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by digitalneal 3235 days ago
Didn't Blue Apron and Square Space alone underwrite like half the podcasts in the world last year? Wonder what this means for podcast advertising in Q4/Q1-18
7 comments

Casper mattresses and meundies will have to step up their game.
and stamps.com
And Truecar
None of the podcasts I listen to are sponsored by Truecar, yet, that's the only one I've used out of all the sponsors listed.
And 99designs
This is a great point. Almost every podcast I listen to, from Gimlet to NPR to Mike Rowe, are heavily sponsored by these two firms.

Will be very interesting to see this open doors for other companies who may have been outbid for advertising slots.

I think it means that podcast advertising is an effective means of raising product awareness but the product itself needs to have value and staying power or else it won't result in a sustainable business model.
Never heard 'underwrite' used in that context. Can you provide links?
A bit of context:

Due to regulations about advertising on publicly owned wavelengths, one cannot place a 'direct response' ad on a public radio station (think of your local NPR station here). Instead, there is an 'underwriting message' allowed– typically shorter than a traditional ad, and with no direct sales pitch.

Usually somebody that buys podcast ads is also buying radio ads, and sometimes the terms they use get muddy. 'Underwrite' is probably the wrong term to use for podcast advertising, but since it's frequently used for public radio the meaning would be clear if you were in the industry.

So you can't use offer codes and promo codes on fm/am? Pretty sure I've heard people use those. Is my definition of "direct response" not correct?
The restrictions @mkmk is talking about apply to public radio stations, like NPR (and maybe some college stations).

The key distinctions are that underwriting has to be short (15 seconds each, 60 seconds total), non-competitive (you have to mention them all underwriters of a program), only at the beginning/end, and can't include a call to action. In other words, an underwriting message can say "This program brought to you by Crazy Eddie's Autos, purveyors of new and antique European cars" but not "COME ON DOWN to CRAZY EDDIE'S AUTO'S. WE'RE HAVING A BLOW-OUT SALE THIS WEEKEND ONLY blah blah"

Privately-owned stations can and do run either kind, however.

I was using the term in a sarcastic tone around the buying of ad space. I'm a weird bird, apologies for the confusion around terminology.
think they are using it as a synonym for sponsor. it does show up under the definition for underwrite, never heard of it used this way either.
I've noticed that Bevel ads have dramatically decreased, need to look into how that company is doing.
Just curious, how much are typical customer acquisition costs through podcasts?
Audible