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The Monetize Your Mission Podcast

Podcast von by Jill Hart

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Business

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Conversations and strategies to help you amplify your voice, grow your audience, and monetize your mission using Substack and podcasting. hartlifecoach.substack.com

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Episode Why Information No Longer Converts and What Coaches Can Do Instead Cover

Why Information No Longer Converts and What Coaches Can Do Instead

There is a reason so many smart, heart-led entrepreneurs are feeling the shift right now. More content is not automatically creating more clients. More teaching is not always leading to more trust. More information is not necessarily leading to more sales. Inside a recent Monetize Your Mission Mastermind session, Katya McEwen taught a powerful framework for what to do instead. Her message was simple and timely: information alone no longer converts the way it used to. What creates movement now is an experience that helps people trust themselves, see what is possible, and leave with something real in their hands. Why Information Is Not Enough Anymore Katya explained that the market has changed. People are flooded with content, free advice, AI-generated material, masterclasses, and digital products. There is no shortage of information. What is missing is trust. Not just trust in the teacher, but trust in self. That distinction changes everything. A traditional presentation can leave someone understanding your work, agreeing with your points, and even admiring your expertise. But if they do not feel a shift in themselves, they may still hesitate to take the next step. They may like you, but they do not yet believe they can do the work, follow through, or create the outcome they want. Katya names this as the missing link in many funnels and presentations. Be sure to catch the latest Monetize Your Mission Mastermind!! What Katya Teaches Instead Katya’s framework is called Mini Project Magic, which she describes as a 60 to 90 minute experience that turns any room into revenue. Rather than simply delivering information, the goal is to lead people through a process where they engage, participate, and complete something tangible during the session itself. That is the key difference. Instead of asking people to trust your offer based only on what you say, you help them experience momentum firsthand. They do not just hear about transformation. They feel a piece of it happening in real time. For coaches, course creators, community leaders, and spiritual entrepreneurs, this is a powerful reframe. The point of a live session is not only to inform. It is to create a result. 📌Save For Later The Real Conversion Shift One of the strongest insights from the mastermind was this: The buying decision changes when someone moves from, “I think this person can help me,” to, “This already helped me, and I want more.” That shift is subtle, but it changes the whole energy of how people enter an offer. Katya contrasted the old model of teaching with a more experiential one. In the old model, someone describes the house beautifully and then asks you to sign the mortgage. In the new model, you get to walk through the house first. You get to feel what it is like to be there. You can picture your life inside it. That is what helps close the gap. For a mission-driven business, this matters because aligned sales often happen when people can feel safety, clarity, and self-belief, not just persuasion. The Structure of Mini Project Magic Katya made the framework feel practical and accessible. The structure she shared is simple: * Set the agenda and intentions * Teach briefly * Guide people through a live do-it-now experience * Help them leave with something tangible * Invite reflection and next steps This is part of what makes the method so useful in a mastermind setting. It can be applied to workshops, presentations, summits, community calls, and other live experiences where you want people to move from passive listening to active transformation. The Three Pillars Behind the Method Katya also shared the three pillars that support Mini Project Magic. 1. Your Own Methodology The first pillar is your intellectual property, your framework, your voice, and the way you uniquely guide people. This is not about copying someone else’s process. It is about pulling forward what is already powerful in your own work. 2. Interactive Tools The second pillar is the use of interactive tools that help people participate directly. These could be guided worksheets, dashboards, builders, prompts, or other creative tools that make the session experiential instead of passive. 