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Sherley is a Haitian-American flight attendant who served eight years in the US Army Reserve. Her journey with The Sherley Show (formerly known as Femme Naturelle) began as a way to build a safe space, a community to uplift and empower women in relationships transitioning out of crisis. She resides in New Jersey with her husband and two children.

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How to Know If Your Expertise Is Ready for the Mic

You have built something. A business, a craft, a career, a body of knowledge that took years to develop. People in your life come to you for advice, insight, and perspective. And somewhere along the way, someone — maybe several people — told you that you should start a podcast.

Maybe you have been seriously considering it. Maybe you have already looked up microphones or listened to a few episodes of someone else’s show with a critical ear, wondering if you could do what they do. Maybe you are not sure yet whether the idea is inspired or impractical.

This post is for you. Not a general overview of podcasting, but a specific, honest look at what it means to build a podcast around the expertise and business you have already worked hard to develop — and whether doing so makes strategic sense right now.

Also read: Why You Should Add A Podcast to Your Business


Your Expertise Is Your Differentiator — If You Know How to Use It

THE PRO: You already have the content. Most people who hesitate to start a podcast do so because they do not know what they would talk about. If you have built a business or developed real expertise in a field, you have already solved that problem. You have lived experience, professional knowledge, opinions formed over years, and stories that no one else can tell exactly the way you can. That is the foundation of a podcast that stands out in a crowded market.

THE CON: Having expertise does not automatically make you ready to share it publicly at scale. Being good at something and being able to teach, discuss, and translate it accessibly for an audience are different skills. Before launching, it is worth honestly asking: Can I explain what I do in a way that resonates with someone who is not already in my field? Can I sustain that conversation for 30 to 60 minutes an episode, week after week? If the answer is not yet, that is not a reason to abandon the idea — it is a reason to prepare more intentionally before you launch.


A Podcast Can Legitimize and Expand Your Brand

THE PRO: A podcast positions you as a thought leader. When you consistently show up with insightful, valuable content in your area of expertise, your audience begins to see you differently — not just as someone who offers a service or product, but as a trusted voice in your space. This credibility translates directly into business. It opens doors to speaking engagements, collaborations, media opportunities, and clients who already feel like they know and trust you before they ever reach out.

THE CON: Credibility takes time to build, and inconsistency destroys it faster than it builds it. Launching a podcast and publishing sporadically sends the opposite message from the one you intend. Audiences notice gaps. Sponsors do not invest in inconsistency. If your current bandwidth does not support a regular publishing schedule, it is smarter to wait, prepare, and launch with a sustainable rhythm than to start and stop and start again.


Your Business Can Benefit Directly — If the Strategy Is Clear

THE PRO: A podcast is a long-form sales conversation you never have to repeat. When your podcast content is strategically aligned with your business offers — your services, your products, your programs — every episode becomes an opportunity to warm up potential clients. Listeners who follow your show for weeks or months before ever buying from you often convert faster and with less friction than cold leads because they already trust you. Your podcast can do the relationship-building work that traditionally takes individual conversations.

THE CON: If your brand and business are not clearly defined, a podcast will amplify the confusion, not resolve it. Before adding a podcast to your ecosystem, you need clarity on who you serve, what you offer, and what makes your approach distinct. A muddled business with a podcast is just a muddled business with a microphone. Get clear on your foundation first, then amplify it through audio.


Podcasting Lets You Build Community Around What You Know

THE PRO: The right podcast builds a loyal audience, not just a following. There is a meaningful difference between someone who follows you on social media and someone who listens to your voice in their ears three times a week during their commute or workout. The intimacy of audio creates a depth of connection that most other content formats cannot match. When your expertise becomes the soundtrack to someone’s growth or healing or business journey, that loyalty is real — and it compounds over time.

THE CON: Community requires consistent nurturing — and expertise alone is not enough to keep people coming back. Your audience is not just looking for information. They can get information anywhere. They are looking for a perspective, a presence, and a host who genuinely cares about their experience. Showing up authentically, staying curious about your audience’s evolving needs, and being willing to grow alongside your listeners is what turns downloads into a community. If you are approaching a podcast purely as a broadcast tool, listeners will feel that — and they will not stay.


