Podcast Pitch — Season Two
Podcast Concept
Built
for Business

The podcast for owners, operators, and decision-makers building and running Australia’s critical industries — from data centres and AI infrastructure to the facilities that keep the country’s most essential sectors operational.

Why Connected should have a podcast — and why now

There are construction podcasts in Australia. Kapitol has one. The sector is not short of voices talking about procurement, project delivery, and industry trends. What doesn’t exist is a show with genuine expertise in the facilities that can’t afford to get it wrong — the data centres, the labs, the AI infrastructure, the advanced manufacturing environments where operational failure has consequences well beyond the building itself.

That’s the gap. Not “construction podcast” — we’d be late to that. The gap is a show that speaks with authority to the owners and operators of Australia’s critical industries, and positions Connected as the firm that understands how to build them.

Owning “critical industries”

We are coining a term that doesn’t yet have an owner in the Australian market. A podcast is the fastest way to plant a flag — every episode that uses the term builds its meaning and associates it with Connected.

Pipeline development

Prospects listen to client conversations. A single episode featuring a client in data centres or AI infrastructure is the most effective business development asset we can create for that sector. It’s proof, not pitch.

Authority that compounds

A podcast builds credibility in a way that case studies and LinkedIn posts can’t. Each episode is a permanent, searchable asset. The audience that finds us in six months is just as valuable as the one listening today.


We ran a pilot. Here’s what it told us.

Season one was two episodes, no promotion strategy, no co-host structure, and an inconsistent publishing cadence. By most measures it was under-resourced. And yet the audience it found engaged with genuine intent — and that’s the most important data point in this pitch.

12.7%
Click-through rate on impressions. YouTube average is 2–5%. When people saw our content, they clicked.
Increase in returning viewers between episodes. The audience that found us came back. That’s loyalty, not luck.
7.7 hrs
Total watch time from two episodes with zero paid promotion. People stayed for the full conversation.
The pilot wasn’t designed to scale. It was designed to test whether the format worked. It did. Season two is what happens when we actually back it. — The case for season two
What we’re doing differently in season two
Season one
  • Emma solo hosting
  • No structured episode cadence
  • No social clip strategy
  • No guest amplification kit
  • Broad topic scope
Season two
  • + Emma + Simon co-host model with defined roles
  • + Monthly minimum, fortnightly target
  • + 3 clips per episode — LinkedIn + Reels
  • + Guest kit — makes sharing effortless
  • + Focused on critical industries — data centres, AI infrastructure, advanced sectors

The “critical industries” play

The construction and facilities sector has no unifying language for the projects that matter most — the ones where getting it wrong has consequences that extend well beyond the building itself. Data centres going offline. Pharmaceutical cold chains failing. Food safety labs without power. Advanced manufacturing lines that can’t restart.

We’re calling this category critical industries. It doesn’t exist as a defined term yet in the Australian market — which means Connected can own it.

Critical industries — what this covers
Data centres & AI infrastructure
5–50MW hyperscale facilities, edge compute, AI training clusters
Health & science
Pathology labs, pharmaceutical manufacturing, TIC facilities
Advanced manufacturing
Food safety, defence-adjacent, sovereign capability facilities

The podcast is how we introduce this term to market. Every episode filed under “critical industries” — whether it’s the data centre boom, a client conversation with a food testing lab, or AI and automation in construction — reinforces the category and positions Connected as the firm that understands it best.

“Built for Business”

The podcast for owners, operators, and decision-makers building and running Australia’s critical industries — from construction economics to the data centres and AI infrastructure shaping the country’s future.

Critical industries Data centre & AI infrastructure Industry intelligence Client conversations

The name does the work. It tells the listener immediately who this is for and what kind of conversation they’re going to get. No jargon, no sector-specific acronyms — just a direct signal to the decision-makers we want in the room.

“Could a client, a developer, or a builder listen to this and say: that’s the most honest thing I’ve heard someone in this industry say publicly? If yes — publish it. If it sounds like a marketing deck — record it again.” — Editorial standard for every episode

Episode type mix

Season two uses a three-track structure. Two tracks are fixed — industry intelligence and client conversations. The third rotates across three original formats that don’t exist elsewhere in the Australian market, keeping the feed varied and giving us a genuine point of difference.

