At Tuning In North, new econometric analysis from WPP Media and Radiocentre reinforced a shift that is already well underway in the market: audio is no longer a supporting channel in digital planning. It is becoming a primary driver of performance, attention, and audience engagement.
For podcast advertising specifically, this marks a turning point. What was once considered an experimental or niche format is now increasingly operating as a strategic media environment in its own right, competing directly with established digital channels for both attention and investment.
The question for advertisers is no longer whether podcasts “work”, but where they sit within a modern media strategy built around outcomes, efficiency, and attention.
Across a £1.8bn econometric dataset covering 141 brands and 10 media channels, audio consistently demonstrates strong performance against market benchmarks.
Within that broader ecosystem, Digital Audio (including podcasts) plays a growing role in short-term efficiency and performance delivery.
Importantly, the data also shows that only highly commoditised digital formats like PPC (Pay-Per-Click) consistently compete on short-term efficiency, positioning audio as one of the few environments that combines both attention and measurable return.
Podcast advertising has traditionally been associated with awareness, storytelling, and niche audience reach. That perception is now changing.
This is a shift driven by both expanded reach and the quality of attention.
Podcast environments are fundamentally different from most digital media because:
This creates a media environment where advertising is not just seen, but actively heard, processed, and remembered.
In a world where attention is increasingly scarce, that matters more than ever.
One of the most important themes emerging from Tuning In North was not just about performance data, but about planning behaviour.
Media strategies are typically still framed as either TV-first, social-first, or digital-first. But rarely audio-first. That is beginning to change. Audio-first thinking does not mean replacing other channels. It means starting with audio as a strategic foundation, particularly where brands want to achieve, deeper engagement, stronger emotional connection, efficient reach within high-attention environments and measurable performance outcomes.
Within that framework, podcasts are no longer an “add-on” to digital plans, they are becoming a core consideration in how modern campaigns are structured.
The strongest outcomes are not coming from isolated podcast activity, but from integrated audio strategies that combine social, audio and video.
Used together, these formats do not compete, they compound, strengthening total campaign effectiveness across both brand and performance objectives.
This is where podcast advertising becomes most powerful: not as a standalone tactic, but as part of a connected audio ecosystem built around attention and outcomes.
For brands evaluating where to invest next, the implications are clear:
Podcast advertising is no longer experimental inventory or limited to niche or low-budget campaigns. It’s increasingly competitive with pure digital channels on performance and podcast advertising is most effective when integrated into broader audio strategies.
And critically, it operates in one of the few media environments where attention is still voluntary, engaged, and sustained at scale.
Sport Social sits at the centre of this shift.
We give advertisers access to highly engaged podcast audiences across sport and culture. Podcasts offer trusted, host-led environments that drive attention and recall, and scalable digital audio inventory within a growing market. Sport Social provides integrated opportunities across social, video and audio.
For advertisers, this means more than reach. It means:
Podcast advertising is no longer catching up with digital media. It is redefining what effective digital audio looks like.