it after they complete thought
- Re-ask questions cleanly if needed for edit
For Backup Safety:
- At natural breaks: "Let's pause for a moment"
- Check platform shows recording active
- Confirm backup still running
Common Mid-Session Fixes
| Issue | Quick Fix |
|---|---|
| Echo appearing | Guest: mute when not speaking |
| Noise introduced | Identify source, eliminate or pause |
| Connection dropping | Both continue recording, sync later |
| Levels changed | Stop, reset levels, note timestamp |
Step 6: Post-Recording Workflow
Handle files after session ends.
Post-Recording Process
Immediately After
Platform Recording:
- Confirm recording saved/processing
- Download all tracks (WAV preferred)
- Verify files play correctly
- Back up to cloud storage
Manual Double-Ender:
- Collect guest's recording (file share)
- Import both tracks to DAW
- Find sync point (clap)
- Align tracks precisely
File Management
Naming Convention:
[Date][Guest][Topic]_[Track].wav
Examples: 2026-01-26_JohnSmith_AIMarketing_Host.wav 2026-01-26_JohnSmith_AIMarketing_Guest.wav 2026-01-26_JohnSmith_AIMarketing_Backup.wav
Storage Structure:
interviews/ ├── raw/ │ ├── 2026-01-26_JohnSmith/ │ │ ├── host.wav │ │ ├── guest.wav │ │ └── backup.wav ├── edited/ │ └── 2026-01-26_JohnSmith_final.wav └── published/ └── episode-45_john-smith.mp3
Quality Check
□ All tracks recorded completely □ Audio is clear, no major issues □ Sync point exists (clap/verbal) □ No missing sections □ Backup is usable if needed
Examples
Example 1: Podcast Guest Setup
Context: Regular podcast needs to onboard non-technical guest.
Input:
Set up remote interview recording. Guest is a marketing executive, not technical. We need professional quality for weekly podcast. Using Riverside.
Output:
Guest Onboarding: Riverside Setup
Pre-Interview Email (Send 3 Days Before)
Subject: Quick setup for our interview on [Date]
Hi [Guest],
Looking forward to our conversation on [topic]! Here's everything you need for a smooth recording.
Recording Link: [Riverside room link]
When: [Date, Time, Timezone]
Duration: Approximately [X] minutes
Simple Setup for Best Audio:
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Browser: Please use Chrome (works best with our platform)
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Headphones: Any earbuds work—this prevents echo
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Location: Quiet room with soft furnishings (bedroom works great)
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Internet: Wired connection if available, strong WiFi otherwise
5 Minutes Before:
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Click the link, allow camera/microphone permissions
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I'll be there to do a quick tech check
No software to install—it all works in your browser.
Let me know if you have any questions!
Day-Of Checklist (Host)
30 min before: □ Open Riverside, test your setup □ Verify recording settings (WAV, separate tracks) □ Prepare Zoom backup link (just in case) □ Review questions
When guest joins: □ Greet, make them comfortable □ "Can you say a few sentences? I'm checking audio levels" □ Verify waveform shows good signal □ "Great, your audio sounds perfect"
Before starting: □ "I'm starting the recording now" □ Click Record □ Brief pause, then begin
If Issues Arise
Guest audio is echoey: "Could you try using headphones? Even phone earbuds work great."
Connection seems unstable: "Let's try turning off your video—often helps with connection." "Do you have a phone you could use as a backup?"
Platform isn't working: "Let me send you a Zoom link as backup while we troubleshoot."
Example 2: High-Stakes Media Interview
Context: Important media interview requiring broadcast quality.
Input:
Recording interview with major tech CEO for industry publication. Must be absolute best quality. CEO has staff who can help with setup. What's the ideal approach?
Output:
Premium Interview Setup: Tech CEO
Recommended Approach: Assisted Double-Ender
Given the importance and available support, use a hybrid approach:
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Platform: Riverside (for convenience + automatic local recording)
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Backup: CEO records locally on professional equipment
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Result: Dual-redundant broadcast-quality capture
Executive Brief (Send to CEO's Team)
Subject: Technical Setup for [Publication] Interview
Recording Date: [Date/Time]
Our platform will handle most of the technical work, but for the absolute best quality, here's the ideal setup:
Equipment (if available):
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USB microphone (Rode NT-USB, Blue Yeti, or similar)
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Wired earbuds or headphones
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Quiet, private room
If professional AV support is available:
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XLR microphone into USB interface
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Record local backup via voice recorder or DAW
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Ensure 48kHz/24-bit settings
Minimum acceptable:
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AirPods or headset with microphone
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Chrome browser
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Quiet location
We will send:
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Riverside link (no install needed)
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Brief tech check 5 minutes before
Host Preparation
Primary Recording: Riverside
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Room created with guest name
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Settings: 4K video (if video), Lossless audio, Separate tracks
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Downloaded permission: Enabled
Secondary Recording: Local DAW
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Audio interface active
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Recording armed
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Sync clap planned
Tertiary Backup: Zoom
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Meeting created (not shared unless needed)
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Cloud recording enabled
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Last-resort option
Quality Assurance Protocol
Before Recording: □ Confirm guest's audio is clean (no echo, background) □ Verify Riverside shows strong signal □ Confirm CEO's team is recording backup locally □ State sync phrase: "Recording starting. Three, two, one, sync." □ Both clap simultaneously
During Recording: □ Monitor Riverside waveform □ Watch for connection warnings □ If any issue: "Let's pause briefly to ensure we're capturing this properly"
After Recording: □ Confirm Riverside saved all tracks □ Request CEO team's local file via secure transfer □ Compare both for best quality □ Archive all versions
Deliverable Quality
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Minimum: 48kHz/16-bit WAV
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Preferred: 48kHz/24-bit WAV
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Usable backup: 44.1kHz/16-bit or high-quality MP3
Example 3: Budget Remote Recording
Context: New podcaster with limited budget needs to interview remote guests.