3. Psychological Framework The third pillar is the psychological design of the experience. Katya was clear that this is not about manipulation. It is about helping people connect emotionally, engage meaningfully, and build belief through action and play. For conscious entrepreneurs, this is an especially important distinction. Ethical conversion matters. Trust matters. The goal is not to pressure people into buying. The goal is to create a room where real movement becomes possible. Why This Fits the Monetize Your Mission Mastermind This teaching landed so well in the Monetize Your Mission Mastermind because it speaks directly to a challenge many business owners are facing. A lot of brilliant people know how to teach. Fewer know how to structure a live experience that helps participants shift identity, create an immediate win, and feel genuinely ready for the next level. Katya’s training offers a way to bridge that gap. It helps mission-driven entrepreneurs think beyond content delivery and into transformation design. That is especially valuable if your work is personal, relational, healing, transformational, or hard to explain in a conventional marketing format. When people can interact with your process in a meaningful way, they begin to understand it from the inside. 🎗️Don’t just subscribe for free - For a limited time only… 🎁 Paid subscribers receive exclusive access to the ❤️‍🔥First Paid Subscriber Roadmap Assessment. This interactive tool helps you identify the fastest path from publishing content to attracting your first paying subscriber or client. You’ll discover your biggest growth bottleneck, your strongest opportunity, and the specific actions most likely to move you forward. (it will take you 5 minutes or less!) Available only to paid SUBSTACK subscribers. Upgrade today and unlock your personalized roadmap. Until we hit best seller status $5/monthly and $45 for the whole year which includes the ❤️‍🔥Substack Setup Intensive - Build your foundations so you can monetize and make your publication sustainable. A Live Example Made It Real One of the most useful parts of the mastermind session was the live demonstration. Katya walked a participant through her business and helped generate several mini project ideas in real time. That moment made the framework concrete. It showed that this method is not theory. It is something that can be built around a real offer, real audience, and real business challenge. That kind of demonstration is powerful in its own right because it models the very thing Katya teaches. People do not just hear the concept. They watch it happen. The Bigger Takeaway The deeper invitation in Katya’s teaching is not just to improve conversion. It is to create spaces where people can trust themselves again. That is a meaningful shift for any coach, healer, guide, or spiritual entrepreneur. It brings the focus back to participation, embodiment, and real change. It asks a better question than “How do I convince people?” It asks, “How do I help people experience what is possible?” That is a much more aligned foundation for mission-based income. Ultimately… Katya McEwen’s teaching inside the Monetize Your Mission Mastermind is a strong reminder that the future of conversion is not more noise. It is more resonance. Not more explaining. More experiencing. Not just more information. More self-trust. For entrepreneurs who want to build visibility, authority, aligned clients, and revenue without leaving their values behind, Mini Project Magic offers a compelling way forward. If this session sparked something for you, the next question is simple: What kind of experience could you create that helps your people leave with a real win? With love & clarity,Jill Hart💜The Coach’s Alchemist Amplify Your Voice • Monetize Your Mission • Get Visible Hi, I’m Jill Hart, The Coach’s Alchemist. I help spiritual entrepreneurs and coaches amplify their voice, attract aligned clients, and monetize their mission through Substack and podcasting. If you’ve been creating content but not seeing it turn into conversations, clients, or consistent income, Substack- the You World Order is for you. It’s where we simplify visibility, build authority, and create a clear path from your content to your offers without chasing algorithms or trying to be everywhere. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe [https://hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

