This article is adapted from China Playbook, our subscription-based strategy hub for decision-makers navigating China’s ever-shifting consumer landscape.
Podcasts in China have transitioned from a niche audio hobby to a multi-platform visual medium for amplifying brand engagement. Platforms like Bilibili, Rednote (Xiaohongshu), and Himalaya have all integrated video podcast tools and are actively engaging with brands and podcasters for this shift.
For brands, video podcasts provide a high-density trust channel: viewers of video podcasts stay engaged 1.5x longer than audio-only listeners. By combining intellectual depth with visual aesthetics, brands like Songmont and Tiffany & Co. are building lifestyle universes that convert passive listeners into loyal community members.
The "video-fication" of everything has finally hit the podcast world. In early 2025, consumption of video podcasts on Bilibili alone grew by 270% year-on-year. This isn't just about adding a camera to a radio show; it’s about a structural shift in how Chinese consumers discover content.
Whether it's the vertical clips culture or long-form intellectual deep-dives, video podcasts are now the primary bridge between a brand's "values" and a consumer's "vibe".
For the 2025 Qixi (Chinese Valentine's Day) season, Tiffany & Co. moved beyond the traditional 30-second commercial. They partnered with intellectual heavyweight Xu Zhiyuan for the program "I Am the Subject of Love".
The Result? By focusing on philosophical reflections on love rather than product specs, the video went viral on social media, proving that intellectual credibility is the new luxury currency.
The episode featuring actor Zhang Ruoyun was particularly popular on social media.
The Chinese leather brand Songmont has evolved from an advertiser into a full-scale broadcaster.
If your brand only communicates through short-form ads and product-centric posts, you are missing the "deep attention" economy. In a saturated market, video podcasts offer a rare commodity: time.
Podcasting in 2026 is no longer a side project; it is a defining expression of brand identity. It’s where you don’t just tell people who you are—you show them how you think.
This article is adapted from our subscription-based strategy hub, China Playbook. Read the full article here with insights and takeaways from our senior strategist, or click the button below to subscribe for free updates.
All visuals screengrabbed via Bilibili