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RedCircle

Also analyzed in: 1 other industry
Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
7
/ 100
Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
55
/ 100
Category-Strong

What the model believes about RedCircle without web search.

LLM Authority?
1
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
6
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about RedCircle from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
55/100
Category-Strong
Quality?
0.67
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.58
Top associations for RedCircle
dynamic ad insertion 6 podcast monetization platform 5 ad marketplace tools 3 independent podcasters 3 monetization tools 3 less brand recognition 3 podcast hosting platform 3 podcast hosting tools 2 smaller brand recognition 2 not for non-podcasters 2 cross-promotion tools 2 easy setup 2 independent creators 2 monetization for creators 2 podcast platform 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
handles ad placement 2 campaign management services 1 podcast monetization platform 1 connecting advertisers with podcasts 1 ad network for podcasts 1 helps advertisers reach listeners 1 supports podcast ad placement 1 measures campaign performance 1 targets podcast audiences 1 helps place ad campaigns 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows RedCircle is firmly in the model's "podcast advertising network" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is RedCircle known for?
RedCircle is known for its podcast platform—especially podcast hosting, monetization, and ad marketplace tools for independent creators.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is RedCircle known for?
RedCircle is best known as a podcast platform, especially for podcast hosting, monetization, and ad marketplace tools for independent creators.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
1/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
2

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best podcast advertising networks for new podcasters? not mentioned #2
discovery Which podcast advertising networks work well for true crime shows? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What podcast ad networks are best for interview podcasts? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast advertising networks help with host-read ad sales? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best podcast ad networks for audience targeting? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast advertising networks support dynamic ad insertion? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What podcast ad networks are best for shows with midroll inventory? not mentioned #6
discovery Which podcast advertising networks are best for niche audiences? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best podcast advertising networks for B2B podcasts? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast ad networks are good for sports podcasts? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What podcast advertising networks work best for large catalogs of episodes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast ad networks are best for monetizing back catalog episodes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best podcast advertising networks for video podcasts? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast ad networks offer revenue sharing for creators? not mentioned #3
discovery What podcast advertising networks are best for growing ad fill rates? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast ad networks are best for advertisers buying podcast inventory? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What podcast advertising networks help brands reach listeners at scale? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast advertising networks are best for monetizing independent networks? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best podcast ad networks for international audiences? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast advertising networks are best for premium inventory? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to large podcast advertising networks? not mentioned #3
comparison How do podcast advertising networks compare with direct sales? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What is the best alternative to a full-service podcast ad marketplace? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Should I use a programmatic podcast ad network or a managed sales team? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to podcast ad exchanges? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do podcast advertising networks compare to sponsorship agencies? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to self-serve podcast ad platforms? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which is better for creators: podcast ad networks or affiliate monetization? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to host-read ad marketplaces? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do podcast ad networks compare with podcast monetization platforms? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I monetize a podcast with ad inventory but no sales team? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I fill unsold podcast ad slots automatically? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I insert ads into old podcast episodes? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get advertisers for a niche podcast? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I increase podcast ad revenue without changing my content? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I target podcast ads to the right audience? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I manage podcast ad campaigns across multiple shows? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I price podcast ad inventory fairly? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I track podcast ad performance and revenue? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I sell podcast ads to local businesses? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much do podcast advertising networks charge? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Is there a free podcast advertising network? #5 not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest podcast advertising network? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How do podcast advertising network fees work? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the best podcast ad networks with no minimum audience? not mentioned #4
transactional Which podcast ad networks offer revenue share? #5 #3
transactional What podcast advertising networks have the best payout rates? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there podcast ad networks with self-serve pricing? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the best podcast ad network for a small budget? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much can I earn from a podcast advertising network? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best podcast advertising networks for new podcasters? · discovery · retrieval mode
For **new podcasters**, the best ad networks are usually the ones with **low eligibility thresholds, self-serve setup, and both host-read + programmatic options**. My short list: - **Acast Marketplace** — best all-around if you can get to about **1,000 monthly listeners**. It’s creator-friendly, self-serve, and uses dynamic ad insertion across your back catalog. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/5503627-monetizing-with-acast-marketplace)) - **RedCircle Ad Platform (RAP)** — best for newer shows that want a clear path to monetization; eligibility starts at **500 weekly downloads** and includes both host-read and programmatic ads. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/what-is-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap)) - **Spreaker Ad Exchange** — best if you host on Spreaker and want monetization turned on early; it’s self-service, supports pre/mid/post-rolls, and starts monetizing as soon as you join. ([help.spreaker.com](https://help.spreaker.com/en/articles/3753298-spreaker-monetization-the-ad-exchange)) - **Gumball** — best for host-read sponsorships if your show already looks polished to brands; it’s built around direct host-read deals and creator control, but it’s more of a brand marketplace than an “easy first-dollar” network. ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/podcasters)) - **Spotify Partner Program** — good later, but not ideal for absolute beginners, since it requires hosting on Spotify for Creators plus **12 episodes, 10,000 global consumption hours in 30 days, and 2,000 unique listeners/viewers in 30 days**. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/fm/creators/article/spotify-for-podcasters-monetization-options/)) If you want the **fastest path as a new podcaster**, I’d start with **RedCircle** or **Spreaker**; if you already have steady growth, go for **Acast**; if you have a strong on-air personality and want sponsor-style reads, check **Gumball**. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/what-is-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best for beginners, best CPM potential, and best for podcast hosts with under 1,000 downloads/week**.
Prompt: What podcast ad networks are best for shows with midroll inventory? · discovery · retrieval mode
For shows with **midroll inventory**, the strongest options are usually: 1. **Megaphone / Spotify Audience Network** — best if you want to **fill unsold midrolls automatically at scale**. Megaphone supports smart ad locations that can add midroll slots, and Spotify Audience Network says it can monetize unsold inventory for Megaphone publishers. ([support.megaphone.fm](https://support.megaphone.fm/en/articles/8827107-adding-smart-ad-locations?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Acast** — best if you want **multiple midrolls and strong marketplace tooling**. Acast has a dedicated **Mid 2** targeting option, automatic mid-roll insertion, and dynamic insertion for pre/mid/post-roll. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/10256368-ad-manager-targeting-the-second-midroll?utm_source=openai)) 3. **SiriusXM / Midroll** — best for **premium, host-read midroll campaigns** on larger shows. SiriusXM describes Midroll as a leading podcast ad network, and its sales org represents major podcast inventory. ([investor.siriusxm.com](https://investor.siriusxm.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/925/siriusxm-to-acquire-stitcher?utm_source=openai)) 4. **RedCircle** — best for **indie shows that want a self-serve ad platform** with host-read and programmatic fills. RedCircle’s RAP supports both, and it explicitly treats midroll as the highest-value position. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/setting-up-advertising-in-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Audacy** — best if you’re selling into a **larger media network** with standard pre/mid/post structures and broader brand integrations. Audacy’s playbook explicitly includes mid-roll inventory and notes that the number of mid-roll spots per episode can vary. ([audacyinc.com](https://audacyinc.com/podcasts/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **Big show + premium host-reads:** SiriusXM/Midroll - **Dynamic fill / automation:** Megaphone + Spotify Audience Network - **Multiple midrolls / flexible marketplace:** Acast - **Self-serve indie monetization:** RedCircle - **Network-scale sales:** Audacy ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/10256368-ad-manager-targeting-the-second-midroll?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **ranked shortlist for your show size** (e.g. under 10k, 10k–100k, 100k+ downloads/ep).

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
6/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best podcast advertising networks for independent shows? 0 2/5 7, 7
Which podcast advertising networks are most recommended for publishers? 0 1/5 9
What are the most popular podcast ad network options? 0 0/5
Which podcast advertising network should I use to monetize my show? 0 0/5
What are the top podcast advertising networks for inventory monetization? 0 0/5
What is the best podcast advertising network for dynamic ad insertion? 0 0/5
Which podcast ad networks are best for programmatic ads? 0 0/5
What are the leading podcast advertising networks for creators? 0 2/5 11, 8
Which podcast advertising networks do advertisers use most? 0 0/5
What are the best podcast ad networks for growing revenue? 0 0/5
What podcast advertising networks are good for small podcasts? 0 1/5 4
Which podcast ad network is best for automated ad sales? 0 2/5 3, 8
What are the top podcast ad network companies? 0 0/5
What podcast advertising networks are worth considering? 480 0/5
Which podcast ad networks have the best reputation? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best podcast advertising networks for independent shows? (no web search)
For independent shows, the best podcast ad networks are usually the ones that are easy to join, work with smaller audiences, and don’t require massive downloads. **Top picks:** 1. **Spotify Audience Network (Spotify for Podcasters)** - Good if your show already gets steady downloads. - Broad advertiser access and simple setup. 2. **Acast** - Strong for independent creators. - Good dynamic ad insertion, decent marketplace, and easy monetization. 3. **Podcorn** - Best for sponsorship-style deals and host-read ads. - Great for smaller shows that want direct brand matches. 4. **Gumball** - Good for independent podcasts with engaged audiences. - More hands-on sponsorship marketplace. 5. **AdvertiseCast** - One of the bigger podcast ad marketplaces. - Better once you have consistent traffic, but still usable for mid-sized independents. 6. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid if you already use Libsyn for hosting. - Easy plug-in option for monetization. 7. **RedCircle** - Friendly to smaller independent shows. - Offers programmatic ads, cross-promotion, and memberships too. **Best overall for most independent shows:** - **Acast** - **RedCircle** - **Podcorn** If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small audience**, **best CPM**, or **best for host-read sponsorships**.
Iteration: 3 of 5
Prompt: What are the best podcast advertising networks for independent shows? (no web search)
For independent shows, the best podcast ad networks are usually the ones that are easy to join, have decent fill rates, and don’t require huge download numbers. ### Top picks - **Spotify for Creators (Megaphone / Spotify Ad Network)** Good if you want broad reach and easy setup, especially if your show already lives in Spotify’s ecosystem. - **Acast** One of the strongest options for independent podcasters. Good ad tech, dynamic insertion, and solid marketplace access. - **Libsyn Ads** Best for smaller-to-mid shows that want a straightforward, established network. Good if you already host on Libsyn. - **AdvertiseCast** Very popular with independent creators. Good brand ad opportunities and generally accessible compared with premium-only networks. - **PodcastOne Ad Marketplace** Better for shows with steady downloads and a more established audience, but still worth a look. - **Gumball** Great for host-read sponsorships and direct marketplace-style deals. Often a strong fit for indie shows with engaged listeners. - **RedCircle** Good all-around option for independent podcasters, especially if you want monetization tools plus ad network access. ### Best by situation - **Small independent show:** RedCircle, Libsyn Ads - **Growing show with decent downloads:** Acast, AdvertiseCast - **Host-read sponsorship focus:** Gumball - **Already on Spotify/Anchor ecosystem:** Spotify for Creators - **Using Libsyn hosting:** Libsyn Ads ### Quick tip If your show is still small, don’t rely only on ad networks. You’ll often make more from: - **direct sponsors** - **affiliate offers** - **listener support** via **Patreon** or **Supercast** If you want, I can rank these specifically for **small shows under 5k downloads/episode** or for **shows that want host-read ads only**.
Iteration: 5 of 5

Also analyzed in RedCircle in 1 other industry

This report focuses on Podcast Advertising Networks because that is where RedCircle scores highest. The model also evaluates it against the industries below, with their own prompts and competitor sets. Click any industry for its full leaderboard.

What to do next Recommendations for RedCircle

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Push product-specific content into authoritative sources

The model knows your category but may not name your specific products. Get product-level content into independent reviews, comparison articles, and ranked lists.

