Why Substack Belongs at the Top of Your List Right Now
I’ve talked to a lot of writers who scroll past Substack every time someone brings it up. They’re already managing Instagram, TikTok, maybe YouTube. Another platform feels like more weight.
I get it. But I want to share what changed my mind, and why I keep coming back to this one.
You Actually Own What You Build
Every platform you’re on right now, the followers belong to the platform. TikTok, Instagram, YouTube. They can ban your account, change the algorithm, or shut down tomorrow. Your audience disappears with them.
On Substack, every subscriber hands you their email address. That list is yours. You can take it anywhere. Nobody can touch it.
That’s not a small thing. I’ve spent years watching creators pour everything into platforms they don’t own. Substack is the first place I’ve felt like I’m building something that actually belongs to me.
It’s Not Just for Writers
This is the part people get wrong most often. If you hear “newsletter platform” and think “not for me,” stay with me for a second.
Podcasters can host their show directly on Substack. Video creators can embed their content there. Coaches, analysts, journalists, people documenting their lives for their kids. It works for all of them.
Substack also has native integration with YouTube and LinkedIn. Your content from those platforms can live there too. It’s becoming a real hub for multimedia work, and most people still haven’t figured that out.
Free vs. Paid and Why Annual Matters
You set the rules on Substack. Free content builds your list. Paid content builds your income. Some writers keep their newsletter free and put their podcast behind a paywall. Some flip it. It’s your call.
Monthly subscriptions get a lot of the attention, at $5, $10, $20 a month. But I’d encourage you to think about annual recurring revenue instead.
Here’s a real example. If your monthly rate is $20, and you offer annual access at $45 or $50 total, that’s a deal that’s hard to pass up. Twelve months for less than three months at full price. People take that offer.
Stacking value matters too. We give our paid members 555 notes templates from The Creator’s Vault, plus a free entry into The Draftys, our sports writing awards. When someone looks at what they get, the price stops feeling like a decision.
Notes Are Where Growth Actually Happens
This is the part of Substack most people underestimate.
Notes is the built-in social feed. Short posts, reactions, ideas. It runs on its own algorithm and it’s how new readers find you. Not through your newsletter. Through notes.
Restacking is a huge part of this. When you restack someone else’s note, you’re sending their work to your audience. When they restack yours, their readers see your name. That’s real growth and it costs nothing.
The Money Isn’t Based on Views
This one matters more than people realize.
On YouTube and TikTok, a bad month means a bad check. Your income moves with your view count. On Substack, your income moves with your subscriber count. Those are very different things.
A hundred paying subscribers at $10 a month is $1,000 every single month, whether you went viral or not.
Brands are also starting to take Substack seriously. PR agencies are actively looking for newsletter-specific campaigns right now. There aren’t many engaged Substack creators yet. That gap is your opening. A small, loyal list can bring in real sponsorship money, and engaged subscribers are worth more to a brand than passive social media followers.
The Timing Is Still Right
The best time to start was probably two years ago. The second-best time is right now.
Most niches on Substack still have low competition. The people following you on other platforms are already looking for a reason to migrate. They want something more personal, more direct, less noisy.
The community energy on Substack is also different from most platforms. People actually support each other. Writers recommend each other’s publications. Lists grow together. I’ve never seen anything quite like it, and I’ve been in this space for a while.
What This Means for You
Pick one topic. Set up your profile. Write your first post and make it free. Show up at least once a week. That’s it to start.
The first post doesn’t have to be great. It just has to exist.
Every week you wait is a week someone else in your niche gets further down the road. That’s not meant to scare you. It’s just true.
Start small. Stay consistent. Build the thing you actually own.
-Robbin Marx
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