with Steve Pratt, Author of the hit book Earn It

CASE STUDY

AMEX

How a podcast on mentorship became a strategic engine for small business engagement
Audio Engineering Creative Development Host Coaching Podcast distribution Podcast Scripting Podcast Strategy
Each ~25-minute episode of Business Class: Build It Braver connects an early-stage business owner with an experienced mentor for a candid conversation around one pressing operational or strategic challenge. With a lean, insight-driven format and purposeful sound design, the podcast offered real-time learning, hosted by someone who’s been through it herself.
Industry
Financial Services

Company size

10K+

Website

americanexpress.com

Overview

JAR helped American Express launch a podcast that built real connection with small business owners by pairing tactical mentorship with unfiltered, real-world storytelling.

Business Objective

JAR partnered with North Strategic, part of the Publicis Group, to help American Express launch a branded podcast rooted in real-world entrepreneurship. The result: Build It Braver, a tactical and emotional lifeline for Canadian small business owners, hosted by entrepreneur Vivian Kaye.

American Express aimed to connect more meaningfully with Canada’s small business community — not through abstract advice, but through shared experience.

The core challenge:
How can small-to-mid-sized businesses scale production and distribution without collapsing their cash flow?

That question anchored the debut episode and informed the full arc of the series. From there, episodes tackled everything from digital expansion and staffing to niche positioning and supply chain resilience — always with practical mentorship at the core.

“Vivian is asking all the same questions that I would ask as well.”
— Listener review

The Solution

A podcast that mentors in real time — no polish, just progress.

The series launched in October 2021 with a high-profile mentor–mentee pair: fashion entrepreneur Catherine Addai (Kaela Kay) and retail veteran Joe Mimran (Joe Fresh, Club Monaco). Their conversation set the tone: specific, vulnerable, and deeply practical.

The creative vision was rooted in one core insight:

Vulnerability builds trust. Relatable struggle creates connection.

Rather than talk about entrepreneurship, Build It Braver invited listeners into the process—messy moments, coaching breakthroughs, and all.

Strategic and creative highlights included:

  • Host fit: Vivian Kaye — Canadian founder, single mom, and 7-figure entrepreneur — anchored the show with authenticity and energy.
  • Mentorship model: Episodes paired a guest business owner with an established founder or industry leader (e.g., Allen Lau, Taylor Frankel, Wes Hall).
  • Unfiltered tone: Real conversations were preserved, including sidebars about childcare logistics and founder burnout.
  • Narrative clarity: Each episode had a single focus, coachable moment, and practical takeaway — no fluff.
  • Brand integration: Subtle but effective — listeners knew Amex had their back, without hearing a sales pitch.
  • Sound design: Clean and purposeful, with intentional choices like leaving in a sewing machine hum to keep listeners grounded in the real.

“It sounds like you’re sitting across from someone who gets it — not listening to a corporate production.”
—Listener feedback

The Impact

  • Listen-through rate: 90% (vs. industry avg ~60–70%)
  • Brand awareness lift: +6% in category recognition
  • Consideration lift: +6% increase post-listen

 

  • Featured promo on the SmartLess podcast
  • Distribution across Apple, Spotify, iHeart, TuneIn, RSS
  • Amplified via #AmexBuildItBraver on social and in Amex CRM

Hosted on the Amex Business Class hub alongside show notes and resources

  • Repositioned Amex as an ally, not an advertiser, to small business owners
  • Strengthened ties with BIPOC and women-led entrepreneurial segments
  • Served as proof-of-concept for branded content with emotional and tactical utility

“Build It Braver wasn’t just ‘branded content that worked.’ It moved the needle on consideration, held attention, and earned its place on the charts — with no hard sell.”

  • Childcare chaos: Multiple episodes veered into real-life interruptions — sitter cancellations, school pick-ups — creating unexpected moments of connection.
  • The sewing machine hum: Left in during Catherine Addai’s episode to underline the authenticity — this was a real business in motion.
  • Mentors teaching live: Guests didn’t just advise — they coached in real time, pausing to walk through real dilemmas.

Vivian’s banter: Described by one listener as “mentor-like and relatable,” her voice carried the show’s ethos of accessible expertise.

“It sounds like you’re sitting across from someone who gets it — not listening to a corporate production.”

— Listener feedback

90%
listen-through rate (vs. industry avg ~60–70%)
+6%
in brand awareness lift & category recognition
#8
Peak chart rank #8 in Canada, Entrepreneurship