The Financial Reality: Investment Before Return

THE PRO: A well-positioned podcast can generate income — and it can do so in multiple ways. Sponsorships and advertisements are the most visible revenue stream, but they are far from the only one. Podcasts built around expertise are often most profitable through the host’s own offers: courses, coaching, consulting, books, events, and products that the podcast promotes organically. The show becomes the top of a funnel that leads listeners toward deeper engagement with your business.

THE CON: Podcasting costs money before it makes money — and most shows take longer to monetize than people expect. Equipment, editing, website hosting, cover art, marketing, and the time you invest all represent real costs, financial and otherwise. If you are launching with the expectation of a quick return, you will likely be disappointed and tempted to quit before the show finds its footing. Launch with a clear financial plan, a realistic timeline, and a business model that does not depend on podcast revenue to survive in the early months.


So — Should You Do It?

The honest answer is: it depends on where you are right now.

If your business has a clear identity, your expertise is something you can speak to authentically and consistently, and you are willing to invest the time and resources to do it with intention — then yes. A podcast built around your knowledge and experience can be one of the most powerful tools you add to your brand.

But if you are still building the business, still figuring out who you serve, or stretched so thin that adding one more responsibility would compromise the quality of everything else you are doing — then the most strategic move might be to prepare now and launch later. There is no prize for launching first. There is a significant advantage to launching right.

Everybody does not need a podcast. But if you do — if the idea keeps coming back to you, if the stories you want to tell are sitting right there waiting — the question is not whether to do it. It is how to do it in a way that lasts.


Key Takeaways

  • Having expertise gives you a content foundation most people struggle to build — that is a real advantage in podcasting.
  • Being knowledgeable and being able to consistently translate that knowledge for an audience are two different skills. Prepare for both.
  • A podcast can position you as a thought leader, but inconsistency will undermine that credibility faster than anything else.
  • Your podcast and your business must be strategically aligned — a clear brand message comes before a microphone, not after.
  • The real power of an expertise-based podcast is not sponsorships — it is warming up potential clients who already trust you before they buy.
  • Launch with a realistic financial plan. Most podcasts take time to monetize. Your business model should not depend on podcast revenue in the early stages.
  • There is no advantage to launching fast. There is a significant advantage to launching with intention, consistency, and a sustainable plan.

Ready to Start or Grow Your Podcast?

The following resources are exclusively for women who want to launch or scale a podcast as a real income stream.

Visit sherleysshow.com to access all resources.

Sources & Related Reading

Sherley’s Show™ — How to Sustain Your Podcast by Delegating Tasks

Sherley’s Show™ — Effective Podcast Growth Strategies Revealed

Sherley’s Show™ — Building Multiple Income Streams as a Flight Attendant



Sherley’s Show is learning and growing every single day. We aim to uplift all marginalized voices both on this podcast and in real life. Please note that we are always striving to change the problematic language that society has internalized in us. Thank you for your patience as we aim to strip certain phrases from our vocabulary.


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Are you interested in getting your opinion out about a particular topic but don’t know how to do so?  If so, here is an opportunity to do so to share your point of view, PLUS get your message and voice out there.  It is always a great way to know about different perspectives and enrich ourselves through knowledge sharing.

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Sherley’s Show provides an atmosphere where every woman is comfortable growing into their best self. Sherley’s Show is a no judgment podcast where we discuss how to rise strong out of all types of obstacles that come with relationships. Through personal life experiences and discussions ranging from infidelity, trust, forgiveness, sex, heartbreak, self love, therapy and more, we offer words of empowerment as you strive to build and maintain all of the relationships in your life. You may be going through something that is unique and difficult. Sharing your story gives others comfort and could also be helping someone else. Let them know they are not alone. Everyone has a story, do not let fear hold you back.

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Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links, I will get a commission if you decide to make a purchase through any of my links, at no cost to you. Please read my disclosure for more info.

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