+5 to +15 on LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 5:58 AM

All 210 AI responses for RedCircle

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "RedCircle" in the podcast advertising network category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I’m familiar with RedCircle as a podcast hosting and monetization/ad platform, but I don’t know its full feature set or current positioning in depth." }
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I recognize RedCircle as a podcast monetization and advertising platform and know some of its core positioning, but I’m not confident on detailed features or current pricing." }
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":5,"justification":"I’m aware RedCircle is a podcast monetization/ad network brand, but I don’t know its specific features, pricing, or competitive positioning in detail."}
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":6,"justification":"I know RedCircle as a podcast hosting/monetization and ad platform with some general awareness of its offerings, but I’m not confident on detailed feature, pricing, or positioning specifics."}
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I know RedCircle as a podcast hosting and monetization/advertising platform and have some sense of its role in the market, but I’m not deeply familiar with its specific features, pricing, or competitive positioning." }
What is RedCircle known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is known for its podcast platform—especially podcast hosting, monetization, and ad marketplace tools for independent creators.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is best known as a podcast platform, especially for podcast hosting, monetization, and ad marketplace tools for independent creators.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is known for podcast hosting, monetization, and ad tools for independent creators.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is best known as a podcast monetization and hosting platform, helping creators distribute, monetize, and manage their podcasts.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is known as a podcast monetization and hosting platform. It helps podcasters host, distribute, and monetize their shows through ads, subscriptions, and listener support.
What are RedCircle's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle’s main strengths are its podcast-first monetization tools, easy ad marketplace access for smaller creators, dynamic ad insertion, and an emphasis on helping independent podcasters earn revenue without needing huge scale. It’s also relatively creator-friendly and simple to use. Its main weaknesses are smaller brand recognition and ecosystem size than the biggest podcast platforms, which can mean fewer advertisers, less network effect, and potentially less reach. It may also feel less feature-rich or less “enterprise-grade” than larger competitors for very big shows or media companies.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle’s main strengths are: - Strong monetization tools for podcasters (ads, sponsorships, subscriptions, tips) - Easy-to-use hosting/distribution workflow - Good fit for indie creators who want revenue options without a big upfront audience - Helpful marketplace/automation for ad matching and campaign management Main weaknesses are: - Smaller ecosystem and brand recognition than larger podcast platforms - Revenue potential can depend heavily on audience size and advertiser demand - Less useful for creators who mainly want advanced production or enterprise-level analytics - Some creators may find feature depth and integrations less extensive than bigger competitors
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle’s main strengths are its focus on independent podcasters, easy monetization tools, dynamic ad insertion, and simple hosting/distribution features. It’s generally seen as user-friendly and good for helping smaller creators start earning without needing a large audience. Its weaknesses are that it’s smaller than the biggest podcast platforms, so it may have less brand recognition, fewer advanced enterprise features, and a smaller advertiser/network reach. Revenue opportunities can also be limited for very small shows, and some users may outgrow it if they need deeper analytics or a more robust all-in-one podcast stack.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle’s main strengths are its creator-friendly podcast monetization tools, easy setup, dynamic ad insertion, and support for both hosting and ad sales in one platform. It’s also appealing for smaller and mid-sized podcasters who want to monetize without needing a huge audience. Main weaknesses: it’s not as widely recognized or as large an ecosystem as some bigger podcast platforms, so reach and marketplace depth can be more limited. Some creators may also find monetization opportunities depend heavily on audience size and ad demand, which can make earnings less predictable.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle’s main strengths are its focus on indie podcast monetization, easy-to-use hosting and ad tools, and its ability to help smaller creators access dynamic ad insertion, cross-promotion, and distribution. It’s often seen as more creator-friendly than larger, more enterprise-oriented platforms. Main weaknesses: it has less brand recognition and scale than the biggest podcast platforms, so advertisers and networks may offer fewer opportunities; some advanced users may find its analytics and feature set less deep than more mature competitors; and its value is strongest for podcasts that fit its monetization/cross-promo ecosystem rather than every type of audio publisher.
Who should use RedCircle? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is best for independent podcasters, small-to-mid shows, and creators who want easy hosting, analytics, cross-promotion, and monetization tools without a lot of technical setup. It’s less ideal for people who need a highly customized enterprise podcast workflow, very advanced production features, or a platform with the largest possible ecosystem and market share. If you’re a complete beginner who only wants a simple upload-and-forget tool, or a large network with complex sales/ops needs, you may want to look elsewhere.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is best for independent podcasters who want an easy way to host, distribute, and monetize a show with built-in ad tools and listener support. It’s a good fit if you want simplicity, are okay with a hosted platform, and care about monetization options without a lot of technical setup. You should avoid it if you need full control over your podcast infrastructure, want a highly custom enterprise workflow, or prefer a platform with the widest possible feature set and integrations. It may also be a poor fit if you’re not interested in monetization or you want to self-host everything.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is best for independent podcasters and small teams who want easy hosting, distribution, and monetization tools like listener support and ad marketplace access. It can also suit creators who want a simple all-in-one setup without heavy technical work. You should probably avoid it if you need very advanced enterprise features, a highly custom podcast infrastructure, or you’re not focused on podcasting at all. It may also be a weaker fit if you already have a platform that handles everything you need and you don’t want to switch systems.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is best for podcasters who want easy monetization, ad insertion, and cross-promotion without a lot of technical setup—especially independent creators and small teams. It’s a good fit if you want to grow an audience and start making money before you have a huge show. You should avoid it if you want a very advanced, highly customizable enterprise podcast stack, need the lowest possible cost, or prefer to self-host/fully control every part of distribution and analytics. It’s also not ideal if you’re not planning to monetize or don’t need hosting/platform features.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is best for podcasters who want simple hosting plus monetization tools, especially independent creators and small networks looking to grow ad revenue, run dynamic ad insertion, and use cross-promotion. It’s also a good fit if you want a fairly easy setup without building your own ad sales operation. You should avoid RedCircle if you’re not a podcaster, if you need highly customized enterprise-level analytics/workflows, or if you want full control over ad deals and a very hands-on monetization strategy. It may also be a poor fit if your show is tiny and you’re not ready to monetize yet.
How does RedCircle compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is generally positioned as a podcast monetization and hosting platform for independent creators and smaller networks. Compared with main competitors: - Spotify for Podcasters / Anchor: broader free hosting and distribution, but RedCircle is usually stronger on monetization tools and dynamic ad insertion. - Acast: Acast tends to be bigger and more established for premium ad sales and larger shows; RedCircle is often simpler and more accessible for smaller creators. - Podcorn: Podcorn is more marketplace-focused for sponsorships, while RedCircle is more of an all-in-one platform with hosting, ads, and monetization. - Buzzsprout / Libsyn: those are often stronger as classic hosting platforms; RedCircle stands out more for ad monetization features. - Patreon / Supercast: those are better for direct fan membership support, while RedCircle is better for ad-based revenue. In short, RedCircle’s main advantage is monetization simplicity for smaller to mid-sized podcasts; its main tradeoff is that it’s less dominant than the largest hosting and ad networks.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is generally positioned as a podcast hosting, monetization, and ad marketplace platform aimed at independent creators and mid-sized publishers. Compared with its main competitors: - Spotify for Podcasters / Anchor: RedCircle is usually seen as more monetization-focused and more independent-platform friendly, while Spotify’s tools are simpler and tightly integrated with Spotify’s ecosystem. - Libsyn: Libsyn is a long-established hosting option with strong reliability and distribution; RedCircle tends to differentiate more on automated ad monetization and marketplace features. - Acast: Acast is a larger, more premium podcast monetization network with broad ad-sales reach; RedCircle is often lighter-weight and more accessible for smaller creators. - Buzzsprout / Podbean: These are popular all-in-one hosting platforms; RedCircle competes by emphasizing dynamic ad insertion, cross-promotion, and revenue tools rather than just hosting. Overall, RedCircle’s strength is monetization and ad-tech for podcasters who want to earn revenue without needing a huge audience. Its weakness versus bigger rivals is smaller scale, less brand recognition, and typically fewer enterprise-grade tools.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is generally positioned as a podcast monetization and hosting platform for independent creators. Compared with main competitors: - Spotify for Podcasters: bigger reach and simpler distribution, but RedCircle usually offers more ad-monetization flexibility and marketplace-style tools for smaller creators. - Libsyn / Podbean / Buzzsprout: these are more traditional hosting platforms; RedCircle tends to stand out more on dynamic ad insertion and revenue opportunities, while they often have broader hosting/distribution maturity. - Acast: stronger global ad-tech and enterprise sales; RedCircle is usually more creator-friendly and easier for smaller podcasts to start monetizing. - Megaphone: more premium, publisher-focused, and enterprise-oriented; RedCircle is more accessible for indie podcasters. Best fit: RedCircle is strongest for independent podcasts that want monetization and ad tools without going fully enterprise.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is best known as a podcast hosting, distribution, and monetization platform, and it tends to stand out more on monetization than on pure “simple hosting.” Compared with main competitors: - vs Buzzsprout / Podbean / Libsyn: RedCircle is usually stronger for cross-promotion and ad monetization tools, while those platforms are often simpler, more established, or better-known for straightforward hosting and beginner-friendly workflows. - vs Spotify for Podcasters: RedCircle is more focused on revenue features and marketplace-style ad opportunities, while Spotify’s tools are tightly tied to Spotify’s ecosystem. - vs Acast / Megaphone: RedCircle is generally more accessible for smaller creators; Acast and Megaphone are often viewed as stronger enterprise/large-network solutions with broader ad-tech reach. Overall: RedCircle is a good fit if a creator wants to monetize earlier and use automated ad/cross-promo tools. If the priority is just easy hosting or a very mature ecosystem, competitors like Buzzsprout, Libsyn, or Podbean may be a better fit.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
RedCircle is usually positioned as a podcast monetization and hosting platform for independent creators. Compared with its main competitors: - Spotify for Podcasters / Anchor: RedCircle is generally more focused on creator monetization and ad marketplace tools, while Spotify is stronger for distribution reach and simplicity. - Acast: Acast is often seen as more enterprise-grade with a larger ad sales footprint; RedCircle tends to be simpler and more creator-friendly for smaller shows. - Podcorn: Podcorn is closer to a sponsorship marketplace; RedCircle offers broader podcast infrastructure, not just brand deals. - Libsyn / Buzzsprout / Transistor: those are mainly hosting/distribution tools, while RedCircle differentiates itself by adding monetization options like dynamic ads and cross-promotion. - Patreon / Memberful: those are membership-first; RedCircle is ad/ads marketplace-first. In short, RedCircle’s strength is combining hosting, growth, and monetization for smaller and mid-sized podcasters. Its main tradeoff versus bigger competitors is usually less scale and fewer enterprise features, but more accessibility and ease of use.
What do people typically complain about with RedCircle?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain about RedCircle’s limited ad fill/revenue opportunities, occasional technical glitches, and slow or unhelpful customer support. Some also mention payouts or monetization results not meeting expectations.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that RedCircle can be hard to get real traction on, with limited listener growth and monetization unless you already have an audience. Some also mention occasional payment/support frustrations, a learning curve in the dashboard, and that ad fill rates or sponsorship opportunities can be inconsistent.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about RedCircle’s limited customer support, slow or confusing onboarding, occasional glitches in the dashboard/analytics, and difficulty monetizing because ad supply can be inconsistent. Some also mention payment or payout confusion and that the platform can feel less polished than bigger podcast ad networks.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People often complain that RedCircle’s monetization and ad-revenue opportunities can be inconsistent, support can be slow or hard to reach, and some users find the platform’s analytics and dashboard less intuitive than they’d like. Others mention limited reach compared with bigger podcast platforms and occasional issues with ad matching or campaign performance.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People most often complain that RedCircle can feel buggy or unreliable at times, with issues like audio/episode setup glitches, slow support responses, and monetization or ad-placement results not meeting expectations. Some also mention that growth can be limited unless you already have a decent audience.
What is a typical podcast advertising network known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical podcast advertising network is known for connecting advertisers with podcast publishers, helping sell ad inventory, target audiences, and often handling ad placement, tracking, and campaign performance.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A podcast advertising network is typically known for helping podcasts sell ad inventory and connect advertisers with targeted audiences, often handling ad placement, campaign management, and monetization for creators.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical podcast advertising network is known for connecting advertisers with podcast hosts and shows, then helping place, target, and measure ad campaigns across podcasts.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical podcast advertising network is known for connecting advertisers with podcasts to place ads, often handling sponsorships, host-read spots, targeting, and campaign measurement across multiple shows.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical podcast advertising network is known for connecting advertisers with podcast shows, selling and placing ads across multiple podcasts, and helping hosts monetize their audiences through sponsorships, host-read ads, and targeted campaigns.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best podcast advertising networks for new podcasters? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **new podcasters**, the best ad networks are usually the ones that are **easy to join, have low or no minimums, and handle insertion/ops for you**. ### Best options 1. **Spotify for Creators (formerly Anchor)** - Best for: beginners on Spotify - Why: very easy to set up, simple ad options, low barrier to entry - Good if you want: built-in monetization with minimal fuss 2. **Acast** - Best for: indie podcasts that want marketplace + host-read ads - Why: solid self-serve ads, dynamic ad insertion, decent brand access - Good if you want: a more “real network” feel without huge audience requirements 3. **Spreaker Monetization** - Best for: smaller shows already on Spreaker - Why: easy ads and programmatic monetization - Good if you want: straightforward setup and basic earnings early on 4. **Podcorn** - Best for: host-read sponsorships - Why: connects creators with brands directly, often good for smaller audiences - Good if you want: sponsored segments instead of automated ad fills 5. **Gumball** - Best for: podcasts that want sponsorship sales help - Why: brand marketplace focused on host-read ads - Good if you want: higher-quality sponsors and managed deals 6. **AdvertiseCast** - Best for: growing independent shows - Why: one of the better-known podcast ad marketplaces; more opportunities as you grow - Good if you want: access to real ad buyers, not just small programmatic fills ### Best “start here” picks - **Easiest overall:** Spotify for Creators - **Best for host-read ads:** Podcorn - **Best all-around indie option:** Acast ### Quick reality check Most ad networks want at least some traction, so if you’re brand new, you may get better results from: - **affiliate marketing** - **direct sponsorship outreach** - **host-read ads via Podcorn/Gumball** If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list based on your audience size** (0–500, 500–5,000, 5,000+) or by **US/UK/Canada availability**.
retrieval Mentioned
For **new podcasters**, the best ad networks are usually the ones with **low eligibility thresholds, self-serve setup, and both host-read + programmatic options**. My short list: - **Acast Marketplace** — best all-around if you can get to about **1,000 monthly listeners**. It’s creator-friendly, self-serve, and uses dynamic ad insertion across your back catalog. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/5503627-monetizing-with-acast-marketplace)) - **RedCircle Ad Platform (RAP)** — best for newer shows that want a clear path to monetization; eligibility starts at **500 weekly downloads** and includes both host-read and programmatic ads. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/what-is-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap)) - **Spreaker Ad Exchange** — best if you host on Spreaker and want monetization turned on early; it’s self-service, supports pre/mid/post-rolls, and starts monetizing as soon as you join. ([help.spreaker.com](https://help.spreaker.com/en/articles/3753298-spreaker-monetization-the-ad-exchange)) - **Gumball** — best for host-read sponsorships if your show already looks polished to brands; it’s built around direct host-read deals and creator control, but it’s more of a brand marketplace than an “easy first-dollar” network. ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/podcasters)) - **Spotify Partner Program** — good later, but not ideal for absolute beginners, since it requires hosting on Spotify for Creators plus **12 episodes, 10,000 global consumption hours in 30 days, and 2,000 unique listeners/viewers in 30 days**. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/fm/creators/article/spotify-for-podcasters-monetization-options/)) If you want the **fastest path as a new podcaster**, I’d start with **RedCircle** or **Spreaker**; if you already have steady growth, go for **Acast**; if you have a strong on-air personality and want sponsor-style reads, check **Gumball**. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/what-is-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best for beginners, best CPM potential, and best for podcast hosts with under 1,000 downloads/week**.
Which podcast advertising networks work well for true crime shows? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **true crime** shows, the best podcast ad networks are usually the ones that handle **host-read ads well** and have **broad direct-response categories**. ### Good options - **AdvertiseCast** — strong marketplace for host-read ads; often good fit for true crime audiences. - **Acast** — big inventory, decent brand-safety controls, and good dynamic ad tools. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — strong for larger shows and premium ad sales. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid for mid-size podcasts; easy to work with. - **Audioboom** — good for narrative/story-driven shows, including true crime. - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — simpler option if you want quick fill and automation. - **SAXX / Ad Results Media** — if you want more hands-on ad sales representation. ### Best fit for true crime If your show is **indie or mid-sized**, I’d start with: 1. **AdvertiseCast** 2. **Acast** 3. **Libsyn Ads** If you’re **larger / premium**, look at: 1. **Megaphone** 2. **Audioboom** 3. **Spotify / Spotify Audience Network** ### Why these work True crime listeners tend to respond well to: - **host-read ads** - **subscription apps / audio products** - **VPNs, meal kits, identity protection, financial apps** - **products with a “storytelling” or “investigation” angle** If you want, I can also suggest the **best network based on your show size** (downloads per episode) or give you a **shortlist of brands that usually buy on true crime podcasts**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For true crime shows, the networks I’d look at first are: - **Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast** — strong marketplace for podcast ads, and they actively work with true-crime inventory like *Moms and Mysteries* and *Law&Crime Sidebar*. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/press-release/libsyn-moms-mysteries?utm_source=openai)) - **Audioboom Creator Network** — good if you want premium sales + distribution; they explicitly handle major true-crime shows like *RedHanded* and *True Crime Obsessed*. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/press-release/audioboom-red-handed?utm_source=openai)) - **PodcastOne** — has a sizable true-crime slate via A+E Networks and sells across top ranked shows. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/press-release/podcastone-ae-networks?utm_source=openai)) - **iHeartMedia / iHeartPodcasts** — best for big reach and broad ad tech; they also have marquee true-crime titles like *My Favorite Murder*. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/press-release/netflix-iheartmedia?utm_source=openai)) - **Audiochuck / Tubi Media Group** — especially strong if your show is true-crime-first and you want to be in a network built around that audience. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/press-release/tubi-audiochuck?utm_source=openai)) **Best pick by goal:** - **Max monetization / self-serve marketplace:** Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/press-release/libsyn-moms-mysteries?utm_source=openai)) - **Premium true-crime brand fit:** Audioboom or Audiochuck/Tubi. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/press-release/audioboom-red-handed?utm_source=openai)) - **Largest scale:** iHeart or PodcastOne. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/press-release/podcastone-ae-networks?utm_source=openai)) Also, true crime performs well for ads overall: Oxford Road says the genre is in the **top 20% for ad efficiency**, though performance varies a lot by sub-genre. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/press-release/true-crime-podcast-effectiveness?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to **best networks for a small true-crime indie show** vs **best networks for a larger show with 50k+ downloads/episode**.
What podcast ad networks are best for interview podcasts? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **interview podcasts**, the best ad networks are usually the ones that sell **host-read, contextually matched ads**—they perform best when your show has a clear audience and consistent niche. ### Best options - **AdvertiseCast** – strong all-around choice; lots of direct-brand campaigns and good for mid-sized shows. - **Podcorn** – good for interview shows that want host-read sponsorships and flexible brand integrations. - **Acast Marketplace** – solid if you want dynamic ad insertion plus access to larger ad buyers. - **Spotify Audience Network** – good for scaling programmatic inventory, especially if you already host on Spotify for Podcasters. - **Saxo / Magellan AI partners** – better for larger shows or networks looking for premium CPMs and advanced audience targeting. ### Best fit by podcast size - **Small to mid-size interview podcast:** Podcorn, AdvertiseCast - **Growing show with steady downloads:** Acast Marketplace, Spotify Audience Network - **Large interview show / network:** Acast, Spotify Audience Network, direct sales through agencies ### If you want the highest CPMs - Focus on **direct host-read ads** via **AdvertiseCast** or **Podcorn**. - Avoid relying only on generic programmatic ads unless you have very large volume. If you tell me your **monthly downloads** and **topic/niche**, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 networks for your show.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **interview podcasts**, the best ad networks are usually the ones that support **host-read sponsorships** and **branded segments**: 1. **Gumball** — best for premium **host-read ads** and direct brand deals; it’s built around buying host-read inventory and has transparent search/filtering by genre and audience. ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Acast** — strong for **host-read sponsorships** and branded content, with a large marketplace and self-serve buying; Acast explicitly frames host-reads as native ads and offers branded segments/episodes too. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Libsyn Ads (AdvertiseCast)** — good for creators wanting a more traditional marketplace plus managed sales; Libsyn positions it as a podcast advertising marketplace for brands and creators. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Podcorn** — best if you want **sponsorships, interview segments, and topical integrations** rather than just standard pre/mid-rolls. ([oswpodcast.com](https://www.oswpodcast.com/sponsors/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **SiriusXM Podcast Network** — best for **scale** if your interview show is bigger and fits a network deal; it offers host-read, announcer-read, and custom options. ([siriusxmmedia.com](https://www.siriusxmmedia.com/podcast-ads?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Small/mid-size interview show:** Gumball or Podcorn. ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bigger show / network-ready:** Acast or SiriusXM. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **If you want full-service monetization:** Libsyn Ads. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down by **your download size, niche, and whether you want host-read vs programmatic ads**.
Which podcast advertising networks help with host-read ad sales? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A few podcast ad networks/marketplaces that help with **host-read ad sales**: - **AdvertiseCast** — strong for host-read and dynamically inserted campaigns; good for independent podcasts. - **Acast** — offers host-read ad marketplace tools plus inventory monetization. - **Gumball** — built around sponsoring individual shows with host-read ads. - **Podcorn** — creator marketplace for host-read sponsorships and brand deals. - **Spotify Ad Network / Spotify Audience Network** — offers host-read opportunities through its sales stack. - **ART19** — ad tech platform that supports host-read monetization and sales workflows. - **SXM Media** — more premium network sales, including host-read for larger shows. - **Libsyn Ads** — can help fill host-read and baked-in ad inventory. - **Podbean Ads** — offers monetization options including host-read sponsorships. - **Oxford Road** — not a network, but a top podcast ad agency that helps sell and place host-read ads. If you want, I can also narrow this down to the **best options for small podcasts vs. larger shows**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — a few podcast ad networks/platforms that help with **host-read ad sales** are: - **Acast** — has a self-serve marketplace for booking host-read sponsorships and tools like AdCollab for creator/advertiser collaboration. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/fr/news-and-insights/acast-unlocks-largest-self-serve-marketplace-of-podcast-influencers-for-media-buyers?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn Ads (formerly AdvertiseCast)** — offers a host-read ad marketplace and says it has a broad portfolio of host-read and dynamic ad products. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/03.21.24-Libsyn-Ads-Rebrand-release.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **SiriusXM Media** — explicitly sells **host-read ads** through its podcast ad offering. ([siriusxmmedia.com](https://www.siriusxmmedia.com/host-read-ads?utm_source=openai)) - **Zencastr Creator Network** — offers **host-read sponsorship opportunities** for creators. ([zencastr.com](https://zencastr.com/feature/monetize?utm_source=openai)) - **Frequency** — launched a premium publisher network specifically for **host-read ads**. ([frequencyads.com](https://frequencyads.com/frequency-introduces-a-new-premium-publisher-network-for-host-read-ads/?utm_source=openai)) - **Next Audio** — offers a “Host-Read Studio” / ad management workflow for host-read campaigns. ([nextaud.io](https://nextaud.io/publishers?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this down to: 1. **best for indie podcasts**, 2. **best for larger networks**, or 3. **best for self-serve advertiser sales**.
What are the best podcast ad networks for audience targeting? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If your goal is **audience targeting**, the best podcast ad networks are usually the ones with strong **1P data, programmatic tools, and niche inventory**. ### Best podcast ad networks for targeting **1. Acast** - Strong for **interest-based and contextual targeting** - Good creator network + programmatic buying - Best if you want scale with flexible targeting options **2. Spotify Audience Network** - Great for **logged-in user data** and broad reach - Strong demographic and behavioral targeting inside Spotify’s ecosystem - Best for brands already buying audio/digital at scale **3. AdsWizz** - One of the strongest platforms for **programmatic podcast buying** - Good targeting via audience segments, geo, device, and campaign optimization - Best for performance-minded advertisers **4. SiriusXM Media / Pandora** - Strong **first-party listener data** - Good for demographic, interest, and location-based targeting - Best for reaching large U.S. audio audiences **5. Triton Digital** - Solid for **publisher-side targeting** and programmatic audio - Often used behind the scenes by major podcast publishers - Best for advanced audio buys and enterprise campaigns **6. Megaphone (Spotify)** - Great for **host-read premium inventory** and audience insights - Better for premium podcast placements than broad self-serve targeting - Best for direct response + brand campaigns **7. Oxford Road** - Not a network in the classic sense, but a top **podcast ad agency/buyer** - Excellent for finding the right shows and optimizing targeting through testing - Best if you want hands-on campaign strategy ### Best picks by goal - **Best overall targeting:** Spotify Audience Network - **Best programmatic targeting:** AdsWizz - **Best premium podcast inventory:** Acast or Megaphone - **Best U.S. audio audience data:** SiriusXM Media / Pandora - **Best for expert buying help:** Oxford Road If you want, I can also rank these for **performance marketing**, **B2B targeting**, or **small-budget advertisers**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If your main goal is **audience targeting**, the strongest podcast ad networks right now are: - **Spotify Audience Network** — best for **scale + demographic/geographic/behavioral + contextual targeting** across podcasts on and off Spotify. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) - **Acast** — best for **advanced audience + contextual targeting** in a large independent podcast marketplace, including predictive and episode-level targeting tools. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** — best for **programmatic targeting and contextual buying**, with privacy-friendly and cookie-free audience solutions. ([adswizz.com](https://www.adswizz.com/siriusxm-and-comscore-bring-cookie-free-audience-targeting-to-podcasts/?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn Ads (formerly AdvertiseCast)** — good for **targeted podcast inventory** with predictive contextual targeting and advanced targeting/measurement. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/03.21.24-Libsyn-Ads-Rebrand-release.pdf?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Want the **largest audience-based podcast buying system**? **Spotify Audience Network**. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) - Want **independent podcast inventory with strong targeting controls**? **Acast**. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/?utm_source=openai)) - Want **programmatic audio infrastructure**? **AdsWizz / SiriusXM Media**. ([siriusxmmedia.com](https://www.siriusxmmedia.com/insights/siriusxm-media-and-amazon-ads-now-offer-programmatic-audio-through-amazon-dsp?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best for SMBs, e-commerce, or B2B**.
Which podcast advertising networks support dynamic ad insertion? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Several podcast ad networks/platforms support dynamic ad insertion (DAI), including: - **Megaphone** (by Spotify) - **Acast** - **ART19** (by Amazon) - **Spotify Audience Network** - **Audioboom** - **Libsyn Ads / Libsyn Studio** - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** - **AdLarge** - **Gumball** - **Podcorn** (creator sponsorship marketplace; not classic DAI, but used for dynamic host-read inserts in some setups) If you want, I can also narrow this down to: 1. **best for indie podcasters**, 2. **best CPM/ad demand**, or 3. **best self-serve platforms with DAI**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Several major podcast ad networks/platforms support dynamic ad insertion (DAI), including: - **Acast** — says it launched with DAI and that most of its ads are dynamically inserted. ([acast.com](https://www.acast.com/en-us/about-us?utm_source=openai)) - **iHeartPodcast AdSuite / iHeartMedia** — offers “dynamic and streaming ad insertion” for podcast ads. ([iheartmedia.com](https://www.iheartmedia.com/press/iheartmedia-rolls-out-new-iheartpodcast-adsuite-offering-comprehensive-solution-podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast** — notes programmatic ad insertion and dynamic ads across its network. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/03.21.24-Libsyn-Ads-Rebrand-release.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean (PodAds)** — explicitly describes PodAds as a dynamic ad insertion system/capability. ([podads.podbean.com](https://podads.podbean.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Blubrry** — offers a dynamic ad insertion system for pro hosting customers. ([blubrry.com](https://blubrry.com/support/ad-insertion-documentation/?utm_source=openai)) - **Megaphone** — its AdLocator lets you place insertion points for dynamic ad insertion. ([support.megaphone.fm](https://support.megaphone.fm/en/articles/70951-mark-ad-locations/?utm_source=openai)) Also worth noting: **Futuri POST** and **Transistor** have dynamic ad insertion features too, though they’re more hosting/platform tools than classic ad networks. ([futurimedia.freshdesk.com](https://futurimedia.freshdesk.com/support/solutions/articles/44001278141-post-dynamic-ad-insertion?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best networks for advertisers** vs **best platforms for publishers**.
What podcast ad networks are best for shows with midroll inventory? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For shows with **midroll inventory**, the best options are usually the networks that have strong direct-sales demand and fill for host-read ads: - **PodcastOne** – strong for larger inventory and direct deals - **AdvertiseCast** – one of the best marketplace-style networks for midroll fill - **Acast Marketplace** – good international reach and dynamic insertion - **Libsyn Ads** – solid for midroll monetization, especially for smaller-to-mid shows - **Podcorn** (now under **Go Digital Media Group**) – good for sponsored midroll integrations - **Gumball** – strong for host-read sponsorships and midroll campaigns - **Megaphone Ads** – best if you’re already on the Spotify/Megaphone stack - **SXM Media / Stitcher Ads** – strong brand-demand network for premium inventory - **iHeartPodcasts / iHeartAudience Network** – good reach, especially for bigger shows If you want the **best all-around choices for midroll**, I’d start with: 1. **AdvertiseCast** 2. **Acast Marketplace** 3. **Libsyn Ads** 4. **Gumball** If you want, I can also rank them by **fill rate, CPMs, or suitability for small vs. large podcasts**.
retrieval Mentioned
For shows with **midroll inventory**, the strongest options are usually: 1. **Megaphone / Spotify Audience Network** — best if you want to **fill unsold midrolls automatically at scale**. Megaphone supports smart ad locations that can add midroll slots, and Spotify Audience Network says it can monetize unsold inventory for Megaphone publishers. ([support.megaphone.fm](https://support.megaphone.fm/en/articles/8827107-adding-smart-ad-locations?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Acast** — best if you want **multiple midrolls and strong marketplace tooling**. Acast has a dedicated **Mid 2** targeting option, automatic mid-roll insertion, and dynamic insertion for pre/mid/post-roll. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/10256368-ad-manager-targeting-the-second-midroll?utm_source=openai)) 3. **SiriusXM / Midroll** — best for **premium, host-read midroll campaigns** on larger shows. SiriusXM describes Midroll as a leading podcast ad network, and its sales org represents major podcast inventory. ([investor.siriusxm.com](https://investor.siriusxm.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/925/siriusxm-to-acquire-stitcher?utm_source=openai)) 4. **RedCircle** — best for **indie shows that want a self-serve ad platform** with host-read and programmatic fills. RedCircle’s RAP supports both, and it explicitly treats midroll as the highest-value position. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/setting-up-advertising-in-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Audacy** — best if you’re selling into a **larger media network** with standard pre/mid/post structures and broader brand integrations. Audacy’s playbook explicitly includes mid-roll inventory and notes that the number of mid-roll spots per episode can vary. ([audacyinc.com](https://audacyinc.com/podcasts/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **Big show + premium host-reads:** SiriusXM/Midroll - **Dynamic fill / automation:** Megaphone + Spotify Audience Network - **Multiple midrolls / flexible marketplace:** Acast - **Self-serve indie monetization:** RedCircle - **Network-scale sales:** Audacy ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/10256368-ad-manager-targeting-the-second-midroll?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **ranked shortlist for your show size** (e.g. under 10k, 10k–100k, 100k+ downloads/ep).
Which podcast advertising networks are best for niche audiences? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **niche audiences**, the best podcast ad networks are usually the ones with **strong targeting, host-read inventory, or specialty verticals**: - **Acast** — good for indie and niche shows; strong international reach. - **Spotify Audience Network** — useful if your niche audience is large enough and you want scalable targeting. - **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** — strong for premium audio and more advanced targeting. - **AdvertiseCast** — solid marketplace for direct buys across lots of niche podcasts. - **Podcorn** — good for smaller, niche creator-led campaigns and host-read ads. - **Gumball** — useful for direct access to mid-tier and niche podcasts. - **Oxford Road** — best if you want a full-service audio agency with niche audience expertise. - **Headgum Ads** — especially good for comedy, entertainment, and creator-style niche audiences. If you want the **best overall for niche targeting**, I’d start with: 1. **AdvertiseCast** 2. **Acast** 3. **Podcorn** 4. **SiriusXM Media** If you tell me your **niche, budget, and target country**, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **niche audiences**, the strongest podcast ad networks are usually the ones with **good audience targeting + lots of show/category inventory**: 1. **Acast** — best overall for niche targeting. It says it offers advanced targeting/attribution, plus access to a very large marketplace of shows across apps. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Spotify Audience Network** — strong if you want **behavioral, demographic, geographic, and contextual** targeting (including show categories and episode topics). ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast** — good for buying across a broad catalog and finding genre-specific inventory; Libsyn has also highlighted niche genre demand like true crime. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/AdvertiseCast-Marketplace-Unveils-March-2022-Podcast-Advertising-Rates-FINAL50.pdf?utm_source=openai)) 4. **iHeartMedia** — useful if your niche maps to a clear interest cluster (tech, health, local, Latino, etc.); iHeart explicitly emphasizes reaching highly specific audiences by interests, behaviors, and demographics. ([iheartmedia.com](https://www.iheartmedia.com/advertise/insights/articles/understanding-the-full-audio-landscape?utm_source=openai)) **Best pick by use case** - **Most precise targeting:** Spotify Audience Network. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best mix of scale + niche inventory:** Acast. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for genre-led buys / long-tail shows:** Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/AdvertiseCast-Marketplace-Unveils-March-2022-Podcast-Advertising-Rates-FINAL50.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for local or identity-based niches:** iHeartMedia. ([iheartmedia.com](https://www.iheartmedia.com/advertise/insights/articles/understanding-the-full-audio-landscape?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best network by niche” list** (B2B, gaming, finance, wellness, parenting, etc.).
