We just launched! Get the cheapest price for your ads before they increase forever.Start now We just launched! Get the cheapest price for your ads before they increase forever.Start now
Podcads

Used by ecommerce brands, agencies, and creators.

Tech & Gadgets: Podcast Ads vs Studio Shoots on Pinterest

For tech gadget brands advertising on Pinterest: should you use podcast-style ads or studio shoots? The answer depends on speed, cost, and what consumer electronics brands respond to on Idea Pins.

Tech & Gadgets + Pinterest: podcast ads vs studio shoots.

Studio Shoots strength: premium visual polish.

Podcast ads strength: speed and message control on Pinterest.

Products: wireless earbuds, smart home devices, portable chargers.

Studio Shoots for tech gadget brands on Pinterest

Studio Shoots on Pinterest offers premium visual polish and full creative control. For tech gadget products like wireless earbuds, this can work — but expensive ($2k–$20k+ per day) and weeks-to-months lead time.

Podcast-style ads for tech gadget on Pinterest

Podcast-style ads on Pinterest give tech gadget brands full message control in 1:1 and 9:16, 15–60s format. Tech buyers want to understand what a product does in real life, not just on a spec sheet. Podcast-style ads explain features through use cases — like hearing a friend say what they actually use the product for. On Pinterest specifically, the conversational format earns higher watch time than studio shoots.

Full message control for tech gadget products.

Minutes to first Pinterest ad.

1:1 and 9:16, 15–60s format optimized for Idea Pins.

Common questions

Clear answers to help you decide if podcast-style ads are worth testing.

Which format for tech gadget on Pinterest?

Podcast-style ads for fast testing. Studio Shoots when premium visual polish matters most. Most tech gadget brands use both.

Cost comparison?

Podcast-style ads: flat subscription, unlimited. Studio Shoots: Expensive ($2K–$20K+ per day).

Ready to create ads that convert?

Generate podcast-style ads from one brief. More hooks, more cuts, more tests — without the studio overhead.