18. Juni 2026 - 1 h 10 min
Episode Before You Publish: How to Protect Your Best Ideas and Create Bigger Writing Opportunities Cover

Before You Publish: How to Protect Your Best Ideas and Create Bigger Writing Opportunities

A lot of coaches, creators, and spiritual entrepreneurs are already writing. They are publishing on Substack. Posting on Medium. Sharing on LinkedIn. Writing blog posts on their own websites. Putting thoughtful ideas into the world with consistency and heart. That is not the problem. The real issue is that many people do not realize they are making a publishing decision the moment they hit publish. In this week’s Monetize Your Mission Mastermind, Jill sat down with Krissi Driver [https://substack.com/profile/87041676-krissi-driver] , writing coach, ghostwriter, and content strategist, to talk about first rights, publication strategy, and how writers and entrepreneurs can think more intentionally about where their work belongs. Krissi shared that she helps writers and entrepreneurs pitch and submit to media outlets and literary publications, and that her own bylines include The New York Times, The Guardian, Business Insider, and Fast Company. Why This Conversation Matters for Coaches and Spiritual Entrepreneurs For conscious business owners, content is not just content. Content builds visibility.Content builds trust.Content builds authority.Content attracts aligned people.Content can create mission-based income when it is used strategically. That is why this conversation matters so much. Many entrepreneurs are taught to publish everywhere as quickly as possible. Krissi offers a more thoughtful approach. She explains that when your work is posted publicly, even on your own platform, that can count as publication. In other words, you may be using up your first rights without realizing it. For someone who wants to grow through mainstream publications, literary journals, anthologies, or guest articles, that distinction matters. 🎗️Don’t just subscribe for free - For a limited time only… 🎁 Paid subscribers receive exclusive access to the First Paid Subscriber Roadmap Assessment. This interactive tool helps you identify the fastest path from publishing content to attracting your first paying subscriber or client. You’ll discover your biggest growth bottleneck, your strongest opportunity, and the specific actions most likely to move you forward. (it will take you 5 minutes or less!) Available only to paid SUBSTACK subscribers. Upgrade today and unlock your personalized roadmap. Until we hit best seller status $5/monthly and $45 for the whole year which includes the Substack Setup Intensive - Build your foundations so you can monetize and make your publication sustainable. What Are First Rights? Krissi breaks it down simply. First rights means the first opportunity to publish a piece of work. If you publish the piece yourself first, you have already made that choice. That is not wrong. It just means some future options may be off the table. She also makes an important point that many business owners miss: Published does not only mean a newspaper or magazine.It can also mean: * A Substack post * A Medium article * A blog post * A third-party website * Even public social content, depending on the format That one shift in understanding can completely change how you plan your content. The Mistake Many Writers Make Krissi gives an example of someone who writes a personal essay, posts it on Substack, and then later sees a publication looking for that exact kind of story. At that point, the editor may decline it because the piece has already been published. That is not because the writing is bad. It is because the publication often wants original work. This is where strategy matters. Not every piece needs to go to a larger publication. But some pieces might do more for your visibility, authority, and audience growth if they are pitched first and self-published later. When First Rights Matter Most Krissi explains that first rights matter most when you are considering places that usually want original work, including: * Literary journals and magazines * Print magazines * Newspapers * Online publications * Anthologies * Writing contests She also notes that some places occasionally accept previously published work, but those opportunities are less common. So the practical takeaway is simple: Before you publish, pause long enough to understand your options. 📌Save For Later How to Decide Where a Piece Belongs One of the strongest ideas in the conversation is that there is no single perfect home for every piece of writing. Some pieces are best on your own platform. Some are better pitched elsewhere. Krissi says that if a piece is mainly there to serve your own audience with information about your business, then your own platform is probably the right place. But if the piece can benefit or entertain a wider audience, it may be a strong candidate for pitching or submission. That is a powerful filter for anyone creating content in a mission-driven business. Feeling stuck between having a powerful message and not knowing how to consistently market it in a way that feels aligned? Subscribe to the Monetize Your Mission Podcast for grounded, actionable conversations that help you grow your audience, attract aligned clients, and build a business that supports your mission. Questions to Ask Before You Publish Krissi walks through several questions that can help you make a better publishing decision: * What type of piece is this? * What is the goal of this piece? * Has this exact piece already been published? * Who is the audience? * Could it be stronger with revisions? * Should this be submitted as a finished draft or pitched as an idea? These questions are useful far beyond traditional writing. They also apply to thought leadership, personal brand storytelling, educational content, and authority-building articles for coaches and service providers. What Bigger Publication Opportunities Can Do for Your Business Krissi talks openly about the benefits of placing work outside your own platform. A larger publication can help you: * Reach more readers * Build authority * Grow your audience * Support another project * Stack bylines * Increase visibility * Earn a little money from your writing That matters for conscious entrepreneurs because visibility is not just about vanity. The right visibility can support your work in the world. It can help the right people find you. It can create trust faster. It can give your message more reach without asking you to be louder than you want to be. A More Strategic Way to Think About Content This conversation is a reminder that content is not only about consistency. It is also about placement. A thoughtful piece may become: * A Substack post * A guest article * A pitch to a mainstream outlet * A literary essay * A contest submission * A visibility asset that leads people back to your list or offers That kind of strategy helps your content work harder for your mission. Feeling stuck between having a powerful message and not knowing how to consistently market it in a way that feels aligned? Subscribe to the Monetize Your Mission Podcast for grounded, actionable conversations that help you grow your audience, attract aligned clients, and build a business that supports your mission. Watch the Full Conversation If you are a coach, writer, healer, or spiritual entrepreneur who wants your content to create more authority and aligned growth, this episode is worth watching. It will help you think more clearly about: * what to publish now * what to hold back * what to pitch * and how to use your writing more intentionally Connect and Next Steps Want to connect with Krissi Driver? * Website: www.krissidriver.com [http://www.krissidriver.com/] * Mentioned offer page: www.krissidriver.com/MMMlive [http://www.krissidriver.com/MMMlive]. And if this conversation sparked something for you, reply and share this: What is one piece you may want to pitch before you publish it? With love & clarity,Jill Hart💜The Coach’s Alchemist Amplify Your Voice • Monetize Your Mission • Get Visible Hi, I’m Jill Hart, The Coach’s Alchemist. I help spiritual entrepreneurs and coaches amplify their voice, attract aligned clients, and monetize their mission through Substack and podcasting. If you’ve been creating content but not seeing it turn into conversations, clients, or consistent income, Substack- the You World Order is for you. It’s where we simplify visibility, build authority, and create a clear path from your content to your offers without chasing algorithms or trying to be everywhere. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe [https://hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

