Podcast marketing for an elective ultrasound studio puts your voice and story in front of an engaged audience that is already seeking out content about pregnancy, birth work, and parenthood – content they’re consuming while driving, exercising, or folding laundry. No scroll, no algorithm, no competition from the post above yours. Just a host who trusts you enough to invite you onto their show, introducing you to their entire listener base.
This is earned media of a specific kind: intimate, trusted, long-form. A 30-minute podcast interview reaches people very differently than a social post or a paid ad. The listener has chosen to spend time with that host, and when the host brings you on as a guest, a piece of that trust transfers.
Podcast marketing for an elective ultrasound studio involves appearing as a guest on podcasts that reach expecting parents, birth workers, and parenting communities. It builds awareness and credibility through extended, trust-forward conversations with aligned audiences – a fundamentally different dynamic than social media or paid advertising. Last Updated: June 2025
Why Podcasting Is a Different Kind of Marketing Channel
Podcast marketing for an elective ultrasound studio is the practice of seeking guest appearances on podcasts that serve expecting parents, birth workers, and family-focused audiences to build brand awareness and credibility through extended, high-trust audio conversations. Unlike social media content that competes for attention in a crowded feed, podcast episodes reach listeners who have actively chosen to spend 30 to 60 minutes with that show – and by extension, with you as their guest.
The mechanics are different from every other marketing channel you’ve used. There’s no visual, no link to click, no immediate action a listener can take. What a podcast appearance does is build a kind of familiarity and trust that takes months to develop through social media and is virtually impossible to purchase through advertising. Listeners feel they know you after hearing you speak for 40 minutes. That feeling is worth something when they’re deciding where to book a keepsake scan.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics and market research on audio content consumption, podcast listening among adults 25 to 44 – the core demographic for expectant parents – has grown substantially over the past five years and shows continued upward trends in regular listening habits. The audience is there and growing.
Which Podcasts Are Worth Your Time
Not every podcast is worth pitching. Your time is limited, and a well-targeted pitch to a smaller but highly aligned show will outperform a generic pitch to a large but broadly focused one. The shows worth targeting fall into a few clear categories:
- Pregnancy and birth podcasts – these are your most direct audience match. Shows about natural birth, hospital birth, birth worker experiences, and pregnancy wellness all reach expecting parents actively consuming content about the exact phase of life when they’d consider a keepsake scan.
- Doula and midwife professional podcasts – appearing on a podcast for birth workers positions you as a knowledgeable resource in their professional community. These listeners can become direct referral partners, not just clients.
- Parenting and new parent podcasts – slightly later in the funnel, but shows about first-time parenthood, new baby preparation, and family life still reach clients in or near the booking window.
- Entrepreneur and small business podcasts – if you have a compelling business story (career change, unusual path to studio ownership, building a profitable niche business), entrepreneur-focused shows outside the pregnancy space can generate significant interest and awareness in ways that surprise most studio owners.
How to Find and Evaluate Podcast Targets
Start with Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Google Podcasts. Search for “pregnancy podcast,” “birth worker podcast,” “doula podcast,” and “new parent podcast.” Filter by release frequency – shows that release regularly (weekly or biweekly) are more likely to be actively booking guests than shows that haven’t published in months.
For each target show, listen to at least two episodes before pitching. Notice:
- Does the host interview guests, or is it primarily a solo show?
- What kinds of guests have they had before? Is your angle a natural fit?
- What does their audience seem to want from the show based on the questions the host asks?
A show with 2,000 listeners who are all expecting parents in their second trimester is a better target than a show with 50,000 general listeners who happen to include a small percentage of expecting parents. Alignment beats size.
Crafting a Pitch That Podcast Hosts Actually Want to Read
Podcast hosts – especially on smaller, independent shows – are often managing bookings themselves. Your pitch needs to tell them immediately why their audience would find you interesting. Not why you’re successful, not why your studio is professional, but what conversation their listeners would gain from spending 30 minutes with you.
A strong podcast pitch email covers:
- Who you are in two sentences (not a bio – a person doing something interesting)
- The specific angle or topic you’d bring to the show (not “elective ultrasound” but something like “what expecting parents don’t know about the 4D scan window, and how keepsake studios are filling a gap that traditional prenatal care doesn’t address”)
- Why this is relevant to their specific audience right now
- A clear offer: “I’d be happy to do a 30-minute episode – here’s my availability and a link to a previous interview [if you have one] so you can hear how I come across on audio”
Preparing for Your First Podcast Appearance
Audio quality matters. A guest who sounds like they’re calling from a parking garage creates friction that undermines even an excellent conversation. Invest in a decent USB microphone ($50 to $100) and record in a quiet, soft-furnished room before your first appearance. The difference between a good microphone and a laptop mic is immediately audible and communicates professionalism.
Prepare three to five stories or examples you can draw on during the conversation. Not scripts – stories. A moment with a client, an observation from training, something that happened in your studio that illustrates a point. Concrete narratives are what listeners remember, not statistics or descriptions.
Decide in advance what you want listeners to do after the episode. Visit your website? Follow you on Instagram? Text you? Give the host a clean, simple call to action to share at the episode’s close. One action, clearly stated, is more likely to be acted on than three options delivered vaguely.
What to Do After an Episode Goes Live
Don’t let the episode publish and move on. Share it everywhere – social media, email list, Google Business Profile posts, your website. Tag the show and the host. Submit a review of the podcast on Apple if you haven’t already. These actions are small but they signal to the host that you value the relationship and take their show seriously, which makes them more likely to mention you again and recommend you to other podcasters in their network.
According to the Small Business Administration, small businesses that actively leverage earned media appearances – podcast episodes, press features, event appearances – by amplifying them through their own channels see a multiplier effect on initial audience reach of two to four times. The appearance is the seed; your promotion is the amplification.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to have been on a podcast before to get booked on one?
No. Many first-time guests are booked on smaller shows based on pitch quality and topic relevance alone. Starting with local or niche shows with modest audiences is both easier to break into and often more relevant to your specific client base than going directly for large national shows. Build your guest portfolio and your comfort with audio format on smaller stages first.
Should I consider starting my own podcast instead of guesting on others?
Running a podcast requires consistent time, production, and audience-building effort that most solo studio owners don’t have capacity for. Guest appearances deliver the awareness and credibility benefits of podcast presence without that overhead. Unless you have a specific content vision and the operational bandwidth to sustain a regular publishing schedule, guest appearances are a better return on time invested.
How does podcast guesting compare to YouTube for studio marketing?
They reach audiences through different habits and in different contexts. YouTube viewers are typically actively searching for visual content; podcast listeners are in passive consumption mode during other activities. Both have value, but they require different production approaches and attract audiences in meaningfully different mindstates. Studios with limited time typically find podcast guesting easier to execute than consistent YouTube production.
What topics should I avoid discussing on a pregnancy or birth podcast?
Stay firmly in the lane of elective and keepsake ultrasound as a bonding and experience-based service. Don’t make claims about health, fetal development assessment, or diagnostic capabilities that your service doesn’t provide. Reinforce clearly and confidently that elective scanning complements, not replaces, regular prenatal care. This framing is both honest and positions you professionally in a way that resonates with birth worker audiences.
Building a Marketing Strategy for Your Studio?
Podcast guesting is one piece of a broader earned media and content strategy. Ultrasound Trainers works with studio owners on the full picture of marketing, growth, and operations – from pre-launch planning to multi-channel marketing strategy for established businesses.
Get in TouchSources: Bureau of Labor Statistics (bls.gov); Small Business Administration (sba.gov). For additional guidance on content marketing as a small business, see SBA’s customer growth resources.
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