The Accidental Builder
Bryan Barletta is Founder and Partner at Sounds Profitable, the leading trade association for the global business of podcasting. Two hundred and ten partner companies. Five hundred dollars a month. No contracts. Free research. Twenty years in digital advertising turned into the infrastructure layer podcasting didn’t know it needed.
“I didn’t mean to start this. It just kind of happened.”
Bryan Barletta co-founded Sounds Profitable in 2020 with research veteran Tom Webster, eighteen years at Edison Research. Their thesis was that podcasting needed a trade association priced for the whole industry, not for the enterprise buyer. Six years later, 210 partner companies are on the roster, growing every month, at 500 dollars a month with no contracts attached.
Barletta spent his twenties inside the early mobile advertising industry. He joined Medialets as its first employee after the company’s initial funding round, and worked on what became the world’s first shakable mobile advertisement for Dockers. Solutions Architect roles at Motricity and Mocean Mobile followed. He ran Product Development at PadSquad, Product Management at AdTheorent, and Technical Solutions at Barometric, the attribution company that spun out of AdTheorent and was later acquired by Claritas. A year as Senior Product Manager for monetisation and data at Megaphone took him deeper into podcasting infrastructure.
The origin of the podcast attribution category sits inside that career. On a call at AdTheorent, a sales colleague agreed to extend the company’s mobile attribution product into podcasting for NBCUniversal and Progressive Auto. Barletta, listening on the same line, hit mute to push back. The line stayed live. They built what Barletta calls the first podcast attribution company. It was the Serial era, and the water-cooler moment was genuine.
Sounds Profitable is the result of Barletta’s decade and a half of watching digital advertising infrastructure form and re-form. The association offers monthly consulting, a private Slack community, a custom research database, discounts on partner events and partner-built event spaces. Free research, drawn from 5,000-person US samples run twice a year, with a debut UK report due in May and Australia and Germany in the planning schedule. In 2025, Podcast Movement, one of the largest podcast event operators in the world, acquired Sounds Profitable; Barletta now also serves as its President.
“Just enough to hang ourselves with. Just enough for a hand up.”
“Five hundred dollars a month. No contracts. 210 partners. Free research.”
Barletta built Sounds Profitable on a single pricing idea: access at a price the whole industry can afford. 500 dollars a month, no contracts, no exit penalties. The stack members get includes monthly consulting, a private Slack community, a custom research database, discounts on industry events and free space at partner-built event hubs. The IAB meets Media Link, in Barletta’s framing, at 6,000 dollars a year rather than half a million. Sounds Profitable has grown every month it has been in business.
“IP and user agent. Just enough to hang ourselves with. Just enough for a hand up.”
Barletta argues podcasting never got the richer signal stack that mobile or display enjoyed. IP address and user agent are the entire attribution spine, supplemented by first-party measurement, promo codes, vanity URLs, pixel-based attribution and post-purchase surveys. The resulting discipline, he contends, has produced a defensible category. As cookies and mobile device IDs retire across the rest of digital, podcasting’s early constraints look like a head start.
“One conversation becomes audio RSS, YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify video, LinkedIn clips, a newsletter cut.”
Barletta frames the podcast studio as the cheapest media atelier a brand can run. A single recorded conversation becomes audio RSS, video on YouTube and Apple Podcasts, a Spotify upload, LinkedIn clips, a newsletter feature and a set of social soundbites. The marginal cost of each additional surface is close to zero once the conversation exists. In his view, the next decade’s brand winners will treat podcasting as a content engine rather than a marketing channel.
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