12. Juni 2026 - 52 min
Episode The Substack Mistake That’s Costing Coaches Visibility Cover

The Substack Mistake That’s Costing Coaches Visibility

Many coaches make the same mistake with Substack. They treat it like just another newsletter platform. That approach sounds harmless, but it can quietly limit your visibility, weaken your authority, and make content creation feel more fragmented than it needs to be. When Substack is only used as an email tool, its bigger potential gets missed. For coaches, spiritual entrepreneurs, and transformational leaders, Substack can be much more than a place to send updates. It can become a publishing platform, a content hub, a relationship-building tool, and a visibility engine that helps your work reach more of the right people. In this Monetize Your Mission Mastermind session, Jill Hart breaks down what Substack really is, what it is not, and how to use it in a more strategic way so your content supports audience growth, authority building, and aligned client attraction. The Mistake: Using Substack Like a Simple Newsletter A lot of coaches hear about Substack and assume it is basically a newsletter tool with a little extra polish. That is the mistake. When you see Substack only through that lens, you miss the social side, the discoverability features, the publishing tools, the podcast support, the repurposing opportunities, and the ways it can help your content live longer and work harder. Instead of becoming a central home for your message, it gets treated like one more channel to keep up with. That usually leads to one of two outcomes. Either it gets neglected, or it becomes another task on the content checklist without producing much momentum. What Substack Actually Is One of the most useful distinctions Jill makes is that Substack has two sides. There is the publication side, where you create long-form content, posts, podcast episodes, and written pieces. Then there is the social side, where people can follow you, discover your content in the feed, and engage with what you share. That matters because it changes how you think about the platform. You are not only sending content to people who already know you. You are also creating content inside a system that can support discovery and conversation. For coaches, that is important. Visibility grows faster when your content is not trapped in one format or one delivery method. Why This Mistake Costs Coaches Visibility When Substack is underused, coaches often lose visibility in a few key ways. * First, they miss the opportunity to build a body of work that shows their thinking. A thoughtful archive of posts, podcasts, notes, and conversations builds trust over time. * Second, they miss organic discovery. Followers may see your work in the feed even if they are not email subscribers yet. That creates a softer path into your world. * Third, they miss the chance to repurpose content efficiently. One strong episode or post can become multiple assets, but only if you use the platform strategically. The result is a business that keeps creating content but does not get the full return on that effort. Followers, Subscribers, and Smarter Audience Building Another useful point from the session is the difference between followers and subscribers. Followers can see your content in the social feed. Subscribers receive your content in their inbox. Both matter, and both serve different purposes. This gives you more flexibility in how people enter your ecosystem. Not everyone is ready to join your email list right away, but they may still want to follow your work. That means Substack can support relationship-building at different stages of readiness. This is especially helpful for coaches and service providers. Audience growth is not only about collecting emails. It is also about creating enough resonance and visibility that the right people want to stay connected. Notes Are a Visibility Tool, Not Just a Feature Jill also emphasizes the role of notes, and this is one of the most practical takeaways in the whole training. Notes help drive visibility. They give you a lightweight way to stay present, start conversations, resurface ideas, and bring attention back to your longer-form content. They can also be scheduled, edited, and used more intentionally than many people realize. For coaches who feel intimidated by long-form publishing, notes can be a great entry point. They create momentum without requiring a full article or full episode every time. And for coaches already publishing deeper content, notes help extend the life of that content and bring more eyes to it. How One Episode Can Become Much More This is where the visibility piece really starts to click. Jill shows how one video or podcast episode can turn into a whole ecosystem of content. A native video post on Substack can lead to clips, notes, transcript downloads, longer-form written content, and wider distribution. That means one original conversation can become: * A full video or podcast post * Multiple clips * Notes for visibility and engagement * A written article based on the transcript * Additional content for social platforms * Searchable, evergreen content inside your publication This is a much smarter model