Used by ecommerce brands, agencies, and creators.
New Customer Acquisition Surfing Ads for Content Creators
Content Creators in the surfing space running new customer acquisition campaigns need creative that moves fast. Monetizing audience attention beyond brand deals is hard — and new customer acquisition timelines (Ongoing, refreshed weekly) make it worse. Podcads solves both.
Surfing × Content Creators × New Customer Acquisition.
Timeline: Ongoing, refreshed weekly.
Workflow: Audience insight → Generate ad creative → Pitch brands → Deliver assets.
Products: surfboards, wetsuits.
The content creators challenge: surfing new customer acquisition
Monetizing audience attention beyond brand deals is hard. In surfing, this is compounded by hyper-local audience near coastlines makes broad targeting wasteful. When a new customer acquisition campaign hits with a timeline of Ongoing, refreshed weekly, content creators cannot afford production delays.
Surfing is a lifestyle, not just a sport. Podcast-style ads tap into surf culture — the dawn patrol stories, the wave that changed everything — creating brand affinity through shared passion rather than product specs. For content creators specifically: Audience insight → Generate ad creative → Pitch brands → Deliver assets — adapted for surfing new customer acquisition.
The playbook
Content Creators running surfing new customer acquisition campaigns:
Brief early
Start Ongoing, refreshed weekly. Pick surfboards or wetsuits.
Generate angles
3–5 surfing hooks targeting surfboard DTC brands.
Launch fast
Pitch brands → Deliver assets.
Iterate
Read data in days. Scale winners.
Common questions
Clear answers to help you decide if podcast-style ads are worth testing.
How do content creators handle surfing new customer acquisition?
With Podcads: Audience insight → Generate ad creative → Pitch brands → Deliver assets. Fits within Ongoing, refreshed weekly.
How many angles to test?
3–5 per cycle for surfing products.
Ready to create ads that convert?
Generate podcast-style ads from one brief. More hooks, more cuts, more tests — without the studio overhead.
