Steven Bartlett is many things: entrepreneur, investor, author, host of The Diary of a CEO, and probably the only person alive who could make a podcast episode feel like a TED Talk with better lighting.
But here’s the thing: behind the viral moments and heart-to-hearts with business moguls and celebrities, Steven’s also been quietly dropping gems about how brands and podcasters can actually work well together.
And if you’re a marketer curious about podcast ads, it’s worth tuning in. We pulled three real insights from Steven plus one bonus tip from us.
Let’s get into it.
1. The best ad reads start with real affinity.
When Steven works with a brand, it’s not just a transaction, it’s a shared belief system. He’s said this multiple times across interviews and social posts: he only promotes products he genuinely uses or would use himself.
In one of his Uber campaigns, for example, he called out that his team already relied on the service before the partnership. That detail was not just a throwaway, it’s the kind of social proof listeners pick up on. Steven did get some help from his sales team closing the deal eventually but it would not have happened without a true, authentic relationship with the brand.
What this means for brands:
Before deciding which podcasts to work with, ask yourself: Would this host actually use my product? If the answer is yes, great! Half the work is done.
2. Transparency isn’t optional. It’s the whole game.
Earlier last year, Steven faced backlash when the UK’s ASA (Advertising Standards Authority) ruled that his podcast ads for Huel and Zoe weren’t clearly labeled as paid promotions, especially given his financial ties to those companies.
Steven addressed the issue quickly, but the moment served as a reminder for the entire industry: audiences are paying attention. And regulators are, too.
What this means for brands:
Make it painfully clear to hosts what needs to be disclosed, and err on the side of over-communicating. A trustworthy host = a trustworthy ad. Period.
3. Influence isn’t bought. It’s built.
Steven’s podcast doesn’t just chase flashy metrics or paid impressions. Instead, it builds deep emotional equity. Listeners don’t just tune in for tips, they come for trust. So when Steven endorses something, it hits different.
That’s exactly why Colgate chose The Diary of a CEO for their first ever podcast advertising campaign. It wasn’t about volume, it was about brand trust.
What this means for brands:
Pick shows where the audience genuinely cares what the host thinks. Then, let that trust do the heavy lifting.
Bonus: Podcast hosts aren’t billboards (phew!)
One of the biggest mistakes advertisers make is treating a host-read ad like a voiceover gig. Steven doesn’t do that. He riffs. He adds context. He delivers a message as himself, not as a mouthpiece. And so do other successful hosts.
That’s not an accident. It’s what makes podcast ads so powerful. And we’re here to help you scale that magic, without losing the human part.
Final takeaways from the CEO’s mic
Steven Bartlett didn’t just build a podcast, he built a trust engine. And that’s exactly what podcast advertising is all about.
Here’s the TL;DR:
- Don’t fake the fit, choose hosts who’d actually use your product.
- Disclose everything. Transparency builds credibility.
- Trust beats targeting. Always.
- Let hosts riff. It’s how the message lands.
Sources:
https://www.tiktok.com/@steven/video/7005251981799460101
https://podnews.net/press-release/uber-diary-of-a-ceo
https://www.thetimes.com/business-money/companies/article/huel-and-zoe-ads-banned-for-failing-to-disclose-links-to-steven-bartlett-57jpn760x?region=global
https://www.campaignlive.co.uk/article/colgate-partners-steven-bartlett-first-podcast-campaign/1875547?