What are the best podcast advertising networks for B2B podcasts? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **B2B podcasts**, the best ad networks are usually the ones with **strong host-read inventory, niche targeting, and direct sales support**. ### Best options - **Oxford Road** — Best for **serious B2B performance marketing**. Strong if you want measurement, attribution, and big-brand podcast buying. - **AdvertiseCast** — Good all-around network with a large inventory and solid access to **business and tech shows**. - **Acast Marketplace** — Strong for **targeted programmatic + host-read** buys, especially if you want scale across multiple shows. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — Best if you want to buy across **Spotify/partner inventory** and use more advanced ad tools. - **Gumball** — Good for **direct deals with independent podcasts**, useful for niche B2B audiences. - **Podcorn** — Best for **smaller, niche sponsor buys** and flexible creator partnerships. - **SXM Media / Stitcher** — Strong for larger budgets and premium inventory across major business podcasts. - **The Podcast Exchange (TPX)** — Solid for **Canadian and North American** podcast advertising with broader brand buys. ### Best pick by goal - **Performance/lead gen:** Oxford Road - **Niche B2B shows:** Gumball, Podcorn - **Scale + targeting:** Acast Marketplace, Megaphone - **Broad business podcast inventory:** AdvertiseCast, SXM Media If you want, I can also give you a **ranked top 5 specifically for SaaS/B2B lead gen**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **B2B podcasts**, I’d start with these: 1. **Mission** — best if you want **ABM-style sponsorships** and access to senior decision-makers. Mission says its network is built for the C-suite, with strong B2B shows like *Marketing Trends* and *IT Visionaries*, and it offers sponsorships tied to pipeline, leads, and guest-intro style deal support. ([missionsponsors.com](https://www.missionsponsors.com/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **N2K / CyberWire** — best for **cybersecurity, IT, and technical B2B**. N2K describes itself as a leading B2B media network, and its CyberWire brand is focused on cybersecurity and other professional audiences. ([n2k.com](https://www.n2k.com/press-releases?utm_source=openai)) 3. **TWiT** — best for **tech and IT buyers**. TWiT says its audience is heavily tech/IT decision-maker-heavy and that it selectively partners with sponsors whose products fit that audience. ([twit.tv](https://twit.tv/podcast-advertising?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Acast** — best if you want **scale plus B2B targeting**. Acast offers podcast advertising to B2B audiences and says you can run host-read or pre-recorded campaigns across a network of 135,000+ shows. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/b2b?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Libsyn Ads** — best for a **broad marketplace with targeting and measurement**. Libsyn says AdvertiseCast/Libsyn Ads is a podcast advertising marketplace that helps brands reach targeted audiences and manage measurable campaigns. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/03.21.24-Libsyn-Ads-Rebrand-release.pdf?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Spotify Audience Network** — best for **scaled reach and audience targeting**. Spotify says it offers demographic, geographic, behavioral, and contextual targeting, plus full-funnel measurement. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall for B2B:** Mission - **Best for cybersecurity/IT:** N2K / CyberWire or TWiT - **Best for scale:** Spotify Audience Network or Acast - **Best marketplace option:** Libsyn Ads If you want, I can turn this into a **ranked top 5 by budget** (small, mid-market, enterprise) or by **industry** (SaaS, cybersecurity, fintech, HR tech, etc.).
Which podcast ad networks are good for sports podcasts? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good podcast ad networks for **sports podcasts** include: - **Midroll** — strong for premium host-read inventory and established shows. - **SXM Media (SiriusXM Ads)** — good if your audience skews mainstream sports and you want bigger brand budgets. - **Acast Marketplace** — solid for dynamic ad insertion and international reach. - **Audioboom Ads** — good for larger sports shows and direct sales support. - **Gumball** — easy self-serve marketplace; useful for smaller/mid-size sports podcasts. - **Podcorn** — good for host-read sponsorships and smaller creators. - **AdvertiseCast** — broad network with decent category targeting, including sports. - **Libsyn Ads** — reliable if your show is already on Libsyn. - **Spotify Audience Network** — strong scale, especially if your listeners are on Spotify. - **Triton Digital** — good for enterprise-level podcast monetization and sports media brands. If you want the best fit: - **Small/indie sports podcast:** Gumball, Podcorn, AdvertiseCast - **Mid-size sports show:** Acast, Audioboom, Midroll - **Big audience / premium brand deals:** SXM Media, Spotify Audience Network, Triton Digital If you want, I can also rank these by **CPM, ease of approval, or best for host-read sponsorships**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good options for sports podcasts: - **Locked On Podcast Network** — best if you want **local/team-specific sports** inventory; it positions itself as the #1 local sports podcast network and offers advertiser-friendly brand-safety language. ([lockedonpodcasts.com](https://lockedonpodcasts.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Audacy Sports** — strong for **big sports reach** and league coverage; Audacy says it has **600+ sports podcasts** and spans NFL, NBA, MLB, NCAA, and sports betting. ([audacyinc.com](https://audacyinc.com/sports/?utm_source=openai)) - **SiriusXM Podcast Network / SiriusXM Media** — good for **premium sports podcasts** and broader reach; SiriusXM Media says it reaches **70M monthly podcast listeners** and advertises sports inventory. ([siriusxmmedia.com](https://www.siriusxmmedia.com/en/podcast-ads?utm_source=openai)) - **iHeartPodcasts** — a good general-scale option if you want **large audience + sports breadth**; iHeart says it publishes **800+ podcasts** across many genres including sports. ([investors.iheartmedia.com](https://investors.iheartmedia.com/news/news-details/2023/iHeartMedia-and-Global-Sign-Multi-Year-Podcast-Partnership--Deal-in-the-UK-Ireland-and-USA-2023-hYxAs7n6ad/default.aspx?utm_source=openai)) - **The Ringer / Spotify** — strong for **sports commentary and analysis** shows, especially if your audience overlaps with sports/media culture. ([en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ringer_%28website%29?utm_source=openai)) - **Wondery** — worth considering for **premium sports storytelling**; it has sports titles and now has ad-sales collaboration with Rogers Sports & Media in Canada. ([wondery.com](https://wondery.com/links/sports-wars/?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me your podcast’s **sport, audience size, and whether it’s local, betting, or national analysis**, I can narrow this to the best 2–3.
What podcast advertising networks work best for large catalogs of episodes? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **large episode catalogs**, the best podcast ad networks are usually the ones that support **dynamic ad insertion (DAI)**, **back-catalog monetization**, and **programmatic fill**. ### Best options - **Acast** — strong for large catalogs, DAI, and catalog-wide monetization. - **Spotify Audience Network** — good reach and decent automation, especially if your show already performs on Spotify. - **ART19** — excellent for enterprise-level catalogs and ad tech/control. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — very strong for premium publishers with lots of inventory. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid for smaller-to-mid catalogs that want easy monetization. - **Triton Digital** — strong for large publishers and network sales. - **SXM Media / Pandora** — good if you want broader audio ad demand beyond podcasts. - **AdResults Media** — useful if you want a managed-sales partner for a big library. ### Best overall picks by use case - **Best for large back catalogs:** **Acast** or **ART19** - **Best for premium enterprise publishers:** **Megaphone** or **Triton Digital** - **Best for simpler setup:** **Libsyn Ads** - **Best for reach/programmatic:** **Spotify Audience Network** ### What to look for - **Dynamic ad insertion** - **Pre-, mid-, and post-roll support** - **Programmatic + direct sales** - **Good reporting** - **Easy retroactive monetization of old episodes** If you want, I can also rank these by **revenue potential**, **ease of setup**, or **best fit for indie vs enterprise catalogs**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **large catalogs of episodes**, the best ad networks are usually the ones with **dynamic ad insertion, back-catalog monetization, and bulk episode tools**. My short list: 1. **Megaphone / Spotify** — strongest for catalog-scale operations; it has **Smart Ad Locations** for automatically adding mid-rolls into back catalog episodes and an **Episode Manager** for bulk catalog optimization. ([support.megaphone.fm](https://support.megaphone.fm/en/articles/8827107-adding-smart-ad-locations?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Triton Digital / Omny Studio + TAP** — very good if you want enterprise hosting plus monetization; Triton says TAP continuously monetizes **current and back-catalog content**, and Omny supports DAI with ad markers and targeting. ([help.tritondigital.com](https://help.tritondigital.com/user/docs/podcasting-faq?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Libsyn Ads** — a strong fit for older catalogs because it explicitly supports **back catalog** monetization, automatic ads, and dynamic insertion across **pre-, mid-, and post-roll**. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/automatic-podcast-ads/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Audioboom** — solid if you want host-read plus DAI; Audioboom says it uses **dynamic ad insertion** and supports both baked-in and dynamically inserted host reads. ([support.audioboom.com](https://support.audioboom.com/hc/en-us/articles/360021131674-Ad-Schedule?utm_source=openai)) 5. **AdLarge / AdvertiseCast** — good for bigger catalogs that want enterprise DAI and broad network access; they specifically say they can monetize an **entire back catalog** via Megaphone DAI. ([adlarge.com](https://adlarge.com/adsalesrep101?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Simplecast Monetization** — worth considering if you want an all-in-one platform; it advertises **automated monetization for new episodes and back catalogs**. ([simplecast.com](https://www.simplecast.com/monetization?utm_source=openai)) **If I had to pick 3:** **Megaphone**, **Libsyn**, and **Triton/Omny**. They look best suited to large libraries because they emphasize bulk tools and back-catalog DAI. ([support.megaphone.fm](https://support.megaphone.fm/en/articles/12622201-episode-manager?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **comparison table by catalog size, minimum downloads, and revenue model**.
Which podcast ad networks are best for monetizing back catalog episodes? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best for **back catalog / evergreen episodes**: 1. **Acast Marketplace** - Strong for dynamically inserting ads into older episodes. - Good if you want a hands-off setup and broad demand. 2. **Spotify Audience Network (via Megaphone or Anchor/Spotify for Podcasters)** - Good programmatic fill for catalog inventory. - Best if you already host on Megaphone or are in the Spotify ecosystem. 3. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid for smaller to mid-sized shows with deep catalogs. - Easy way to monetize older eps without a huge sales team. 4. **AdvertiseCast** - Good marketplace for direct-sold and programmatic-style monetization. - Better when you have a recognizable niche and decent download volume. 5. **Gumball** - Useful if your back catalog gets steady, niche listens and you want simple ad insertion. - Often works well for mid-tier creators. **Best overall pick for catalog monetization:** - **Acast** if you want the easiest evergreen monetization. - **Megaphone + Spotify Audience Network** if you want stronger programmatic reach. - **Libsyn Ads** if you want straightforward setup and you’re not huge yet. If you want, I can also rank these by **RPM potential**, **ease of setup**, or **best for small vs large podcasts**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If your goal is **evergreen revenue from older episodes**, the strongest options are the networks/platforms with **dynamic ad insertion (DAI)** and explicit **back-catalog support**. My short list: 1. **Acast** — best if you want a big network + strong back-catalog monetization. Acast says its marketplace uses dynamic ad insertion across “your entire back catalog,” and it says it can place ads across the full catalog, not just new episodes. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/5503627-monetizing-with-acast-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Libsyn / AdvertiseCast** — best if you want a mature ads stack with both programmatic and host-read options. Libsyn says its automatic podcast ads monetize **old and new episodes**, and its ad tools support DAI by episode or across the full catalog. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/podcast-monetization?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Podbean PodAds** — best for podcasters/networks that want straightforward self-serve control over the archive. Podbean explicitly markets monetizing your **back catalogue** with dynamic ad insertion and says its network tools can run ads across the network and monetize the back catalogue. ([podads.podbean.com](https://podads.podbean.com/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Blubrry** — best if you want simpler hosting + monetization with back-catalog coverage. Blubrry says pre-roll is available on your **entire back catalog** and that its DAI lets you earn revenue from old episodes. ([blubrry.com](https://blubrry.com/services/dynamic-podcast-advertising-insertion/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best for larger publishers/enterprise setups. Spotify says Megaphone includes **Dynamic Ad Insertion (DAI)** and monetization capabilities for enterprise publishers. ([newsroom.spotify.com](https://newsroom.spotify.com/2021-10-19/spotify-welcomes-podcast-publishers-in-germany-france-spain-and-italy-to-megaphone/?utm_source=openai)) **Bottom line:** - **Best overall for back catalog:** **Acast** - **Best self-serve / easy setup:** **Podbean** - **Best for established podcast businesses:** **Libsyn/AdvertiseCast** - **Best for enterprise publishers:** **Megaphone** ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/5503627-monetizing-with-acast-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **top-3 recommendation for your show size** (small / mid / large).
What are the best podcast advertising networks for video podcasts? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best options for **video podcasts**: 1. **Spotify Ad Network / Megaphone** - Best if you want big reach and strong podcast-specific ad tooling. - Good for video podcasts distributed on Spotify. 2. **Acast** - Great for dynamic ad insertion and premium podcast inventory. - Strong for shows with both audio + video distribution. 3. **AdvertiseCast** - Good marketplace for host-read and programmatic podcast ads. - Works well for independent creators and mid-sized shows. 4. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid for podcast monetization at scale. - Better if you already use Libsyn hosting. 5. **YouTube BrandConnect** - Best for podcasts that perform well on YouTube. - Not a traditional podcast ad network, but very strong for video podcast sponsorships. 6. **Wondery / Amazon Ads** - Good for premium podcast inventory and brand campaigns. - Strong if your audience overlaps with Amazon/Prime users. ### My quick recommendation - **Best overall:** **Acast** - **Best for scale:** **Spotify Ad Network / Megaphone** - **Best for YouTube video podcasts:** **YouTube BrandConnect** - **Best for independents:** **AdvertiseCast** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best networks by CPM** - the **best networks for host-read ads** - or a **top 5 list for smaller video podcasts**
retrieval Not mentioned
For **video podcasts**, the strongest options are usually: 1. **YouTube via Google Ads** — best for scale and native video buying. Google explicitly positions YouTube ads for video campaigns, and YouTube is the main home of video podcasts. ([ads.google.com](https://ads.google.com/intl/tr_tr/home/campaigns/video-ads/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Spotify Advertising / Spotify Partner Program** — best if you want podcast-first inventory with video support inside Spotify and creator monetization for video episodes. Spotify says creators can upload video, and eligible video episodes can earn premium video revenue. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/resources/news/the-new-home-of-podcasting-on-spotify?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Acast** — best premium podcast network if you want **audio + video + YouTube** in one place. Acast says it offers YouTube video ads at scale and integrated campaigns across audio, video, social, and live events. ([acast.com](https://www.acast.com/en/press-room/acast-uk-launches-industry-first-youtube-program?utm_source=openai)) 4. **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** — best for large-scale programmatic podcast buying, especially if you want to reach podcast audiences across a broad network. SiriusXM Media and AdsWizz both continue expanding omnichannel podcast monetization. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/latest?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Audioboom** — best if you want premium creator inventory with self-serve and direct-sold options; its hosting/distribution includes YouTube Podcasts and its ad products include dynamic insertion and premium sponsorships. ([audioboom.com](https://audioboom.com/advertisers?utm_source=openai)) **My short ranking:** - **Best overall:** YouTube/Google Ads - **Best podcast-native video option:** Spotify - **Best premium network:** Acast - **Best for programmatic scale:** SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz If you want, I can turn this into a **recommendation by budget** (small / mid / enterprise) or by **goal** (brand awareness, direct response, host-read sponsorships).
Which podcast ad networks offer revenue sharing for creators? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A few well-known podcast ad networks that **pay creators via revenue share**: - **Acast** — ad marketplace + dynamic insertion; creators keep a share of ad revenue. - **Spotify for Podcasters / Spotify Audience Network** — eligible shows can earn a cut from ads sold through Spotify. - **Libsyn Ads** — sells host-read and dynamic ads, with revenue sharing for podcasters. - **AdvertiseCast** — marketplace for host-read campaigns; creators get paid a share. - **Gumball** — connects brands and podcasts, with creators earning per campaign/revenue split. - **Podcorn** — sponsorship marketplace; creators set rates and keep most of the deal minus platform fees. - **SXM Media / Midroll** — larger network with revenue-sharing ad sales for selected shows. - **Sounder** — podcast monetization and dynamic ads with creator revenue share. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small podcasts**, **best CPMs**, or **easiest approval**.
retrieval Mentioned
A few podcast ad networks/platforms that explicitly offer revenue sharing for creators are: - **Spotify Partner Program** — creators earn **50% of ad revenue** from ads Spotify places in episodes, plus Premium video revenue. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/us/creators/article/spotify-partner-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast** — Libsyn says accepted creators get a **70/30 split** on ad revenue, with the creator keeping 70%. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/monetize-your-podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **RedCircle Ad Platform (RAP)** — RedCircle’s support docs say the platform uses a **70/30 revenue share split** for creators. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/what-is-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap?utm_source=openai)) - **Audioboom** — Audioboom offers a creator **revenue share** for ads placed on shows. ([support.audioboom.com](https://support.audioboom.com/hc/en-us/articles/360006028478-Add-Advertising-To-Your-Podcast?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this to: 1. **best for small creators**, 2. **best CPM/revenue potential**, or 3. **networks with no minimum download threshold**.
What podcast advertising networks are best for growing ad fill rates? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If your goal is **higher ad fill rates**, the best podcast ad networks are usually the ones with the **largest demand pools + dynamic ad insertion + programmatic support**. ### Best networks for fill rate growth 1. **Spotify Audience Network (SAN)** - Strong for programmatic demand and advertiser scale - Good if you have decent monthly downloads and broad audience appeal 2. **Acast** - One of the strongest for dynamic ad insertion and international fill - Good mix of direct sales + programmatic demand 3. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid for smaller/mid-size shows that need easier fill - Often a good starter network 4. **Megaphone (Spotify)** - Best if you’re a larger publisher and want premium ad tech + yield tools - Strong for maximizing fill and inventory control 5. **iHeart Audience Network** - Good for broad advertiser demand, especially if your audience is mainstream - Can help with scale and fill, particularly in the US 6. **AdvertiseCast** - Strong marketplace for host-read and performance-driven campaigns - Good supplementary demand source ### Best picks by situation - **Small to mid-size podcast:** **Libsyn Ads** or **Acast** - **Growing show with decent downloads:** **Spotify Audience Network** + **Acast** - **Large publisher/network:** **Megaphone** + **iHeart Audience Network** - **Need more host-read deals:** **AdvertiseCast** ### Quick tip To improve fill rates faster, use: - **Dynamic Ad Insertion (DAI)** - **Multiple ad networks / mediation** - **Lower floor prices at first** - **Geo-targeting and evergreen inventory** If you want, I can also rank these by **CPM**, **ease of setup**, or **best for small podcasts**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **growing ad fill rates**, the best options are usually the networks with **strong programmatic demand + dynamic ad insertion + broad inventory access**. My short list: 1. **Acast** — strong for scale and programmatic backfill; it says almost all of its ad products are dynamically inserted, and it has expanded programmatic access through Magnite. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/fr/news-and-insights/the-benefits-of-dynamic-ad-insertion-in-podcast-advertising?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Libsyn / AdvertiseCast** — good if you want a marketplace built around podcast ad buying and dynamic insertion; Libsyn also emphasizes programmatic ad insertion across its network. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/11.01.23-Libsyn-AdvertiseCast-Oct-23-Ad-Rates-FINAL.pdf?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Spotify Audience Network** — best if you want lots of demand and audience-based buying at scale; Spotify positions it as an audio-first marketplace with targeting and measurement, and podcast ads are powered by its ad insertion tech. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **SiriusXM Podcast Network / SiriusXM Media** — best for large reach and premium demand; SiriusXM says it has very large monthly podcast reach and broad advertiser flexibility. ([siriusxmmedia.com](https://www.siriusxmmedia.com/en/podcast-ads?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Podbean PodAds** — solid if you want straightforward backfill/monetization tools; Podbean explicitly says it can help fill ad slots and track fill rates. ([developers.podbean.com](https://developers.podbean.com/enterprise/solutions/podcast-network-hosting?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** if your main KPI is **fill rate**, pick the network with the **largest programmatic demand pool** and **DAI/DAI-style delivery**, not just the highest CPM. Acast and Spotify are especially good fits for that. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/fr/news-and-insights/the-benefits-of-dynamic-ad-insertion-in-podcast-advertising?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best for small shows / mid-tier / large networks”** shortlist.
Which podcast ad networks are best for advertisers buying podcast inventory? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **advertisers buying podcast inventory**, the best networks/platforms usually are: - **Spotify Advertising (incl. Megaphone)** — best for scale and premium podcast reach; strong for dynamic ad insertion and targeting. - **Acast** — great for host-read inventory, indie + premium shows, and international reach. - **SXM Media / AdsWizz** — strong for large-scale audio buying, programmatic access, and cross-podcast/audio reach. - **iHeartPodcasts / iHeartMedia** — best if you want big U.S. reach and access to major talent-led shows. - **Wondery (Amazon Ads)** — strong premium inventory, especially for branded-content-friendly podcasts. - **Libsyn Ads** — good for mid-market buyers wanting straightforward access to podcast inventory. - **AdvertiseCast** — one of the easiest marketplaces for direct podcast buying; good for performance campaigns. - **Gumball** — best for buying host-read ads across a broad creator/podcast network. - **Podscribe** — not a network itself, but very useful for measurement, attribution, and optimizing podcast buys. - **Podbean Ad Marketplace** — solid for direct access to a large number of independent shows. **Best overall by goal:** - **Big reach:** Spotify / iHeart / SXM Media - **Premium host-read ads:** Acast / Gumball / Wondery - **Programmatic buying:** SXM Media / AdsWizz - **Simpler direct marketplace buying:** AdvertiseCast / Libsyn Ads If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by budget level** (enterprise vs SMB) or by **country/region**.
retrieval Not mentioned
There isn’t one universal “best.” Podcast inventory is still mostly bought show-by-show, and audience-based buys are a smaller slice of the market, so the right network depends on whether you want **scale, premium shows, or programmatic efficiency**. ([iab.com](https://www.iab.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/IAB_US_Podcast_Advertising_Revenue_Study_2023_Part_2.pdf)) **Best picks for advertisers:** - **Spotify Audience Network** — best for **scale + self-serve/programmatic reach** across Spotify’s podcast ecosystem and third-party Megaphone publishers. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) - **AdsWizz Audio Marketplace** — best for **large-scale programmatic podcast buying** and broader audio marketplace access; AdsWizz says it’s one of the largest podcast-only marketplaces. ([adswizz.com](https://www.adswizz.com/podcasters/marketplace/?utm_source=openai)) - **Acast Marketplace** — best for **premium independent podcasts and host-read sponsorships**, with self-serve buying and programmatic options via partners like Magnite. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/fr/news-and-insights/acast-unlocks-largest-self-serve-marketplace-of-podcast-influencers-for-media-buyers?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast** — best for **buyers who want a simple marketplace with lots of show-level choice** and a more hands-on sales-supported approach. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/podcast-advertising-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) - **iHeartMedia / SiriusXM Media** — best for **big audio scale** and cross-channel buying if you want podcasts plus broader audio inventory. ([investors.iheartmedia.com](https://investors.iheartmedia.com/news/news-details/2025/StackAdapt-and-iHeartMedia-Bring-Broadcast-Radio-to-Programmatic-Advertising/default.aspx?utm_source=openai)) **My practical recommendation:** - **Direct-response / performance:** Spotify Audience Network or AdsWizz. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) - **Brand campaigns / premium host-read:** Acast or Libsyn Ads. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/fr/news-and-insights/acast-unlocks-largest-self-serve-marketplace-of-podcast-influencers-for-media-buyers?utm_source=openai)) - **Big reach / national awareness:** iHeartMedia / SiriusXM Media. ([investors.iheartmedia.com](https://investors.iheartmedia.com/news/news-details/2025/StackAdapt-and-iHeartMedia-Bring-Broadcast-Radio-to-Programmatic-Advertising/default.aspx?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your budget, vertical, and target audience**.
What podcast advertising networks help brands reach listeners at scale? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A few of the biggest podcast ad networks/platforms for scale are: - **Acast** — broad global podcast inventory; strong for programmatic and host-read options - **Magellan AI** — not a network itself, but a great **podcast advertising marketplace/intelligence platform** for buying at scale - **AdsWizz** — major audio ad tech/network used across large podcast and streaming inventories - **SXM Media** (SiriusXM Media / Pandora / Stitcher ecosystem) — strong reach across audio audiences - **Spotify Advertising** — huge scale across Spotify’s podcast inventory - **iHeartPodcasts / iHeartMedia** — one of the largest podcast/audio reach networks in the U.S. - **Wondery** — premium podcast network with strong branded-content opportunities - **Libsyn Ads** — direct podcast ad marketplace with wide network access - **Gumball** — self-serve marketplace for podcast sponsorships, good for fast buying - **Podcorn** — creator marketplace for host-read sponsorships - **Audacy** — broad podcast + radio/audio network - **The Podglomerate** — network and ad sales partner for premium podcasts If you want, I can also narrow this down to: 1. **best for brand awareness**, 2. **best for host-read ads**, or 3. **best for programmatic buying**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—some of the main podcast ad networks/platforms brands use for scale are: - **Spotify Audience Network** — built to help advertisers “reach your target audience at scale” across podcasts on and off Spotify. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) - **Acast** — says it offers “scale and frequency” across a network of 135,000+ shows. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/agencies?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn / AdvertiseCast** — positions itself as a marketplace that helps brands “effectively target and reach” a large podcast audience. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/03.21.24-Libsyn-Ads-Rebrand-release.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Audioboom** — offers “true global scale” and premium network buying for advertisers. ([audioboom.com](https://audioboom.com/advertisers?utm_source=openai)) - **AdsWizz** — a big podcast/audio ad-tech and marketplace layer used by major publishers; it supports programmatic buying and scaling podcast inventory. ([adswizz.com](https://www.adswizz.com/adswizz-surpasses-1-billion-monthly-podcast-downloads/?utm_source=openai)) - **PRX / Dovetail** — more publisher/network infrastructure than a pure ad network, but it supports scalable dynamic ad serving and monetization across its network. ([prx.org](https://prx.org/technology/?utm_source=openai)) - **Audacy Creator Lab / podcast brands offerings** — provides a dashboard and managed options to “start, run and scale campaigns.” ([creators.audacy.com](https://creators.audacy.com/brands/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best for performance, brand safety, or premium host-read reach**.
Which podcast advertising networks are best for monetizing independent networks? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For **independent podcast networks**, the strongest monetization options are usually: 1. **Acast** - Great for **dynamic ad insertion** and global inventory. - Good if you want to monetize a back catalog and smaller shows. - Strong self-serve + managed sales mix. 2. **Megaphone (Spotify)** - Best for larger independent networks that want premium **programmatic + direct-sold** monetization. - Excellent ad tech and yield tools. - Better if you already have meaningful scale. 3. **ART19** - Strong for **hosting + monetization + analytics** in one stack. - Good for networks that want clean infrastructure and reliable ad ops. - Often a good fit for mid-sized networks. 4. **Audioboom** - Best known for **sales representation** and monetization support. - Useful if you want help selling inventory without building a big sales team. - Particularly good for networks with loyal audiences and premium content. 5. **Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast** - Solid for smaller independent networks. - Easier entry point, good for **host-read** ads and simple monetization. - Not as strong as the top tier for larger-scale yield optimization. ### Best picks by situation - **Best overall for independents:** **Acast** - **Best for larger networks:** **Megaphone** - **Best all-in-one stack:** **ART19** - **Best if you want sales help:** **Audioboom** - **Best for smaller networks:** **Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast** ### What to prioritize Look for: - **Dynamic ad insertion** - **Direct sales support** - **Programmatic demand** - **Strong analytics** - **Easy ad ops workflow** If you want, I can also rank these by **revenue potential**, **ease of use**, or **best fit for fiction/news/comedy networks**.
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For **independent podcast networks**, the best options usually are: 1. **Acast** — best for networks that want a strong **open ecosystem** and premium monetization without losing control. Acast says it powers independent creators, publishers, and media networks, offers monetization at the core, and supports distribution plus premium ads. ([acast.com](https://www.acast.com/en-us?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Libsyn Ads** — best for networks that want a more traditional **podcast ad marketplace** with full-service campaign management. Libsyn rebranded AdvertiseCast to Libsyn Ads, and it describes the platform as a marketplace connecting podcasters with advertisers and agencies. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/03.21.24-Libsyn-Ads-Rebrand-release.pdf?utm_source=openai)) 3. **SoundStack** — best for networks that care most about **tech-agnostic monetization, dynamic ad insertion, and multiple demand partners**. SoundStack explicitly positions itself for podcast networks with independent infrastructure, DAI, and broad buyer access. ([soundstack.com](https://www.soundstack.com/solutions/podcast-networks/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Spotify Audience Network / Megaphone** — best if you want **scale and automated fill for unsold inventory**, especially if you’re already in Spotify’s publishing ecosystem. Spotify says creators/publishers can monetize with ads across Spotify Free and other podcast platforms, and that independent podcasters can use it to monetize content. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/spotify-audience-network/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Podbean PodAds** — best for smaller independent networks that want **simple network-wide dynamic ad insertion**. Podbean says PodAds simplifies running ad campaigns across multiple podcasts in a network. ([podads.podbean.com](https://podads.podbean.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Acast - **Best for ad sales marketplace:** Libsyn Ads - **Best for infrastructure/control:** SoundStack - **Best for scale/fill:** Spotify Audience Network - **Best for small networks:** Podbean PodAds ([acast.com](https://www.acast.com/en-us?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **comparison table by CPM potential, ease of use, minimum audience size, and best fit**.
What are the best podcast ad networks for international audiences? discovery
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Best podcast ad networks for **international audiences**: 1. **Acast** - One of the strongest global networks - Good for Europe, UK, Australia, and growing in the US - Strong dynamic ad insertion and marketplace access 2. **Spotify Audience Network** - Large reach across many countries - Best if your show already gets strong Spotify listening - Good for programmatic and host-read style ads 3. **Audioboom** - Strong international sales team and premium brands - Good for English-language audiences in multiple markets - Better fit for established shows 4. **Podbean Ads Marketplace** - Easier entry for smaller podcasts - Works well for global distribution - Good if you want simple setup and dynamic insertion 5. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid for independent podcasters - Decent international reach, especially via networked campaigns - Best if you already host on Libsyn 6. **AdvertiseCast** - Strong marketplace for direct-response advertisers - Good for shows with US + international listeners - Nice if you want more control over CPM deals ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall international reach:** **Acast** - **Best for Spotify-heavy audiences:** **Spotify Audience Network** - **Best for premium brand campaigns:** **Audioboom** - **Best for smaller creators:** **Podbean Ads** If you want, I can also rank them by **CPM, fill rate, or ease of approval**.
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For **international audiences**, my top picks are: 1. **Acast** — best if you want broad global reach and marketplace buying. Acast says it has a network of **100,000+ podcasts across 15 global markets** and positions itself as a global monetization platform. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/no/news-and-insights/global-marketers-are-10-times-more-likely-to-increase-podcast-ad-spend-over-next-five?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Audioboom** — strong for premium, brand-safe campaigns with global scale. Audioboom says it can reach listeners “**around the world**” and offers both a premium network and a self-serve global marketplace. ([audioboom.com](https://audioboom.com/advertisers?utm_source=openai)) 3. **AdsWizz / SiriusXM Media** — best for programmatic scale and cross-border audio buying. AdsWizz describes itself as a **global leader** in digital audio/podcast tech, and it has explicit EMEA/North America advertiser paths plus partnerships extending into Asia. ([adswizz.com](https://www.adswizz.com/adswizz-surpasses-1-billion-monthly-podcast-downloads/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast** — good if you want a mix of marketplace access and international expansion. Libsyn says it has expanded internationally, including the acquisition of **Germany’s Julep Media**, and offers a large creator marketplace. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Libsyn-2022-Financial-Update-Final.pdf?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Spotify Audience Network / Megaphone** — useful if Spotify inventory matters in your target countries. Spotify has expanded Megaphone into multiple European markets, including **Germany, France, Spain, and Italy**. ([newsroom.spotify.com](https://newsroom.spotify.com/2021-10-19/spotify-welcomes-podcast-publishers-in-germany-france-spain-and-italy-to-megaphone/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Acast - **Best premium host-read network:** Audioboom - **Best programmatic/global adtech:** AdsWizz - **Best for Spotify-centric reach:** Megaphone / Spotify Audience Network - **Best for indie creators + scale:** Libsyn Ads If you want, I can also give you a **country-by-country shortlist** (US/UK/Canada/Europe/APAC) or a **“best for advertisers vs publishers”** breakdown.
Which podcast advertising networks are best for premium inventory? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For **premium podcast inventory**, the strongest networks are usually: 1. **Spotify Advertising** – best for large-scale premium reach, especially if you want major shows and strong targeting. 2. **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** – excellent for premium audio inventory, upscale audience targeting, and programmatic access. 3. **Acast** – very strong in host-read, high-quality independent and network podcasts; good brand-safe premium inventory. 4. **iHeartMedia / iHeartPodcasts** – huge premium inventory with major mainstream shows and broad reach. 5. **Wondery (Amazon Ads)** – great for premium storytelling podcasts and brand-safe placements. 6. **NPR** – one of the best for premium, affluent, highly trusted audiences. 7. **PRX** – strong for public radio-style premium inventory and quality sponsorships. If you want the **best overall mix of premium + scale**, I’d start with: - **Spotify Advertising** - **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** - **Acast** - **iHeartMedia** If you want, I can also rank them by **brand safety, audience quality, or programmatic buying**.
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For **premium podcast inventory**, I’d shortlist these: 1. **SiriusXM Media / SiriusXM Podcast Network** — strongest for scale plus premium, brand-safe inventory; they say they reach **70M monthly podcast listeners** and offer programmatic guaranteed access to premium placements. ([siriusxmmedia.com](https://www.siriusxmmedia.com/insights/podcast-advertising-and-how-were-making-it-better?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Acast** — great for curated, high-quality podcast inventory; Acast describes itself as a large independent podcast company with **140,000+ podcasts** and **1B+ quarterly listens** in its premium inventory. ([acast.com](https://www.acast.com/en-gb/press-room/acast-and-magnite-partner-to-expand-programmatic-podcast-advertising-at-global-scale?utm_source=openai)) 3. **NPR / National Public Media** — best if brand safety and premium editorial environments matter; NPR podcast inventory is available via **private marketplace (PMP)** and **programmatic guaranteed**. ([nationalpublicmedia.com](https://www.nationalpublicmedia.com/products/npr-programmatic-audio/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Wondery / Amazon Ads** — strong for premium storytelling shows; Wondery says you can **programmatically access premium podcast inventory** via Amazon DSP. ([advertising.wondery.com](https://advertising.wondery.com/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Libsyn Ads** — good for breadth and direct buying; its marketplace offers inventory from **1,300+ shows** and lets advertisers shop and compare show-level details. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/podcast-advertising-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) **Best pick by goal:** - **Most premium / brand-safe:** NPR, SiriusXM Media - **Best global premium scale:** Acast - **Best premium storytelling inventory:** Wondery - **Best marketplace breadth:** Libsyn Ads ([nationalpublicmedia.com](https://www.nationalpublicmedia.com/products/npr-programmatic-audio/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them for **CPM efficiency, host-read quality, or programmatic buying**.
