Radio ads felt inevitable for decades. You bought a slot, hoped someone was half-listening while they drove to work, and called it brand awareness. Then digital display came along and promised precision targeting, which it delivered, sort of, when people weren’t using ad blockers. Podcast advertising sits in a genuinely different category to both, and it’s taken a while for UK brands to catch up to what’s actually happening there.
The numbers are hard to ignore at this point. Ofcom data from 2023 showed around 21% of UK adults listening to podcasts weekly, and that figure skews heavily towards the 25-44 bracket with disposable income and brand loyalty. These aren’t passive listeners either; someone choosing to spend 45 minutes with a specific host, on a specific topic, has already told you a lot about what they care about and what they might spend money on.
The trust problem that podcast ads don’t have
Most advertising has a trust deficit baked into it. People have spent years training themselves to skip pre-roll video, scroll past sponsored posts, and mentally mute banner ads; the format announces itself as an interruption before a single word has been said. Podcasting works differently because the host is the ad, in most cases. When someone you’ve been listening to for two years recommends a product in their own voice, with their own opinion, it lands differently to a brand reading off a script.
Host-read ads in particular carry an endorsement quality that’s genuinely difficult to manufacture elsewhere. Listeners trust the host, so trust extends to what the host recommends. It’s not complicated, but it is powerful. That said, it only works if the product actually fits the audience, which is why targeting matters so much more than reach when you’re thinking about podcast advertising.
A supplement brand advertising on a true crime podcast isn’t inherently wrong, but it’s also not doing much work. The same brand on a fitness or wellbeing show is speaking directly to people who already think about what they put in their bodies. Same budget, very different result.
Mid-roll, pre-roll, and why placement actually matters
There’s a practical side to this that often gets glossed over in the broader conversation about audio. Where your ad sits in an episode isn’t a minor detail – pre-roll spots get heard, but they get skipped too, especially by regular listeners who know the episode will start properly in about 60 seconds. Post-roll is basically a lottery, but mid-roll, the ad that drops somewhere in the middle of an episode, tends to perform best because the listener is already invested in the content and less likely to bail.
Episode length matters too. A ten-minute show that drops three ad slots is going to irritate people. A 60-minute conversation where two or three ads are woven in naturally by the host feels like a much lighter touch. Honestly, a lot of brands don’t think about this when they’re buying spots and end up annoyed when results are underwhelming.
What UK brands are still getting wrong
There’s a tendency to treat podcast advertising as a direct response channel and measure it entirely on immediate conversions. Some formats work that way, particularly short-form shows with tight, engaged audiences and a host who drives people to a promo code. But for a lot of brands, especially those selling something with a longer consideration cycle, the value builds over time. You’re planting a name in someone’s head repeatedly, in a context they associate with content they actually like.
Attribution is also genuinely tricky. Promo codes help, but they only capture the people who remember to use them. Vanity URLs can work, and surveys asking new customers where they heard about you fill in some gaps. But you’ll rarely get a clean line between spend and return, and if you need that, podcasting will frustrate you. It’s a medium that rewards patience and consistency.
The brands seeing real results from audio advertising are the ones that have committed to it for at least three to six months on shows where the audience already cares about what they’re selling. One placement on a big show for one week tends to disappear into the noise. Consistency on a niche show with genuine community around it tends to stick. That’s not a revolutionary insight, but it’s one the industry keeps having to rediscover.










































