50%
Industry intelligence
Expert guests, data-driven topics on critical industries
25%
Client conversations
Real projects, real outcomes, real operators
New to market
25%
Rotating formats
Three original formats, alternated across the season
The Number
~20 min · no guest

One data point. Twenty minutes. What it actually means.

Emma and Simon pick a single stat from the critical industries world and unpack it completely. “$10M per MW.” “25% of Australian insolvencies are in construction.” “42 days average commissioning overrun.” Short, shareable, and strong for LinkedIn clips. Runs between longer episodes to keep the feed active without a guest booking.

Outside the Room
30–40 min · external guest

The client’s experience, told by someone who doesn’t speak construction.

A CTO buying data centre capacity. A pathology lab director. A defence logistics head. Someone who commissions or operates a critical facility but has no construction background. They describe what the build process looked and felt like from their side of the table. The communication gap this reveals is honest, commercially useful, and unlike anything else in the market.

The Watchlist
10–15 min · no guest

Three things Emma and Simon are watching in critical industries this month.

A regulation change. A project announcement. A market shift. Recorded quickly, published fast — this is the format that keeps the channel current between longer episodes. Lowest production cost of any format on the show. Highest frequency potential. Great for staying visible in weeks when a full episode isn’t ready.

How the rotation works: The Number and The Watchlist sit between longer episodes to maintain cadence without requiring guest bookings. Outside the Room is scheduled like a full episode. A typical six-episode block might run: Industry Intelligence → The Number → Client Conversation → Outside the Room → Industry Intelligence → The Watchlist.


Format decisions

Every format choice below is deliberate. This is a low-cost, high-return investment that gets smarter with each episode produced.

Host Emma — but build a signature style, not just interview format
Co-host Simon as recurring sparring partner — internal or external — for commentary episodes
Length 30–45 min (industry intelligence) · 20–25 min (client conversations) · 10–20 min (The Number / The Watchlist)
Cadence One episode per month minimum · fortnightly if capacity allows
Clips 3 social clips per episode minimum — 60 sec for LinkedIn, 30 sec for reels
Distribution Spotify + Apple Podcasts + YouTube (video format strongly recommended)
Guest amplification Build a guest kit — make it effortless for them to share

Six episodes, ranked by priority

These aren’t arbitrary topics. Each one is chosen because it is timely, Connected has genuine expertise or a client story to tell, and it will resonate with exactly the decision-makers we want as future clients.

1
Construction insolvency crisis

25% of all Australian insolvencies over five years. This is timely, data-rich, and directly relevant to Connected’s clients who are carrying contractor risk right now. Simon is essential here — he can speak to what insolvency actually looks and feels like mid-project. Emma holds the client and financial exposure angle.

Guest: ASBFEO, AIBS, or Master Builders Australia
Urgent
2
The data centre boom

$10M/MW, the infrastructure arms race, and what it means for facilities operators. Connected has genuine expertise here — this is an authority play. Emma leads on the client, operator, and investment angle. Simon leads on the delivery reality: programme, long-lead equipment, the $10M/MW pressure on contractors.

Target audience: NEXTDC, Equinix, AirTrunk, Digital Realty
Hot topic
3
Client conversation — environmental TIC specialist (ALS)

First client voice on the show. Shifts the podcast from opinion to proof. Prospects listen to clients, not just industry experts. Emma leads as primary host — this is a client relationship episode. Simon joins for a defined segment asking specifically about the build process: what made the facility work, what was hard, what they’d do differently.

Social proof
4
Client conversation — food testing specialist (MNAQ)

Second client voice. Pair these two back-to-back or in the same season block — they establish Connected’s cross-sector capability beyond construction. Emma owns the relationship. Simon joins to probe the lab fitout and operational commissioning story — what that client went through to get their facility live is exactly his territory.

Social proof
5
AI and automation in construction

Why is a sector worth hundreds of billions resisting the tools that would save it? Simon carries significant credibility here — he can speak to what actually gets adopted on site vs what is theoretical. Emma challenges on why clients aren’t demanding more. High-tension episode, great listen.