than creating from scratch every time. For coaches with limited time, it creates a more sustainable content rhythm. For coaches who want authority, it creates more touchpoints around the same core message. Why Native Publishing Builds More Authority One of Jill’s strongest recommendations is to publish natively on Substack rather than using it only as a place to embed content from elsewhere. Why? Because native publishing gives you access to more of the platform’s tools. It allows you to work with clips, notes, transcripts, and built-in publishing features in a way that better supports visibility over time. This is not just about convenience. It is about authority. When your work lives natively on the platform, it is easier to organize, repurpose, discover, and revisit. It creates a stronger home base for your thought leadership. For coaches, that matters. Authority is built when your message is easy to find, easy to engage with, and clearly connected across formats. 📌Save For Later Small Optimization Choices Matter The session also highlights the importance of titles, subtitles, headers, and structure. This may seem like a smaller detail, but it plays a major role in discoverability. Clear titles help people know what your content is about. Strategic subtitles help reinforce the topic. Headers improve readability and help organize longer pieces. These choices do more than make a post look polished. They help both humans and search systems understand your content. If your work is transformational, nuanced, or rooted in deep coaching conversations, clarity matters even more. The clearer your structure, the easier it is for the right people to recognize the value of what you do. Templates Make Consistency Easier Another practical strategy Jill shares is the use of templates. Templates reduce friction. When you already have a repeatable structure for calls to action, signature sections, community invitations, or bio blocks, it becomes much easier to publish consistently. You spend less time reinventing the format and more time focusing on the message. This matters because many coaches do not struggle with ideas. They struggle with turning those ideas into repeatable, visible content. Templates make that easier. They support consistency, and consistency supports authority. Want aligned clients? Get daily momentum and proven visibility strategies inside. A Better Way to Use Substack for Your Coaching Business The real shift is this: Stop using Substack like just another newsletter. Start using it like a visibility system. That means seeing it as a place where your long-form content, short-form content, social visibility, podcasting, and audience growth can work together. It means building from one strong piece of content instead of scattering your energy across disconnected platforms. It means using Substack as a strategic home for your message, not just a delivery tool. For coaches, this creates a more grounded and sustainable way to grow. It helps your ideas travel further. It helps your audience understand your work more deeply. And it helps you build authority without needing to be everywhere all at once. Ultimately, The Substack mistake that costs coaches visibility is not being on the platform. It is using the platform too narrowly. When Substack is treated as just another newsletter, its real value gets lost. But when it is used as a publishing hub, a relationship-building tool, and a content repurposing engine, it becomes a much stronger asset for your business. For coaches, spiritual entrepreneurs, and transformational leaders, that shift can support more visibility, stronger authority, and more aligned growth. Substack works best when it becomes the place where your message lives, expands, and keeps working for you long after you hit publish. With love & clarity,Jill Hart | The Coach’s Alchemist Most coaches are doing all the things… posting, showing up, creating content… …and still not seeing consistent clients. Not because the content is bad. Because there’s no clear client acquisition system behind it. That’s exactly what the Client Acquisition Audit is designed to fix. In this 30-minute session, we’ll look at your current setup and identify the specific gaps that are keeping you invisible or inconsistent with clients. If your message is there but the clients aren’t… this will show you why. 👉 Book your Client Acquisition Audit here Hi, I’m Jill Hart, The Coach’s Alchemist. I help spiritual entrepreneurs and coaches amplify their voice, attract aligned clients, and monetize their mission through Substack and podcasting. If you’ve been creating content but not seeing it turn into conversations, clients, or consistent income, You World Order is for you. It’s where we simplify visibility, build authority, and create a clear path from your content to your offers without chasing algorithms or trying to be everywhere. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe [https://hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

4. Juni 2026 - 1 h 1 min
Episode A Case of Mistaken Identity - Organize Your Substack With Categories, Sections, And Tags Cover

A Case of Mistaken Identity - Organize Your Substack With Categories, Sections, And Tags

