In an exchange from the 2010 movie, “The Social Network,” Justin Timberlake’s character openly mocks another character about the smalltime advertising leads he
landed. “You’re just a small step away from bagging Snookie’s Cookies, I can feel it!” Thus convincing Mark Zuckerberg to hold off on advertising until they're able to drum up
demand from larger advertisers.
The podcasting industry has found itself in a similar position over the past year.
If you’re an avid listener of podcasts, as I am,
you probably have heard advertising for brands like Casper mattresses, Squarespace, Harry’s Razors, Audible.com, Seat-Geek, and of course, Mail Kimp/Chimp.
It can seem
like these brands are on a never-ending loop. There must be a better way to support this growing source of news and entertainment by attracting more advertising dollars from a wider range of
brands.
It’s not the quality of the audience, given that the average podcast listener is 51% more likely to have a household income of more than $250,000, per a Simmons
study. The audience for most of these shows are still somewhat on the smaller side.
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Marketing in the digital age is all about finding the right micro-audience to leverage with
the right message. What better audience than well-educated-urban-dwelling-yuppie-podcast-addicts? So what’s holding them back?
The largest issue marketers have with the
medium is measurement. We’ve come to expect all digital media to be trackable and measurable. We want to know how many people were exposed, what they did after listening, and most importantly
how many of them converted.
The issue with podcasts is the vast majority of them are still consumed within the expertly sterile, well-designed, white-walled garden of Apple.
Apple is infamous for providing very little information to brands about what is happening on their app store or through iTunes.
The use of RSS trackers advertisers can learn little more than
how many people downloaded the podcast and when they did it.
However, more and more third-party podcast managers are coming to market to steal listeners away from the official
Podcast app, which just a few years ago, Apple decided to make native, no doubt to slow the growth of podcast listening alternatives.
One of my favorites is SoundCloud which lets users
seamlessly switch from the app to the browser-based player, something Apple has no plans of producing. It also provides all users with a robust reporting dashboard detailing all listening metrics.
Even taking into account these limitations ,I still don’t know why a company like Unilever doesn’t put some serious advertising muscle behind podcasting for their brands
like Dove, Ben & Jerry’s and Lipton.
Podcasting could become something akin to "Mad Men," in that it never had great ratings overall, but AMC kept on air for seven seasons because it
was one of the most reliable and efficient ways to deliver an affluent male skewing audience.
I’m still hopeful that as success stories begin to emerge, podcasts will start drawing some
real advertising dollars and can finally stop the infinitely loop of selling Snookie’s Cookies.