What are the best alternatives to large podcast advertising networks? comparison
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Best alternatives to big podcast ad networks: - **Direct sponsorship sales** — sell ads yourself. Best for shows with a loyal niche audience. - **Podcast marketplaces** — e.g. **AdvertiseCast**, **Podcorn**, **Acast Marketplace**, **Spreaker Ads**. - **Self-serve ad platforms** — e.g. **Spotify Ad Studio**, **GumGum**, **AudioGO**. - **Podcast hosting platforms with ads** — e.g. **Libsyn Ads**, **Megaphone**, **Captivate Sponsorships**. - **Affiliate + performance deals** — e.g. **Amazon Associates**, **Impact**, **PartnerStack**. - **Branded content / sponsorship agencies** — e.g. **Oxford Road**, **Oxford Road**, **Nativo** (for broader audio/content). If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small podcasts**, **best CPMs**, or **easiest to use**.
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If you want alternatives to big podcast ad networks, the best options are usually: 1. **Host-read marketplaces** — best for authenticity and easier creator-brand matching. - **Gumball**: direct host-read ad marketplace for podcasters and advertisers. ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/?utm_source=openai)) - **Audacy Creator Lab / Podcorn**: creator marketplace for host-read sponsorships and dynamic ads. ([audacyinc.com](https://audacyinc.com/press/audacy-unveils-audacy-creator-lab/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Self-serve podcast ad marketplaces** — best if you want more control and less network lock-in. - **RedCircle Ad Platform (RAP)**: marketplace with host-read and programmatic ads. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/what-is-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Direct sponsorship sales** — best margins if you can sell yourself. - Build a media kit, pitch brands directly, and use a marketplace only as backup. Magellan AI lets publishers upload media kits so advertisers can find them, and it offers free verified-download visibility. ([magellan.ai](https://www.magellan.ai/upload-your-media-kit?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Measurement/attribution tools instead of networks** — best if you already buy media directly. - **Podscribe** and **Magellan AI** help with attribution, verification, and planning rather than acting like a classic ad network. ([podscribe.com](https://podscribe.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My short take:** - **Best for small/mid shows:** Gumball or RedCircle. ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for creators who want more direct brand deals:** Audacy Creator Lab / Podcorn. ([audacyinc.com](https://audacyinc.com/press/audacy-unveils-audacy-creator-lab/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for advertisers who want control and proof:** direct buys + Podscribe. ([podscribe.com](https://podscribe.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **ranked list for podcasters vs advertisers**.
How do podcast advertising networks compare with direct sales? comparison
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Podcast ad networks and direct sales each work well, but for different goals. ### Ad networks Examples: **Acast**, **Spotify Audience Network**, **Megaphone**, **Libsyn Ads**. **Pros** - Faster to launch - Easier to scale across many shows - Less sales/admin work - Good for filling unsold inventory **Cons** - Lower CPMs than direct deals - Less control over who sees the ad - Often more generic creative - Network fees cut into revenue ### Direct sales Examples of tools used: **Gumball**, **Podcorn** (now **Aspire**), **Barometer**, plus in-house sales. **Pros** - Higher CPMs and better margins - More control over brand fit and placements - Custom packages: host reads, sponsorships, bundles - Better long-term advertiser relationships **Cons** - Harder and slower to sell - Requires sales effort and account management - More ad ops work - Revenue can be less predictable ### Best use case - **Use networks** if you want convenience, broad fill, and less workload. - **Use direct sales** if you have a strong niche audience and can sell premium sponsorships. - Many publishers do **both**: direct sales first, then networks to monetize leftover inventory. If you want, I can also compare them by **revenue potential, control, and workload** in a simple table.
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**Short version:** - **Ad networks** = easier, more automated, faster fill. - **Direct sales** = higher control, usually higher revenue per deal, more work. ### Podcast ad networks **Pros** - Quick to set up - Good for smaller shows - Automated matching and billing - Helps monetize unsold inventory **Cons** - Lower CPMs on average - Less control over brand fit - More “one-size-fits-all” - Network may take a cut ### Direct sales **Pros** - Usually better rates - Stronger brand relationships - More control over pricing, ad placement, and creative - Can bundle sponsorships, live reads, newsletter, events, etc. **Cons** - Sales effort required - Harder to scale - Needs prospecting, pitching, and account management - Slower to close ### Rule of thumb - **Small or growing podcast:** start with a network. - **Established podcast with a niche audience:** direct sales often wins. - **Best model for many shows:** use **both** — direct deals first, network for leftover inventory. If you want, I can also compare them by **CPM, revenue potential, workload, and best use cases** in a table.
What is the best alternative to a full-service podcast ad marketplace? comparison
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The best alternative is usually a **podcast ad network with self-serve or managed buying**, rather than a full-service marketplace. **Top picks:** - **Acast Marketplace** — best overall if you want broad podcast inventory and programmatic-style buying. - **Spotify Ad Network** — strong for reach and easy targeting inside Spotify’s ecosystem. - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — good for simpler, smaller-budget campaign buying. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid if you want direct podcast ad placements with less hand-holding. - **Gumball** — best if you want to buy ads directly from shows, more like marketplace-lite. **If you want the closest “alternative”:** - **Acast Marketplace** or **Gumball** **If you want full control and lower cost:** - Run campaigns through **Spotify Ad Studio** or **Acast self-serve**, then scale from there. If you tell me your budget and goal (brand awareness, app installs, leads, etc.), I can point to the single best option.
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If you want the **closest alternative**, I’d pick **Gumball**. It’s a self-serve marketplace for **host-read podcast ads** where you can browse inventory, filter by audience/genre, and book directly online without needing a full-service agency flow. ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/)) If you mean **more control / programmatic buying**, then **AdsWizz** is the stronger alternative; if you want **measurement + direct-buy control**, **Podscribe SmartServe** is worth a look. ([adswizz.com](https://www.adswizz.com/podcasters/podcast-monetization/)) If you tell me your goal—**host-read, self-serve, programmatic, or cheaper**—I can give you a single best pick.
Should I use a programmatic podcast ad network or a managed sales team? comparison
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Usually: - **Use a programmatic podcast ad network** if you want **speed, scale, and lower lift**. - **Use a managed sales team** if you want **premium shows, custom deals, and stronger brand control**. ### Quick rule - **SMB / performance marketing / testing podcast ads** → **Programmatic** - Good options: **Spotify Ad Network**, **Acast Marketplace**, **Gumball**, **SAXX?** No, that's not a network. Better: **AdsWizz**, **Triton Digital**, **Podscribe** for measurement. - **Brand marketing / higher budgets / big launches** → **Managed sales** - Work directly with networks like **iHeartPodcasts**, **Wondery**, **NPR**, **Audacy**, **Libsyn Ads**, or through agencies. ### Programmatic wins when you need: - Fast setup - Flexible budgets - Easy targeting - Easier A/B testing - Less salesperson back-and-forth ### Managed sales wins when you need: - Host-read ads - Better audience fit - Sponsorships and exclusives - Custom integrations - Better storytelling and brand safety ### My recommendation If you’re new to podcast ads, start with **programmatic** to learn what converts. If you already know your audience and want stronger brand impact, go **managed**. If you want, I can also give you a **decision tree** based on your budget, CAC target, and campaign goal.
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It depends on your **scale, team, and goals**: ### Use a **programmatic podcast ad network** if you want: - Fast setup - Low sales overhead - Broad reach - Easier testing/optimization - Smaller inventory or shorter campaigns **Best for:** brands that want efficiency and don’t need custom deals. ### Use a **managed sales team** if you want: - Premium placements - Custom sponsorships - Better brand alignment - Higher-touch strategy - Stronger storytelling / host-read integration **Best for:** advertisers with bigger budgets, longer campaigns, or brands that care a lot about context and creative control. ### Simple rule - **Performance / scale / speed** → programmatic - **Brand building / premium shows / custom packages** → managed sales ### Practical recommendation If you’re unsure, start with **programmatic to test**, then move high-performing shows or categories into **managed deals**. If you want, I can give you a **decision matrix** based on your budget, CPM target, and campaign goal.
What are the best alternatives to podcast ad exchanges? comparison
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Best alternatives to podcast ad exchanges: 1. **Direct host-read sponsorships** - Best for: premium brands, higher trust, better conversion - Why: you negotiate directly with the show and get custom reads - Examples: **Nielsen Podcast Network**, **Wondery**, **Acast**, **Libsyn Ads** 2. **Podcast networks** - Best for: scale across multiple shows with one buy - Why: easier than buying show-by-show - Examples: **iHeartPodcasts**, **Audacy**, **Triton Digital**, **Midroll/SXM Media** 3. **Podcast marketplaces** - Best for: self-serve buying without a full exchange - Why: more control than an exchange, less friction than direct sales - Examples: **Acast Marketplace**, **Spotify Ad Exchange** (if you want a platform-style option), **Podcorn**, **Gumball** 4. **Creator/sponsor marketplaces** - Best for: sponsor-read integrations and niche audiences - Examples: **Podcorn**, **Gumball**, **Buy Sell Ads** (for some audio inventory) 5. **Agency-managed podcast buys** - Best for: larger budgets and performance tracking - Why: agencies can negotiate better rates and bundle inventory - Examples: **PMG**, **Mediavest**, **Carat**, **Havas Media** 6. **Dynamic ad insertion through hosting platforms** - Best for: smaller advertisers who want scalable audio ads - Examples: **Megaphone**, **Simplecast**, **Art19**, **Podbean Ads** **Best overall picks by goal** - **Best performance:** direct host-read deals - **Best scale:** podcast networks - **Best self-serve:** Podcorn or Acast Marketplace - **Best premium inventory:** Wondery or SiriusXM Media If you want, I can also give you the **best alternatives for buying podcast ads vs. selling podcast inventory**—the options differ a lot.
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If you mean **ways to buy/sell podcast ads without relying on an exchange**, the best alternatives are: 1. **Direct host-read sponsorships** — usually the highest-trust option; the host reads the ad in their own voice. Acast and Libsyn both sell host-read sponsorships directly through their marketplaces. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/8143532-the-sponsorships-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Podcast ad marketplaces / networks** — good if you want curated inventory and less manual outreach. Examples include **Acast**, **Libsyn Ads**, and **SoundStack Marketplace**. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Dynamic ad insertion (DAI) / automatic podcast ads** — best for back catalog monetization and more scalable, programmatic-style fill. Libsyn’s Automatic Podcast Ads and SoundStack both highlight DAI as a core monetization option. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/automatic-podcast-ads/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Custom branded content / partnerships** — stronger for big-budget campaigns than standard ad slots. PodcastOne, for example, lists custom segments, episode takeovers, branded podcasts, live shows, and merchandise among its revenue options. ([d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net](https://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0001940177/b35efdf5-c128-4a74-be47-4e4d1b6dc8e3.pdf?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall:** direct host-read sponsorships - **Best for scale:** marketplace + DAI - **Best for premium branding:** custom branded content ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/8143532-the-sponsorships-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these for **advertisers vs. podcasters**.
How do podcast advertising networks compare to sponsorship agencies? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Podcast advertising networks and sponsorship agencies both help you sell podcast ads, but they work differently: ### Podcast ad networks **What they do:** Aggregate inventory across many podcasts and sell ads programmatically or through a marketplace. **Best for:** - Scale - Faster fill rates - Performance-based campaigns - Simpler buying **Pros:** - Easier to launch - Broad reach - Often good for dynamic ad insertion - Less relationship management **Cons:** - Less control over host-read quality - Lower exclusivity - Can feel less premium - Pricing may be less flexible **Examples:** - **Acast** - **Spotify Audience Network** - **AdvertiseCast** - **Libsyn Ads** ### Sponsorship agencies **What they do:** Act as brokers/strategists between brands and podcasts, often negotiating direct host-read sponsorships and custom integrations. **Best for:** - Brand campaigns - Premium placements - Niche audience targeting - Custom reads and endorsements **Pros:** - Stronger creative control - Better host-brand fit - More premium inventory - Often higher listener trust **Cons:** - Slower setup - More manual negotiation - Usually higher minimums - Less scalable than networks **Examples:** - **Oxford Road** - **Lower Street** - **The Podglomerate** - **Quill** ### Quick rule of thumb - Choose a **network** if you want **reach and efficiency**. - Choose an **agency** if you want **premium, custom sponsorships**. If you want, I can also give you a “which is better for advertisers vs podcasters” breakdown.
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In short: - **Podcast advertising networks** sell and place ads across many shows. - **Sponsorship agencies** broker more custom brand deals, often including integrations, host reads, and partnerships. ### Podcast ad networks **Best for:** scale, automation, performance campaigns **What they do:** - Aggregate inventory from many podcasts - Handle targeting, buying, and sometimes dynamic ad insertion - Often optimize for reach, CPMs, and measurable conversions **Pros:** - Easier to buy at scale - Faster setup - Better for programmatic or always-on campaigns - Often more standardized reporting **Cons:** - Less custom - Can be weaker on premium branded storytelling - Sometimes lower host involvement ### Sponsorship agencies **Best for:** brand-building, premium placements, custom campaigns **What they do:** - Negotiate directly with podcasters or networks - Design sponsorship packages - Arrange host reads, branded segments, live reads, integrations, and sometimes broader influencer-style partnerships **Pros:** - More tailored creative - Stronger host authenticity - Better for launches, brand lift, and bespoke deals - Can access premium shows and exclusives **Cons:** - Usually more expensive - Slower to execute - Less scalable than network buying ### Rule of thumb - Choose an **ad network** if you want **reach and efficiency**. - Choose a **sponsorship agency** if you want **custom creative and deeper brand association**. If you want, I can also give you a **side-by-side table** or help decide which is better for **your specific campaign goal**.
What are the best alternatives to self-serve podcast ad platforms? comparison
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Best alternatives depend on your goal, but the main options are: - **Managed podcast ad networks**: **Wondery+?** no. Better examples: **Libsyn Ads**, **Acast**, **Spotify Audience Network**, **AdLarge**, **Magellan AI marketplace**. Good if you want someone to handle targeting, trafficking, and reporting. - **Podcast ad agencies / full-service media buyers**: **Oxford Road**, **Veritone One**, **DAX US**, **Podcorn (now part of Spotify/Spotify Ads)**. Best for brands that want strategy, host-read buying, and campaign optimization. - **Direct sponsorships with shows**: Buy directly from podcasters or networks like **NPR**, **TED Audio Collective**, **Slate**, **Gimlet-style independents**, **Stuff Media**, etc. Best for premium placements and host-read ads. - **Creator marketplaces / host-read marketplaces**: **Podcorn**, **Gumball**, **Acast Marketplace**, **VoiceGlue**. Good for smaller campaigns and more flexible creator matching. - **Programmatic audio/ad exchanges beyond podcast-only tools**: **Spotify Ad Exchange (SAX)**, **The Trade Desk**, **Triton Digital**, **AdsWizz**. Best if you want scale and already buy programmatically. If you tell me your budget, country, and whether you want **host-read** or **dynamic ads**, I can narrow this to the best 3 options.
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If you want to avoid self-serve podcast ad platforms, the best alternatives are usually: - **Managed podcast ad networks** — best for most brands that want help with planning, trafficking, and optimization. Examples: **Libsyn Ads**, **Acast**, **SiriusXM Media / Midroll**, and **Audacy Creator Lab**. These offer host-read sponsorships, pre-recorded ads, or both. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/podcast-monetization-solutions?utm_source=openai)) - **Podcast ad agencies** — best if you want a partner to handle strategy and buying across multiple shows/networks. Libsyn explicitly positions its team as a full-service sales team, and Acast/SiriusXM also support agency workflows. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/podcast-advertising?utm_source=openai)) - **Direct host-read sponsorships** — best for authenticity and higher trust. Acast highlights host-read sponsorships as a core buy, and SiriusXM notes the format is “like a host-read ad, but at-scale.” ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/fr/news-and-insights/acast-unlocks-largest-self-serve-marketplace-of-podcast-influencers-for-media-buyers?utm_source=openai)) - **Programmatic podcast ads / dynamic insertion** — best when you want scale and less manual buying. Libsyn’s Automatic Podcast Ads and Acast’s pre-recorded campaigns support this model. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/automatic-podcast-ads/?utm_source=openai)) - **Creator marketplaces / branded-content platforms** — best for smaller campaigns or influencer-style buys. Audacy Creator Lab lets brands set budgets, discover podcasters, and manage sponsorships directly. ([creators.audacy.com](https://creators.audacy.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) **Simple rule:** - Want **white-glove service** → agency or managed network. - Want **trust + performance** → host-read sponsorships. - Want **scale + automation** → programmatic/dynamic ads. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/podcast-advertising?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **shortlist by budget** (e.g. under $10k, $10k–$50k, enterprise).
Which is better for creators: podcast ad networks or affiliate monetization? comparison
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**Short answer:** For most creators, **affiliate monetization is better early**, while **podcast ad networks are better once you have steady downloads**. ### Podcast ad networks **Best for:** podcasts with predictable listenership **Pros:** - More passive once set up - Better fit for high-volume shows - Often easier to scale with audience growth **Cons:** - Usually requires meaningful download numbers - CPMs can be inconsistent - Less control over brand fit **Good options:** - **Acast** - **Megaphone** - **Spotify Audience Network** - **AdvertiseCast** ### Affiliate monetization **Best for:** creators with trust-heavy audiences **Pros:** - Works even with smaller audiences - Can outperform ads if your audience buys products - More control over what you promote **Cons:** - Requires more active selling/content integration - Revenue can be uneven - Depends heavily on conversion rate **Good options:** - **Amazon Associates** - **Impact** - **CJ Affiliate** - **PartnerStack** (great for SaaS) - **LTK** (strong for lifestyle/creator commerce) ### Rule of thumb - **New/smaller creator:** affiliate wins - **Larger podcast with regular downloads:** ad network wins - **Best overall:** use both If you want, I can recommend the **best option based on your platform** (podcast, YouTube, newsletter, TikTok, etc.).
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Depends on your audience and traffic, but for most creators: - **Affiliate monetization** is better if you have **high trust + strong purchase intent**. - **Podcast ad networks** are better if you have **steady downloads + want passive, simpler revenue**. **Rule of thumb** - **Small/medium audience:** affiliates often win - **Large, consistent audience:** ad networks become easier and more reliable - **Niche review/education content:** affiliates usually outperform - **Broad entertainment content:** ad networks usually fit better **Pros of affiliate** - Higher upside per conversion - Works well with recommendations you genuinely use - Can monetize even with a modest audience **Cons of affiliate** - Less predictable - Depends on listener action - Needs strong trust and good product fit **Pros of ad networks** - Easier setup - More passive - Revenue scales with downloads **Cons of ad networks** - Lower control over ads - Earnings can be modest unless your audience is sizable - CPMs vary a lot **Best answer:** If you’re starting out, **affiliate monetization** is often better. If you already have strong download volume, **podcast ad networks** are better for consistency. **Best of all:** use **both**. If you want, I can help you choose based on your **podcast size, niche, and audience type**.
What are the best alternatives to host-read ad marketplaces? comparison
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If you mean **podcast host-read ad marketplaces**, the best alternatives are: 1. **Direct sponsorship sales** - Sell ads directly to brands instead of via a marketplace. - Best for higher rates and stronger relationships. - Tools: **GumGum**, **Podcorn by Airtory**, **Acast Brand Partnerships**. 2. **Programmatic audio ads** - Automated ad buying, usually cheaper and easier to scale. - Good for filling inventory. - Platforms: **Spotify Ad Exchange**, **SiriusXM Media**, **AdsWizz**. 3. **Dynamic ad insertion (DAI)** - Swaps ads into episodes automatically based on listener targeting. - Best for evergreen back catalogs. - Providers: **Megaphone**, **Libsyn Ads**, **Acast**, **Simplecast Ads**. 4. **Affiliate marketing** - You earn commission per sale instead of a flat CPM. - Works well for niche shows with loyal audiences. - Networks: **Amazon Associates**, **Impact**, **CJ Affiliate**, **PartnerStack**. 5. **Branded content / custom campaigns** - Brands sponsor episodes, segments, or series. - Higher-touch, often more lucrative. - Agencies/platforms: **The Podglomerate**, **Oxford Road**, **Quill**, **Lower Street**. 6. **Newsletter + podcast bundle ads** - Sell the show alongside email inventory. - Great if you have a media audience. - Tools: **beehiiv**, **Mailchimp**, **Passionfroot**. 7. **Memberships / subscriptions** - Replace ad revenue with listener support. - Best for engaged audiences. - Platforms: **Patreon**, **Supercast**, **Supporting Cast**, **Apple Podcasts Subscriptions**. If you want, I can rank these by **highest revenue**, **easiest to start**, or **best for small podcasts**.
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If you mean **podcast host-read ad marketplaces**, the best alternatives are: 1. **Direct-sold sponsorships** Buy straight from the creator/network instead of through a marketplace. Best for custom messaging and premium shows. Gumball is explicitly built around this direct model, and Acast also supports booking host-reads in its own marketplace. ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Programmatic / self-serve podcast ads** Good if you want scale, faster setup, and less negotiation. Spotify Ads Manager offers self-serve podcast ads and programmatic buying; Libsyn Ads also offers automatic ads and programmatic insertion; Acast supports pre-recorded ads too. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-CA/news-and-insights/podcast-ads-automated-buying-launch/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Managed podcast ad networks / brokers** Better if you want someone else to handle targeting, trafficking, and reporting. Libsyn Ads and Acast both position themselves as full ad platforms with measurement and campaign management. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/03.21.24-Libsyn-Ads-Rebrand-release.pdf?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Affiliate / creator partnership deals** Useful for performance marketing when you want pay-for-results rather than a fixed sponsorship fee. This is less “marketplace-like” and more direct creator partnership. ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best for control:** direct sponsorships - **Best for scale:** Spotify Ads Manager / programmatic - **Best for easy podcast monetization:** Libsyn Ads or Acast - **Best for creator-led authenticity:** host-read direct deals via Gumball ([gumball.fm](https://gumball.fm/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best alternatives for advertisers** or **best alternatives for podcasters**.
How do podcast ad networks compare with podcast monetization platforms? comparison
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**Short version:** - **Podcast ad networks** help you **sell ad inventory** to advertisers. - **Podcast monetization platforms** help you **earn money in multiple ways**, often including ads, memberships, subscriptions, tips, and dynamic ad insertion. ## Podcast ad networks Examples: **Acast Marketplace**, **AdvertiseCast**, **Podbean Ads Marketplace**, **PodcastOne**, **Libsyn Ads** **Best for:** - Shows with steady downloads - Publishers who want help filling ad slots - Host-read or programmatic ad sales **What they do:** - Connect you with advertisers - Handle campaign booking and sometimes ad trafficking - Often pay per impression or per campaign **Pros:** - Easier monetization setup - Access to advertisers without a sales team - Good for established shows **Cons:** - Usually focused mainly on ads - Less flexibility if you want subscriptions or listener support - Revenue depends heavily on audience size and ad demand ## Podcast monetization platforms Examples: **Patreon**, **Supercast**, **Memberful**, **Spotify for Podcasters**, **Buzzsprout Monetization**, **Captivate Spark** **Best for:** - Creators who want multiple income streams - Niche shows with loyal fans - Smaller podcasts that may not have strong ad demand yet **What they do:** - Support paid memberships, bonus content, premium feeds - May include donations, subscriptions, and sometimes ads - Some also offer analytics, hosting, or distribution tools **Pros:** - More ways to make money - Works well even with smaller audiences - Better for direct fan support **Cons:** - Requires more audience engagement - You may need to manage perks/content for paying supporters - Ad sales may be limited or secondary ## Main difference - **Ad networks = advertiser-first** - **Monetization platforms = creator-first** ## Which should you choose? - Choose an **ad network** if you want **hands-off ad revenue** and have decent downloads. - Choose a **monetization platform** if you want **membership income, premium content, or direct fan support**. - Many podcasters use **both**: e.g., **Acast** or **AdvertiseCast** for ads plus **Patreon** or **Supercast** for memberships. If you want, I can also give you a **best platform by podcast size** (small, medium, large).
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Short version: - **Podcast ad networks** = help you **sell ad inventory** by connecting your show to advertisers. - **Podcast monetization platforms** = a **broader toolkit** to make money from your audience, often including ads, subscriptions, memberships, donations, dynamic ad insertion, analytics, and commerce. ### Key difference **Ad network** - Focus: ad sales - Best for: shows with decent downloads and audience fit - Example jobs: fill mid-roll slots, broker CPM deals, manage advertisers **Monetization platform** - Focus: multiple revenue streams - Best for: creators who want flexibility - Example jobs: ads + paid subscriptions + listener support + premium content ### Practical comparison | Feature | Ad Network | Monetization Platform | |---|---|---| | Main goal | Sell ads | Grow overall revenue | | Revenue types | Mostly ads | Ads, subscriptions, memberships, tips, premium feeds, commerce | | Complexity | Lower | Higher | | Audience size needed | Usually higher | Can work at small-to-large sizes | | Control | Less control over ad deals | More control over business model | | Best for | Established shows | Creators building a full monetization stack | ### When to choose which Choose an **ad network** if: - you want mostly passive ad revenue - your show has steady downloads - you don’t want to manage multiple revenue products Choose a **monetization platform** if: - you want to diversify income - you have loyal listeners willing to pay - you want subscriptions or premium episodes in addition to ads ### Rule of thumb - **Ad network = one revenue channel** - **Monetization platform = revenue system** If you want, I can also compare specific options like **Acast, Spotify for Podcasters, Megaphone, Patreon, Supercast, Podcorn, Gumball, and Audioboom**.
How do I monetize a podcast with ad inventory but no sales team? problem
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If you have ad inventory but no sales team, the fastest path is to **sell via a podcast ad network or marketplace** and use **dynamic ad insertion**. ### Best options - **Acast Marketplace** — good for host-read + programmatic selling. - **Megaphone by Spotify** — strong for larger inventory and dynamic insertion. - **Libsyn Ads** — simple monetization for smaller shows. - **AdvertiseCast** — good for direct-response advertisers. - **PodcastOne / ART19** — useful if you want managed monetization. - **Gumball** — creator-friendly, especially for sponsorships. - **SXM Media** — if you can qualify for premium inventory. ### What to do 1. **Set up dynamic ad insertion** - Put pre-roll, mid-roll, and post-roll slots in your episodes. - Use **Megaphone**, **Acast**, or **ART19**. 2. **Join a network/marketplace** - They handle advertiser relationships, pricing, and trafficking. - You keep a revenue share instead of hiring sales staff. 3. **Package your audience** - Create a one-sheet with: - monthly downloads - audience demographics - top countries - episode cadence - ad slot availability 4. **Sell what you already have** - Even small shows can monetize with: - host-read ads - programmatic ads - affiliate offers - newsletter swaps - sponsorship bundles 5. **Use affiliate + direct-response offers** - Easier than brand sponsorships. - Good platforms: **Amazon Associates**, **Impact**, **CJ Affiliate**, **ShareASale**. ### Best setup for no sales team - **Small show:** Libsyn Ads + affiliate links - **Growing show:** Acast + host-read + programmatic - **Larger show:** Megaphone or ART19 + marketplace sales ### Simple rule If you don’t want to sell manually, **don’t rely on private sponsorships alone**. Use a marketplace that can fill inventory automatically. If you want, I can recommend the **best monetization stack based on your download numbers**.
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Use a **self-serve podcast ad marketplace** and **dynamic ad insertion**, so you can sell inventory without hiring reps. Platforms like **Acast**, **Podbean**, **Libsyn Ads**, and **Spotify for Creators** all offer creator-side ad monetization or marketplace options that can insert ads into your show without a traditional sales team. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/self-serve?utm_source=openai)) A practical setup: 1. **Pick one monetization layer** - **Programmatic ads** for easy fill. - **Host-read / sponsorship marketplace** for higher CPMs and better fit. - **Both** if your platform supports it. ([help.podbean.com](https://help.podbean.com/support/solutions/articles/25000028945-get-started-how-to-join-podbean-ads-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Set your ad slots** - Add clear **pre-roll, mid-roll, and post-roll** positions. - Keep breaks natural so sponsors don’t hurt retention. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/podcast-monetization?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Create a one-page media kit** - Show downloads, audience geo, category, demo, and ad slot options. - Even with a marketplace, this helps you look “buyable.” (This is my recommendation, based on how marketplaces ask you to package inventory.) ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/market-your-podcast?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Use a platform that handles matching/fill** - **Acast self-serve** is built for advertisers to browse inventory and launch host-read campaigns. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/self-serve?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** supports opt-in programmatic and host-read ads. ([help.podbean.com](https://help.podbean.com/support/solutions/articles/25000028945-get-started-how-to-join-podbean-ads-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn Ads** offers an ad marketplace and automatic podcast ads; Libsyn says anyone can join its automatic podcast ads, while its marketplace has minimum thresholds. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/podcast-monetization?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify for Creators Ads** is invite-only, so it’s good to try, but not something you can fully rely on as your only path. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/tv/creators/article/ads/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Layer in direct-response sponsor tactics** - Offer **sponsorship packages**, **promo codes**, and **tracked URLs**. - That makes it easier for sponsors to buy without a big sales org. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/7912879-self-serve-acast-attribution-tracking-101?utm_source=openai)) **Best low-lift path:** If you have no sales team, start with **Podbean or Libsyn for automated fill**, then add **Acast-style self-serve host-read sponsorships** once you have a clear audience profile. ([help.podbean.com](https://help.podbean.com/support/solutions/articles/25000028945-get-started-how-to-join-podbean-ads-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **30-day monetization plan** for your show.
How do I fill unsold podcast ad slots automatically? problem
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Use an ad server + programmatic podcast marketplace + a fallback “house ad” setup. **Best approach** 1. **Set a fallback ad** for every unsold slot - Promote your own podcast, newsletter, Patreon, merch, or a sponsor bundle. 2. **Connect to a podcast ad platform** that can fill remaining inventory automatically: - **Acast** - **Adswizz** - **Gumball** - **Pineapple Street / SXM Media** (bigger shows) - **Spotify Ad Exchange** (if available for your setup) 3. **Use dynamic ad insertion (DAI)** so the ad can be swapped after publish time. 4. **Set rules** in the ad server: - If no campaign is sold, serve house ad - If a campaign is sold, serve sponsor creative - Rotate multiple fallback ads to avoid repetition 5. **Upload a creative library** of backup ads: - 15s and 30s versions - Promo codes, CTA variations, seasonal promos **Easy stack for most podcasters** - Hosting: **Buzzsprout**, **Transistor**, or **Megaphone** - Ad insertion/management: **Acast** or **Adswizz** - Backup creative: your own promo ads **If you want a very simple option** - Sell direct ads as usual - Fill leftovers with **house ads** - Automate the swap using **dynamic insertion** in your host or ad server If you tell me your podcast host and ad setup, I can suggest the exact workflow.
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Use **dynamic ad insertion (DAI)** plus a **programmatic marketplace/SSP** to backfill any unsold pre-, mid-, or post-roll slots automatically. Platforms like **AdsWizz**, **Libsyn Automatic Podcast Ads**, and **Acast** all support this kind of automated insertion and programmatic selling. ([adswizz.com](https://www.adswizz.com/publishers/insertion-suite/?utm_source=openai)) A simple setup looks like this: 1. **Keep direct-sold inventory first** (host reads, sponsorships). 2. **Define fallback rules** for unsold slots (backfill, category exclusions, brand-safety filters, frequency caps, and minimum CPM/floor prices). 3. **Connect an ad server/SSP** so multiple demand sources can compete for the slot in real time. 4. **Use dynamic insertion** so the ad is stitched in at play time, not baked into the file. ([adswizz.com](https://www.adswizz.com/how-an-audio-ssp-powers-programmatic-audio-monetization/?utm_source=openai)) If you want the most hands-off option, these are the main paths: - **Libsyn Automatic Podcast Ads**: automatic programmatic ads, including backfill for unsold host-read slots and back catalog monetization. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/automatic-podcast-ads/?utm_source=openai)) - **AdsWizz**: ad insertion + marketplace/SSP + yield optimization for podcast inventory. ([adswizz.com](https://www.adswizz.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Acast Automated Marketplace / self-serve**: automated podcast ad buying and selling, with unsold inventory eligible for Acast’s use under its creator terms. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/11419220-campaign-types?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can recommend the **best stack for your show size** (small indie vs network vs agency) and map out the exact workflow.
How can I insert ads into old podcast episodes? problem
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Use **dynamic ad insertion (DAI)**. That lets you put new ads into old episodes without re-uploading the audio. ### How to do it 1. **Host your podcast on a platform that supports DAI** - Good options: **Spotify for Creators (Anchor)**, **Libsyn**, **Megaphone**, **Acast**, **AdSwizz**. 2. **Mark ad break points** - In your host’s dashboard, set mid-roll, pre-roll, or post-roll markers. 3. **Upload or connect ad files** - Add your own sponsor spots, or use marketplace ads if your host offers them. 4. **Set targeting rules** - By episode age, geography, device, time window, etc. 5. **Replace old ads automatically** - New listeners hear the new ad; existing downloads usually keep the version they already got. ### If your host doesn’t support it - You can manually re-edit episodes in **Adobe Audition**, **Audacity**, or **Descript**, then re-upload. - But that means changing the episode file, not true dynamic insertion. ### Best platforms for this - **Megaphone** — best for larger shows, robust monetization - **Libsyn** — solid and simple - **Acast** — strong ad marketplace - **Spotify for Creators** — easiest for smaller creators ### Important - If old episodes are already downloaded by listeners, you usually **can’t replace those copies** unless they re-download. - Make sure your ad reads/placements comply with your host’s policies and any sponsor contracts. If you want, I can recommend the **best setup for your podcast size and host**.
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You have a few ways: 1. **Dynamic ad insertion (best option)** - Upload the old episode to a podcast host that supports DAI. - Mark ad slots in the episode. - The host serves a current ad when someone plays the episode. 2. **Host-read update** - Re-record a short intro, midroll, or outro. - Re-upload the episode as a new version. - Good if you want a personal ad for sponsors or promos. 3. **Prefix/suffix injection** - Add ads at the beginning or end of the audio file. - Simple, but less flexible than dynamic insertion. 4. **Ad markers in your RSS/feed** - Use a podcast platform that supports inserting ads into back catalog episodes through the feed. - This is how many networks monetize old content. ### Typical workflow - Choose a hosting platform with ad insertion support. - Add cue points to old episodes. - Connect an ad marketplace or direct sponsor. - Set rules by episode, show, country, or date. - Test playback on major podcast apps. ### Good platforms to check - **Spotify for Creators** - **Acast** - **Megaphone** - **Libsyn** - **Captivate** - **Buzzsprout** (some monetization options) If you want, I can also give you: - the **cheapest way**, - the **best way for a small podcast**, or - a **step-by-step setup** for your host.
How do I get advertisers for a niche podcast? problem
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To get advertisers for a niche podcast, focus on **fit, proof, and outreach**. ### 1) Build a sponsor-ready media kit Include: - audience niche - downloads per episode - listener geography, age, interests - engagement stats - ad slots/pricing - past results/testimonials Tools: **Canva** for the media kit, **Chartable** or **Podtrac** for analytics. ### 2) Sell to brands already serving your audience Look for brands that naturally match your niche, e.g.: - finance podcast → **Wealthfront**, **Betterment**, **Rocket Money** - gaming podcast → **Razer**, **Logitech G**, **NVIDIA** - fitness podcast → **Hydrow**, **AG1**, **Whoop** - parenting podcast → **Frida**, **Lovevery**, **Moshi** Start with: - direct brand websites - marketing managers on LinkedIn - affiliate/sponsorship contacts ### 3) Use podcast ad marketplaces These can connect you to advertisers faster: - **Gumball** - **Podcorn** - **AdvertiseCast** - **Acast Marketplace** - **Spotify Audience Network** ### 4) Offer low-risk entry points Advertisers like: - 1-episode test buys - host-read ads - promo codes + tracked links - bundled newsletter/social mentions ### 5) Reach out with a short pitch Example: > Hi [Name], I host [Podcast], a niche show for [audience]. We get [X] downloads/episode and strong engagement around [topic]. I think your brand fits our listeners well. I’d love to share a one-sheet and sponsorship options. ### 6) Track performance Use: - unique promo codes - UTM links - landing pages - post-campaign reports If you want, I can help you write a **one-page sponsor pitch** or build a list of **brand targets for your exact niche**.
