
Top 23 ways to grow your newsletter in 2022
“Discover the best strategies, channels and tactics to explode your email-list growth in 2022. Featuring insights from 1k+ media brands and newsletter operators.”
Top 23 ways to grow your newsletter in 2022
“Discover the best strategies, channels and tactics to explode your email-list growth in 2022. Featuring insights from 1k+ media brands and newsletter operators.”
What I’ve learned growing a newsletter to 15,000 readers
Anna Codrea-Rado shares how she’s grown her newsletter to 15,000 subscribers.
“Of all the reasons I think this newsletter’s grown, the one I’m most confident about is consistency.
I’ve tried lots of different formats, types of content and names for this newsletter but what’s stayed the same is that I’ve sent it at 2 PM on Friday afternoons for the last four and a half years”
Alex Garcia is interviewed on HypeFury.
His Marketing Examined newsletter has a very distinctive design that really stands out. He added 118k subscribers on Twitter in the last year and a half, mostly through Twitter threads.
He shares how he got clients for his marketing agency, how he beat out hundreds of applicants for a job at The Hustle, how he tests subject lines, how to get followers on social media, and more.
Big Idea: I love his idea of a Notion command center to keep track of what you learn to level up your online skills. This is what I hope IdeaEconomy will become.
15 Newsletter Growth Tips: From +1K to 17K Subs in 2 Yrs
“Learn actionable tips from my learnings while growing #SEOFOMO from +1K to 17K subscribers in 2 years, becoming one of the top SEO newsletters.”
Josh Spector on Newsletter Growth
Josh Spector, one of my favorite creators, breaks down how he makes money, his typical consulting engagement, and his approach to writing and growing his newsletter.
After 14 months of publishing my curated IdeaEconomy newsletter, I’ve passed 1200 subscribers.
I’m now adding 150 to 200 subscribers per month. If I continue on this trajectory I’ll likely have over 3000 subscribers at the end of next year.
3000 subscribers would be great, but I can achieve much more. Here is my plan to get to 10,000 newsletter subscribers by the end of 2022.
The four areas that have been working for me so far have been original content, newsletter advertising, newsletter cross-promotions, and general networking.
My newsletter is almost all curated content, but curation is not enough. It’s very hard to get shares and backlinks without original content.
The two articles I have written (Unbundling Fiverr and Succeeding at the Creator Game) have brought over 300 subscribers and continue to drive regular traffic.
I hope to start writing at least two articles per month. I also plan to hire other writers to help with creating comprehensive guides and other content.
I’ve gotten more than 250 subscribers with paid advertising at a total cost of about $650. That is a little expensive for a newsletter that isn’t making any money, but it’s worth investing in to get an initial critical mass of subscribers. If I can get the cost per subscriber closer to $2, I’d be happy to pay for the full 10,000 subscribers.
I’ve gotten some good results by cross-promoting with other newsletters. I’ve only done it a few times so far, but it has driven about 100 subscribers. The more subscribers I get, the easier it will be to find more newsletters to cross-promote with.
I’ve connected with dozens of creators over the last year and many have gone on to promote my content or newsletter.
I’m going to be more deliberate in my outreach and creating value for others.
I want to give a special shout-out to Josh Spector of For the Interested. He’s been my biggest supporter and the source of well over 100 subscribers. Advertising on his site has also been very effective.
I consider the four areas above as the foundation of my future growth but there are many other areas where I can improve. I plan on leveling up my site design, SEO, Twitter usage, and personal branding.
A distinctive graphic design can really make you stand out on social media and make your content more memorable. Julian Shapiro is one of the best examples I can think of.
I’m in the process of improving my lightbulb character, website, and newsletter landing page. I hope to use the new designs in post images and on Twitter.
James Clear built a million-subscriber email list largely from his domination of personal development content. Search for any keyword like productivity, motivation, building habits, etc. and you’ll see James Clear in the top results.
I’m getting practically zero new subscribers from organic search. This will change over time as I add optimized longer-form content.
I can do a lot more to promote the content I curate on Twitter and connect with other creators. I’ve added about 800 Twitter followers last year, but I can get much better at this.
Some people I’m trying to learn from are Dickie Bush, David Perell, and Alex Llull
David Perrell is the “writing guy.” Josh Spector is the “newsletter guy.” Andrew Kamphey is the “Google spreadsheets” guy.
I’d like to become known as the “IdeaEconomy guy.” That will help me build my personal monopoly and help with some bigger projects I have planned.
Once I start making progress in the above areas there are some bigger, potentially more impactful ideas I can implement.
I want to substantially increase the number of articles I write. I hope to do a challenge like Anne-Laure Le Cunff’s 100 articles in 100 days. She says;
“And Ness labs absolutely would not be what it is today without those articles. They laid the foundation for what Ness Labs is, and they generated hundreds of thousands of views, a dozen consulting contracts, and many coaching sessions to people randomly finding me through one of the articles. In terms of exposure, I have been invited to several podcasts and some articles were featured in the press.”
I’m also considering publishing the newsletter more than once a week. I started publishing it daily last year but cut back to a weekly edition. I’m thinking of testing two or three times a week.
I hope that tackling challenges and sharing my journey online will help generate interest in what I’m doing. The best example I know of is Pieter Levels and his 12 startups in 12 months. I’ve shared a little of my progress on IndieHackers, but I’ll put more effort into promoting what I’ve done as I get better results.
I’m planning my first IdeaEconomy giveaway for the end of the year. I’ve gained thousands of subscribers through giveaways in the past, so I know they can be effective. I hope this will be the first of many giveaways for IdeaEconomy.
Large newsletters like Morning Brew get over 1000 subscribers a day from their referral program. I’ve heard of some small newsletters finding success as well.
With some attractive rewards, a referral program could become a good source of growth.
I want to develop a more distinctive basic business premise than a weekly curated newsletter. I don’t want to give too many details away, but I’m planning a type of creator marketplace for the new year.
In another business, I donate 25% of all gross profits to charity. I plan on doing something similar with IdeaEconomy. I’m not sure if this makes a difference to growth or not, but I find it personally motivating to be working towards something that gives back.
This is my plan to get to 10,000 subscribers by December 31, 2022. That will be about 2.5 years after I started this newsletter.
It’s a much more ambitious growth rate than what I achieved in my first year, but I still think is achievable. With more and better content, outsourced help, more paid advertising, and some bigger wins like a successful giveaway, I think 10,000 subscribers is a reasonable goal.
Am I missing any good audience-building ideas? I’d love to hear from you.
Courtland Allen of IndieHackers interviews Casey Botticello, founder of the Blogging Guide newsletter that has recently reached the $500 per month in recurring revenue after starting in February. Casey shares his business model and how he is growing the newsletter. Paid newsletters on platforms like Substack (What is Substack?) have been gaining in popularity recently. There is a growing market willing to pay for quality content, despite all the free information online. If you are a content creator, paid subscriptions are worth considering. I’ve decided against that direction for this IdeaEconomy newsletter, but there are many that seem to be succeeding. For more information, Trends.vc has a helpful post on the business of paid newsletters
Andrew Warner of Mixegy interviews The Hustle newsletter founder Sam Parr. I love The Hustle and their My First Million podcast. The Hustle now has close to 2 million subscribers. Sam Parr is a great person to follow and learn from. Listen to the interview!