How to Get Podcast Sponsors
The Two Paths to Podcast Sponsorship
Podcast sponsorships come from two sources: networks and direct deals. Each has different economics, effort requirements, and income potential. Most podcasters use a combination of both at different stages of growth.
Podcast ad networks (Spotify Audience Network, Acast, Podcorn, AdvertiseCast) connect you with brands programmatically or via marketplace listings. The network handles sales, insertion, and payment — you accept the campaign terms they offer. The tradeoff: they take 30–50% of the CPM, and you have less control over which brands advertise.
Direct deals mean you sell ad slots directly to brands, keep 100% of the rate, and negotiate terms yourself. The tradeoff: you do the sales work. Direct deals typically pay 30–60% more per ad slot than equivalent network campaigns. At meaningful scale (10k+ downloads/episode), direct deals are almost always the higher-income path.
Use the CPM calculator to model what both paths would generate at your current download volume.
Step 1: Build Your Media Kit
A media kit is a one or two-page document you send to prospective sponsors. It is your sales pitch in document form. A strong media kit includes:
// Media Kit Essentials
1. Show description and mission — two to three sentences on what your podcast covers and who it's for. Be specific about your audience, not vague ("we cover finance" vs "we help early-career tech workers manage their first W-2 and stock compensation").
2. Listener demographics — average age range, income if available, professional background, geography. Sources: Spotify for Podcasters, Apple Podcasts Connect, or listener surveys.
3. Download statistics — monthly downloads, per-episode average, growth trend over the past 6 months. Be honest: sponsors verify these numbers.
4. Engagement evidence — email list size, social following, community membership, listener reviews. Engagement signals beyond downloads are increasingly valued.
5. Ad placement options and rates — pre-roll, mid-roll, post-roll options with your CPM rates or flat rates per episode.
6. Past sponsor logos (if any) — social proof that brands have trusted you.
Step 2: Find Sponsors to Pitch
Finding relevant sponsors to approach directly requires research, but the payoff is significantly higher rates than network campaigns. Sources for sponsor discovery:
- Listen to similar podcasts: Who is advertising on shows in your niche? These companies already know podcast advertising works and are already buyers. They're warm leads.
- Your listener base: What products and services do your listeners already use or have expressed interest in? Ask in a listener survey. Sponsors whose products your audience genuinely likes perform better and are easier to sell.
- Sponsor databases: Podnews, Podvertise, and Podcorn list active podcast advertisers. These are actively looking for shows.
- Your existing affiliates: If you're already promoting products as an affiliate, those companies may be interested in a more prominent host-read sponsorship. The affiliate relationship proves the product is relevant to your audience.
- Industry events and conferences: Companies with marketing booths at conferences in your niche are marketing-active companies that understand content-based reach.
Step 3: Craft Your Outreach
Cold email outreach to potential sponsors works when it's specific and demonstrates audience understanding. A strong outreach email structure:
- Subject line: Specific and value-first ("Partnership opportunity — [Your Show] audience for [Product Category]")
- Opening: Show you know the brand — one sentence about their product and why it's relevant to your audience specifically
- Your show's value proposition: Two to three sentences on who listens, what they care about, and why they'd respond to this brand
- The ask: Specific — "I'd love to discuss a mid-roll host read sponsorship for Q3. We have mid-roll slots available at [rate] CPM." Attach your media kit.
- Social proof: If you have a notable past sponsor, mention them briefly.
Direct email to marketing managers or podcast advertising buyers at target companies. LinkedIn is often the easiest way to find the right contact at a brand. "Podcast advertiser" or "media buyer" or "marketing manager" searches at your target companies typically surface the right people.
Step 4: Set Your Rates
Setting rates for direct sponsorships is more nuanced than just quoting a CPM from a rate card:
- CPM-based pricing: Common for larger campaigns. Set a CPM rate, multiply by your average episode downloads in thousands. Example: 8,000 downloads × $35 CPM = $280/episode for a mid-roll.
- Flat per-episode pricing: Common for smaller shows or brands unfamiliar with CPM math. Clear and simple. A podcast with 5,000–8,000 downloads per episode might charge $150–$300 per mid-roll episode.
- Campaign packages: Minimum 3–6 episodes for direct deals. Sponsors need time to see results, and you want the stability of a committed campaign, not one-off episodes.
Negotiation is expected. Your first quoted rate is a starting point. Sponsors often push back on rate or ask for add-ons (social posts, newsletter mentions). Know your floor rate before entering any negotiation.
// Negotiation tip
If a sponsor pushes back on price, offer to add an additional placement (social post, newsletter mention) instead of reducing your CPM. This preserves your rate integrity while giving the sponsor more value — often the actual issue is perceived value rather than absolute budget.
Step 5: Deliver and Build Relationships
The sponsors most likely to renew are the ones whose campaigns went smoothly and felt taken care of. Standard sponsor deliverables:
- Send the host-read script or talking points well before recording date
- Deliver episode download numbers 30 days after publish
- Report on promo code redemptions if available
- Follow up 6–8 weeks after the campaign with renewal timing
Sponsors who renew multiple times are significantly more valuable than one-off campaigns because the sales cost is zero after the first deal. Building ongoing sponsor relationships is the foundation of sustainable podcast revenue.