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To get advertisers for a niche podcast: 1. **Know your audience exactly** - Niche sells. - Write down: age, location, income, interests, job titles, buying habits, and why they listen. 2. **Create a simple media kit** - Show: - downloads per episode - audience demographics - sample ad spots - social/email reach - past sponsors/testimonials - Make it a 1-page PDF and a landing page. 3. **Sell to brands that already fit** - Look for companies your listeners already use. - Best targets: - SaaS/tools - DTC brands - courses/memberships - conferences/events - local or regional businesses if your audience is local - Niche podcasts often do well with **direct-response** and **category-specific** sponsors. 4. **Start with small brands** - Don’t only pitch major ad agencies. - Contact founders, marketing managers, and growth leads directly. - Smaller brands are often easier to close. 5. **Offer simple ad packages** - Example: - 1 pre-roll + 1 mid-roll - newsletter mention - social post - episode sponsorship - Bundle for more value. 6. **Use affiliate deals first** - If you’re small, ask for: - affiliate commission - flat fee + commission - This lowers risk for sponsors. 7. **Reach out directly** - Send short, specific pitches: - who your show is for - why their product fits - expected results - what you’re offering - Mention a specific episode or listener pain point. 8. **Join podcast ad marketplaces** - Try: - Podcorn - Gumball - AdvertiseCast - Acast Marketplace - Spotify podcast ad tools - Good for filling inventory while you build direct relationships. 9. **Show sponsor-friendly proof** - Even if downloads are modest, show: - high open rates on email - strong engagement - listener testimonials - niche authority - conversion history if you have it 10. **Follow up** - Most deals happen after 2–4 follow-ups. - Keep it polite and short. If you want, I can also write: - a **sponsor pitch email** - a **media kit outline** - or a **list of sponsor types for your podcast niche**.
How do I increase podcast ad revenue without changing my content? problem
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You can raise podcast ad revenue without changing content by improving **monetization setup**: - **Use dynamic ad insertion (DAI):** Monetize your back catalog and swap ads by country, device, or date. - Try **Megaphone**, **Acast**, **Spotify for Creators**, or **Libsyn Ads**. - **Sell direct instead of only using networks:** Direct sponsors usually pay more. Build a simple media kit with downloads, audience demographics, and examples. - Use **Canva** for the media kit and **Podtrac** or **Chartable** for audience/download data. - **Increase ad inventory:** Add more slots per episode: pre-roll, mid-roll, and post-roll. Even one extra mid-roll can make a big difference. - **Raise CPMs with better targeting:** Sell by niche, geography, or listener segment. Premium audiences command higher rates. - **Offer host-read ads:** These usually outperform baked-in reads and justify higher CPMs. Keep the same content, just change ad delivery. - **Bundle sponsorships:** Sell podcast + newsletter + social + website placements together for a higher total deal. - **Create evergreen inventory:** Package older episodes for sponsor rotation. Many shows ignore this revenue stream. - **Improve reporting:** Advertisers pay more when they trust the numbers. Use clean analytics and post-campaign reporting from **Chartable**, **Podtrac**, or **Spotify for Creators**. - **Sell higher-value categories:** Finance, B2B SaaS, insurance, legal, and education often pay more than broad consumer brands. - **Use a sales rep or network:** If you don’t want to sell yourself, partner with **AdvertiseCast**, **Gumball**, or **Acast Marketplace**. If you want, I can help you build a **revenue plan for your show** based on your current downloads and niche.
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Focus on the **ad product**, not the content: - **Grow session length**: longer listen time = more ad inventory. - **Add more ad slots**: pre-roll, mid-roll, post-roll, and host-read promos. - **Raise CPMs**: improve audience quality for advertisers (demographics, niche, geography). - **Package sponsorships**: sell bundles across episodes, newsletter, clips, and socials. - **Use dynamic ad insertion**: helps monetize old episodes and swap in higher-paying ads. - **Improve retention**: better completion rates make ad spots more valuable. - **Sell direct, not just programmatic**: direct deals usually pay more. - **Create premium inventory**: exclusive category sponsorships, first-position ad slots, category lockouts. - **Increase distribution**: YouTube, Spotify, Apple, clips, and email can boost reach and ad demand. - **Track and present metrics**: downloads, listen-through rate, geography, and audience segments. Fastest wins: 1. Add dynamic mid-rolls to the back catalog 2. Sell direct sponsors 3. Bundle podcast + newsletter + social 4. Raise rates for premium ad positions If you want, I can turn this into a **step-by-step monetization plan** for your show size.
How do I target podcast ads to the right audience? problem
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To target podcast ads well, focus on **the show, not just the medium**. ### 1) Define your ideal listener Start with: - age, gender, income - interests/hobbies - buying intent - location - problem your product solves ### 2) Pick podcasts by audience fit Choose shows where the audience already matches your buyer. Look for: - topic alignment - listener demographics - engagement level - ad frequency (too many ads = lower response) ### 3) Use the right targeting methods Best options: - **Host-read ads**: strongest trust and conversion - **Programmatic podcast ads**: scale + audience targeting - **Contextual targeting**: place ads in relevant shows/episodes - **Geo-targeting**: great for local businesses - **Interest/behavioral targeting**: better for broader campaigns ### 4) Work with platforms that support targeting Good options include: - **Spotify Ad Studio** - **Acast Marketplace** - **Megaphone** - **AdsWizz** - **Triton Digital** ### 5) Match the creative to the listener Make the ad feel native: - mention the show/topic - use the host’s tone - include one clear CTA - offer a simple promo code or landing page ### 6) Test and measure Track: - promo code redemptions - landing page traffic - unique URLs - post-purchase surveys (“Where did you hear about us?”) ### 7) Buy smart A strong starting strategy: - 70% on niche, high-fit podcasts - 20% on mid-size shows - 10% on tests/new shows If you want, I can also give you a **podcast ad targeting checklist** or recommend **the best platform for your business type**.
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Start with **who the listener is**, then buy ads against **shows, episodes, or audiences** that match that person. **1) Define your ideal customer** - Age, gender, income, location - Interests, problems, buying intent - What they listen to and why **2) Pick the right show type** - **Niche podcasts** for precise targeting - **Category leaders** for scale - **Host-read ads** for trust - **Programmatic ads** for broader audience targeting **3) Use audience signals** - Podcast topic/category - Listener demographics - Geography - Device/time/daypart - Past behavior or intent - Lookalike audiences from your CRM/site visitors **4) Match message to mindset** - Awareness: simple problem/solution - Consideration: proof, benefits, comparison - Conversion: offer, urgency, clear CTA **5) Test small first** - Run 3–5 shows or audience segments - Change one variable at a time - Track promo code use, landing page visits, lift, and CAC **6) Optimize with data** - Keep shows with best conversion, not just downloads - Prefer engaged listeners over raw reach - Add exclusions for irrelevant audiences If you want, I can help you build a **podcast ad targeting plan** for your specific product or audience.
How do I manage podcast ad campaigns across multiple shows? problem
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Use a **centralized workflow**: 1. **Pick one ad ops platform** - For hosting/insertion: **Megaphone**, **Acast**, or **AdsWizz** - For attribution/measurement: **Podscribe** - For audience/ad-sales intel: **Magellan AI** 2. **Standardize campaign setup** - One brief per advertiser - Consistent targets: show, genre, geo, CPM, flight dates, frequency caps - Use the same naming convention across all shows 3. **Create a master calendar** - Track starts/ends, deliverables, host-read vs. announcer-read, and make-goods - Tools: **Airtable**, **Notion**, or **Monday.com** 4. **Segment inventory by show** - Group shows by audience fit and performance - Package high-performers together for better sell-through 5. **Track performance in one dashboard** - Monitor downloads, listens, completion rate, CTR, and attribution - Use **Podscribe** + **Google Looker Studio** for reporting 6. **Automate trafficking** - Use dynamic ad insertion where possible - Set rules for campaign pacing and rotation to avoid over/under-delivery 7. **Review weekly** - Reallocate budget to top-performing shows - Pause weak placements, refresh creative, and handle make-goods early If you want, I can give you a **recommended stack** for a small team vs. a larger network.
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To manage podcast ad campaigns across multiple shows, set it up like a media portfolio: 1. **Define one objective** - Brand awareness - Site traffic - App installs - Lead gen / sales 2. **Standardize your campaign structure** - One master brief - One tracking link per show - One naming convention for ads, episodes, and hosts 3. **Use show-level segmentation** - Group shows by audience fit - Split by genre, demo, geography, or host-read vs. baked-in inventory 4. **Track performance consistently** - Use unique promo codes or URLs - Measure downloads, conversions, CAC, and ROAS by show - Compare performance by host, episode type, and placement 5. **Centralize reporting** - Maintain a single dashboard in Airtable, Notion, Sheets, or a podcast ad platform - Update weekly with spend, impressions, listens, clicks, conversions 6. **Test and optimize** - Run A/B tests on copy, offers, and creative - Shift budget toward the best-performing shows - Pause weak placements quickly 7. **Coordinate execution** - Keep a calendar for flight dates, scripts, approvals, and asset delivery - Build a workflow for host approvals and publish dates 8. **Protect brand consistency** - Give each host flexible talking points - Set clear do/don’t messaging - Review reads for compliance If you want, I can also give you: - a **campaign tracker template** - a **media buying workflow** - or a **best-practice setup for host-read podcast ads**.
How do I price podcast ad inventory fairly? problem
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Price podcast ad inventory with a **CPM-based model**, then adjust for **placement, format, and show quality**. ### Simple starting point **Ad price = (Average downloads per episode ÷ 1,000) × CPM** ### Typical CPM ranges - **Pre-roll:** $15–$25 CPM - **Mid-roll:** $25–$50 CPM - **Post-roll:** $10–$20 CPM - **Host-read ads** usually command the high end - **Programmatic/dynamic ads** usually price lower than direct-sold host-read ### What affects “fair” pricing - **Downloads in first 7 or 30 days** (use whichever is standard for your show) - **Audience quality**: niche, buying power, geography - **Engagement**: completion rate, listener loyalty - **Ad format**: host-read > announcer-read > baked-in > programmatic - **Exclusivity**: charge more if they want category exclusivity - **Frequency**: discount if buying multiple episodes or a long flight ### A practical method 1. Look at your **last 3–5 episodes’ average downloads** 2. Set a base CPM from market rates 3. Add premiums: - +20–50% for **mid-roll** - +25–100% for **host-read** - +10–30% for **exclusive category** 4. Give volume discounts only for committed packages ### Example If a show averages **10,000 downloads**: - Pre-roll at $20 CPM = **$200** - Mid-roll at $35 CPM = **$350** - Host-read mid-roll at $45 CPM = **$450** ### Tools/platforms to compare - **AdvertiseCast** — good for marketplace pricing benchmarks - **Acast** — strong for dynamic ad inventory and direct deals - **Megaphone** — solid for larger shows and campaign management - **Podcorn** — useful for sponsor matchmaking ### Rule of thumb If sponsors keep buying quickly, your price is probably **too low**. If inventory sits unsold, it’s probably **too high**. If you want, I can give you a **pricing worksheet or calculator** you can use for your show.
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A fair way is to price on **value delivered**, not just episode length. **Common model** - **CPM** (cost per 1,000 downloads) is the standard. - Formula: **Price = (expected downloads ÷ 1,000) × CPM** **What to base CPM on** - Audience niche and buying power - Host-read vs. pre-produced - Placement: pre-roll, mid-roll, post-roll - Exclusivity/category lockout - Episode frequency and consistency - Historical performance: downloads in first 7, 30, or 60 days - Engagement: click-throughs, promo-code redemptions, site visits **Fair-pricing approach** 1. **Use recent average downloads** per episode, not peak episodes. 2. **Adjust for placement**: - Mid-roll: highest value - Pre-roll: medium - Post-roll: lowest 3. **Discount for uncertainty** if you’re new or inconsistent. 4. **Charge more for host-read ads** than announcer-read. 5. **Bundle inventory** for better rates: - 3-episode package - season sponsorship - category exclusivity **Simple tier example** - Pre-roll: lower CPM - Mid-roll: 1.5–2x pre-roll - Host-read: premium on top **Rule of thumb** If you have a niche audience with strong engagement, price higher than broad but low-intent shows, even with similar downloads. If you want, I can help you build a **pricing calculator** for your show.
How do I track podcast ad performance and revenue? problem
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Track podcast ad performance with a mix of **attribution, promo codes, and host analytics**. ### 1) Use unique tracking links Give each advertiser a unique URL with UTM parameters or a redirect link. **Good tools:** - **Podsights** — podcast attribution and pixel tracking - **Chartable** — SmartLinks, SmartPromos, and attribution - **Podtrac** — audience measurement and ad tracking - **TUNE** or **Impact** — if you want stronger affiliate-style attribution ### 2) Use promo codes Create a unique code per sponsor, like **SAVE20JANE**. Track: - redemptions - revenue per code - conversion rate by episode This is still one of the easiest ways to prove ROI. ### 3) Track downloads and listens Use your hosting platform’s analytics to see episode performance. **Popular hosts with analytics:** - **Libsyn** - **Megaphone** - **Spotify for Creators** - **Acast** - **Buzzsprout** Look at: - downloads in first 7/30 days - completion rate if available - traffic by episode ### 4) Measure ad revenue directly If you sell ads yourself, track: - CPM - number of ad impressions sold - fill rate - effective CPM - total revenue by episode/campaign Use a spreadsheet or a simple CRM at first, then move to an ad platform. **Common podcast ad platforms:** - **Gumball** - **Acast** - **Spotify Ad Studio** - **Megaphone ad marketplace** ### 5) Ask sponsors for post-campaign results Report: - downloads - clicks - code redemptions - attributed sales - cost per acquisition (CPA) - return on ad spend (ROAS) ### Simple setup For each ad, use: - **one unique URL** - **one promo code** - **one campaign record** with episode date, host read, and spend If you want, I can give you a **simple podcast ad tracking template** in Google Sheets format.
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Track it in two layers: **performance** and **revenue**. ### 1) Track ad performance Use a unique measurement method for each campaign: - **Promo codes**: `SHOW10`, `POD20` - **Vanity URLs**: `brand.com/show` - **Unique phone numbers / SMS numbers** - **UTM links** for digital destinations - **Host-read CTA tracking** with episode-specific links Key metrics: - **Impressions / downloads** per episode - **Unique listeners** - **Click-through rate** on tracked links - **Redemption rate** for promo codes - **Conversions** / purchases / signups - **CAC / CPA** if you know spend ### 2) Track revenue Build a simple ad revenue sheet or dashboard with: - **Advertiser** - **Campaign** - **Episode(s)** - **Ad type**: pre-roll, mid-roll, post-roll, host-read, baked-in - **Rate**: CPM, flat fee, CPA, rev share - **Units sold** - **Gross revenue** - **Net revenue** after agency/platform fees - **Payment status** Common revenue formulas: - **CPM deal**: `downloads ÷ 1000 × CPM × ad slots sold` - **Flat fee**: fixed amount per episode/campaign - **Affiliate / CPA**: `conversions × payout per conversion` ### 3) Best practice setup Use: - **Podcast hosting analytics** for downloads/listens - **Link tracking** like Bitly or Rebrandly - **Analytics** like Google Analytics with UTMs - **CRM or spreadsheet** for invoices and payments - **Dashboard** in Looker Studio, Airtable, or Notion ### 4) What to report to advertisers Give them: - Episode downloads - Link clicks - Conversions - Cost per conversion - Audience geography/demographics if available - Top-performing episodes If you want, I can give you a **simple spreadsheet template** for tracking podcast ad revenue and performance.
How do I sell podcast ads to local businesses? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Sell them on **local reach + trust + measurable offers**. ### 1) Pick the right businesses Target places that already buy local marketing: - dentists, med spas, chiropractors - realtors, mortgage brokers - restaurants, gyms, home services - law firms, auto repair, HVAC ### 2) Create a simple media kit Include: - podcast topic + audience - average downloads per episode - listener location if you have it - episode length/frequency - ad options: pre-roll, mid-roll, sponsor shoutout - pricing - example promo code or landing page Use **Canva** for the one-pager and **Google Slides** for a deck. ### 3) Sell the outcome, not the ad Businesses care about: - calls - appointments - coupon redemptions - website visits Offer: - unique promo code - custom URL - “mention this podcast” deal - trackable phone number via **CallRail** ### 4) Start with an easy offer Make it low-risk: - “3-episode sponsor package” - “first month at intro rate” - “pay for 3 ads, get 1 bonus mention” Example: - $150–$500 per episode for small local shows - more if you have strong niche listeners or solid download numbers ### 5) Reach out directly Best channels: - walk in - email - call - local networking events Short pitch: > Hi, I host a local podcast reaching [audience]. I think your business would fit well because our listeners are [type of customer]. I can offer a sponsor spot with a custom promo code so we can track results. Open to a quick chat? ### 6) Give them proof Show: - download counts - listener reviews - audience demographics - examples of past sponsor results If you’re new, use: - social engagement - guest credibility - local relevance - testimonials from listeners/customers ### 7) Make buying easy Use: - **Stripe Payment Links** for payment - **DocuSign** or **PandaDoc** for contracts - **HubSpot CRM** or **Airtable** to track leads ### 8) Follow up with results After the campaign, send: - impressions/downloads - clicks - promo code redemptions - next-step offer That’s how you turn one ad into a repeat sponsor. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **local business cold email template**, or 2. a **one-page podcast sponsor pitch deck outline**.
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Sell them like a **local response channel**, not like a “podcast ad.” **Pitch:** - **Who you reach**: your local listeners - **What they get**: calls, visits, bookings, leads - **Why podcast**: trusted host voice + local relevance - **How to measure**: unique promo code / vanity URL / call tracking **Simple process:** 1. **Pick 20–50 target businesses** - dentists - med spas - gyms - realtors - restaurants - HVAC/plumbing - lawyers - car dealers 2. **Build a one-page media kit** - audience size - listener location - demographics - episode downloads - ad formats - pricing - example results - testimonials 3. **Create 3 offers** - **Starter**: 1 pre-roll + 1 social mention - **Standard**: 4 ads/month + newsletter mention - **Sponsor**: category exclusivity + host-read ad + live read 4. **Use a local-business angle** Say: - “I can put your business in front of people in this city who already trust my voice.” - “You’re not buying impressions; you’re buying local attention.” 5. **Make the ad easy** Offer: - you write the script - they approve it - you read it naturally - they get a custom code like `PODCAST10` 6. **Track results** Use: - unique coupon code - landing page - call tracking number - dedicated form 7. **Sell on the phone or in person** Best opener: - “I host a local podcast with listeners in [city]. I think it could bring you new customers. Can I send you a 1-page sponsor proposal?” **What closes deals:** - category exclusivity - local geography - host-read authenticity - low entry price - simple monthly package **Good first pricing idea:** - $250–$500/month for small local businesses - $500–$1,500/month if you have strong local reach If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **cold email template**, 2. a **media kit outline**, or 3. a **pricing menu**.
How much do podcast advertising networks charge? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Podcast ad networks usually charge in one of these ways: - **Revenue share:** Most common. They take **~10%–30%** of ad revenue, and the rest goes to the podcaster. - **Flat management fee:** Some agencies/network reps charge **monthly retainers** or setup fees, often **$500–$5,000+ / month** for larger shows. - **Marketplace fee / take rate:** Platforms like **Acast**, **Libsyn Ads**, **Spreaker**, and **Buzzsprout Ads** typically keep a cut of each ad sold. - **Direct ad buy pricing:** If you’re buying ads, podcasters often charge by **CPM** (cost per 1,000 downloads). Common rates: - **$15–$30 CPM** for mid-roll - **$20–$50+ CPM** for premium, niche, or highly engaged audiences ### Common example If a podcast gets **50,000 downloads** and sells a **$25 CPM mid-roll**: - Gross ad revenue = **$1,250** - Network cut at 20% = **$250** - Podcaster gets **$1,000** ### Well-known networks/platforms - **Advertisers/marketplaces:** **Acast**, **Libsyn Ads**, **AdvertiseCast**, **Spotify Audience Network**, **Gumball** - **Podcast hosting with ads:** **Buzzsprout**, **Captivate**, **Spreaker** If you want, I can also break down **what a podcast should expect to earn** or **what an advertiser pays per ad placement**.
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There isn’t one standard price. Most podcast ad networks charge in one of two ways: **CPM pricing** (cost per 1,000 impressions) or a **revenue share/service fee**. ([blog.podbean.com](https://blog.podbean.com/why-podcast-advertising-rates-vary-and-what-to-expect/?utm_source=openai)) A useful ballpark for **mid-market podcast ads** is about **$20–$25 CPM** for a 60-second spot; AdvertiseCast reported an average **$21.90 CPM in June 2024** and **$22.58 in 2023**. ([podnews.net](https://podnews.net/update/ad-rates-up-for-jun24?utm_source=openai)) But pricing can be much lower or higher: - **Podbean PodAds**: **$1 CPM** service fee. ([help.podbean.com](https://help.podbean.com/support/solutions/articles/25000032555-how-to-pay-for-podads-campaigns?utm_source=openai)) - **Acast**: a basic campaign with country-level targeting is around **$15 CPM**. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/es-es/news-and-insights/how-much-does-podcast-advertising-cost?utm_source=openai)) - Premium host-read placements on popular shows can run well above that. ([blog.podbean.com](https://blog.podbean.com/why-podcast-advertising-rates-vary-and-what-to-expect/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also break this down by **host-read vs programmatic**, or estimate what a campaign would cost for your budget.
Is there a free podcast advertising network? transactional
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recall Mentioned
Yes — but “free” usually means **no upfront fee**, not guaranteed results. Good options: - **AdvertiseCast Marketplace** — free to join; you set rates and connect with advertisers. - **Podcorn** — free creator signup; brands post opportunities. - **Acast Marketplace** — no upfront cost; ad marketplace for podcasters. - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free tools, and in some regions access to ad monetization. - **RedCircle Ads** — free hosting + ad marketplace. If you want the easiest starting point, I’d look at **Podcorn** and **AdvertiseCast Marketplace** first. If you want, I can also suggest the best one based on your podcast size and niche.
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Yes—**free to join**, but not usually **free to advertise**. Good options: - **Podbean Ads Marketplace**: join is free; you can opt into programmatic or host-read ads. ([sponsorship.podbean.com](https://sponsorship.podbean.com/podcasters)) - **Blubrry Programmatic Advertising**: they say it’s “as easy as signing up” with **no minimums** for podcasters. ([blubrry.com](https://blubrry.com/services/podcast-advertising/blubrry-podcast-advertising/)) - **Acast self-serve**: sign up is free, but the **minimum spend is $250 per campaign**. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/self-serve)) So if you mean **“no upfront cost to join”**, yes. If you mean **“place ads for free”**, basically no—these networks still require ad spend or revenue sharing. ([blubrry.com](https://blubrry.com/services/podcast-advertising/blubrry-podcast-advertising/)) If you want, I can narrow this down to: 1. **best for small podcasts**, or 2. **best for advertisers with a tiny budget**.
What is the cheapest podcast advertising network? transactional
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If you mean **the cheapest way to buy podcast ads**, the lowest-cost options are usually: 1. **Spotify Ad Studio** — often the easiest low-budget self-serve option. 2. **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — good for smaller budgets and simpler buys. 3. **AdvertiseCast** — sometimes lower minimums than bigger networks, especially for niche shows. **Best cheap pick:** **Spotify Ad Studio** for the lowest barrier to entry. **Best value for small budgets:** **Podbean Ads Marketplace**. If you mean **the cheapest network for podcasters to monetize**, then **Podbean Ads Marketplace** is usually one of the easiest to start with, but payouts vary a lot by show size and audience. If you want, I can give you a **ranked list by minimum spend, CPM, and ease of use**.
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If you mean **lowest entry budget**, **Acast** looks like the cheapest major podcast advertising network I found: it says its entry point is **$250 / £250 / €250**. Spotify’s podcast ads start at **$1,000**, and Blubrry’s typical minimum is **$5,000/month**. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/6525537-how-to-approach-podcast-advertising?utm_source=openai)) If you mean **lowest CPM**, that depends on targeting and format, but **programmatic podcast ads** are usually the cheapest option. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/news-and-insights/podcast-advertising-the-ultimate-guide?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank the cheapest podcast ad networks by **minimum spend**, **CPM**, or **best for small budgets**.
How do podcast advertising network fees work? transactional
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Podcast ad network fees are usually taken **out of the money the advertiser pays** before the rest goes to the podcaster. ### Common fee setups - **Revenue share / commission**: the network keeps a cut, often **10%–30%**. - **CPM margin**: advertiser pays a CPM (say **$25–$40**), and the network keeps the spread between what the advertiser pays and what the creator gets. - **Managed service fee**: fixed or percentage fee for handling sales, trafficking, reporting, and billing. ### Typical flow 1. Advertiser buys ad inventory through the network. 2. Network sells the spot at a CPM or flat rate. 3. Network deducts its fee. 4. Podcaster gets the remainder. ### Example If an ad sells for **$1,000**: - Network fee: **20% = $200** - Podcaster payout: **$800** ### Other costs to watch - **Insertion fees** or setup fees - **Hosting/platform fees** - **Programmatic fees** if sold through automated buying - **Minimums** or exclusivity requirements ### Networks/products to compare - **Acast** - **Spotify Audience Network** - **Megaphone** - **AdvertiseCast** - **Libsyn Ads** If you want, I can break down **how much podcasters actually earn per 1,000 downloads** or compare **specific network fee structures**.
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Podcast ad network fees usually work in one of a few ways: - **Revenue share:** the network keeps a percentage of ad revenue, often around **20%–50%**. - **Commission on sold ads:** the network takes a cut only on ads it helps sell. - **Flat management fee:** some networks charge a monthly fee to run sales, reporting, and trafficking. - **Platform fee + payout share:** you get paid after the network deducts its fee and sometimes the host platform’s cut too. Typical flow: 1. Advertiser pays the network. 2. Network takes its fee. 3. Remaining amount goes to the podcast or publisher. Fees can depend on: - ad type: **host-read vs. dynamically inserted** - sales model: **direct-sold vs. programmatic** - exclusivity - audience size and niche - minimum spend or contract length Example: - advertiser pays **$10,000** - network fee is **30%** - creator gets **$7,000** If you want, I can also break down: - **podcast network fees for creators** - **fees advertisers pay** - or **how CPM pricing translates into take-home revenue**.
What are the best podcast ad networks with no minimum audience? transactional
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If you want **podcast ad networks you can join with little or no audience minimum**, the best bets are: 1. **Spotify for Podcasters** - Best all-around starting point - No public minimum audience requirement for getting started - Good for automatic ad placement and easy setup 2. **Podcorn** - Great for **sponsorship-style ads** and host-read deals - No minimum audience requirement - Better for smaller shows that can sell niche audience value 3. **Podbean Ads Marketplace** - Easy for smaller podcasts to monetize - Often available to shows without huge download numbers - Good if you already host on Podbean 4. **Acast Marketplace** - Strong ad tech and good brand network - Smaller shows may be accepted depending on content and region - Worth checking even if you’re growing 5. **Riverside / RSS.com monetization tools** - Some hosting platforms now include ad/monetization options with low barriers - Best if you want simple, built-in monetization **Best pick for most small podcasts:** - **Spotify for Podcasters** for easiest automated ads - **Podcorn** for finding sponsors without a big audience If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by payout, ease of approval, and best for small podcasts**.
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If you mean **no download/listener threshold**, the best options I found are: 1. **Blubrry Programmatic Advertising** — they say **“all shows can start with Programmatic Advertising today”** and explicitly note **no minimum download count**. ([blubrry.com](https://blubrry.com/services/podcast-advertising/)) 2. **Spreaker Monetization** — you can enable monetization with **at least one published episode**; Spreaker says its ad revenue-sharing program is designed to help smaller podcasts start earning, though bigger shows are more likely to land direct sponsorships. ([help.spreaker.com](https://help.spreaker.com/en/articles/3807236-can-i-monetize-listens-that-occur-across-all-podcasting-platforms)) **Worth knowing:** - **Buzzsprout Ads** is *not* no-minimum; it requires **1,000 downloads in 30 days** plus other eligibility rules. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/193-buzzsprout-ads-eligibility)) - **RedCircle RAP** requires **500 weekly downloads** before you can apply. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/what-is-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify Partner Program / Audience Network** also has eligibility thresholds, not zero-minimum access. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/fm/creators/article/spotify-for-podcasters-monetization-options/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best for tiny podcasts” ranking** by payout potential, ease of approval, and ad quality.
Which podcast ad networks offer revenue share? transactional
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recall Mentioned
These podcast ad networks commonly offer **revenue share** (or a split of ad revenue): - **Acast** — one of the best-known revenue-share podcast platforms; works well for dynamic ad insertion. - **Spotify Audience Network** — Spotify shares ad revenue when your show is included in the network. - **Megaphone** — typically for larger publishers; ad revenue is shared through its marketplace. - **Libsyn Ads** — revenue share on inserted ads, often used by independent creators. - **RedCircle** — creator-friendly monetization with revenue share on ads and memberships. - **Spreaker** — offers dynamic ad insertion and revenue sharing on monetized shows. - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — shares ad revenue with podcasters using its ad tools. - **Simplecast Ads** — monetization options via its platform, including ad revenue sharing in some plans. A few notes: - **Revenue share terms vary a lot** by audience size, country, and inventory type. - Some networks are **invite-only** or require minimum downloads. - If you want, I can also give you the **best revenue-share network for small podcasts vs. larger podcasts**.
retrieval Mentioned
These podcast ad networks/platforms offer revenue share to creators: - **Acast Marketplace** — 50/50 split on Acast Commercials. ([acast.com](https://www.acast.com/en/legal/terms-and-conditions-for-creators-standard?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify Partner Program** — 50% share of ad revenue from Spotify-monetized ads. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/us/creators/article/spotify-partner-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **RedCircle Ad Platform (RAP)** — 70/30 revenue share split. ([support.redcircle.com](https://support.redcircle.com/what-is-the-redcircle-ad-platform-rap?utm_source=openai)) - **RSS.com PAID** — typically 70% to the podcaster, 30% to RSS.com. ([help.rss.com](https://help.rss.com/en/support/solutions/articles/44002615393-how-revenue-sharing-works-with-paid?utm_source=openai)) - **Spreaker** — gives creators 60% of revenue, with an additional 10% boost for on-platform traffic. ([help.spreaker.com](https://help.spreaker.com/en/articles/3892734-what-about-impressions-cpm-and-revenue?utm_source=openai)) - **Castos Ads** — offers a standard revenue share for Castos podcasters. ([castos.com](https://castos.com/podcast-ads-guide/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best payout**, **lowest audience minimums**, or **host-read vs programmatic**.
What podcast advertising networks have the best payout rates? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
The **highest-paying podcast ad networks** are usually the ones with **premium host-read ads** and strong direct-sales teams, not the biggest “open” networks. ### Best payout / highest CPM potential 1. **Gumball** - Often strong for **indie shows** with host-read ads - Good if you want to sell to brands directly through a marketplace 2. **Acast** - Can pay well, especially for shows with solid downloads and international audience - Good dynamic ad insertion + direct deals 3. **AdvertiseCast** - Frequently one of the better options for independent podcasters - Good CPMs when your audience matches advertiser demand 4. **SXM Media / Midroll** - Usually among the **top payers** for established shows - Strong direct-brand advertising, but harder to get into 5. **Audioboom** - Good monetization for larger shows and networks - Often strong on premium inventory 6. **Spotify Audience Network** - Convenient and broad reach - Payout can be decent, but often not the absolute highest vs. premium host-read sales ### Usually lower payout - **Generic programmatic networks** - **Open ad marketplaces** with low-quality fill - **YouTube-style podcast hosting monetization** often lags premium podcast CPMs ### Rule of thumb - **Best CPMs:** host-read sponsorships - **Best scale + decent pay:** Acast, AdvertiseCast, Spotify Audience Network - **Best for big established shows:** Midroll / SXM Media, Audioboom If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by indie podcast size** (e.g., under 5k, 5k–50k, 50k+ downloads per episode).
retrieval Not mentioned
There isn’t one universal “best” network, but **the highest payouts usually come from host-read sponsorship marketplaces**, not pure programmatic fill. ([help.spreaker.com](https://help.spreaker.com/en/articles/3753296-advertising-basics-for-podcasters)) **Strongest payout options (from the official numbers I found):** - **Spreaker Prime**: sponsor/host-read CPMs around **$20–$30**; their ad-exchange/programmatic inventory is much lower, around **$3 CPM** on average, with some shows higher. ([help.spreaker.com](https://help.spreaker.com/en/articles/8119773-the-prime-network-monetization)) - **Libsyn / AdvertiseCast**: most podcasts are seeing about **$18–$20 CPM for 30s** and **$25 CPM for 60s** spots, with Libsyn taking a **70/30 split** (you keep 70%). ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/monetize-your-podcast)) - **Spotify Partner Program**: creators earn **50% of revenue recognized** for ads Spotify monetizes, and keep **all** revenue from baked-in host reads. It also includes premium video revenue, but eligibility is limited. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/monetization)) **Rule of thumb:** If your show can land **direct host-read deals**, that usually beats network programmatic revenue. If you want a network, **AdvertiseCast/Libsyn and Spreaker Prime** look strongest on payout potential. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/monetize-your-podcast)) If you want, I can rank the top podcast ad networks for **small shows**, **mid-size shows**, or **video podcasts**.
Are there podcast ad networks with self-serve pricing? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes. A few podcast ad networks/platforms offer self-serve or mostly self-serve buying: - **AdvertiseCast** — self-serve marketplace for podcast host-read ads; you can browse shows and get pricing upfront. - **Podcorn** — creator marketplace with transparent pricing and direct booking for sponsorships. - **Acast Marketplace** — more self-serve-style buying for inventory across podcasts, often with CPM-based pricing. - **Spotify Ad Studio** — self-serve ads for podcasts and Spotify audio inventory; good for smaller budgets. - **YouTube/Google Ads** isn’t podcast-specific, but can be used for podcast promo with self-serve pricing. If you want, I can also list the **best options for small budgets**, **B2B brands**, or **US-only shows**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — several podcast ad networks/platforms offer **self-serve** buying with published or semi-published pricing. Examples: **Acast** has self-serve podcast advertising with a **$250 minimum spend per campaign**. **Buzzsprout Ads** says pricing starts at **1 cent per impression** / **$10 CPM**. **Audacy Creator Lab** says brands can sign up free and **set their own budget**, with a **10% service fee**. **Overcast** says its ad system is self-serve and prices adjust with demand. **AudioGo** also offers a self-serve network buy with **flexible budgets**. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/self-serve)) If you want, I can also give you a short list of the **best self-serve options for small budgets vs. larger campaigns**.
What is the best podcast ad network for a small budget? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For a **small budget**, the best place to start is usually **Podcorn**. **Why Podcorn:** - **No big upfront minimums** - Lets you buy **host-read podcast sponsorships** - Good for testing with smaller shows and niche audiences - Easier to control spend than traditional network buys **Good alternatives:** - **Spotify Ad Studio** — best if you want self-serve audio ads and a low entry point - **Acast Marketplace** — good inventory, but often better once you have a bit more budget - **AdvertiseCast** — solid network, but typically better for moderate budgets **My pick:** - **Lowest-budget / easiest start:** **Podcorn** - **Best self-serve paid ads:** **Spotify Ad Studio** If you want, I can also give you a **best network by budget range** (e.g. under $500, $500–$2k, $2k+).
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best pick for a small budget: Acast Self-Serve.** It has a **$250 minimum spend per campaign**, which is the lowest clear entry point I found among major podcast ad platforms, and it’s built for self-serve buying with budget control and targeting. ([advertise.acast.com](https://advertise.acast.com/self-serve?utm_source=openai)) If you can spend **around $1,000+**, **Spotify Ad Studio** is also strong, but its podcast-ad minimum is **$1,000**. ([ads.spotify.com](https://ads.spotify.com/en-US/ad-experiences/podcast-ads/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule:** - **Under $1k:** Acast - **$1k+ and want Spotify inventory:** Spotify - **Want host-read marketplace buying:** Audacy/AdvertiseCast-style marketplaces can work, but they’re usually less “small-budget friendly” than Acast’s self-serve option. ([creators.audacy.com](https://creators.audacy.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best option by budget tier** ($250, $500, $1,000, $5,000).
How much can I earn from a podcast advertising network? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
It varies a lot, but a common range is: - **$15–$50 CPM** for host-read ads on many podcast networks - **$8–$25 CPM** for more standard programmatic ads - **Top niche shows** can get **$50–$100+ CPM** **CPM = earnings per 1,000 downloads/impressions.** ### Rough examples If you get **10,000 downloads per episode**: - At **$15 CPM**: about **$150 per ad** - At **$30 CPM**: about **$300 per ad** - At **$50 CPM**: about **$500 per ad** If you run **2 ads per episode**, that could be **$300–$1,000 per episode**. ### What affects earnings most - Audience size - Niche (finance, business, tech usually pay more) - Listener location (US/UK/AU pay best) - Ad type (host-read pays more) - Consistency and engagement ### Networks/platforms to look at - **Acast** - **Spotify Audience Network** - **Libsyn** - **Megaphone** - **AdvertiseCast** - **Podbean Ads** If you want, I can estimate your potential earnings based on your **monthly downloads** and **niche**.
retrieval Not mentioned
