Ethan Brooks Profile picture
Apr 29, 2021 24 tweets 10 min read Read on X
Wow... You people are way too nice!

I tried to share a thread today, and didn't realize it got cut off 2 tweets in.

To everyone nice enough to like it anyways, here's the FULL scoop on the newsletter engine

(a model we developed to explain the newsletter business) 🧵...
This is the Newsletter Engine. It shows how money/attention flow through a newsletter business.

What's really cool - when you understand how it works, you can use it to deconstruct any newsletter biz, diagnose problems, and find new opportunities.

Let's break it down.
There are 3 levels to the Newsletter Engine, starting from the foundation and building upward.

The levels are:
1️⃣ Product - What you make
2️⃣ Monetization - How it makes money
3️⃣ Growth - How you get new readers
Product is the foundation of any newsletter. It's made up of 3 components:

1️⃣ Content - your editorial strategy
2️⃣ Tech - tools that power your company
3️⃣ Community - how you craft a sense of belonging among readers

Let's take a closer look at each...
Content: The structure of your email, as well as its voice and worldview.

When people talk about their favorite newsletter, most often, they talk about how it covers a topic, not what it covers.

You can write about anything as long as you have a voice that's unique.
Tech: ESP gets all the attention, but there are 5 key parts to a newsletter company's tech stack:

-Website
-Registration Software
-Payment Processor
-Email Service Provider
-Analytics

Together, these facilitate the key interactions you have with readers or ad clients.
Community: The sense of belonging you're able to create among readers.

This is what keeps people around.
These 3 -- content, tech, and community -- touch every part of your newsletter business.

They're core to who you are, and key to your success.

You can never grow or monetize your way out of a product problem.
Moving up, you have the monetization layer. There are 3 basic ways to make money from a newsletter:

-Free Subscriptions (monetized via ads)
-Low Price Subscriptions
-High Price Subscriptions

A newsletter business can have 1 or more of each.
The idea is that you (ultimately) build all 3. They feed into each other.

Your free newsletter drives sales for the low-priced subscription which in turn drives sales for the high-priced subscription.

I did a longer thread on how these work here:
At the very top, you have growth funnels drawing new readers in. There are 3 main levers for growth:

1️⃣ Time (e.g. social media & other free tactics)
2️⃣ Money (e.g. ads and influencers)
3️⃣ Audience (e.g. referral programs)
All together, it works like this:

1️⃣ A reader enters via your growth funnel.
2️⃣ Their attention is turned into money w/ your monetization strategy.
3️⃣ That money is re-invested in growth & product.
4️⃣ The cycle continues.

Attention in >> Money out >> Reinvest >>Rinse Repeat
So, how do we use this?

Well, one cool thing about the Newsletter Engine is that it offers a framework you can use to deconstruct and learn from any newsletter business.

Say we want to learn from Morning Brew...
We start with the product layer, and know we need to break down 3 things:

-Their content/editorial strategy
-The technology they use
-Their community strategy
Look at content/voice, and ask yourself:

1) What, specifically, do they offer? (e.g. How many newsletters? Published how often? etc...)

2) What editorial rules do they live by (e.g. describe their voice, use of graphics, etc...)

You'll learn a lot, and start seeing white space
Later, you look at tech.

You can unearth a lot about a newsletter's tech stack by plugging their URL into builtwith.com

@denk_tweets has also written some interesting pieces on the tech powering MB:

medium.com/the-mission/th…
We round product out by examining community.

The Brew does some interesting things to create a sense of belonging.

For instance, they use the ☕ emoji on Twitter as a calling card. That's an interesting tactic.
So basically, the structure of the newsletter engine gives us a template we can use for research.

When you know what you're looking for, you can spend more time learning rather than wandering.
Another example... Say we want to learn lessons on monetization from NYT.

The Newsletter Engine shows us exactly what to look for:

We want to know how they're using free, low-price, and high-price subscriptions to make money.
Reading their annual reports, we find that low-price subscriptions are of increasing importance.

They use dozens of free newsletters to promote a few paid subscriptions.

In fact, subscription revenue has begun to out-earn ad revenue.
As for growth, those same annual reports are a goldmine.

You can also learn a lot about how a website gets traffic by dropping their URL into similarweb.com
And if you want to know what's working for them in paid ads, look at Facebook's Ad Library, and sort by the longest-running ads.

