Think about the last time you listened to Pandora, a podcast, or iHeartRadio. Chances are you heard an ad somewhere in there — maybe before a song started, or during a break in your favorite show.
That's digital audio advertising. And for small businesses, it's one of the most direct, affordable ways to reach people who are actually paying attention.
This guide breaks down exactly what digital audio advertising is, how it works, and how to get started without a big budget or a marketing agency.
Digital audio advertising is the practice of placing audio ads — short, spoken-word spots, typically 15 to 30 seconds — across streaming music platforms, podcasts, and digital radio apps.
Unlike traditional radio, where a single ad plays to anyone within broadcast range, digital audio advertising targets specific people based on who they are, where they are, and what they're interested in. The ad follows the listener, not the station.
Platforms like Pandora, iHeartRadio, Spotify, SiriusXM, and thousands of podcasts all run digital audio ads. When you advertise through a self-serve platform like AudioGo, your ad can appear across all of them — reaching millions of engaged listeners from a single campaign.
Traditional radio has been around for over a century — and it still works. But it has real limitations that digital audio solves.
Here's how they compare:
|
Traditional Radio |
Digital Audio Advertising |
|
|---|---|---|
|
Targeting |
Broad (geographic + time of day) |
Precise (age, interests, behavior, location) |
|
Measurement |
Estimated reach only |
Impressions, listen-through rate, clicks, web visits |
|
Minimum budget |
Often $1,000+ for a radio buy |
As low as $250 on self-serve platforms |
|
Setup time |
Days or weeks |
Minutes |
|
Creative |
Produced studio session |
AI voice, produced voice, or upload your own |
The core difference: traditional radio is a broadcast. Digital audio advertising is a targeted conversation with the right person at the right moment.
You'll often hear these terms used interchangeably, but they're not the same thing.
Digital audio advertising is the broader category. It includes any ad served across digital audio content — streaming music, digital radio stations, internet radio, and podcasts.
Podcast advertising is a specific type of digital audio advertising that places ads within podcast episodes. It's excellent for reaching highly engaged, niche audiences who lean in to content they trust.
Both fall under the digital audio umbrella, and most advertisers benefit from running both simultaneously. The good news: with a self-serve platform, you don't have to choose between them.
Here's the simple version of what happens when a listener hears your ad:
The whole system runs on technology called dynamic ad insertion (DAI), which places ads into audio content at the moment of playback. This is what makes targeting and real-time measurement possible — and what makes digital audio fundamentally different from putting a commercial on a local FM station.
Digital audio ads come in a few standard formats:
Pre-roll — Plays before the content starts. High completion rates because listeners haven't settled in yet.
Mid-roll — Plays during a break in the content. The most effective placement for podcasts, where listeners are already engaged.
Post-roll — Plays after the content ends. Lower cost, lower completion rate — good for budget stretching.
Companion banner — A clickable visual ad that appears on screen alongside your audio ad on mobile and desktop apps. This makes your audio campaign interactive and trackable in a way traditional radio never could be.
Most campaigns use a mix of pre-roll and mid-roll, with a companion banner attached to improve click-through performance.
The most common objection we hear from small business owners is some version of: "Isn't audio advertising just for big brands?"
The answer is no — and that's exactly what makes digital audio interesting right now.
A few reasons it works especially well for smaller budgets:
Screen-free reach. The average American spends about 1.8 hours a day listening to digital audio. That's time when your Google and Facebook ads simply can't reach them — they're away from a screen. Audio fills that gap.
High engagement. Listeners can't scroll past an audio ad. When your ad plays, it plays. Research shows that 75% of consumers remember audio content they hear — 9 percentage points higher than social media.
Targeting without waste. You're not paying to reach the whole city. You're paying to reach people who match your customer profile — by age, interests, behaviors, location, and more.
Affordable entry point. Campaigns on AudioGo start at $250. That's a real test budget, not a commitment. You can run a targeted 30-day campaign, see what the data says, and scale from there.
Measurable results. Listen-through rates, impressions, companion banner clicks, web traffic lift — you see exactly what your ad spend is doing.
The short answer: any business that wants to reach people during their day, not just when they're on a screen.
Digital audio advertising works particularly well for:
If your customer listens to music, podcasts, or digital radio, and nearly everyone does, digital audio advertising can reach them.
You don't need an agency or a professional recording studio to run digital audio ads.
With AudioGo, the process looks like this:
The whole setup takes about 15 minutes. Give it a try!
Digital audio advertising is targeted, measurable, and affordable — and it reaches people in moments when no other digital channel can.
If you've been meaning to explore audio but assumed it was too complicated or too expensive, it isn't anymore.