It depends mostly on **downloads per episode, CPM, and fill rate**. A common benchmark is **$18–$25 CPM** for host-read audio ads, with some networks splitting revenue **70/30** in the creator’s favor. Libsyn’s calculator also notes they factor in a **30% network commission**, and they generally want at least **20,000 listeners/downloads per episode** to monetize. ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/podcast-advertising-faq-for-podcaster?utm_source=openai)) **Quick formula:** `earnings = (downloads ÷ 1,000) × CPM × ad spots × fill rate × your share` Examples at a **$25 CPM** and **70% creator share**: - **10,000 downloads/episode, 1 ad sold:** about **$175 per episode** - **50,000 downloads/episode, 1 ad sold:** about **$875 per episode** - **50,000 downloads/episode, 2 ads sold:** about **$1,750 per episode** ([advertising.libsyn.com](https://advertising.libsyn.com/podcast-advertising-calculator?utm_source=openai)) At a bigger level, podcast ad revenue in the U.S. was projected to exceed **$2 billion in 2024** and reach **nearly $2.6 billion by 2026**, so the market is still growing. ([iab.com](https://www.iab.com/insights/us-podcast-advertising-revenue-study-2024/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can estimate **your podcast’s likely earnings** if you tell me your average downloads per episode.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best podcast advertising networks for independent shows?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For independent podcasts, the best ad networks usually depend on your download size and how much control you want. ### Best options - **Acast** — great for independent creators; strong marketplace and easy dynamic ad insertion. - **Spotify Ad Network** — good reach if your audience is on Spotify; solid for growing shows. - **Libsyn Ads** — one of the most creator-friendly networks; good for smaller-to-mid shows. - **AdvertiseCast** — strong for host-read ads and direct brand deals; good support for independents. - **Gumball** — excellent if you want premium brand campaigns and a simple self-serve setup. - **Podcorn** — best for sponsorship marketplace-style deals and sponsored segments. - **Riverside Ads** — newer, but worth a look for independent shows wanting modern monetization tools. - **Triton Digital / AdsWizz** — more enterprise-focused, but powerful if you scale up. ### Best picks by situation - **Small independent show:** Libsyn Ads, Podcorn - **Growing show with decent downloads:** Acast, AdvertiseCast - **Want easy sponsorship matching:** Gumball, Podcorn - **Want broader programmatic fill:** Spotify Ad Network, Acast ### My short recommendation If you want the most balanced setup, start with **Acast** or **AdvertiseCast**. If you’re still small, try **Podcorn** and **Libsyn Ads** first. If you want, I can also give you a **“best networks by monthly downloads”** list.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Best podcast ad networks for independent shows: - **AdvertiseCast** — Great for indies with solid downloads and direct-response advertisers. Easy to join, broad brand inventory, good CPMs. - **Acast Marketplace** — Strong for independent creators, especially if you want dynamic ad insertion and access to bigger brands. - **Spotify Audience Network** — Good if your show already does well on Spotify and you want automated ad matching. - **Gumball** — Best for independent shows that want simple self-serve brand sponsorships and host-read opportunities. - **Podcorn** — Good for smaller indie shows; strong for sponsored segments, host-reads, and native integrations. - **Libsyn Ads** — Best if you already host on Libsyn and want a straightforward ad marketplace. - **SXM Media / Stitcher-style marketplace** — Better for larger independents with stronger download numbers. ### Best picks by goal - **Highest chance of getting ads:** AdvertiseCast - **Most indie-friendly:** Podcorn, Gumball - **Best for automation:** Spotify Audience Network, Acast - **Best if already on Libsyn:** Libsyn Ads ### Quick rule of thumb If you’re under **~5,000 downloads per episode**, start with **Podcorn** or **Gumball**. If you’re above that, **AdvertiseCast** and **Acast Marketplace** are usually stronger. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best networks by minimum download requirement**, or 2. a **recommended setup for your show size and niche**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
For independent shows, the best podcast ad networks are usually the ones that are easy to join, work with smaller audiences, and don’t require massive downloads. **Top picks:** 1. **Spotify Audience Network (Spotify for Podcasters)** - Good if your show already gets steady downloads. - Broad advertiser access and simple setup. 2. **Acast** - Strong for independent creators. - Good dynamic ad insertion, decent marketplace, and easy monetization. 3. **Podcorn** - Best for sponsorship-style deals and host-read ads. - Great for smaller shows that want direct brand matches. 4. **Gumball** - Good for independent podcasts with engaged audiences. - More hands-on sponsorship marketplace. 5. **AdvertiseCast** - One of the bigger podcast ad marketplaces. - Better once you have consistent traffic, but still usable for mid-sized independents. 6. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid if you already use Libsyn for hosting. - Easy plug-in option for monetization. 7. **RedCircle** - Friendly to smaller independent shows. - Offers programmatic ads, cross-promotion, and memberships too. **Best overall for most independent shows:** - **Acast** - **RedCircle** - **Podcorn** If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small audience**, **best CPM**, or **best for host-read sponsorships**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best podcast advertising networks for independent shows: - **Acast Marketplace** — Strong for indie creators with dynamic ad insertion and decent access to mid-market brands. - **AdvertiseCast** — Good CPM network with a wide range of advertisers; popular with established independent podcasts. - **Gumball** — Very good for host-read sponsorships and direct brand deals; tends to fit premium indie shows. - **Podcorn** — Best if you want to sell sponsorships directly without much back-and-forth; creator-friendly marketplace. - **Libsyn Ads** — Solid option if you already host on Libsyn; easy integration for dynamic ads. - **Spotify Audience Network** — Good if your audience is already on Spotify; useful for automated ad fills. - **Spreaker / Adswizz** — Better for shows already in the Spreaker ecosystem, with automated monetization tools. - **SXM Media (formerly Stitcher Ads)** — Strong network, but usually better for larger shows than brand-new indies. **Best overall picks for most independent shows:** 1. **AdvertiseCast** 2. **Acast Marketplace** 3. **Gumball** 4. **Podcorn** **Quick rule of thumb:** - Want **hands-off monetization** → **Acast** or **Libsyn Ads** - Want **direct sponsor control** → **Gumball** or **Podcorn** - Want **better ad fill at scale** → **AdvertiseCast** or **Spotify Audience Network** If you want, I can also rank these by **highest CPM**, **easiest approval**, or **best for small shows under 5,000 downloads/episode**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
For independent shows, the best podcast ad networks are usually the ones that are easy to join, have decent fill rates, and don’t require huge download numbers. ### Top picks - **Spotify for Creators (Megaphone / Spotify Ad Network)** Good if you want broad reach and easy setup, especially if your show already lives in Spotify’s ecosystem. - **Acast** One of the strongest options for independent podcasters. Good ad tech, dynamic insertion, and solid marketplace access. - **Libsyn Ads** Best for smaller-to-mid shows that want a straightforward, established network. Good if you already host on Libsyn. - **AdvertiseCast** Very popular with independent creators. Good brand ad opportunities and generally accessible compared with premium-only networks. - **PodcastOne Ad Marketplace** Better for shows with steady downloads and a more established audience, but still worth a look. - **Gumball** Great for host-read sponsorships and direct marketplace-style deals. Often a strong fit for indie shows with engaged listeners. - **RedCircle** Good all-around option for independent podcasters, especially if you want monetization tools plus ad network access. ### Best by situation - **Small independent show:** RedCircle, Libsyn Ads - **Growing show with decent downloads:** Acast, AdvertiseCast - **Host-read sponsorship focus:** Gumball - **Already on Spotify/Anchor ecosystem:** Spotify for Creators - **Using Libsyn hosting:** Libsyn Ads ### Quick tip If your show is still small, don’t rely only on ad networks. You’ll often make more from: - **direct sponsors** - **affiliate offers** - **listener support** via **Patreon** or **Supercast** If you want, I can rank these specifically for **small shows under 5k downloads/episode** or for **shows that want host-read ads only**.
Which podcast advertising networks are most recommended for publishers?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For **podcast publishers**, the most commonly recommended ad networks/platforms are: 1. **Acast Marketplace** - Strong for **dynamic ad insertion** and premium direct sales - Good if you want a mix of managed service + programmatic demand 2. **Spotify Ad Network / Megaphone** - Best for larger publishers who want **scalable monetization** and first-party hosting tools - **Megaphone** is especially respected for publisher-side ad management 3. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid option for independent creators and mid-sized shows - Easy to use, with established inventory fill 4. **AdvertiseCast** - Very popular with publishers because of its **marketplace for host-read ads** - Good if you want brand deals without building a full sales team 5. **Gumball** - Best for **mid-tier and premium host-read sponsorships** - Often recommended for shows with engaged audiences and strong CPM potential 6. **PodcastOne / AdLarge** - More traditional publisher monetization networks - Better for established shows with consistent downloads 7. **Triton Digital** - Strong enterprise option for larger networks and media companies - Good if you need advanced ad tech and programmatic sales ### Quick picks - **Best overall for publishers:** **Acast** or **Megaphone** - **Best for host-read sponsorships:** **AdvertiseCast** or **Gumball** - **Best for independent shows:** **Libsyn Ads** If you want, I can also rank these by **CPM potential, ease of setup, or best fit for small vs. large podcasts**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For **podcast publishers**, the most commonly recommended ad networks are: - **Acast** — strong all-in-one hosting + monetization, good for mid-to-large shows - **AdvertiseCast** — popular for host-read and dynamic ad sales, broad advertiser demand - **Spotify Audience Network** — good if you want access to Spotify’s ad ecosystem - **Libsyn Ads** — solid for smaller and mid-sized podcasters, easy if you already use Libsyn - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — premium option for larger publishers and networks - **Podcorn** — good for sponsorship marketplace-style deals, especially for niche shows - **Gumball** — useful for direct sponsorships and automated brand matching - **Spreaker / Voxnest** — decent monetization tools, especially for creators on their platform - **SXM Media** — better for larger audiences and premium inventory - **Podscribe** (measurement/attribution more than a network) — often recommended alongside monetization partners **Best overall picks by publisher type:** - **Small shows:** Libsyn Ads, Podcorn, Gumball - **Growing shows:** AdvertiseCast, Acast - **Large/premium publishers:** Megaphone, SXM Media, Spotify Audience Network If you want, I can also rank these by **highest CPM**, **easiest approval**, or **best for indie podcasters**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For most podcast publishers, the **most commonly recommended ad networks** are: 1. **Acast** - Strong for **premium host-read and dynamic ads** - Good tools for **indie to mid-sized publishers** - Often praised for easy setup and decent fill rates 2. **AdvertiseCast** - Very popular with **independent podcasters** - Good marketplace for **host-read sponsorships** - Flexible, straightforward monetization 3. **Spotify Audience Network** - Best if you want **programmatic ad fill** - Useful for **larger catalogs** and publishers already on Spotify’s ecosystem 4. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid option for **Libsyn-hosted shows** - Good for **automated ad insertion** and hands-off monetization 5. **Triton Digital / TapInfluence-style publisher sales** - Better for **larger networks and enterprise publishers** - Strong if you want more traditional **ad sales infrastructure** 6. **Podcorn** - Good for **smaller publishers** who want **direct brand deals** - More creator-marketplace than classic ad network, but still widely used ### Best pick by publisher type - **Indie/small show:** **AdvertiseCast** or **Acast** - **Mid-sized network:** **Acast** or **Spotify Audience Network** - **Large publisher:** **Triton Digital** or **Spotify Audience Network** - **Libsyn user:** **Libsyn Ads** If you want, I can also rank these by **RPM potential, ease of use, or best fit for indie vs. enterprise publishers**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
For **podcast publishers**, the most commonly recommended ad networks are: - **Spotify Ad Network (SAX)** — strong for scale, especially if you already distribute on Spotify. - **Acast Marketplace** — popular for dynamic ad insertion and good fill for mid-to-large shows. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best for larger publishers/networked shows; strong programmatic tools. - **Gumball** — great for direct-sold sponsorships and premium host-read ads. - **Adopter Media** — often recommended for independent publishers who want a hands-on ad sales partner. - **AdvertiseCast** — one of the biggest and most established podcast ad marketplaces. - **Podcorn** — good for creator-friendly sponsorships and smaller/mid-size shows. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid if you already host with Libsyn and want simpler monetization. - **RedCircle** — good for smaller publishers; easy to start with monetization tools. - **Triton Digital** — best for larger publishers needing enterprise-grade audio ad tech. **Best pick by publisher type:** - **Small/indie:** Podcorn, RedCircle, AdvertiseCast - **Growing shows:** Acast, Adopter Media, Gumball - **Large networks:** Megaphone, Triton Digital, Spotify Ad Network If you want, I can also rank these by **revenue potential**, **ease of setup**, or **best for host-read ads**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For podcast **publishers**, the most commonly recommended ad networks are: - **Spotify Audience Network** — strong demand and easy monetization if you have decent scale. - **AdvertiseCast** — widely used, especially for host-read and premium podcast inventory. - **Acast Marketplace** — good for dynamic ad insertion and international reach. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best for larger publishers who want premium tools plus ad sales support. - **Gumball** — solid for independent shows and simpler self-serve ad deals. - **Podcorn** — good for sponsorships and creator-friendly brand deals. - **Libsyn Ads** — a long-running option, especially if you already host with Libsyn. - **Midroll** — more established, often geared toward larger podcasts. If you want the shortest recommendation list: **AdvertiseCast, Acast, Spotify Audience Network, and Megaphone** are usually the first ones to evaluate. If you want, I can also rank these by **best CPMs, easiest approval, or best for small podcasts**.
What are the most popular podcast ad network options?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular podcast ad network options are: - **Acast** — big global marketplace; strong for host-read and programmatic ads. - **AdsWizz** — one of the largest podcast/audio ad platforms; widely used by publishers and brands. - **Spotify Audience Network** — good if you want scale across Spotify’s ecosystem. - **Megaphone** — popular with larger publishers; owned by Spotify, strong ad insertion/tools. - **Art19** — podcast hosting + monetization platform with ad network features. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid choice for independent podcasters and smaller shows. - **Gumball** — marketplace focused on direct sponsorships and creator-friendly ad deals. - **Podcorn** — good for matching brands with podcasters for host-read integrations. - **Nielsen Podcast Ad Suite** — more enterprise-oriented measurement + ad solutions. - **Wondery+ / Amazon Ads** — useful if you’re looking at Amazon’s audio/podcast ecosystem. If you want, I can also break these down by: 1. **best for indie podcasters**, 2. **best for publishers**, or 3. **best for advertisers buying podcast inventory**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Popular podcast ad network options include: - **Acast** — large global podcast marketplace; good for dynamic ad insertion and sales. - **Spotify Audience Network** — strong reach across Spotify’s podcast inventory. - **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** — major podcast ad tech and sales platform with broad publisher access. - **Liberated Syndication (Libsyn Ads)** — popular with indie creators and mid-sized shows. - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — easy for smaller podcasters to start monetizing. - **Gumball** — well-known for connecting advertisers with podcast hosts directly. - **AdvertiseCast** — one of the biggest podcast marketplaces for host-read ads. - **Podcorn** — sponsored content marketplace, especially for creator-led campaigns. - **Op3 / Megaphone (by Spotify)** — more enterprise-focused hosting + ad insertion. - **Blubrry Advertising / ad network** — established option for WordPress/Blubrry podcasters. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small shows, big shows, or easiest to join**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most popular podcast ad network options: - **Spotify Ad Network** (including Spotify Audience Network) - **Acast** - **Megaphone** (by Spotify) - **Libsyn Ads** - **Podcorn** - **AdvertiseCast** - **Gumball** - **Triton Digital** - **SXM Media** (SiriusXM Media) - **Oxford Road** (more of a podcast ad agency/network partner) If you want, I can also break these down by: - best for **small podcasts** - best for **premium advertisers** - best for **programmatic ads** - best for **host-read sponsorships**
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most popular podcast ad network options: - **Acast** — large global podcast marketplace; good for dynamic ad insertion and host-read campaigns. - **Spotify Audience Network** — strong reach across Spotify’s podcast inventory and programmatic buys. - **Libsyn Ads** — one of the oldest podcast ad networks; solid for indie and mid-tier shows. - **AdvertiseCast** — broad marketplace with lots of U.S. inventory and managed services. - **Gumball** — good for direct-to-host sponsorships and easy campaign buying. - **Podcorn** — popular for branded content and host-read integrations. - **Podscribe** — more of a measurement/attribution platform, but also used in ad buying and verification. - **Magnite** (including podcast inventory via its audio stack) — strong programmatic option for larger brands. - **SXM Media** — big reach through SiriusXM, Pandora, and Stitcher-style audio inventory. - **ART19** — widely used hosting + ad tech platform, especially for dynamic ad insertion and monetization. If you want, I can also break these down by: 1. **best for small podcasts**, 2. **best for advertisers/brands**, or 3. **best for programmatic vs host-read ads**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular podcast ad network options are: - **Acast** — big global podcast marketplace; strong for host-read and programmatic ads. - **Magellan AI** — more of an analytics + ad intelligence platform, but widely used to find podcast ad opportunities. - **Podscribe** — measurement + attribution + network access; popular with advertisers and agencies. - **Gumball** — marketplace for buying podcast sponsorships directly from shows. - **AdvertiseCast** — one of the biggest podcast ad marketplaces; good for buying host-read ads across many shows. - **Podcorn** — creator marketplace for sponsorships and host-read placements. - **Spotify Audience Network** — programmatic podcast ad buying inside Spotify’s ecosystem. - **SAXX?** Not a podcast network; ignore. - **Libsyn Ads** — ad marketplace tied to Libsyn hosting. - **Triton Digital** — large audio/podcast ad tech and marketplace provider. - **Wondery Network / Amazon Ads** — strong if you want premium inventory through Amazon’s podcast ecosystem. If you want the simplest “starter” choices, I’d look at: 1. **AdvertiseCast** 2. **Gumball** 3. **Acast** 4. **Spotify Audience Network** If you want, I can also rank them by **best for small advertisers**, **best for brands**, or **best for host-read sponsorships**.
Which podcast advertising network should I use to monetize my show?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **best default choice**, use **Megaphone** if you’re a larger show/network, or **Spotify for Creators** if you want an easy all-in-one starting point. ### Good options by type - **Spotify for Creators** — best for small/medium shows starting out Easy setup, built-in monetization tools, simple dynamic ad insertion. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best for serious monetization Strong ad tech, premium inventory, good for scaling CPMs. - **Acast** — great all-around network for independent creators Solid monetization, good marketplace access, widely used outside the U.S. too. - **Libsyn Ads** — good if you already host on Libsyn Convenient if you want hosting + monetization in one place. - **AdvertiseCast** — strong for direct-sold and marketplace ads Good reputation, often better for shows with a clear niche audience. - **Podcorn** — better for sponsorships and host-read deals Useful if your show does well with native brand integrations. ### My quick recommendation - **Under ~10k downloads/ep:** **Spotify for Creators** or **Acast** - **10k–100k downloads/ep:** **Acast** or **AdvertiseCast** - **100k+ or networked shows:** **Megaphone** If you want, I can recommend the **best one for your show** based on your download numbers, niche, and whether you want **programmatic ads, host-read sponsorships, or both**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the safest default, use **Spotify Audience Network** for scale and fill, and **AdvertiseCast** if you want a more hands-on network with strong direct-sold inventory. Quick picks: - **Best all-around:** **AdvertiseCast** - **Best for scale/programmatic:** **Spotify Audience Network** - **Best for premium direct-sold shows:** **Gumball** - **Best if you’re on an RSS host and want simple setup:** **Acast** - **Best for easy monetization inside Spotify ecosystem:** **Spotify for Podcasters** Rule of thumb: - **Under 10k downloads/episode:** start with **Spotify Audience Network** or **Acast** - **10k–100k:** **AdvertiseCast** or **Gumball** - **100k+ / premium niche audience:** **Gumball** or direct brand deals via **AdvertiseCast** If you tell me your **monthly downloads, audience country, and podcast category**, I can recommend the single best network for your show.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the safest default: **Acast**. ### Best options by show size - **Small / growing show:** **Acast** or **Libsyn Ads** - **Established show with good downloads:** **Megaphone** (Spotify) or **Acast** - **Independent creator-friendly sponsorships:** **Podcorn** (now part of Acast, still commonly used as a marketplace) ### My quick take - **Acast** — best all-around balance of ad inventory, ease of use, and monetization tools. - **Megaphone** — best if you already have meaningful scale and want premium programmatic + direct deals. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid if you already host with Libsyn and want a straightforward option. - **Podcorn** — good for host-read sponsorships and one-off brand deals. ### Choose based on your show - **Under ~5k downloads/episode:** start with **Acast** or **Podcorn** - **5k–50k downloads/episode:** **Acast** or **Megaphone** - **50k+ downloads/episode:** **Megaphone** plus direct sponsorship sales If you tell me your **monthly downloads, niche, and hosting platform**, I can recommend the single best network for your show.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
It depends on your download volume and audience, but my default picks are: - **Best overall:** **Acast** - **Best for smaller/medium shows:** **AdvertiseCast** - **Best for sponsorship marketplace style deals:** **Podcorn** - **Best if you already use Libsyn:** **Libsyn Ads** Quick rule: - **Under ~10k downloads/episode:** start with **Podcorn** or **AdvertiseCast** - **10k–100k+:** **Acast** is usually the strongest all-around choice - **If you want the biggest brand campaigns and have scale:** look at **Acast** and **SXM Media** If you want one answer: **use Acast** unless your show is very small, in which case **AdvertiseCast** is the safer first step. If you tell me your **monthly downloads, niche, and country**, I can recommend the best network for your show specifically.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the safest default: **Audioboom**. If you want the best all-around monetization network for most independent shows: **Acast**. Quick guide: - **Acast** — best overall if you want a mix of host-read ads, dynamic ad insertion, and easy setup - **Audioboom** — strong if you want premium CPMs and you’re already getting solid downloads - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best for bigger shows with serious scale - **Libsyn Ads** — good if you already use Libsyn and want a simple all-in-one option - **Podcorn** — good for branded/sponsorship-style deals, especially smaller or niche shows - **AdvertiseCast** — solid marketplace for host-read sponsorships My practical recommendation: - **Under ~10k downloads/month:** start with **Podcorn** or **AdvertiseCast** - **10k–100k/month:** use **Acast** or **Audioboom** - **100k+/month:** look at **Megaphone** If you tell me your **monthly downloads, genre, and whether you want ads inserted automatically or host-read sponsorships**, I can give you a better pick.
What are the top podcast advertising networks for inventory monetization?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top podcast ad networks for **inventory monetization** (publisher-side) include: 1. **Spotify Audience Network** Strong demand, dynamic ad insertion, good if you want to fill unsold inventory at scale. 2. **Acast** One of the biggest podcast monetization platforms; good for host-read and programmatic selling. 3. **Spreaker / Voxnest** Solid ad marketplace with dynamic insertion and broad reach. 4. **Libsyn Ads** Good for independent podcasters; straightforward monetization and ad matching. 5. **AdvertiseCast** Large marketplace with direct-sold and programmatic options; strong for premium inventory. 6. **PAVE Studios / Podscribe marketplace integrations** Useful if you want measurement + monetization workflow, especially for performance-focused campaigns. 7. **Gumball** Better for creator-to-brand direct deals, but can help monetize inventory efficiently. 8. **Triton Digital** More enterprise-level; good for larger networks with scalable inventory and reporting needs. 9. **The Podcast Exchange (TPX)** Strong in Canada/U.S. with publisher monetization and direct brand demand. 10. **PodcastOne** Best if you’re in their network or want access to their sales relationships and ad stack. **Best overall choices by use case:** - **Largest scale/programmatic:** Spotify Audience Network, Triton Digital - **Best for indie creators:** Libsyn Ads, Spreaker - **Best for premium direct deals:** AdvertiseCast, Acast - **Best for brand-direct sponsorships:** Gumball, PodcastOne If you want, I can also give you: - a **ranked list by CPM/revenue potential**, or - the **best network for small shows vs. large networks**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top podcast ad networks for **inventory monetization**: 1. **Acast** - Strong for host-read, dynamic ad insertion, and programmatic fill. - Good for independent podcasters and networks. 2. **Spotify Audience Network** - Broad demand via Spotify’s marketplace. - Best if you want easier access to large-brand programmatic buyers. 3. **Megaphone (by Spotify)** - Enterprise-grade hosting + ad insertion + monetization tools. - Popular with larger publishers and media networks. 4. **Libsyn Ads** - One of the most established podcast ad marketplaces. - Good for direct monetization and automated campaign matching. 5. **Podbean Ad Marketplace** - Easy to use for smaller shows. - Offers dynamic ads and monetization without heavy setup. 6. **Art19** - Strong for premium publishers and sophisticated ad ops. - Good analytics and dynamic insertion. 7. **Gumball** - Good for premium host-read ads and direct sponsorships. - Better if you want higher-touch brand deals. 8. **AdvertiseCast** - Large marketplace with self-serve and managed options. - Solid for mid-sized shows looking to fill inventory. 9. **Liberated Syndication / Midroll** - Well-known in podcast advertising. - Strong for host-read sponsorships and campaign management. 10. **Podcorn** - Best for creator-friendly sponsor matching. - Useful for smaller and mid-tier podcasts. If you want, I can also rank these by: - **best CPMs** - **best for small podcasts** - **best for premium inventory** - **best programmatic fill**
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top podcast ad networks for **inventory monetization**: 1. **Spotify Ad Network (Spotify Advertising)** - Strong for podcast-scale monetization, especially if you use Spotify for Podcasters. 2. **Acast Marketplace** - Very popular for independent and mid-sized shows; good dynamic ad insertion and programmatic fill. 3. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid for creators already on Libsyn; easy setup and broad advertiser access. 4. **Megaphone by Spotify** - Best for larger publishers; premium inventory, DAI, and direct sales support. 5. **AdvertiseCast** - Good marketplace for host-read and performance-oriented podcast ads; broad network of advertisers. 6. **Sponsr** - Good for smaller/mid-sized creators looking to monetize with minimal friction. 7. **Podcorn** - Marketplace focused on connecting creators with brands for native/host-read ads. 8. **Gumball** - Strong for self-serve creator monetization and brand sponsorship matching. 9. **Oxford Road** - Best if you want a high-touch agency/network approach and premium brand deals. 10. **Audioboom Ad Marketplace** - Good for publishers with larger inventory and international reach. **Best picks by use case:** - **Largest scale:** Megaphone, Spotify Ad Network - **Best for independents:** Acast, Libsyn Ads, AdvertiseCast - **Best for host-read deals:** Podcorn, Gumball, AdvertiseCast - **Best managed service:** Oxford Road If you want, I can also rank these by **fill rate, CPMs, and ease of setup**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Top podcast advertising networks for inventory monetization: 1. **Spotify Ad Network (formerly Spotify Audience Network)** Strong demand, large reach, good for programmatic + host-read style inventory. 2. **Acast Ads** One of the biggest independent podcast ad marketplaces; good fill rates and dynamic ad insertion. 3. **Libsyn Ads** Solid for independent creators and networks; simple monetization and DAI support. 4. **Triton Digital / Podcast ad tech** Best for larger publishers and enterprise inventory monetization. 5. **AdvertiseCast** Big marketplace for direct-sold and programmatic podcast ads; good brand demand. 6. **Gumball** Good for premium host-read ads and smaller-to-mid publishers. 7. **Megaphone (Spotify-owned)** More of an enterprise platform than a pure network, but widely used for monetization and ad ops. 8. **Podsights** Great for attribution-driven monetization; often paired with networks and sales teams. 9. **The Podcast Exchange (TPX)** Strong in Canada/U.S.; useful for managed sales and network monetization. 10. **Audioboom** Good for larger creators and premium inventory, especially if you want managed sales. **Best picks by publisher type:** - **Independent podcasters:** Acast, Libsyn Ads, Gumball - **Premium/network publishers:** Megaphone, Triton Digital, Audioboom - **Maximize programmatic fill:** Spotify Ad Network, Acast - **Direct-sold campaigns:** AdvertiseCast, Gumball, TPX If you want, I can also rank these by **payout rates, ease of setup, or best for small vs. large shows**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top podcast ad networks for **inventory monetization**: 1. **Acast** – strong marketplace for host-read and programmatic podcast ads; good global demand. 2. **Spotify Audience Network** – solid for programmatic fill if your show has scale. 3. **AdsWizz** – one of the biggest podcast/audio ad tech platforms; widely used by publishers. 4. **AdvertiseCast** – good for direct-sold and managed monetization, especially mid-sized shows. 5. **Libsyn Ads** – easy for independent podcasters already on Libsyn. 6. **Podbean Ads Marketplace** – simple monetization for smaller creators using Podbean. 7. **SXM Media** – strong premium audio demand via SiriusXM/Podcast inventory. 8. **Megaphone (Spotify)** – best for larger networks needing ad operations + dynamic insertion. 9. **ART19** – good enterprise-grade hosting/monetization, especially for larger publishers. 10. **Gumball** – useful for creators wanting brand deals and marketplace-style sales. If you want, I can also rank these by: - **best for small podcasts** - **best CPMs** - **best programmatic fill** - **best for enterprise networks**
What is the best podcast advertising network for dynamic ad insertion?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall for dynamic ad insertion (DAI): _Megaphone by Spotify_**. Why: - Strong DAI tooling - Good for host-read + programmatic mixed monetization - Widely used by premium podcast publishers - Solid analytics and workflow **Other strong options:** - **Acast** — great if you want a full hosting + monetization platform with built-in DAI - **Triton Digital** — strong for larger audio publishers and enterprise-level ad ops - **Spotify Audience Network** — good for programmatic reach inside the Spotify ecosystem - **Spreaker** — simpler, more creator-friendly DAI options **Quick pick:** - **Best premium publisher choice:** Megaphone - **Best all-in-one indie/network choice:** Acast - **Best enterprise audio stack:** Triton Digital If you tell me your podcast size, hosting setup, and whether you want host-read, programmatic, or both, I can narrow it to the best fit.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **for podcast publishers**, the best all-around choice is usually **Acast**. **Why Acast** - Strong **dynamic ad insertion (DAI)** stack - Large advertiser demand - Easy host-read + automated ad mix - Good for mid-tier to large shows **Best alternatives** - **Megaphone (Spotify for Podcasters)** — best for premium publishers that want strong DAI tools and ad ops control - **ART19** — excellent enterprise-grade DAI and audience targeting - **Libsyn Ads** — solid if you want simpler monetization - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — easier, but less powerful than Acast/Megaphone **My short recommendation** - **Best overall:** **Acast** - **Best for enterprise/premium:** **Megaphone** - **Best for large-scale operations:** **ART19** If you want, I can also rank these by **revenue potential**, **ease of setup**, or **best for small podcasts**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall:** **Acast** It’s one of the strongest podcast ad networks for **dynamic ad insertion (DAI)** because it combines good marketplace demand, reliable ad tech, and solid fill rates for many shows. **Also strong, depending on your setup:** - **Spotify Megaphone** — best if you’re a publisher already using Spotify’s hosting/ad stack. - **Art19** — strong for premium publishers and scalable DAI. - **Triton Digital** — good for larger networks and radio-style inventory. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid option for independent podcasters. **Quick pick:** - **Independent/small-to-mid show:** **Acast** - **Large publisher/network:** **Spotify Megaphone** or **Art19** If you want, I can also rank these by **CPM, fill rate, ease of setup, and exclusivity requirements**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall for dynamic ad insertion:** **Acast** Why: strong DAI tooling, large podcast ad marketplace, good targeting, and relatively easy monetization for both big and mid-size shows. **Also worth considering:** - **Spotify Audience Network / Megaphone** — best if you want access to Spotify’s ecosystem and premium inventory - **Spotify Megaphone** — especially strong for publishers already hosting there - **Art19** — excellent DAI infrastructure, more enterprise/publisher-focused - **AdsWizz** — powerful ad tech, often used by larger networks and platforms - **Libsyn Ads** — solid option for independent creators and smaller publishers **Quick recommendation:** - **Best overall:** Acast - **Best for scale/enterprise:** AdsWizz or Art19 - **Best if you’re already on Spotify:** Megaphone If you tell me your show size, hosting platform, and country mix, I can narrow it to the best fit.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **the best all-around podcast ad network for dynamic ad insertion**, I’d pick **Acast**. **Why Acast:** - Strong **dynamic ad insertion** tech - Large **marketplace** of podcast inventory - Good for both **host-read** and **programmatic** ads - Solid **targeting, reporting, and fill rates** **Close alternatives:** - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best if you want premium publisher tools and are already in the Spotify ecosystem - **ART19** — excellent for publishers who want strong DAI and control - **Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast** — good for smaller shows and simpler monetization **Short recommendation:** - **Best overall:** **Acast** - **Best for big publishers:** **Megaphone** - **Best for independent podcasters:** **Libsyn Ads** If you want, I can also rank them by **fill rate, CPM, ease of use, or host-read quality**.
Which podcast ad networks are best for programmatic ads?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For **programmatic podcast ads**, the best-known options are: - **Spotify Audience Network** — strongest if you want scale and automated targeting across premium podcasts. - **Acast Marketplace** — good for programmatic access plus broad publisher inventory. - **Triton Digital** — solid if you want enterprise-grade audio/podcast programmatic buying. - **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** — one of the biggest programmatic audio stacks; strong for audio + podcast. - **Liberated Syndication (Libsyn Ads)** — good for podcast-specific inventory and direct/programmatic options. - **Oxford Road** — more of a managed agency than a pure network, but very strong for podcast performance buying. If you want the **best overall starting point**, I’d look at: 1. **Spotify Audience Network** 2. **Acast Marketplace** 3. **AdsWizz / SiriusXM Media** If you tell me your **budget, target country, and whether you want CPM or performance**, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For **programmatic podcast ads**, the strongest options are usually: - **Acast Ads** — one of the best-known podcast programmatic marketplaces; strong scale across independent shows. - **Spotify Ad Network / Spotify Audience Network (SPAN)** — good if you want reach inside Spotify’s podcast inventory. - **Gumball** — better for direct podcast buys, but also useful if you want streamlined host-read + programmatic-style workflows. - **AdsWizz** — more of the backbone infrastructure than a simple network, but very widely used for programmatic audio/podcast buying. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — great for larger publishers; often paired with Spotify’s monetization stack. - **AudioGo by Amazon Ads** — useful if you want broader audio + podcast reach through Amazon’s ad ecosystem. - **Pandora/ SiriusXM Media** — strong for audio inventory, including podcast-adjacent programmatic placements. ### Best picks by goal - **Best overall scale:** **Acast Ads**, **Spotify Audience Network** - **Best for enterprise programmatic buying:** **AdsWizz** - **Best for publisher-side monetization:** **Megaphone** - **Best for broader audio campaigns:** **Amazon Ads AudioGo**, **SiriusXM Media** If you want, I can also give you a **“best networks by budget”** shortlist or a **comparison table of CPMs, targeting, and minimum spend**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For **programmatic podcast ads**, the strongest options are: 1. **Spotify Audience Network / Spotify Ad Exchange** - Best for: scale + strong first-party audience data - Good if you want access to Spotify-owned podcast/audio inventory 2. **Acast** - Best for: premium podcast inventory + programmatic marketplace - Strong for mid-market and international reach 3. **AdsWizz** - Best for: pure audio programmatic infrastructure - Common choice for buyers wanting exchange-based audio/podcast access 4. **Triton Digital** - Best for: large-scale audio and podcast programmatic buys - Solid if you want broad publisher integrations 5. **SiriusXM Media** - Best for: premium audio audiences - Good for programmatic access to curated inventory **My quick recommendation:** - **Best overall:** Spotify Audience Network - **Best premium podcast inventory:** Acast - **Best programmatic infrastructure:** AdsWizz - **Best broad audio scale:** Triton Digital If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by CPM, targeting, or brand-safety**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Top choices for **programmatic podcast ads**: 1. **Spotify Audience Network** – biggest reach and strong first-party audience data. 2. **Acast Marketplace** – solid global podcast inventory with good programmatic access. 3. **iHeartMedia / iHeartPodcasts** – huge scale, especially for mainstream U.S. audiences. 4. **SiriusXM Media** – premium inventory; good for brand-safe campaigns. 5. **Audioboom** – strong for independent/premium shows and scalable programmatic buys. 6. **AdsWizz** – not a network itself, but one of the most important podcast audio ad platforms powering programmatic supply. **Best overall for scale:** Spotify Audience Network **Best for premium podcast inventory:** Acast or SiriusXM Media **Best “engine” behind many programmatic deals:** AdsWizz If you want, I can also rank these by **CPM, targeting, or ease of buying**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Best podcast ad networks for **programmatic ads**: - **Spotify Audience Network** — strongest if you want scale and access to Spotify’s podcast inventory + music/audio audiences. - **Triton Digital / Tapclicks** — good for premium publisher inventory and audio ad automation. - **AdsWizz** — one of the biggest names in programmatic audio; widely used by broadcasters and podcast publishers. - **Gumball** — better for direct podcast sponsorships, but also offers scalable podcast buying options; not as pure-programmatic as the others. - **Acast Marketplace** — strong for podcast-first inventory with automated buying and targeting. - **SiriusXM Media** — great if you want broadcast + podcast reach in one place. - **iHeartPodcasts / iHeartMedia** — large inventory and solid programmatic capabilities through its audio ecosystem. - **Libsyn Ads** — useful for podcast-specific buys, especially smaller-to-mid publishers. If you want the **best overall for programmatic scale**, start with: 1. **AdsWizz** 2. **Spotify Audience Network** 3. **Acast Marketplace** 4. **SiriusXM Media** If you want, I can also rank these by: - **best ROI** - **best for SMB budgets** - **best for enterprise** - **best for niche podcast targeting**
