Head-to-head comparison

PodSeeker vs Tally

Two of the guest workflow tools podcasters reach for. Here's how they differ on pricing, features, audience, and the trade-offs that actually matter day-to-day.

Free, beautiful forms widely used as a guest questionnaire builder.

Best for: Unlimited free guest forms

At a glance

Field
PodSeeker
Tally
Best for
PR-led podcast outreach
Unlimited free guest forms
Price tier
Freemiumverify
Freemiumverify
Platforms
Web
Web
Audience
Solo creatorsSmall teamsAgencies
Solo creatorsSmall teamsAgencies

The honest trade-offs

PodSeeker

Pros

  • Full podcast database with PR-focused features
  • Unlimited follow-ups on every plan
  • Agency tier handles 20,000 CSV exports/month

Watch-outs

  • $49/month entry steep for solo guests
  • Built for outreach volume, not casual booking
  • Only initial pitches count toward quota

Tally

Pros

  • Genuinely unlimited free forms and submissions
  • Stripe and integrations work on free tier
  • Conditional logic and signatures included free

Watch-outs

  • Less polished animations than Typeform
  • Tally branding stays until Pro
  • Smaller template library than competitors

Which one should you pick?

Pick PodSeeker if

You’re building around pr-led podcast outreach. PodSeeker is a PR-focused podcast outreach tool starting at $49/month, designed for the kind of bulk-pitching workflow where you're trying to book 50+ guests a month for clients. The database, follow-up tools, and CSV exports are aimed at agencies.

Pick Tally if

You’re building around unlimited free guest forms. Tally is the indie favorite for guest questionnaires because the free tier is actually unlimited, unlike Typeform's stingy 10-response cap. The UI is a touch less polished than Typeform's conversational forms, but you're saving $30 a month and getting Stripe and Notion integration for free.

Also worth comparing

Or see all PodSeeker alternatives.

Frequently asked

What does PodSeeker do better than Tally?

PodSeeker's standout is "Full podcast database with PR-focused features". Tally doesn't make that promise — it leans into "Genuinely unlimited free forms and submissions" instead. If the first sentence describes your workflow, pick PodSeeker; if the second does, pick Tally.

What are the trade-offs?

PodSeeker: $49/month entry steep for solo guests. Tally: less polished animations than typeform. Whether either matters depends entirely on what you actually need — neither is a deal-breaker by itself.

Can I use PodSeeker and Tally together?

Both are guest workflow tools so most teams pick one. Some workflows do combine them — for example, using PodSeeker for one show or episode type and Tally for another. Worth trying both free tiers before committing.