It may be your structure. A lot of people start Substack thinking they are building a newsletter. But what you are really building is a publication. That means your readers need more than good posts. They need clear pathways to explore your work, understand your message, and stay inside your world longer. That is exactly what categories, sections, and tags help you do. In this Monetize Your Mission Mastermind session, Jill breaks down how to organize your Substack so it supports visibility, reader trust, search discoverability, and stronger client attraction over time. Why Substack Structure Matters When your publication is organized clearly, people can tell what you do much faster. They can find the content that matters most to them. They can follow related topics more easily. And they are more likely to keep reading instead of clicking away after one post. This kind of structure also gives search engines and AI systems more context about your work. Instead of seeing random disconnected content, they can start to recognize the themes, topics, and pathways your publication is built around. That matters more than ever. Substack is no longer just a place to send emails. It can become a content library, a search asset, a community bridge, and a client attraction tool when you set it up intentionally. Feeling stuck between having a powerful message and not knowing how to consistently market it in a way that feels aligned? Subscribe to the Monetize Your Mission Podcast for grounded, actionable conversations that help you grow your audience, attract aligned clients, and build a business that supports your mission. What Categories Do On Substack Categories are the broadest layer of organization. Think of them as the main umbrella your publication lives under. They tell both readers and platforms what larger conversation your work belongs to. Depending on your work, that could be business, education, health and wellness, faith and spirituality, culture, or another aligned category. The important thing is not choosing the biggest category just because it sounds impressive. In many cases, a smaller and more aligned category gives you a better chance of standing out. A broad category may have more traffic, but it often comes with more competition. A smaller category can create more relevance and make it easier for the right people to find you. The question to ask is simple: Does this category fit the heart of my work while still giving me room to be a whole person inside my publication? That is usually the sweet spot. 📌Save For Later How Sections Help Readers Understand Your Work If categories are your umbrella, sections are the rooms inside the house. This is where your Substack starts to feel organized and intentional. Sections help you separate different content types, themes, or reader pathways. You might have one section for podcast episodes, one for teachings, one for visibility strategy, one for personal reflections, or one for community updates. The goal is not to create as many sections as possible. The goal is clarity. When someone lands on your publication, they should be able to understand what you do and where to go next without having to sort through a mixed pile of unrelated posts. A strong section structure helps your Substack feel easier to browse, easier to binge, and easier to trust. In most cases, keeping your sections in the three to seven range is more than enough. That gives you room to organize your work without overwhelming your readers or spreading your content too thin. Why Tags Matter More Than Most People Realize Tags are where many creators get messy. It is easy to treat them like social media hashtags, but that approach usually creates confusion instead of clarity. A better way to think about tags is this: tags are searchable topic labels. They help connect related pieces of content across your publication. They allow posts from different sections to live under the same theme. And they create extra pathways for readers to discover what they care about most. For example, you might write about client attraction in a teaching post, mention it again in a podcast recap, and return to it in a visibility article. Tags help tie those pieces together so a reader interested in that topic can keep going deeper. That is what makes your publication feel useful and connected. How To Use Tags Strategically A strong tag strategy is usually simpler than people expect. You do not need dozens of tags. You do not need a brand new phrase for every post. And you do not need to label every tiny nuance. What works better is choosing a smaller set of relevant, repeatable tags and using them consistently. That means: * choosing phrases your audience would actually search for * using a few strategic tags per post instead of a huge list * keeping your naming consistent * letting your tags reinforce the themes you want to be known for This helps your publication feel more coherent over time. It also helps your readers and the platform understand what your work is really about. Build A Library, Not A Timeline This is the mindset shift underneath the whole conversation. If you treat your Substack like a timeline, every post has to work on its own and then quickly disappears beneath the next thing. If you treat your Substack like a library, every post becomes part of a larger body of work. That changes how people experience your publication. They do not just read one thing and leave. They find a trail. They follow a topic. They move from one section to another. They begin to understand the depth of your work, not just the latest post you published. That is what strong structure creates. A library is easier to navigate. Easier to trust. Easier to recommend. Easier to grow. The Real Goal Is Not Just More Subscribers It is possible to grow a subscriber count without building real momentum. What matters more is whether the right people are finding you and engaging with what you share. Are they reading?Are they staying?Are they exploring more than one post?Are they joining your community, replying to your emails, or moving toward your offers? That is the real measure. A well-organized Substack supports more than discoverability. It supports authority. It supports connection. It supports aligned growth. When your content is easier to understand and easier to navigate, the right readers are more likely to stay in your world. A Simple Next Step For Your Substack If your publication feels disorganized right now, start small. Review your categories and make sure they truly fit the work you want to be known for. Look at your sections and ask whether they help a new reader understand your world quickly. Then review your tags and tighten them until they reflect the language your audience is already using. You do not need to rebuild everything at once. You just need to start organizing with more intention. Because when your Substack is structured well, your content works harder for you long after you hit publish. Join The You World Order Community Want support building a publication that grows your visibility, authority, and aligned client attraction? Join the You World Order community here:https://skool.com/you-world-order [https://skool.com/you-world-order] Apply For The Client Acquisition Audit Ready for deeper support around your content, positioning, and growth strategy? Apply here: https://coachsalchemist.com [https://coachsalchemist.com] With love & clarity,Jill Hart | The Coach’s Alchemist P.S. Most coaches don’t have a content problem. They have a setup problem. 👀A few small shifts inside your Substack can completely change how subscribers move from reader → conversation → client. That’s exactly what we’re fixing inside the Substack Setup Intensive. ✨ Here is the current list of Substack categories referenced in this training (2026). Since platforms do change over time, it is always wise to double check inside your own Substack settings before choosing your primary and secondary categories.Health * Politics * Crypto * News * Faith and Spirituality * Health and Wellness * Culture * World Politics * U.S. Politics * Business * Technology * Finance * Education * Science * Philosophy * Parenting * Food and Drink * Travel * History * Literature * Music * Art and Illustration * Design * Fashion and Beauty * Sports * Humor * Fiction * Comics * Climate and Environment * International This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe [https://hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

