By Bill Bernardoni
âTherefore, everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house; yet it did not fall, because it had its foundation on the rock. But everyone who hears these words of mine and does not put them into practice is like a foolish man who built his house on sand. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell with a great crash.â â Matthew 7: 24-27
The Ad Break Is Broken
In the Book of Matthew, in the story quoted above, Jesus talks of two builders: one who built his house on rock, and one who built his house on sand. When the storm came, only one house was left standing.
I canât help but think of that famous parable when I think of and hear about podcasters who are solely relying on advertising revenue in 2025. Why would you solely rely on advertising revenue when you have so many other options for monetization? Iâm not saying theyâre not critically important because they are, but CPMs drop without warning. Sponsors vanish mid-season. Ads are the sandâunstable, shifting, and increasingly unreliable. Even top-tier shows are left scrambling when the storm hits.
But if you have built your podcast on rock? Guess what, theyâre still standing. Because theyâve laid a foundation of diverse, sustainable revenue streamsâpaid communities, digital products, live events, licensing, and so much more. Theyâve turned content into a business and listeners into loyal supporters.
Whether you’re dissecting unsolved murders, decoding market trends, or helping people breathe through anxiety attacks, this moment calls for more than just creativity. It calls for strategyâand a foundation that is built to last.
In this piece, weâll explore the tools that todayâs most successful podcasters are using to build businesses that weather any storm.
đď¸ One Burner or a Full Kitchen?
Growing up, my family was in the restaurant business for a while. Running and managing a restaurant can be quite stressful if you do not know what youâre doing and if you donât have the right equipment. Monetizing a podcast is a lot like that. Sure, you can survive with a single stove burnerâsay, adsâbut youâll burn out fast. The smart podcast operators run a full kitchen: subscriptions, courses, live events, licensing, and more.
You also donât need millions of downloads to be able to monetize successfully. You just need the right people who believe in what you’re building. Even the smallest podcasts can successfully monetize.
đ Paid Communities: Build the Club, Not Just the Show
The future of podcasting isnât just listeningâITâS BELONGING.
Patreon is great and has its place in this conversation, but todayâs most successful podcasters are building interactive, paywalled communities where superfans donât just consumeâTHEY CONNECT. Think premium content, member-only chats, live calls, deep engagement, and so much more.
đ¸ Red Scare â The Cult Model
Estimated to earn tens of thousands of dollars per month via Patreon, Red Scare combines sharp cultural critique with an unapologetic tone that resonates deeply with its niche. Subscribers pay for bonus episodes and insider accessâbut they stay because the show feels like a worldview. Their community isn’t just paying for content. They’re paying to belong.
đ§Ş Ologies with Alie Ward â Science with Heart (and Merch)
With thousands of patrons, Ologies offers ad-free episodes, extended interviews, live Q&As, and heartfelt community updates. Itâs a perfect example of how educational content with personality can attract loyal, paying fansâespecially when bundled with fun merch and genuine engagement.
đ§ The Daily Pep! by Meg Kissack â Small but Mighty Motivation
This five-minute motivation podcast runs a tight-knit membership where members receive bonus episodes, creative coaching, and journaling prompts. Meg proves that even micro-communities can produce meaningful, sustainable revenueâby showing up consistently and offering genuine value.
âCommunity converts passive listeners into superfans who support your work because they feel like itâs theirs too.â â Seth Godin
Tip: Donât just sell content â SELL ACCESS. People pay for proximity. If they trust you, theyâll want to be closer.
𧢠Merch That Actually Sells (And Doesnât Feel Cringe)
The trick to selling podcast merch? Donât make it about you, make it about them.
Listeners donât want to wear your logoâthey want to wear their identity. The best podcast merch taps into what the show represents: community, inside jokes, aesthetic, and story. Great merch isnât just advertisingâitâs culture.
đ˝ Last Podcast on the Left â Horror Chic Meets Cult Status
With its blend of true crime, horror, and humor, Last Podcast has built a massive merch empire. From gothic T-shirts and enamel pins to candles and collectibles, their drops feel more like band merch than podcast swag. Fans wear it as a badge of belongings and show up in it at live events like itâs a uniform.