What are the leading podcast advertising networks for creators?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the leading podcast advertising networks for creators: - **Acast** — Strong for independent creators; offers dynamic ad insertion and a large marketplace of advertisers. - **Spotify Audience Network** — Good reach if your show is already on Spotify; helps monetize with programmatic and direct-sold ads. - **Podcorn** — Popular with smaller and mid-size creators for sponsorships and host-read campaigns. - **AdvertiseCast** — One of the better-known marketplaces for connecting podcasters with brands. - **Gumball** — Focuses on automated sponsorship matching and dynamic pricing for ad spots. - **Megaphone** (by Spotify) — Best for bigger creators and networks that want premium hosting plus ad tools. - **Libsyn Ads** — Solid option if you already host on Libsyn; simple ad marketplace and insertion tools. - **Spreaker / Voxnest** — Useful for creators who want hosting plus monetization features in one place. **Best picks by creator type:** - **Small/independent:** Podcorn, AdvertiseCast - **Growing shows:** Acast, Gumball - **Large shows/networked podcasts:** Megaphone, Spotify Audience Network If you want, I can also rank these by **revenue potential**, **ease of use**, or **best for host-read ads**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the leading podcast advertising networks for creators: - **Spotify Audience Network** — big reach, strong for dynamic ad insertion and programmatic sales. - **Acast** — creator-friendly, solid monetization tools, host-read and programmatic options. - **Libsyn Ads** — good for independent podcasters using Libsyn hosting; simple ad integration. - **AdvertiseCast** — marketplace for host-read sponsorships; strong for direct brand deals. - **Podcorn** — creator marketplace for sponsorships, especially good for smaller shows. - **Gumball** — focused on host-read ads and sponsor matching for podcasts. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — premium hosting + ads, best for larger networks and publishers. - **Art19** — enterprise-level ad tech and monetization, often used by bigger shows. - **Triton Digital** — strong if you want broad audio ad inventory and measurement. - **Captivate Sponsorships** — good for indie creators, with easier monetization workflows. If you’re a solo creator, the best starting points are usually **AdvertiseCast, Podcorn, Acast, or Libsyn Ads**. For bigger shows, **Spotify Audience Network, Megaphone, Art19, or Triton Digital** tend to be stronger. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small creators vs. mid-size vs. enterprise**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the leading podcast advertising networks for creators: - **Spotify Audience Network** — strong for reach and automated host-read and programmatic ads. - **Acast** — popular with independent creators; good ad marketplace plus monetization tools. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid for smaller shows using Libsyn hosting; easy ad insertion. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best for larger publishers/creators with more advanced ad ops. - **AdvertiseCast** — one of the biggest independent podcast ad marketplaces; easy to join. - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — good for creators already on Podbean; simple monetization. - **Spreaker / Voxnest Ads** — useful if you want hosting plus ad marketplace in one place. - **Podcast One / Midroll-style networks** — better for established shows with bigger audiences. - **Castbox Creator Studio** — monetization options for creators on Castbox. - **RedCircle Ads** — creator-friendly and focused on dynamic ad insertion. If you want the best all-around picks for independent creators, start with: 1. **Acast** 2. **AdvertiseCast** 3. **RedCircle** 4. **Spotify Audience Network** If you want, I can also rank these by **best CPM**, **easiest approval**, or **best for small podcasts**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the leading podcast ad networks/platforms for creators: - **Acast** — Strong all-around network with dynamic ad insertion, host-read and programmatic options, and good monetization tools. - **Spotify Ad Network (Spotify for Creators / Megaphone)** — Big reach, especially if your audience is on Spotify; good for creators already in the Spotify ecosystem. - **Libsyn Ads** — Popular with independent podcasters; straightforward monetization and decent access to direct-sold campaigns. - **Podcorn** — Great for sponsor marketplace-style deals; lets creators connect directly with brands for host-read integrations. - **AdvertiseCast** — One of the best-known podcast ad marketplaces; solid for creators with established downloads. - **Triton Digital** — Strong enterprise-grade ad tech and network access, often better for larger shows or networks. - **The Podglomerate** — Good for premium sales, audience growth, and working with higher-quality sponsors. - **Gumball** — Useful for mid-to-large creators looking for automated ad sales and brand partnerships. - **Simplecast Ads** — Good if you already use Simplecast; integrated hosting + monetization. - **Patreon / Memberful** — Not an ad network, but a top alternative if you want to monetize directly from listeners instead of ads. **Best picks by creator type** - **Small/new show:** Podcorn, Libsyn Ads - **Growing show:** Acast, AdvertiseCast, Gumball - **Big audience:** Spotify Ad Network, Triton Digital, The Podglomerate If you want, I can also rank these by **RPM potential**, **ease of signup**, or **best for host-read ads**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Leading podcast ad networks for creators include: - **Acast** — big global network; good for hosting + ad monetization. - **Spotify for Creators (Megaphone / Spotify Audience Network)** — strong for reach and programmatic ads. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid for indie podcasters; simple ad sales and insertion. - **AdvertiseCast** — marketplace for host-read and dynamic ads; good for smaller-to-mid shows. - **Gumball** — creator-friendly sponsorship marketplace with transparent rates. - **SXM Media** — large premium network, best for bigger podcasts. - **The Podglomerate** — manages ads, sponsorships, and growth for quality niche shows. - **RedCircle** — easy monetization tools for independent creators. - **Castbox Creator Network** — ad network plus distribution tools. - **Wondery / Amazon Ads** — premium inventory, mostly for larger shows. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small creators**, **best CPMs**, or **best for host-read sponsorships**.
Which podcast advertising networks do advertisers use most?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The **most commonly used podcast ad networks/platforms** by advertisers are: 1. **Spotify Audience Network** - Huge reach; very common for programmatic podcast buys. 2. **Acast** - One of the biggest independent podcast ad marketplaces, especially for host-read inventory. 3. **iHeartPodcasts / iHeartMedia Podcast Network** - Very widely used in the U.S. because of scale and strong sales team. 4. **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** - Major for programmatic podcast advertising and audio inventory. 5. **Audacy / Cadence13** - Popular for premium podcast placements and direct buys. 6. **Libsyn Ads** - Common among brands buying across lots of smaller shows. 7. **Megaphone (Spotify)** - More of an ad platform than a pure network, but widely used by publishers and advertisers. 8. **Podbean Ads Marketplace** - Often used for smaller-to-mid-sized podcast campaigns. If you mean **“which are used most in practice?”**, the biggest names tend to be **Spotify Audience Network, Acast, iHeartMedia, and SiriusXM Media/AdsWizz**. If you want, I can also rank them by **reach**, **host-read quality**, or **best for direct-response ads**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Advertisers most often buy podcast ads through these networks/platforms: 1. **Spotify Audience Network** (including **Megaphone**) 2. **Acast** 3. **Libsyn Ads** 4. **SXM Media / Midroll** 5. **AdvertiseCast** 6. **Podcorn** 7. **Gumball** 8. **Ocean Media** If you mean **biggest by scale and reach**, the most commonly used are usually **Spotify Audience Network, Acast, Midroll/SXM Media, and Libsyn Ads**. If you want, I can also rank them by: - **best for performance ads** - **best for brand awareness** - **best for smaller advertisers**
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Advertisers most often use these podcast ad networks/platforms: 1. **Spotify Advertising** (incl. **Spotify Audience Network**) 2. **Acast** 3. **iHeartPodcasts / iHeartMedia Podcast Network** 4. **Libsyn Ads** 5. **Megaphone** (Spotify’s podcast ad platform) 6. **Podbean Ads** 7. **AdsWizz** 8. **NPR Sponsorship / NPR Podcast Network** 9. **Wondery** (Amazon) 10. **BBC Global News / Global podcast inventory** (market-dependent) If you mean **where big-brand advertisers buy most podcast ads**, the most common answer is usually: - **Spotify/Megaphone** - **Acast** - **iHeart** - **NPR** - **AdsWizz** If you want, I can also rank them by: - **reach** - **self-serve ease** - **best for direct-response** - **best for premium brand campaigns**
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The podcast ad networks advertisers use most are usually: 1. **Spotify Audience Network** 2. **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** 3. **iHeartMedia** 4. **Acast** 5. **AdvertiseCast** 6. **Libsyn Ads** Also common, especially for smaller brands: - **Podcorn** - **Gumball** - **Megaphone** (more hosting + marketplace) - **Triton Digital / AdsWizz** (infrastructure behind many buys) If you want, I can also rank these by: - **best for direct-response ads** - **best for brand awareness** - **best for smaller budgets**
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
There isn’t a single public “top by spend” list, but advertisers most often buy podcast ads through these big networks/platforms: - **Spotify Audience Network** - **iHeartMedia** (incl. the iHeartPodcast Network) - **SiriusXM Media** - **Acast** - **AdvertiseCast** - **Libsyn Ads** - **Megaphone** (by Spotify, especially for publisher-direct buying) - **NPR sponsorships** (for premium brand campaigns) If you mean **programmatic** buying, the most-used pipes are usually **Spotify Audience Network**, **iHeart**, and **SiriusXM Media**. If you mean **direct host-read sponsorships**, **Acast** and **AdvertiseCast** are very common. If you want, I can rank these by **reach**, **brand-safety**, or **best for SMB vs enterprise**.
What are the best podcast ad networks for growing revenue?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best podcast ad networks for growing revenue: 1. **Acast** - Strong for dynamic ad insertion, international monetization, and premium direct deals. - Good choice if you want both programmatic and host-read revenue. 2. **Spotify Audience Network** - Best if your show already performs well on Spotify. - Good scale and solid brand demand. 3. **Sax** - Great for mid-roll monetization and programmatic yield optimization. - Often strong for shows with decent download volume. 4. **Megaphone (Spotify for Creators)** - Powerful for larger publishers who want advanced ad tech and direct-sold campaigns. - Better for teams that want control and enterprise tooling. 5. **AdvertiseCast** - Easy to work with and good for independent podcasters. - Helpful if you want a mix of direct and marketplace ads. 6. **Gumball** - Strong for host-read ads and simple self-serve sponsorships. - Good for creators who want to stay independent. 7. **Libsyn Ads** - Solid option for smaller-to-mid-sized podcasts. - Convenient if you already host with Libsyn. ### Best overall picks - **Best for scale:** Acast, Spotify Audience Network - **Best for indie creators:** AdvertiseCast, Gumball - **Best for enterprise/publishing teams:** Megaphone - **Best for programmatic optimization:** Sax If you want, I can also rank these by **best CPMs**, **best for small podcasts**, or **best for shows with 10k/50k/100k+ downloads per month**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest podcast ad networks/platforms for growing revenue: - **Acast** — Great for independent shows and growing audiences. Strong dynamic ad insertion, programmatic + direct deals, and easy monetization. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — Best for larger shows/publishers. Premium tech, strong ad ops, and solid access to direct advertisers. - **AdvertiseCast** — Good for mid-sized podcasts. Simple marketplace, direct sponsorships, and decent fill for host-read ads. - **Libsyn Ads** — Best if you already host with Libsyn. Easy setup, solid network demand, and straightforward monetization. - **SXM Media / Midroll** — Strong for established podcasts wanting premium brand advertisers and host-read campaigns. - **Podcorn** — Good for creator-led sponsorships and native brand deals, especially if you want more control over pricing. - **Oxford Road** — Strong for performance-focused shows; good if you want higher-CPM direct response advertisers. - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — Easy for smaller shows to start monetizing with minimal friction. **Best overall picks:** - **For most independent creators:** **Acast** - **For bigger shows:** **Megaphone** - **For easy sponsorship sales:** **AdvertiseCast** - **For direct brand deals:** **SXM Media / Midroll** or **Oxford Road** If you want, I can also rank these for **CPM rates, ease of approval, and best fit by audience size**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best podcast ad networks for growing revenue: 1. **Acast** — Strong for dynamic ad insertion, global demand, and good fill rates. 2. **Megaphone (Spotify for Podcasters)** — Best if you want premium programmatic tools and larger advertiser access. 3. **AdvertiseCast** — Good for host-read sponsorships and mid-to-large shows. 4. **Libsyn Ads** — Solid for independent creators, with easy monetization and programmatic ads. 5. **Podcorn** — Best for creator-friendly sponsorship matching and brand deals. 6. **Gumball** — Good marketplace for host-read ad sales, especially for growing shows. 7. **SXM Media / Stitcher** — Strong for premium inventory and larger network opportunities. 8. **AdsWizz** — Excellent for programmatic monetization, especially at scale. **Best overall picks by goal:** - **Highest revenue potential:** Acast, Megaphone, AdsWizz - **Best for indie podcasters:** Libsyn Ads, Podcorn, Gumball - **Best for host-read sponsorships:** AdvertiseCast, Podcorn, Gumball If you want, I can also rank these by **best CPMs**, **best for small shows**, or **best for beginners**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Best podcast ad networks for growing revenue, by mix of scale, fill, and monetization quality: 1. **Acast** - Strong for both dynamic ads and sponsorship sales - Good international reach - Best if you want a mix of host-read and programmatic 2. **SXM Media (SiriusXM + Pandora)** - High-quality premium demand - Great for larger shows with U.S. audience - Strong CPMs if you have solid download volume 3. **Spotify Audience Network** - Big reach, easy access to programmatic inventory - Good for filling unsold ad slots - Best if you already distribute heavily on Spotify 4. **AdvertiseCast** - One of the biggest podcast marketplaces for direct response ads - Good for mid-tier and growing shows - Strong for host-read campaigns 5. **Gumball** - Good for branded sponsorships and direct deals - Better if your audience is niche and valuable - Works well when you can sell premium integrations 6. **Podcorn** - Strong marketplace for host-read sponsorships - Good for smaller-to-mid shows looking to monetize fast - Useful if you want easier deal flow 7. **Libsyn Ads** - Reliable network for monetization + hosting integration - Good for steady programmatic and sponsorship fill - Best for creators already on Libsyn 8. **Megaphone / Spotify for Podcasters ad products** - More infrastructure than pure network, but strong for larger publishers - Good if you want advanced ad insertion and sales tooling ### Best picks by goal - **Highest revenue potential:** Acast, SXM Media, AdvertiseCast - **Easiest to start monetizing:** Podcorn, Libsyn Ads - **Best for programmatic fill:** Spotify Audience Network, Acast - **Best for premium host-read sponsorships:** Gumball, AdvertiseCast ### Quick recommendation If you want the best overall stack: - **Acast + AdvertiseCast + Podcorn** - Add **Spotify Audience Network** for leftover inventory If you tell me your monthly downloads, audience country, and whether your show is niche or broad, I can recommend the best 2–3 networks for your case.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the **best podcast ad networks for growing revenue**, depending on your show size and monetization style: ### Top picks 1. **Acast** Best for: **all-around monetization + dynamic ad insertion** Strong inventory, global reach, and good tools for selling host-read and programmatic ads. 2. **SXM Media (formerly Midroll)** Best for: **larger podcasts** Great if you already have meaningful downloads and want higher-value brand deals. 3. **AdvertiseCast** Best for: **easy marketplace access** Good for connecting with advertisers without a huge sales operation. 4. **Spotify Audience Network** Best for: **programmatic revenue** Useful if you want more automated ad fill, especially for back catalog episodes. 5. **Podbean Ads Marketplace** Best for: **smaller shows starting out** Simple to use and often easier to get into than premium networks. 6. **Libsyn Ads** Best for: **indie podcasters on Libsyn** Solid for monetizing existing episodes with dynamic ad insertion. ### If you want the highest revenue potential - **Host-read sponsorships** usually pay the most. - Networks like **SXM Media, Acast, and AdvertiseCast** are often better for premium CPMs than purely automated ad networks. ### Quick recommendation - **Small podcast:** Podbean Ads Marketplace or Libsyn Ads - **Growing podcast:** Acast or AdvertiseCast - **Large podcast:** SXM Media - **Need automation:** Spotify Audience Network If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by CPM potential** or by **best for small vs. large podcasts**.
What podcast advertising networks are good for small podcasts?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Good options for small podcasts: - **Spotify Audience Network** — good reach if you host on Spotify for Creators/megaphone-style setup; works better once you have consistent downloads. - **AdvertiseCast** — one of the most accessible ad marketplaces for smaller shows; self-serve and brand-friendly. - **Podcorn** — good for sponsored reads and niche podcasts; easier to land direct brand deals. - **Gumball** — solid for mid-sized small shows; more managed, but can be harder to get into. - **Acast Marketplace** — good if your show fits their network and you want programmatic + host-read options. - **Riverside Ads / Podscribe marketplace options** — useful for measurement-driven campaigns, though not always best for tiny shows. If you’re very small, the best bets are usually: 1. **AdvertiseCast** 2. **Podcorn** 3. **Spotify Audience Network** (if eligible) For most small podcasts, **direct sponsorship outreach + Podcorn/AdvertiseCast** usually works better than relying only on a big ad network. If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your podcast size, niche, and monthly downloads.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For small podcasts, the best ad networks are usually the ones with **low minimums, easy setup, and access to host-read or dynamically inserted ads**. Good options: - **Acast** — good for smaller shows; easy monetization and decent advertiser access. - **Spotify for Creators (formerly Anchor)** — simple if you already host there; best for beginners. - **Spreaker Ads Marketplace** — solid for smaller and mid-size podcasts; straightforward dynamic ad insertion. - **Libsyn Ads** — works well if you already use Libsyn hosting; easy to activate. - **Podcorn** — not a traditional network, but great for small podcasts getting **direct sponsorships/host-read ads**. - **AdvertiseCast** — better once you have some consistent downloads, but smaller shows can still qualify. - **Gumball** — good for brand deals and host-read placements if your niche is attractive. If you’re very small, I’d start with: 1. **Podcorn** 2. **Spotify for Creators** 3. **Spreaker Ads Marketplace** If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of approval**, **RPM potential**, or **best for under 1,000 downloads/episode**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
For small podcasts, the best ad networks are usually ones with **low minimums, self-serve tools, or “host-read” marketplaces**. Good options: - **Acast Marketplace** – good for smaller shows that want programmatic + some direct deals. - **Podcorn** – very good for small podcasts; creator-friendly sponsored segments and host-read ads. - **Gumball** – solid for smaller to mid-size podcasts; brands buy by CPM and it’s pretty hands-off. - **RedCircle Ads** – good if you want an easy entry into dynamic ad insertion and marketplace ads. - **Spotify for Podcasters (Megaphone/Spotify Ads)** – useful if your show is on Spotify and you want simple monetization options. - **Buzzsprout Ads** – best if you use Buzzsprout hosting; easy for small shows to start. - **Libsyn Ads** – decent if you host on Libsyn and want access to their ad marketplace. - **AdvertiseCast** – strong network, but usually better once you have a bit more scale. If you’re very small, I’d start with: 1. **Podcorn** 2. **RedCircle Ads** 3. **Buzzsprout Ads** or **Libsyn Ads** if you already host there If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of approval**, **best CPMs**, or **best for under 1,000 downloads/episode**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Good options for **small podcasts**: - **Podcorn** — very friendly for smaller shows; sponsors can be matched by niche, and you can do host-read or product-style spots. - **AdvertiseCast** — easier to get started than many “big network” options, good if you have a modest but engaged audience. - **Gumball** — solid for mid/smaller creators who want automated ad buying and don’t want to sell everything manually. - **Acast Marketplace** — good if you’re already on Acast; can work well even before you’re huge. - **Spotify Audience Network** — useful if your show is on Spotify for Creators and you want programmatic fill, though rates can be variable. - **Magellan AI** / **Podscribe** — not networks themselves, but great for tracking and understanding podcast ad market value if you’re pitching sponsors. If you’re very small, the best fit is usually: 1. **Podcorn** 2. **AdvertiseCast** 3. **Acast Marketplace** If you want, I can also rank these by **best CPMs**, **easiest approval**, or **best for true small shows under 1,000 downloads/episode**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For **small podcasts**, the best ad networks are usually the ones that work with **lower download counts** and/or focus on **self-serve sponsorships**. ### Good options - **Podcorn** — very friendly for smaller shows; good for host-read sponsorships and direct deals. - **Acast Marketplace** — solid if you have some traction; can work for smaller podcasts depending on niche. - **AdvertiseCast** — good reputation, but some shows may need decent monthly downloads to be competitive. - **Gumball** — nice for programmatic-style sponsorships and smaller creators. - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — easy if you already host with Podbean; good entry-level option. - **RSS.com Ads** — simple if your show is hosted on RSS.com, and can be accessible for smaller podcasts. - **Spotify Audience Network** — better once you have consistent downloads; not always the easiest starting point. ### Best picks if you’re just starting 1. **Podcorn** 2. **Podbean Ads Marketplace** 3. **RSS.com Ads** 4. **Gumball** ### What to look for - **Low minimum downloads** - **Host-read ad opportunities** - **No long-term exclusivity** - **Niche targeting** if your audience is specific If you want, I can also give you a **“best ad networks by podcast size”** list (under 1k downloads, 1k–10k, 10k+).
Which podcast ad network is best for automated ad sales?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Acast** — it’s one of the strongest choices for **automated podcast ad sales**, with solid self-serve tools, dynamic insertion, and access to programmatic demand. **Good alternatives by use case:** - **Gumball by Libsyn** — best if you want **easy self-serve sponsorship sales** and a simpler marketplace. - **Spotify Audience Network** — best for **programmatic fill** if you’re already on Spotify/Megaphone. - **Acast Marketplace** — best for creators wanting more hands-off automated sales plus brand deals. If you want, I can also rank the best options for **small podcasts vs. large networks**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall for automated podcast ad sales: _Acast_** Why: - strong **dynamic ad insertion** - good **self-serve + marketplace** tools - easier automation for **indie to mid-size shows** **Also worth considering:** - **Spotify Audience Network (via Megaphone)** — best if you’re a larger, premium publisher - **AdvertiseCast** — solid for host-read and managed selling - **Podcorn** — better for sponsorship matching than true automated ad sales If you want, I can rank these by **best for small podcasts vs. big networks**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall for automated podcast ad sales: _Acast_** It has one of the strongest **automated ad marketplace + dynamic ad insertion** setups, so ads can be filled with less manual work. **Good alternatives:** - **Spotify Audience Network** — best if you want access to Spotify’s ad demand and automated fill. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best for larger shows that want more control and enterprise tools. - **AdvertiseCast** — solid, but more marketplace-driven than fully automated. - **Libsyn Ads** — good if you already host with Libsyn and want simple monetization. **My quick pick:** - **Independent podcaster:** **Acast** - **Bigger network / enterprise:** **Megaphone** - **If you’re already on Spotify’s stack:** **Spotify Audience Network** If you want, I can rank them for **RPM, ease of setup, or fill rate**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
**Best overall for automated podcast ad sales: _Acast Marketplace_** It’s one of the strongest options for **hands-off, automated fill** with decent brand demand and good monetization tools. **Best by use case:** - **Acast Marketplace** — best all-around automated ad sales - **Spotify Audience Network** — best if you have access and want big-scale demand - **RedCircle** — best for smaller/independent shows wanting easy automated monetization - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best for larger publishers already using enterprise hosting **Quick pick:** - **Indie creator:** RedCircle - **Growing network:** Acast - **Enterprise / big inventory:** Megaphone or Spotify Audience Network If you want, I can also rank them by **CPMs, ease of setup, and minimum download requirements**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
For **automated ad sales**, the best all-around choice is usually **Acast**. **Why Acast** - Strong **programmatic + automated host-read / dynamic insertion** - Good for **indie to mid-size publishers** - Easier to start than more enterprise-heavy stacks - Solid fill rates in many markets **Best alternatives** - **Spotify Ad Network (via Spotify for Podcasters/Anchor + Megaphone)** — best if you’re already in the Spotify/Megaphone ecosystem - **AdsWizz** — best for larger publishers wanting more enterprise-grade programmatic control - **Simplecast Ads** — good if you want a simpler automated setup - **RedCircle** — good for smaller creators who want easy monetization fast **Short recommendation** - **Best overall:** **Acast** - **Best enterprise:** **AdsWizz** - **Best for Spotify users:** **Megaphone / Spotify Ad Network** - **Best for small creators:** **RedCircle** If you want, I can rank them specifically for **CPM, ease of setup, or fill rate**.
What are the top podcast ad network companies?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top podcast ad network companies: - **Acast** — One of the biggest global podcast ad platforms; strong for dynamic ad insertion and inventory across many shows. - **SiriusXM Media / Stitcher Ads (formerly Midroll)** — Major player for host-read and network podcast ads. - **iHeartPodcasts / iHeartMedia** — Huge reach, especially if you want large-scale U.S. podcast inventory. - **Spotify Advertising (Spotify Audience Network)** — Strong if you want audio + streaming + podcast placements in one buy. - **Audacy** — Big U.S. audio/podcast advertising network with cross-platform options. - **AdvertiseCast** — Popular marketplace for buying ads across thousands of podcasts. - **Liberated Syndication (Libsyn Ads)** — Well-known for podcast monetization and ad sales. - **Triton Digital** — Large programmatic podcast/audio ad tech platform. - **Megaphone (Spotify-owned)** — Premium hosting + ad insertion + marketplace for bigger publishers. - **Podcorn** — Good for sponsor-read/native podcast ads, especially for direct creator campaigns. If you want, I can also rank them by: 1) **best for small advertisers**, 2) **best for performance marketing**, or 3) **best for premium brand campaigns**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top podcast ad network companies: - **Acast** — one of the biggest global podcast ad networks; strong for dynamic ad insertion and host-read inventory. - **Spotify Audience Network** — Spotify’s programmatic podcast ad marketplace, good for reach across many shows. - **iHeartMedia / iHeartPodcast Network** — massive reach, especially for mainstream and sports/news podcasts. - **SiriusXM Media (AdsWizz)** — large-scale audio/podcast ad tech and inventory marketplace. - **Libsyn Ads** — strong for independent creators and direct podcast ad sales. - **AdvertiseCast** — well-known marketplace for buying podcast ads across many shows. - **Podcorn** — good for sponsor-to-creator matching and host-read campaigns. - **Audioboom** — premium podcast monetization and ad sales network. - **Wondery** (Amazon) — premium network with strong audience and brand-safe inventory. - **Triton Digital** — major audio/podcast ad tech and marketplace provider. If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **best for brands**, 2. **best for independent podcasters**, or 3. **best for programmatic buying**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top podcast ad network companies: - **Acast** — one of the biggest independent podcast ad platforms; strong dynamic ad insertion and hosting tools. - **Spotify Advertising** — huge reach through Spotify’s podcast inventory; good for broad awareness buys. - **Liberated Syndication (Libsyn Ads / AdvertiseCast)** — major podcast ad marketplace with lots of mid-roll inventory. - **Triton Digital** — enterprise-grade audio/podcast ad tech and measurement. - **NPR Ads** — premium inventory tied to NPR’s podcast network. - **Magellan AI** — more of an ad intelligence platform, but widely used for podcast ad buying insights. - **Podscribe** — measurement + attribution for podcast ads; often paired with media buys. - **iHeartPodcasts / iHeartMedia Audio** — large-scale podcast and audio ad network. - **SXM Media (SiriusXM / Pandora / Stitcher inventory)** — premium audio/podcast reach. - **AdvertiseCast** — strong self-serve marketplace for podcast sponsorships. If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **best for advertisers**, 2. **best for publishers**, or 3. **best for direct-response performance ads**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top podcast ad network companies: - **Acast** — one of the biggest global podcast ad networks; strong for dynamic ad insertion and host-read inventory. - **Spotify Ad Network** — broad reach across Spotify’s podcast ecosystem. - **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** — major podcast/audio ad tech and sales network. - **iHeartMedia** — huge podcast and radio-backed ad network with strong scale. - **Audacy** — large podcast/audio advertising network, especially in the U.S. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — premium podcast hosting plus ad marketplace/network tools. - **Libsyn Ads** — well-known podcast ad marketplace for indie and network shows. - **Podcorn** — marketplace focused on creator-led and host-read sponsorships. - **AdLarge** — podcast and digital audio ad sales network. - **Triton Digital** — major audio ad tech/network platform with podcast monetization tools. If you want, I can also rank these by **reach**, **best for indie podcasters**, or **best for advertisers**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top podcast ad network companies include: - **Spotify Audience Network** — huge reach, strong for scale and programmatic audio. - **Acast** — one of the biggest independent podcast ad networks; good for host-read and dynamic ads. - **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** — major audio/podcast ad infrastructure and premium inventory. - **iHeartPodcasts / iHeartMedia** — massive U.S. reach, strong for branded campaigns. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid self-serve network for independent podcast advertisers and creators. - **AdvertiseCast** — marketplace-style network with lots of mid-tier and niche shows. - **Podcorn** — good for sponsorships and creator-driven host-read ads. - **Triton Digital** — big in podcast/audio ad tech and network sales. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — premium podcast hosting + ad marketplace for publishers. - **Podscribe** — more measurement/attribution than a pure network, but widely used in podcast ad buying. If you want, I can also rank them by **best for advertisers**, **best for podcasters**, or **best for programmatic audio**.
What podcast advertising networks are worth considering? 480/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Worth considering, depending on your goal: - **Acast** — strong for dynamic ad insertion, host-read inventory, and international reach. - **Spotify Audience Network** — good if you want scale and programmatic buying across podcasts. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — best for larger publishers needing robust monetization tools and ad ops. - **AdvertiseCast** — solid self-serve marketplace for buying host-read ads across many shows. - **Podcorn** — good for direct creator partnerships and sponsorships, especially smaller brands. - **Gumball** — easy way to buy host-read podcast ads with transparent pricing. - **Libsyn Ads** — useful if you want a straightforward network tied to podcast hosting/distribution. - **SXM Media / SiriusXM Podcast Network** — strong premium inventory and big-brand reach. - **Audioboom** — good for premium podcast audiences and branded campaigns. - **Wondery+ / Amazon Ads** — worth watching if you want access to Amazon’s podcast ecosystem. If you’re just starting, I’d look at **AdvertiseCast**, **Podcorn**, and **Acast** first. If you want scale, **Spotify Audience Network** and **Megaphone** are the bigger players.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A few podcast ad networks worth looking at: - **Acast** — strong for dynamic ad insertion and a large international network. - **Spotify for Creators (Megaphone / Spotify Ad Network)** — good if you want broad reach inside Spotify’s ecosystem. - **Libsyn Ads** — solid for indie podcasters and managed ad sales. - **Spreaker Ads** — decent for smaller shows and programmatic ads. - **Podbean Ads Marketplace** — simple setup if you already host on Podbean. - **AdvertiseCast** — one of the better-known marketplaces for direct podcast sponsorships. - **Oxford Road** — good if you want a premium agency/network approach. - **Gumball** — useful for self-serve sponsorship deals and brand matching. - **Lower Street** — better for branded podcasts and high-touch production/sales. - **SXM Media / Stitcher-style inventory** — worth considering if you want major network reach. If you want the short version: - **Best for reach:** Acast, Spotify/Megaphone - **Best for small/medium creators:** AdvertiseCast, Libsyn Ads, Podbean Ads - **Best for premium sponsorships:** Oxford Road, Gumball If you tell me your audience size, genre, and whether you want **host-read ads** or **programmatic ads**, I can narrow it down.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Worth considering: - **Acast** — strong for host-read inventory, good international reach, solid dynamic ad insertion. - **Spotify Audience Network** — useful if you want scale and access to Spotify’s ecosystem. - **iHeartMedia / iHeartPodcasts** — big reach, especially for mainstream U.S. audiences. - **SXM Media (SiriusXM + Pandora)** — strong for premium audio inventory and targeting. - **AdvertiseCast** — good marketplace for buying across many podcasts; straightforward for performance campaigns. - **Podcorn** — popular for direct creator sponsorships and flexible brand deals. - **Megaphone (Spotify-owned)** — more of a hosting/ad tech platform, but worth it if you want advanced monetization and DAI. - **Libsyn Ads** — smaller than the giants, but useful for mid-tier podcast buys and simplicity. - **Gumball** — good for branded host-read campaigns and creator partnerships. - **Lower Street** — not a network in the classic sense, but strong if you want branded podcast production plus distribution/ads. If you tell me your goal—**brand awareness, direct response, B2B, or creator sponsorships**—I can narrow this to the best 3.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A few podcast ad networks worth considering: - **Acast** — strong global marketplace, good for host-read and dynamic ads. - **AdvertiseCast** — good inventory across many shows, straightforward buying. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — strong for larger budgets and programmatic/dynamic ads. - **Gumball** — easy self-serve marketplace, useful for direct buys on mid-tier shows. - **Podcorn** — good for influencer-style sponsorships and host-read placements. - **ART19 Ads** — solid if you want programmatic reach and measurement. - **SXM Media / AdsWizz** — big-scale option, especially for larger brands. - **Libsyn Ads** — broad podcast network with manageable buying options. If you want, I can also narrow these down by **best for small budgets, B2B, DTC, or enterprise brands**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A few podcast ad networks worth considering: - **Acast Ads** — strong for premium podcast inventory, especially if you want scale outside the U.S. - **Spotify Advertising / Megaphone** — good if you want access to Spotify’s ecosystem and host-read + programmatic options. - **Gumball** — easy for direct buys in mid-tier podcasts; good for branded content and host-read campaigns. - **Podcorn** — useful for sponsored segments and creator-led buys; good for smaller brands testing podcast ads. - **AdvertiseCast** — one of the more established marketplace-style networks; broad inventory and straightforward buying. - **Spreaker Ads** — solid for programmatic-style podcast placements and RSS-hosted shows. - **Libsyn Ads** — good if you want access to a large podcast hosting/network ecosystem. - **Audioboom** — strong for premium inventory, especially in comedy, news, and sports. - **Podscribe** — more of a measurement/verification platform, but worth pairing with any network for better attribution. If you want the short list: - **Best overall scale:** Acast, Spotify/Megaphone - **Best for host-read sponsorships:** Gumball, Podcorn, AdvertiseCast - **Best for performance/measurement:** Spotify/Megaphone + Podscribe If you tell me your budget, target audience, and whether you want host-read or programmatic ads, I can narrow this to the best 3.
Which podcast ad networks have the best reputation?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A few podcast ad networks with strong reputations: - **Acast** — widely respected for premium host-read inventory and solid ad tech. - **SiriusXM Media / AdsWizz** — big, established, especially strong on programmatic and scale. - **Spotify Audience Network** — good for reach, though quality depends on campaign setup. - **Audiboom** — strong reputation with established shows and direct sponsorships. - **Libsyn Ads** — long-running, generally dependable for indie/premium podcast ads. - **AdvertiseCast** — popular with advertisers looking for host-read placements. - **Podcorn** — well-liked for creator-friendly sponsorship matching. - **Gumball** — good reputation for self-serve host-read ad buying. If you want the safest “good reputation” picks overall: **Acast, AdsWizz/SiriusXM Media, and AdvertiseCast**. If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **best for advertisers**, 2. **best for podcasters**, or 3. **best for programmatic vs host-read ads**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A few podcast ad networks generally have the strongest reputation: - **Acast** — widely respected for premium inventory, brand safety, and creator-friendly tools. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — strong for larger shows and dynamically inserted ads; very established. - **AdsWizz** — one of the biggest ad tech platforms in podcasting; good for scale and targeting. - **Spotify Audience Network** — useful if you want reach across Spotify’s ecosystem. - **SXM Media / SiriusXM Podcast Network** — strong reputation with premium, brand-safe shows. - **AdvertiseCast** — popular with direct-response advertisers; easy buying process. - **Podcorn** — known for sponsor-read and creator-focused campaigns. - **Liberated Syndication (Libsyn Ads)** — long-running, solid reputation in podcast hosting + monetization. If you want the “safest bets” by reputation alone, I’d start with **Acast, Megaphone, AdsWizz, and SXM Media**. If you want, I can also rank them by **best for advertisers**, **best for publishers**, or **best for SMB budgets**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A few podcast ad networks/platforms have a consistently strong reputation: - **Midroll (SXM Media)** — one of the most established, especially for premium host-read inventory. - **Acast** — widely respected internationally; strong tech and self-serve options. - **Megaphone** — top-tier for bigger publishers/network-level ad sales and programmatic. - **AdvertiseCast** — good reputation for reliable direct-response buys and broad inventory. - **Podcorn** — solid for creator-friendly sponsorships and niche shows. - **Libsyn Ads** — respected for smaller/mid-sized podcasters. - **Gumball** — known for simple marketplace-style sponsorships and decent quality control. If you want the “best reputation” overall, I’d start with: 1. **Midroll** 2. **Acast** 3. **Megaphone** If you’re a smaller creator, **AdvertiseCast** and **Podcorn** are often easier to get started with. If you want, I can also rank them by: - **best for advertisers** - **best for podcasters** - **best payout** - **best for host-read ads**
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A few podcast ad networks with generally strong reputations: - **Acast** — widely respected, especially for premium inventory and host-read campaigns. - **Wondery+ / Amazon Ads** — strong brand-safe network with major shows and good measurement. - **Podscribe** — more of an attribution/measurement platform, but often trusted for performance podcast buying. - **Triton Digital** — long-standing, enterprise-grade ad tech with solid reputation. - **Libsyn Ads** — established podcast-specific network, good for broader indie inventory. - **AdvertiseCast** — popular marketplace for direct podcast buys; usually seen as transparent and straightforward. - **Midroll** — one of the best-known premium podcast ad sellers; strong reputation for quality shows. - **Magellan AI** — again more analytics/intelligence than a pure network, but highly respected in the podcast ad space. If you want the safest bets, I’d start with: **Acast, Midroll, AdvertiseCast, and Wondery/Amazon Ads**. What matters most is: - **brand safety** - **show quality** - **host-read vs programmatic** - **measurement/attribution** - **minimum spend** If you tell me your budget and whether you want **host-read ads** or **programmatic**, I can recommend the best fit.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A few podcast ad networks that generally have the **best reputation** in the industry: - **Acast** — strong creator tools, international reach, widely respected. - **AdvertiseCast** — known for solid host-read campaigns and a straightforward marketplace. - **Libsyn Ads** — long-running, trusted, especially for mid-market advertisers. - **Megaphone (Spotify)** — premium inventory and good for larger shows/publishers. - **Spotify Audience Network** — strong reach, especially if you want scale. - **Podcorn** — popular with indie creators for sponsorship matching and flexibility. - **Gumball** — reputable for brand integrations and host-read sponsorships. If you want the **safest “reputation-first” picks**, I’d start with **Acast, AdvertiseCast, and Libsyn Ads**. If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **best for brands** 2. **best for podcasters** 3. **best CPMs / scale**