29. Mai 2026 - 1 h 1 min
Episode How To Use LinkedIn To Grow Your Substack Audience Cover

How To Use LinkedIn To Grow Your Substack Audience

If you are writing on Substack but not actively using LinkedIn, you may be leaving a powerful subscriber growth channel untapped. That is the heart of this conversation with Sam Rathling. Sam is known for helping business owners use LinkedIn in a way that builds visibility, credibility, and real relationships. In this interview, she shares practical ways to stop treating LinkedIn like a static profile and start using it as a living ecosystem that can support your content, authority, and audience growth. For Substack writers, that matters a lot. Most coaches are doing all the things… posting, showing up, creating content… …and still not seeing consistent clients. Not because the content is bad. Because there’s no clear client acquisition system behind it. That’s exactly what the Client Acquisition Audit is designed to fix. In this 30-minute session, we’ll look at your current setup and identify the specific gaps that are keeping you invisible or inconsistent with clients. If your message is there but the clients aren’t… this will show you why. 👉 Book your Client Acquisition Audit here Why LinkedIn Matters for Substack Growth Many people think of LinkedIn as a place for resumes, job updates, or corporate networking. Sam offers a different view. She describes LinkedIn as a professional networking platform where visibility and trust create opportunity. That opportunity might look like clients, collaborations, podcast invitations, referrals, speaking opportunities, or new readers entering your world. For Substack creators, that means LinkedIn can become a steady source of the right people discovering your ideas and choosing to subscribe for more. This is especially important if your Substack is built around thought leadership, coaching, healing, transformation, or conscious entrepreneurship. The people who resonate with your writing are often already on LinkedIn. The missing piece is making it easy for them to find you and follow your work more deeply. 📌Save For Later LinkedIn and Substack Can Create a Flywheel One of the most useful parts of this conversation is when Sam talks about how LinkedIn and Substack can work together rather than compete. She explains that you can create a flywheel between the two platforms. You can repurpose ideas from Substack onto LinkedIn, use LinkedIn to bring people back to your Substack, and let each platform strengthen the other. That means your Substack does not have to do all the heavy lifting alone. LinkedIn can help with discovery.Substack can help with depth.LinkedIn can help people notice you.Substack can help them stay with you. That is a much healthier way to think about audience growth than relying on one platform in isolation. Your LinkedIn Profile Can Help Convert Readers into Subscribers Sam spends a meaningful part of the interview explaining how to make your LinkedIn profile more effective. From a Substack perspective, this is one of the biggest takeaways. She points to several profile areas that can help move people into your ecosystem: Your header image Sam gives examples of people using their LinkedIn banner image to direct attention to a newsletter or Substack. This is simple, but strategic. If someone visits your profile and immediately sees what you write about and where to subscribe, you are creating a clearer path from profile visit to subscriber. Your featured section This may be the most important Substack takeaway in the whole interview. Sam calls the featured section your conversion mechanism. In other words, this is where you intentionally guide someone from LinkedIn into the next step of relationship. She specifically says this is a great place to feature your Substack, your articles, your podcast, or any content hub you want to grow. If you are serious about growing subscribers, this section matters. It gives curious people an easy next click. Your About section Sam also emphasizes the importance of the first lines of your About section. Those opening lines should quickly establish trust and make people want to learn more. Then, further down, you can mention your Substack, your community, and the next step you want readers to take. This is a reminder that subscriber growth does not only come from posting more often. It also comes from making your profile work better when people land on it. Visibility Is What Brings New Readers In Sam’s core equation in the interview is: Visibility + Credibility = Opportunity That applies beautifully to Substack growth. If your writing is excellent but your visibility is low, fewer people will ever discover it. If people see you but your profile and content do not build trust, they may not feel ready to subscribe. LinkedIn helps solve both problems. It