Why am I subscribed to Penelope’s Substack?

I had email FOMO. I could be making a million dollars a year from my subscriber list! I read email marketing advice like it was porn — people say it can happen but I don’t think it really does happen.

Finally I capitulated and started collecting data. The best insight from that data set is how much time a person spends working on projects that run contrary to their personality type. Lots of work is not tiring, but lots of work outside of our sweet spot is exhausting. And, by the way, paying attention to all the little pieces of data is completely not my strength.

So, like Tom Sawyer painting a fence, I told Z if he learned how to use CRM software — specifically, mine — he’d always be able to get a job. “Customer relationship marketing!” I told him.

 “You mean instagram?” That’s what he said. I should have known right then to just forget email forever. But you know that theory about sunk costs? When it comes to email marketing I’m the Titanic.

After two days of learning the ins and outs of Hubspot, Z said no one should have to do this for a living: “This is like Death of a Salesman!”

And just like that, my Hubspot helper quit. So I decided I’d learn the Hubspot intricacies myself. What I learned is that everything I was paying for were tools to form a relationship with potential customers, but I already know the people on my list. Many of you have been receiving my blog posts for 15 years. I’ve exchanged personal emails with about 25,000 of you.

Hubspot recommended that I delete unengaged customers. But I realized that many people receive an email from me and don’t open it because they go to my blog to read and see the comments. I only realized this after trying to figure out why Hubspot systematically deleted the commenters I’m most familiar with. 

Luckily, you are vocal if you stop receiving emails: 

I don’t know why I never receive your posts in my email anymore, but I woke up in the night wondering if you’d died and that was the reason you hadn’t posted. 

So I’m relieved that you’re alive and I’ll subscribe again to see if that works, otherwise I would never have known that you didn’t have cancer.

I spent two months testing every unengaged email in gmail. And I got the nicest emails back from you – almost everyone asked to stay on the list. So I looked around for a way to send my blog posts without having to pay $500 a month.  

I thought this would be a good use for my Patreon. But Patreon wouldn’t let me import my list. Then I thought of Substack. I googled, “Substack is evil” to see if there was anything I should know. A top result was a post from Nick Wohlny who said Substack is terrible because you have to have a huge list in order for it to work.

SOLD!

So I’m going to use Substack because it let me upload 40,000 contacts. You can still read on my blog — that won’t change. Unless you want it to, and then you can read on Substack. You’re subscribed! Either way, I hope you’ll upgrade to a paid subscription. That will allow me to focus more on writing, which will be more fun — for all of us.

 

4 replies
    • Penelope
      Penelope says:

      Yeah, I saw that. My content is staying on my blog though, so I don’t think it’ll be a problem for me. It’s not like Substack controls my brand. At least I think this is right… I might be wrong…We’ll see.

      Penelope

      Reply
  1. jon h
    jon h says:

    The CNN piece just skims the surface of the substack controversy (social-versey? viraldispute? there ought ot be a word). Those guys—and they ARE guys—are tone deaf a******s (who had never been targets of hate, until their tonedeafness) who imagine themselves as Zuckerberg. And/but there are new services cropping up without their baggage (Beehiv, Buttondown, etc) because the tech is not that complex.

    BUT the comments section of a Substack I’m on (Anne Helen Peterson) is the closest thing I’ve found to an online community feeling—which was totally, utterly addictive back in the day (the 90s, on a BBS called Echo). The addictiveness was a problem; why I never got on facebook.

    Reply
    • Penelope
      Penelope says:

      I’m trying to figure out community. Now that my kids are grown up it’s more important to me to have it. I can’t tell if writing more will do that or I need to write in a different place, I’m not sure. But I know that people who read this blog have a shared knowledge — from reading for so long. Even if we don’t always have a shared outlook.

      Penelope

      Reply

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