For many podcasts, there's no such thing as an "ad buy". The ads are placed programatically for each listener with a broker who deals with hundreds or thousands of podcasts. So I often get an ad for a local tractor dealership on the podcasts I listen to, and you might get an ad for Wegman's supermarket.What are the ad buys for terrestrial radio vs podcast. Has that shift happened where a host can make more exclusively doing a podcast.
This tends to create more revenue because the advertiser will pay more to reach a specific audience, rather than a general audience. That can be regional, or it can be that the advertiser has some evidence that I am interested in buying a tractor.
For argument's sake, let's imagine you wanted a local talk program 6a-9a and Glenn Beck from 9a-Noon, and classic rock the rest of the day. There's three problems with that:There used to be many stations that were talk programming during drive times, or just aired Rush and played music during the other dayparts. Would that work today?
1. There's probably already a classic rock station in your market, so you're starting out from a positiion of weakness, especially if you are on AM
2. Premiere Networks probably wants to clear all their shows in your market, so if someone else offers to clear Beck, Clay & Buck and Hannity, you lose
3. The sales staff has to try and sell two formats on one frequency, increasing the complexity of presenting the cluster to clients.