Why it works: They donât sell logos. They sell vibes. And the horror-metal crossover aesthetic gives it long shelf life beyond any episode.
đ Normal Gossip â Viral One-Liners, Minimalist Design
Normal Gossip keeps things snarky and stylish with merch thatâs shareable even if youâve never heard the show. Their hit items? A tote that says âDonât text himâ and tees that quote âMy source is the group chat.â Itâs merch that lives just as comfortably on TikTok as it does in someoneâs closet.
Why it works: Itâs meme-able, wearable, and instantly relatable. The podcast is the funnelâthe brand is the product.
đ The Magnus Archives / Magnus Protocol â Lore You Can Wear
One of the most successful fiction podcasts of all time, The Magnus Archives, turned its immersive world into a merch line that feels like it belongs inside the story. Fans snap up journals, prints, cryptic graphic tees, and faction symbols like itâs part of a secret societyâand thatâs the point.
Why it works: They build merch like they build their show: with layered storytelling, mystery, and meaning. You donât buy a T-shirtâyou join the archive.
âMerch isnât about revenue firstâitâs about resonance. Revenue follows.â â Ben Thompson, Stratechery
Tip: Think like a designer, not a promoter. The best podcast merch could sit on a boutiqueâs rack, and no one would blink.
đ§ Courses, Templates & Toolkits: Productize Your Brain
Your podcast proves youâre an expert. Now package that expertise.
You already create value through your ideas â now monetize that knowledge through courses, toolkits, and downloadable resources for your audience. This model works beautifully for a variety of different types of content â and it’s often the most scalable source of income for independent podcasters.
- đŚ Finance Podcaster: Created a $49 âSide Hustle Starter Kitâ with scripts, pitch templates, and budget planners.
- đ§ Neurodivergent Parenting Pod: Offers a 4-week self-paced course on navigating school systems with a neurodiverse child.
- đ Podcast About Podcasting: Sells a âLaunch in 30 Daysâ course bundled with episode templates and a Notion dashboard.
Tip: Use your most downloaded episode as the basis for a mini-productâitâs already market tested.
âYour podcast is the free sample. The real valueâs in the full meal.â â Steph Smith, creator educator
đ¤ Live Events & Experiences: Turn Audience into IRL Energy
Weâre wired for human connection. And your audience wants to meet you.
Podcasters are going on tour, hosting virtual retreats, and even launching their own mini-conferences. These events do more than just generate revenueâthey deepen the bond between creator and listener like nothing else.
- đ Investigative Podcaster: Hosts âCrime Scene Liveâ shows reenacting unsolved cases with audience participation.
- đĄ Productivity Pod: Runs quarterly âReset Retreatsâ (virtual or in-person) where listeners set goals, journal, and share wins.
- đ Indie Creator: Hosts paid writing sessions with lo-fi beats and accountability check-ins via Zoom every Sunday.
Tip: Start with a ticketed virtual event to test interest and build momentum.
âLive shows arenât just for comedians anymore. If youâve built a connection in someoneâs ears, theyâll show up IRL.â â Phoebe Judge, Criminal
đ Licensing & Repurposing: Monetize What Youâve Already Made
Your podcast content is more valuable than you think â ESPECIALLY TO PEOPLE WHO DONâT EVEN KNOW IT EXISTS YET.
Licensing your episodes or repackaging them for other platforms can turn your archive into passive income. Here are some examples:
- đ History Podcast: Licensed 10 episodes on ancient civilizations to an EdTech platform used in high schools.
- đ§ Self-Help Pod: Repackaged top episodes into a 3-hour audio course on burnout recovery and sold it on Gumroad.
- đ§Ş Science Pod: Partnered with a museum to turn âThe Elements Seriesâ into a branded educational listening station.
Tip: Prioritize evergreen content that solves a clear problem or teaches a timeless concept.
âYou donât need to keep creating to keep earning. You just need to reframe what you already made.â â Jay Clouse, Creator Science
â Tips, Crowdfunding & Listener Support: Just Ask
If youâve never asked your audience to support the show, hereâs your gentle nudge: just ask.
Platforms like Buy Me A Coffee, Ko-fi, or custom Stripe buttons make it simple for fans to tip or donate.
