Stop Booking Famous Guests: The B2B Podcast Mistake Costing You Deals
They hit the top 10 in their category. They landed Fortune 500 CEOs. They racked up downloads month after month. And they closed precisely zero deals. Jason unpacks one of the most common and costly mistakes in B2B podcasting.
They hit the top 10 in their category. They landed Fortune 500 CEOs. They racked up downloads month after month. And they closed precisely zero deals.
Jason Bradwell unpacks one of the most common and costly mistakes in B2B podcasting: building a show for your ego instead of your pipeline. If your guest list reads like a networking wish list, this episode is for you.
Most B2B podcasters start in the same place: chasing the biggest, most recognisable names in their industry. The logic feels sound — credibility by association, impressive LinkedIn posts, a logo wall of guests. But those guests are rarely in your ICP; their audiences are not your audience, and the conversations you have with them rarely address the specific, real-world problems your prospects are wrestling with right now.
Jason walks through the practical alternative: the editorial-led approach. Instead of starting with the guest, you start with the question. What keeps your prospects up at night? What objections come up on every sales call? What decisions are they struggling to make? Those questions become your episode topics, and the guests you find to answer them do not need to be famous — they need to be credible, relevant, and close enough to the work that your prospects genuinely recognise themselves.
He also outlines a five-step framework for building an editorial roadmap rooted in sales intelligence and explains the only metrics that actually matter when measuring a podcast’s commercial impact.
Key Takeaways
- How to audit your sales calls to build a content-driven editorial roadmap.
- Why booking recognisable guests optimises for vanity metrics rather than pipeline.
- How to structure an episode around a prospect’s problem instead of a guest’s agenda.
- Why the best podcast guests are often practitioners and customers rather than celebrities.
- How to give your sales team content they can actually use to move deals forward.
- Why download counts are the wrong success metric and what to track instead.
Chapter Markers
- 00:00 Intro
- 00:45 The top 10 podcast that closed zero deals
- 01:30 Why chasing big-name guests hurts your pipeline
- 02:45 Start with the question, not the guest
- 03:30 Ego approach vs. editorial approach: a direct comparison
- 05:00 When big-name guests do make sense
- 05:30 Five steps to build an editorial-led podcast strategy
- 06:45 The only metrics worth measuring