Then click through to study their landing pages. Go through their funnel. Pick it apart.

facebook.com/ads/library/
So that's it.

The Newsletter Engine gives you a framework for understanding how the business works, deconstructing other businesses, and even finding white space in the industry.
If this was helpful, go ahead and share it with someone who needs it.

We developed this model over 6+ months of dedicated research. I'll be sharing a lot more from our findings in the coming weeks.

DM if you have questions or want me on your podcast too. Happy to share more!

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More from @damn_ethan

Jun 14, 2023
Thinking a lot about email capture these days. Specifically, how to optimize a blog to convert well.

Last week, I spent a few hours going through some major newsletter sites.

Here are 5 common e-cap form placements I noticed between them:
1. Above The Fold (with stories below)

This seems like a new trend in the industry. Used by The Hustle, Brew, The Peak, Chartr, and others. Basically ecap right above the story archive.

Interesting bc you'd think stories would decrease conversion.

Anyone seen data on these?
2. In The Footer

This one's simple - email signup at the very bottom of the website.

We have one at Hampton, and so far it converts at like 0.4%. Much lower than our other ecaps, but not optimized yet. I bet it goes up

Here are examples from The Hustle, 1440, and Chartr Image
Read 10 tweets
Jun 28, 2022
Building a newsletter?

Here's a new visual model I've been tinkering with.

I call it "The Bullseye Model" and if you understand it, you'll understand how newsletters make money, design new products, and think about audience.

Let me break it down for you...👇
First, a reminder... There are 3 ways newsletters make money:

1) Free newsletters (monetized via ads)
2) Low-price ("front-end") subscriptions
3) High-price ("back-end") subscriptions

Used together, they create an engine that turns attention into cash

Each segment of the bullseye model represents one of these 3 monetization strategies.
Read 10 tweets
Jun 27, 2022
Once you know how newsletters make money, you can transfer the model to other domains.

For example... Travel influencers

This is Jack Morris. He's got 2m+ followers on Insta. No huge email list, but his biz still thrives. Let me show you how 👇 Image
First, a quick reminder: There are 3 main ways to monetize a newsletter biz

1) Free Lists (monetized via ads)
2) Low Price Subscriptions
3) High Price Subscriptions

Together, we call these the newsletter engine. They turn attention into cash.

Your free list will always be your biggest. You use it to:

1) Stay in touch with your audience,
2) Make money via ads, and...
3) Sell your paid stuff

Jack's Insta serves a similar purpose.
Read 12 tweets
Mar 26, 2022
How to Sell Paid Newsletters:

Below is a near-universal model for selling paid newsletters.

At first glance, it seems complex. But you can break it into 3 key parts:

✉️ Email Capture
💧 Drip Campaigns
💰 Conversion

Let me show you how this works...
✉️ Email Capture

The first goal with any newsletter biz is simple: Get the email address.

Nothing else matters. Getting the email allows you to build a relationship with (and market to) readers.

The best media companies are merciless about getting email addresses.
For example, when you land on @theinformation you have 2 options:

1️⃣ Sign up
2️⃣ Sign in
Read 15 tweets
Jan 18, 2022
I've spent the last 2 years writing for a multi-million dollar paid newsletter.

Also interviewed founders/operators of several more.

They're tricky to pull off.

Here's an inside look at:
🤷 Why build one
💰 How to price
🗓️ When to launch
Etc...
🤷 Why build a paid newsletter?

Well, as a quick reminder, it's not JUST to make money. You don't need a paid newsletter for that.

🤷 The reasons to build a paid newsletter are:

1️⃣ It diversifies your revenue -- protecting you from ups and downs in the ad market.

2️⃣ It grows the CLTV of your readers, allowing you to spend more on growth/product.

3️⃣ It offers RECURRING revenue.

That last one is key...👇
Read 17 tweets
Jan 3, 2022
Starting or growing a newsletter in 2022?

Here are 20+ threads to help. More on the way too, so be sure to follow along 😉

2/ Executive Summary: The Newsletter Industry in 10 Minutes Or Less

While this version is a little dated (I'll be updating soon) a lot of the principles are timeless.

Still a great place to start

3/ The Business Model

We call this "The Newsletter Engine" -- here's how it works (huge thank-you to @jaltucher for helping us understand the mechanics here)

Read 21 tweets

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