- đŠââď¸ Health Podcast: Lists a tip jar with the line âIf we helped you breathe easier today, help us keep the lights on.â
- đ Theatre Review Pod: Offers one-time donations to fund ticket purchases and venue access.
- đŹ STEM Pod for Teens: Uses monthly supporters to fund giveaways and interviews with underrepresented scientists.
Tip: Use goals to incentivize giving. (âHelp us hit $500 and weâll do a bonus deep dive.â)
âPeople want to support the creators who make their lives better. You just have to give them the invitation.â â Roman Mars, 99% Invisible
đĄ Sponsorship Reimagined: Creative Partnerships That Actually Work
Sponsorship isnât dead â it just needs a rebrand.
Instead of chasing short-term CPM deals, creators are designing strategic partnerships with brands that align with their mission, audience, and creative style.
- đł Finance Podcast: Co-creates a mini-series with a fintech company focused on budgeting for Gen Z, retaining full editorial control.
- đ§Ź Science Pod: Partners with a research nonprofit to produce a 3-episode arc on vaccine innovation.
- đ Arts Pod: Develops a branded storytelling contest with a small publisher that becomes an annual event.
Tip: Focus less on impressions and more on outcomes. Brands want stories, not just slots.
âThe most effective brand collaborations donât feel like advertising. They feel like bonus content.â â Dan Misener, Bumper
đ Global & Niche Language Markets: Monetize Multilingual Momentum
Podcasting isnât just an English-language revolution anymore.
Creators in emerging markets and non-English-speaking regions are finding real opportunitiesâespecially when combining local relevance with scalable content models. Here are some possibilities:
- Spanish-Language Health Pod: Monetizes through WhatsApp communities, paid consultation funnels, and medical guides.
- Hindi Crime Podcast: Offers true crime storytelling via an SMS subscription model (hugely popular in areas with limited bandwidth).
- Bilingual Education Pod: Sells translated lesson packs to language schools across Asia and Latin America.
Tip: If your content has cross-cultural appeal, start experimenting with translation or subtitled video teasers.
âLocalization isnât just about languageâitâs about trust, tone, and timing.â â Aarti Shah, regional podcast strategist
đ¤ Bundles & Creator Collectives: Monetize Together
Why go it alone when collaboration compounds value?
Podcasters are joining forces to bundle products, cross-sell events, and build small collectives that share platforms, subscribers, and reach.
- đ§ Three Neuroscience Pods: Launch a joint âBrain Boxâ subscription with member-only interviews and live panel debates.
- đ¤ Indie Creators: Sell a âPodcast Starter Toolkitâ as a digital bundleâcourse from one, templates from another, hosting discount from a third.
- đ§ââď¸ Wellness Collective: Launches a private podcast feed shared across 5 shows, with rotating hosts and shared marketing.
Tip: Collaboration lowers production risk and increases discovery. Bundle with people your audience already overlaps with.
âIn a fragmented ecosystem, collectives win. They create shared infrastructure, shared trustâand shared revenue.â â Lenny Rachitsky, creator & advisor
đ§ž Final Word: From Podcaster to Media Entrepreneur
Letâs be real: podcasting is no longer in the âjust a hobbyâ phase.
Youâre not just the host of a podcast anymore â youâre a MEDIA BRAND, whether or not you act like it. The question is: will you keep chasing sponsorship scraps, or will you build a business that works for you?
đŻ Start here:
- Pick two monetization strategies that align with your strengths.
- Test one small product or offer in the next 30 days.
- Track what sticks. Tweak. Scale. Repeat.
âYou donât need to monetize every episode. You need to monetize your relationship with the audience.â â Someone smart whoâs probably building a 6-figure podcast right now.
đŚ Build a Podcast Business That Lasts with Bernardoni Media & Marketing
đď¸ Tired of relying on ad revenue alone?
At Bernardoni Media & Marketing, we help creators, strategists, and media brands turn podcasts into profitable, platform-proof businesses.
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Paid community strategy
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Merchandise development & launch
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Sponsorship strategy & brand integration
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End-to-end monetization planning
đŹ Letâs work together â
Because a great podcast deserves more than downloads â it deserves a business model that lasts.


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