All 72 prompts run for RedCircle

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is RedCircle known for?
  • 2 What are RedCircle's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use RedCircle? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does RedCircle compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with RedCircle?
  • 6 What is a typical podcast advertising network known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best podcast advertising networks for new podcasters? discovery
  • 2 Which podcast advertising networks work well for true crime shows? discovery
  • 3 What podcast ad networks are best for interview podcasts? discovery
  • 4 Which podcast advertising networks help with host-read ad sales? discovery
  • 5 What are the best podcast ad networks for audience targeting? discovery
  • 6 Which podcast advertising networks support dynamic ad insertion? discovery
  • 7 What podcast ad networks are best for shows with midroll inventory? discovery
  • 8 Which podcast advertising networks are best for niche audiences? discovery
  • 9 What are the best podcast advertising networks for B2B podcasts? discovery
  • 10 Which podcast ad networks are good for sports podcasts? discovery
  • 11 What podcast advertising networks work best for large catalogs of episodes? discovery
  • 12 Which podcast ad networks are best for monetizing back catalog episodes? discovery
  • 13 What are the best podcast advertising networks for video podcasts? discovery
  • 14 Which podcast ad networks offer revenue sharing for creators? discovery
  • 15 What podcast advertising networks are best for growing ad fill rates? discovery
  • 16 Which podcast ad networks are best for advertisers buying podcast inventory? discovery
  • 17 What podcast advertising networks help brands reach listeners at scale? discovery
  • 18 Which podcast advertising networks are best for monetizing independent networks? discovery
  • 19 What are the best podcast ad networks for international audiences? discovery
  • 20 Which podcast advertising networks are best for premium inventory? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to large podcast advertising networks? comparison
  • 22 How do podcast advertising networks compare with direct sales? comparison
  • 23 What is the best alternative to a full-service podcast ad marketplace? comparison
  • 24 Should I use a programmatic podcast ad network or a managed sales team? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to podcast ad exchanges? comparison
  • 26 How do podcast advertising networks compare to sponsorship agencies? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to self-serve podcast ad platforms? comparison
  • 28 Which is better for creators: podcast ad networks or affiliate monetization? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to host-read ad marketplaces? comparison
  • 30 How do podcast ad networks compare with podcast monetization platforms? comparison
  • 31 How do I monetize a podcast with ad inventory but no sales team? problem
  • 32 How do I fill unsold podcast ad slots automatically? problem
  • 33 How can I insert ads into old podcast episodes? problem
  • 34 How do I get advertisers for a niche podcast? problem
  • 35 How do I increase podcast ad revenue without changing my content? problem
  • 36 How do I target podcast ads to the right audience? problem
  • 37 How do I manage podcast ad campaigns across multiple shows? problem
  • 38 How do I price podcast ad inventory fairly? problem
  • 39 How do I track podcast ad performance and revenue? problem
  • 40 How do I sell podcast ads to local businesses? problem
  • 41 How much do podcast advertising networks charge? transactional
  • 42 Is there a free podcast advertising network? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest podcast advertising network? transactional
  • 44 How do podcast advertising network fees work? transactional
  • 45 What are the best podcast ad networks with no minimum audience? transactional
  • 46 Which podcast ad networks offer revenue share? transactional
  • 47 What podcast advertising networks have the best payout rates? transactional
  • 48 Are there podcast ad networks with self-serve pricing? transactional
  • 49 What is the best podcast ad network for a small budget? transactional
  • 50 How much can I earn from a podcast advertising network? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best podcast advertising networks for independent shows?
  • 2 Which podcast advertising networks are most recommended for publishers?
  • 3 What are the most popular podcast ad network options?
  • 4 Which podcast advertising network should I use to monetize my show?
  • 5 What are the top podcast advertising networks for inventory monetization?
  • 6 What is the best podcast advertising network for dynamic ad insertion?
  • 7 Which podcast ad networks are best for programmatic ads?
  • 8 What are the leading podcast advertising networks for creators?
  • 9 Which podcast advertising networks do advertisers use most?
  • 10 What are the best podcast ad networks for growing revenue?
  • 11 What podcast advertising networks are good for small podcasts?
  • 12 Which podcast ad network is best for automated ad sales?
  • 13 What are the top podcast ad network companies?
  • 14 What podcast advertising networks are worth considering? 480/mo
  • 15 Which podcast ad networks have the best reputation?