The Monetize Your Mission Podcast
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]
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