Input:
I'm starting a podcast and need to record remote interviews. Don't want to spend much money. What's my best option?
Output:
Budget Remote Recording Setup
Free/Low-Cost Approach
Best free option: Riverside Free Tier
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2 hours/month recording
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Watermark on video (audio clean)
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Local recording for quality
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Separate tracks
Alternative: Zencastr Free Trial
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14-day full access
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Good for getting started
Zero-cost manual method:
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Communication: Zoom free (audio muted, video only)
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Your recording: Audacity (free) or Voice Memos
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Guest recording: Voice Memos (iPhone) or Easy Voice Recorder (Android)
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Sync: Clap at start, align in post
Equipment on a Budget
For you ($50-100):
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Audio-Technica ATR2100x-USB ($79) - excellent value
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Or: Fifine K669 USB mic ($30) - good enough to start
For guests (free):
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Their phone's Voice Memos app
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Wired earbuds (prevents echo)
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Quiet room
Budget Workflow
Before Interview:
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Set up Riverside free room
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Email guest link + instructions
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Prepare backup plan (both record on phones)
Guest Instructions Email:
For best audio:
- Use Chrome browser
- Wear any headphones/earbuds
- Find quiet spot
- Click this link: [Riverside link]
No downloads needed! I'll be there 5 min early to check sound.
During Interview:
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Start Riverside recording
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Start local backup (Voice Memos on phone)
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Have guest record on their end (as backup)
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Do quick clap for sync
After:
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Download Riverside tracks (separate)
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Edit in Audacity (free)
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If Riverside had issues, use backup recordings
Upgrade Path
As podcast grows:
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Month 1-3: Free tier, learn process
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Month 4+: Riverside paid ($24/mo) for unlimited
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Month 6+: Better equipment as revenue allows
Total starting cost: $30-80 (mic only)
Checklists & Templates
Guest Preparation Email Template
Subject: Recording Setup for [Show Name] - [Date]
Hi [Name],
Excited for our conversation on [topic]!
Quick Setup (5 minutes):
🎧 Headphones: Please use any earbuds or headphones (prevents echo)
🔇 Quiet Space: Find a room away from noise, soft furnishings help
💻 Browser: Use Chrome for best compatibility
Join Link: [Your platform link]
When: [Date, Time, Timezone]
I'll be there 5 minutes early to do a quick sound check.
Reply to confirm, or let me know if you have questions!
[Your name]
Pre-Recording Checklist
30 Minutes Before
□ Platform tested and working □ Room link created/verified □ Your audio setup tested □ Backup recording ready (Zoom/phone) □ Questions/notes prepared □ Water within reach
When Guest Joins
□ Audio check: "Can you speak for a few seconds?" □ Video check (if applicable) □ Confirm headphone use □ Listen for background noise □ Check levels on platform
Before "Record"
□ State: "I'm starting the recording now" □ Click record □ Sync clap: "3, 2, 1, [clap]" □ Brief pause □ Begin interview
After Recording
□ Confirm file saved □ Download all tracks □ Thank guest for time □ Send follow-up email
Technical Troubleshooting Quick Reference
Common Issues & Solutions
Audio Problems
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Echo | No headphones | Guest: use any earbuds |
| Robotic audio | Bad connection | Turn off video, switch to phone |
| Quiet audio | Low mic gain | Platform: adjust input level |
| Distorted audio | Too loud | Move back from mic |
| Background noise | Environment | Mute between speaking |
Connection Problems
| Symptom | Fix |
|---|---|
| "Connection unstable" | Turn off video |
| Freezing video | Lower quality settings |
| Keeps disconnecting | Switch to mobile hotspot |
| Won't connect at all | Try incognito window |
Platform Problems
| Issue | Solution |
|---|---|
| Mic not detected | Check browser permissions |
| Recording not starting | Refresh, try again |
| Platform down | Switch to Zoom backup |
| Files won't download | Wait, try different browser |
Skill Boundaries
What This Skill Does Well
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Structuring audio production workflows
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Providing technical guidance
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Creating quality checklists
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Suggesting creative approaches
What This Skill Cannot Do
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Replace audio engineering expertise
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Make subjective creative decisions
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Access or edit audio files directly
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Guarantee commercial success
References
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Riverside. "14 Tips for Recording Interviews Professionally"
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NPR Training. "Audio Recording Standards"
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Buzzsprout. "How to Record Remote Podcast Interviews"
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Transom. "Recording Phone Calls and Skype"
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Podcasters' Guide to Audio Engineering
Related Skills
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podcast-production - Full production workflow
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podcast-interview - Interview technique
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audio-editing - Post-production processing
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voice-design - When AI voice is needed instead
Skill Metadata (Internal Use)
name: remote-interview category: audio subcategory: recording version: 1.0 author: MKTG Skills source_expert: NPR Engineering, Remote Recording Best Practices source_work: Double-Ender Technique difficulty: beginner estimated_value: Professional interview quality without studio tags: [remote-recording, podcast, interview, double-ender, riverside] created: 2026-01-26 updated: 2026-01-26