
If you're pitching clients with marketing expertise (CMOs, growth leaders, demand-gen experts, content and SEO strategists, founders, agency owners, authors) the biggest shows aren't where you'll get booked. Mid-sized marketing podcasts are.
Mid-sized shows (roughly 1K-25K listeners per episode) are the sweet spot for guest outreach:
This list features 100 marketing-focused podcasts that regularly interview guests on growth, demand generation, content, SEO, paid media, positioning, and what's actually working in marketing now.
"Marketing" is a Podseeker category, and it's a broad one, which is exactly why targeting matters.
Marketing covers a wide range of specialties that don't always overlap: growth and demand gen, content and SEO, paid media, social, product marketing, and agency operations. A generic "marketing" search returns shows with very different audiences. A PR pro pitching a performance-marketing expert needs different shows than one pitching a content strategist or a brand-positioning consultant, even though all three pitch "marketing."
That's why Podseeker keeps related angles as their own categories. If your client's story is specifically about brand identity and positioning, Branding is sharper. If it's about company-building broadly, see Business or Entrepreneurship. The Marketing category covers the demand, growth, content, and channel conversations that sit at the heart of how companies acquire and keep customers.
Use Marketing when your client's expertise is about reaching and converting an audience, then narrow with adjacent categories when the angle is more specific. Someone searching "marketing" wants range, then precision.
Don't pitch all 100. The users who book the most aren't the ones who pitch the widest, they're the ones who pitch the right shows.
1. Match the show to your client's specific angle
Fit is everything. Within marketing, shows want different things. A growth lead with hard numbers, a content expert with a system, a founder with a channel story, these land on different shows. Look for genuine alignment between your client's expertise and what the show actually covers, not just topic overlap.
2. Check recent episodes
Before pitching, confirm the show is active and see what they've covered lately. Recent episodes are the clearest signal of fit, far better than a category tag. If your client's angle matches the last few guests, that's a strong show. If it doesn't, skip it.
3. Start with a focused batch
Pick the 10-15 strongest fits and pitch those first. A tight, well-matched batch outperforms a broad one almost every time.
4. Read the signal, then expand
If the right shows are replying, expand to more from the list. If they're not, the issue is usually fit, the client angle or the show selection, not the volume. Adjust before you scale.
Every show on this list is in Podseeker's podcast database, with the data to judge fit before you pitch:
The better the fit, the better the booking rate. Podseeker is built to help you find it.





























































































All 100 of these marketing podcasts are in Podseeker, with verified contact info, audience insights, recent-episode data, and Client Fit scoring so you can match the right client to the right show.
The better the fit, the better the booking rate.
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