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Managing Podcast Editor Payments as Your Business Grows

When you're working with one or two people, payment management is easy.

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The problem

Why this matters

When you're working with one or two people, payment management is easy. You know everyone, you remember who prefers ACH versus PayPal, and a missed detail is a quick Slack message away. Scale to ten, twenty, or fifty, and that system falls apart.

What Breaks When You Grow

The first thing that breaks is institutional memory. The one person who knew that your video editor prefers to be paid on Fridays leaves, and suddenly you don't know where the bank details are, who approved the last payment, or whether the routing number you have on file is still current.

The second thing that breaks is verification. When payment processing moves fast, shortcuts become habits. Bank details get stored in spreadsheets. Invoices get paid against details from memory rather than a verified source. One wrong digit and the payment goes somewhere it shouldn't.

The third thing that breaks is compliance. At scale, you have more payees, more 1099s, and more opportunities for gaps in tax documentation. An audit-ready payment record can't be reconstructed from six months of Slack threads.

How to Build a Payment Operation That Scales

01

Centralize Payment Profiles

Every payee should have one verified payment profile in one place — not in three people's email threads. Garded gives you a single source of truth.

02

Remove the Human Collection Step

Stop asking people to send bank details manually. Send a Garded link, the payee fills it out, and the details are in your system — no manual entry, no transcription errors.

03

Create a Payment Authorization Workflow

Define who can request a payment versus who can approve it. Separation of duties prevents both fraud and accidental mispayments.

04

Audit Quarterly

Review active payment profiles quarterly. Remove payees you no longer work with, verify that current details are still accurate, and update contact information.

How podcast editor payments typically work

DetailNotes
Payment modelper episode or monthly package
Typical range$75–$400 per episode for full edit and show notes
Usually managed byyou directly
How it typically flowsPodcast editors deliver edited audio and show notes via shared folder and invoice per episode or monthly
Where the risk entersPer-episode billing creates weekly payment transactions that creators often handle casually over email or Discord
Worth knowing: For a show that publishes weekly, your podcast editor invoices 52 times per year — that's 52 opportunities to accidentally re-share banking details. Store their profile in Garded once and reference it every time

Build a Payment Workflow That Doesn't Break When You Grow

Start with one secure payment request. Scale from there. Free to start.

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Common questions

Can multiple team members access payment profiles in Garded?
Yes. You can control which team members have view versus edit access to payment profiles, with a full audit log of all activity.
How does Garded handle 1099 season?
Garded stores the legal name and tax ID collected during onboarding — both fields required for 1099 filing. Export the data when you need it.
What's the right time to implement a system like this?
Before you need it. The best time to build a secure payment workflow is when your team is small enough that change is easy. By the time payment chaos is a crisis, it's harder to fix.