gives you a place to become more visible through content, comments, and conversations. It also gives you a place to build credibility through profile clarity, authority signals, useful posts, and consistent engagement. Once both are in place, more opportunities open up, including subscriber growth. Subscriber Growth Does Not Start With Pitching This is one reason the conversation feels so aligned for thoughtful writers and conscious entrepreneurs. Sam is very clear that LinkedIn is not about rushing into direct messages and pushing offers on people. Her approach is based on building relationships, staying top of mind, and treating the platform more like a networking room than a sales machine. That matters for Substack too. Most people do not subscribe because they were pressured. They subscribe because they became interested. They saw your perspective. They noticed your consistency. They trusted your voice. They wanted more. LinkedIn can help create those early trust points before someone ever lands on your Substack. The Best LinkedIn Content for Growing Your Substack While the interview is broader than just subscriber growth, there are several content clues that translate well for Substack writers. Sam talks about the importance of educational content, useful insights, and save-worthy posts. She also explains that LinkedIn’s current environment favors content with relevant keywords and clear value, rather than relying on old tactics like hashtag stuffing. For Substack creators, this opens up a simple strategy: * Turn a strong Substack idea into a LinkedIn post * Share one key lesson, story, or takeaway * Create curiosity around the bigger conversation * Let your profile and featured section do the work of moving people deeper That does not mean every LinkedIn post needs to be a direct subscriber pitch. In fact, the interview suggests the opposite. Lead with value. Build trust. Create relevance. Then make the next step easy. Comments and Connections Can Grow Your Audience Too One of the most practical reminders from Sam is that growth on LinkedIn does not come only from your own posts. She talks about the value of commenting on the posts of people in your target market and being an active participant on the platform. Thoughtful comments can increase visibility, spark conversations, and help more of the right people discover you. This matters for Substack writers who feel overwhelmed by having to constantly publish more. Sometimes subscriber growth starts with engagement, not output. A smart comment on the right post can lead someone back to your profile. And if your profile clearly points to your Substack, that interaction can become a new reader relationship. Feeling stuck between having a powerful message and not knowing how to consistently market it in a way that feels aligned? Subscribe to the Monetize Your Mission Podcast for grounded, actionable conversations that help you grow your audience, attract aligned clients, and build a business that supports your mission. What This Video Really Delivers This is not a narrow tutorial on subscriber funnels. It is better understood as a strategic conversation about how to use LinkedIn to build the visibility and trust that make subscriber growth more likely. If you watch this interview expecting a rigid formula, that is not quite what it is. If you watch it wanting to understand how LinkedIn can support your Substack ecosystem, help the right people find you, and create a stronger bridge between professional visibility and long-form audience growth, then yes, this conversation delivers. With love & clarity,Jill Hart | The Coach’s Alchemist PS Most coaches and spiritual entrepreneurs are not stuck because they need more content. They’re stuck because no one ever showed them how to turn their message into a movement… and their visibility into actual clients. The ones quietly building freedom-based businesses right now are following a very different roadmap. Inside You World Order, you’ll discover what most creators never connect:✨ The message that attracts aligned clients✨ The structure that turns content into conversations✨ The visibility system that keeps working long after you hit publish✨ And the community that helps you stop spinning your wheels alone This is where clarity turns into momentum.And momentum turns into income, authority, and freedom. If you’ve been feeling like you’re doing “all the things” but still missing the bigger picture… You probably haven’t seen the system yet. 👀 🔥 Begin your journey → You World Order Skool Community [https://skool.com/you-world-order] This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe [https://hartlifecoach.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

21. Mai 2026 - 1 h 7 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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