Stop gambling and email your audience directly
Leaving the distribution of your work to algorithmic platforms is a dead-end street
EDIT: removed the paywall because it turned off comments for everyone but paid subscribers! If you’re a paid subscriber and want the RSVP link to this week’s Zoom call, please reach out.
I posted this over the weekend on Substack Notes, but you probably didn’t see it.
Five people called me, and we had some nice chats.
Most of my email subscribers don’t spend time on Substack Notes, and probably don’t even know it exists.
I’m certain of this, as over 80% of you read my newsletter in your email inbox.
It might be the same for your newsletter, too.
Hard truth: Substack Notes is social media, where algorithms control what you see and where most of your audience doesn’t see what you post anyway.
The best remedy to all this is delivering a message to their inbox.
This is why when you post a new song on Spotify, you should send an email to your fans to let them know. You can’t trust that Spotify will surface this new song to all your subscribers on their platform.
If you post a new video on YouTube, you should still send an email to your subscribers and let them know. You can’t trust YouTube to distribute your new video to everyone who subscribed to your channel.
Leaving the distribution of your work to algorithmic platforms is a dead-end street. Posting isn’t enough; you have to reach out to your audience directly if you want to survive.
Now, maybe you’ve got some objections…
🚫 Sending too many emails is spammy
✅ If people don’t want to hear from you, let ‘em leave. An unsubscribe is just making room for someone else to come and enjoy your work.
✅ Funny how we don’t want to send too many emails, yet most of us posted multiple times per hour on social media, right?
🚫 Sending a newsletter is too much work
✅ You don’t have to make vertical videos, and you don’t need to make new static images. If you’ve already posted about your new thing on Instagram, just copy and paste the caption you wrote - 95% of your audience didn’t see it anyway, so re-use it!
🚫 I don’t have enough email subscribers
✅ If you have 1,000 social media followers, you might reach 10% of them (that’s 100 people).
✅ If you have 100 email subscribers, 99.9% of them will get your next newsletter (so make sure you write a good subject line).
Still not convinced? Let’s talk about it.
Paid subscribers get to join my weekly ESCAPE POD video chat - a weekly discussion on social media, untangling from algorithms, and a generous dose of Q&A with a group of creative people from all over the world.
SPECIAL OFFER: 10% off monthly/annual subscriptions through the rest of October 2024 - sign up here.
I’ll lead this discussion with other creative folks, and you’ll probably walk away with 2-3 good ideas, concepts, and/or strategies that you can apply to your own work.
Can’t afford another subscription? Refer Social Media Escape Club to your friends and get free access to these calls—details here.
Time: Thursday, Oct 31 at 2-3:00pm EST
If you’re a paid subscriber and want the link, please message me or shoot me an email (hey@sethw.xyz).
Hey Seth- I just opted out of my paid subscription for your newsletter. It's not personal, I just need to trim down on subscriptions. Still love your work, love your message, and feel that tremendous gratitude for the way you got me to rethink how I use the Internet. I'll resub in the future after a good payday. The work you do is tremendous
1. Substack is finally delivering all my subscribed-to emails after 6 months of not. Hooray! Thank you for getting this gold in my inbox today.
2. We've talked about this before, but I'm still so tangled up with how to incorporate Substack into what I do. I've had 4 months off "properly" doing my regular sharing activities, and I want to make a sustainable plan going forward towards the new album release. And I still have such mind resistance to emailing people on my existing list more than once a month :S
I'll figure it out eventually I hope.
Thanks for all the brilliant tips as always, Seth! Always lots to think about.