Guest: Innovation lead at a major contractor or RMIT / UTS construction technology programme
Thought leadership
6
Construction productivity decline

Australia’s productivity in construction has been in structural decline for decades. Make this the Emma and Simon debrief episode — no external guest. They react to the Grattan data together. Simon gives the site reality, Emma gives the client and investment read. Lowest prep, highest impact. Great for launching the co-host dynamic.

Guest: Grattan Institute, Infrastructure Australia, or Laing O’Rourke strategy lead
Evergreen

Three ways to use Simon — not just one

Simon’s involvement shouldn’t be uniform across every episode. His value varies by episode type, and using him in the wrong format dilutes both his contribution and the episode quality. The proposed model is three distinct roles:

Full co-host

Both Emma and Simon present for the full episode. Best for expert industry guests where both perspectives need to challenge the guest throughout.

3 of 6 episodes

Segment guest

Emma leads the episode; Simon joins for a defined 10-minute segment to give the construction reality check. Best for client conversation episodes.

2 of 6 episodes

Debrief duo

No external guest — just Emma and Simon reacting to a report, a news story, or a trend. Lowest prep, highest authenticity. Great filler and social clip content.

1 of 6 episodes

Full topic list — beyond season one

The six priority episodes get us to air quickly. Below is the full pipeline of 23 topics developed for future seasons — a mix of industry intelligence, client stories, and timely debate formats. This demonstrates the long-term content runway available to us.

01

Construction insolvency crisis

25% of Australian insolvencies — the data and the human cost

02

The data centre boom

What’s behind the rise and what it means for the construction industry

03

Client conversations — ALS

Environmental TIC specialist — building a specialist facility

04

Client conversations — MNAQ

Food testing specialist — commissioning a lab at scale

05

Construction productivity decline

Decades of structural decline — what the data actually says

06

Mental health in construction

Guest: Beyond Blue & Simon. The sector’s least talked-about crisis

07

SQM rates — debrief

The necessity, the challenges, the disaster stories, and the guidance

08

The power debate — debrief

Issues with upgrades, connections, delays, solar — Emma & Simon

09

Sustainability story

Guest: David Keenan / ISP2 — what sustainable construction actually looks like

10

Automation in practice

Guest: Kevin from Dulux & Healius pathology — what’s actually being adopted

11

Client conversations — quality testing

Heritage buildings, legacy constraints, specialist fitout

12

Greenfield vs brownfield — debrief

Blank slate vs working with existing — through a construction lens

13

Race to the bottom

Why the industry is so focused on cost — and what else actually matters

14

Modular construction

What it actually means and how it works — or doesn’t — in reality

15

Change management in construction

How to use a build project as a change management tool

16

Relocation challenges & opportunities

Guest: relocation expert — the business decision behind the move

17

Live construction

Building in operational environments — the brief, the risk, the execution

18

Commissioning

The phase most clients underestimate — and why it costs them

19

Client procurement

The issues and opportunities with client-procured items in major capital works

20

The rise of consolidation

What sector consolidation means for clients, contractors, and sub-trades

21

Adaptive reuse

Converting existing buildings — commercial, industrial, and what works

22

Not enough power?

The infrastructure deficit and what it means for development pipelines

23

Facility’s role in attraction & retention

Guest: Sarah — how workplace design drives talent outcomes


What we’re asking for

This is not a large investment. Most of what’s needed — the expertise, the relationships, the opinions — we already have. The ask is for time, a modest production budget, and a commitment to do this properly for at least one season.

  • 1
    Greenlight season one. Six episodes. Twelve months. A clear brief for Emma and Simon to build toward.
  • 2
    Confirm the production model. In-house recording with a freelance editor, or engage a specialist podcast production partner. Budget to be confirmed once the approach is agreed.
  • 3
    Start with episode one. The insolvency episode is ready to brief today. The guest target is clear, the angle is set, and the episode writes itself. A pilot gives us something to react to before committing to a full season.
  • 4
    Build the distribution engine in parallel. Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and a LinkedIn clip strategy. The social clips are where most of the audience will find us — the long-form is the credibility anchor.
Connected Workplaces
Built for Business — Season Two Pitch Document
Prepared 2025