March Workshop: Launch & Grow a Newsletter to Boost Your Writing Career
Every Writer Needs a Newsletter course introduction
Welcome to WoD101! This Substack is designed to offer one new course to writers every month with a new instructor. It is an experiment in making educational content for writers more accessible. We hope you like it, and invite you to learn more by exploring our 2024 Calendar or signing up as a free or paid subscriber.
Courtney Kocak’s workshop, Launch & Grow a Newsletter to Boost Your Writing Career. begins March 4th and will run for 16 Lessons. If you’re already a paid subscriber, you’re in! If you’re a free subscriber, half of the lessons will be free! If you’re neither, you can fix that right now.
Hello writers!
It's your ol' pal
, your March instructor for Write or Die 101. You may have read my rant earlier this year about how we're living in the newsletter era and why every writer needs a Substack. Soon I’m coming back to hold your hand through starting and/or optimizing your newsletter. And I'm really good at holding hands. ;)What qualifies me for this honor? Well, I have a Substack for indie podcasters called
, which just hit 4K subscribers and has nearly 75K podcast downloads. And I’ve done a ton of research on newsletter best practices and experiments. So next month, I'm going to be your newsletter bestie.Newsletters have big benefits because they give you direct access to subscribers' inboxes and they have a low barrier to entry. They are perfect for authors engaged in the ongoing process of book promotion. We are going to spend the entire month of March working on our newsletters and making sweet sweet Substack magic together.
This course will be broken down into bite-sized chunks that won't even feel like work. In fact, it’s going to be easy. We just need to make a pact to focus on progress, not perfection, and take 15 minutes of messy action in service of our newsletter goals each time a lesson drops.
To supplement the nine lessons, we’ll also be soaking up tips and tricks from established newsletter writers — even some fancy ones like
and #fangirl — to help inform our own strategies.And we will think strategically about this. Following your passions and whims as a writer is a beautiful thing. However, a newsletter can be even more important as a business tool as it is a creative outlet. Of course, both can be true, but my point is that putting on our CEO hats as we do some of these exercises is going to be best for our writing careers.
We'll cover the Five Ws (and one H) of newsletters: who, what, where, when, why, and how. Today, I’m giving you a headstart on WHY.
We’re starting with why because it’s our north star. It will orient us to our mission first and foremost, which will guide us through everything else. The word mission has lofty connotations, but your whys don’t have to be pie in the sky. In fact, it’s better if they’re more grounded and practical.
Here’s how I think about my whys for Podcast Bestie:
I launched Podcast Bestie in November 2021 because I wanted a venue to nerd out about podcasting and share this knowledge with other indie podcasters. I had been making podcasts for almost a decade and working in the podcast industry for several years, so people were regularly hitting me up for advice and I wanted a resource I could give to them. I also started teaching during the pandemic and discovered I loved it, so I thought it would be helpful to build an email list to promote my podcast courses.
My why evolved last year when I took a step back from working in the podcast industry to focus on my own projects. At this stage, Podcast Bestie allows me to continue elevating my craft and stay up to date on the industry despite taking a break. It’s also a great networking tool and relationship builder, which will come in handy when/if I’m back on the job market.
And while Podcast Bestie isn’t directly related to my writing career, the platform-building component is important. It’s one of the brags that I use to hype myself up in book proposals.
I've already stated that every writer needs a newsletter, and I believe that to be true. But what are your specific reasons?
Do you want to use your newsletter to develop content? Maybe as a proving ground for a potential book idea?
Do you want to establish yourself as an expert or thought leader in your field?
Do you want your newsletter to help establish you as a writer on a certain beat? (Perhaps if it's been hard to get freelance bylines on that beat or you want to generate recurring revenue for thriving beat reporting like Jessica DeFino’s The Unpublishable.)
Do you want to make connections with other writers?
Do you want to build anticipation for a book launch?
Do you want to build your writer platform more generally?
Do you also teach or coach in addition to writing and want your newsletter to feed into that part of your business?
✍️ For your preliminary homework, spend some time mulling over these questions and any others that get at the core of your newsletter motivations.
💬 I encourage you to share your brainstorms (and any questions) in the comments. I’ll do my best to respond to each and every one.
We'll reconvene on Monday, March 4th to put our whys to work with our first official lesson: Premise, Purpose, and Market Fit.
In the meantime, if you have an existing newsletter, take a few screenshots to document its current status (recent content, welcome email, subscriber stats, etc.) We are on the precipice of a very productive month, and I would love to see some before-and-afters when we wrap.
Your Newsletter Bestie,
Courtney Kocak
P.S. I think newsletters are at the core of a successful writer platform, but my advice for building a writer platform deserves its own separate conversation. If you want to nerd out with me on that topic, sign up for my workshop coming up on Saturday, March 9th, How to Build a “Platform” for Writers Who Shudder at the Thought. (Yes, it will be recorded!) And as an awesome bonus: Write or Die 101 folks get 10% off workshops — the code is in the welcome email for paid subscribers.