Value for Value ā”ļø
Shifts in Podcast Listening Habits
Episode Summary
Welcome back to Podcast Insider, today weāre discuss how podcast consumption has changed in the post-pandemic worldāespecially as more people continue to work from home.
The days of relying on commute-time listening are fading. With data from Edison Research and Jacobs Media, weāre exploring where podcast listening is happening now, how habits are shifting, and what it all means for creators looking to stay relevant.
Whether youāre publishing weekly or still finding your audience, this episode will help you understand todayās podcast listener and how to meet them where they areālikely at home.
Todayās Hosts: Todd Cochrane and MacKenzie Bennett
Part of the changes that have come to podcast creation, listening and watching has been from the major shift to working from home. Thereās clear data on some of these changes that weāll go over with you all today.
The pandemic triggered a massive shift in work cultureāand podcast consumption patterns followed suit. As more people work from home and spend less time commuting, the where, when, and how of podcast listening have changed significantly.
Hereās what current data reveals, and what podcasters need to know to stay relevant in this new environment.
š” Home is Now the Primary Listening Environment
Before the pandemic, podcasting was strongly associated with commuting. Today, thatās no longer the case.
According to Edison Researchās Share of Ear, more podcast listening now occurs at home than anywhere else. As of their latest data:
More than half of podcast listening happens at home.
Only 11% of podcast listening occurs in the car, a major drop from pre-pandemic levels.
16% happens at workāreflecting that many remote workers now blend podcasts into their daily home routine.
This marks a fundamental shift: home has replaced the commute as podcastingās top listening location.
š The Decline of Commute-Time Listening
Fred Jacobs of Jacobs Media has observed a significant shift in audio habits during commuting:
A RAIN News article cites Jacobs Mediaās TechSurvey, revealing that inācar broadcast radio listening dropped from about 62% in 2018 to just 56% in 2022, marking it as an āallātime lowā for driveātime audio, learn more here. Jacobs emphasizes:
āInācar listeningāwhile reboundingāis still well below preāpandemic levels.ā
Despite some commuters returning to offices, the rise of remote and hybrid schedules has disrupted consistent ādriveātimeā spikes. With erratic commuting habits, podcast creators and broadcasters can no longer count on the traditional ādrive timeā bump to deliver peak listenership.
š Overall Podcast Listening Is Still Growing
