How to Grow Your Substack Subscribers (Even As New Writer)

✦ Free Course:
How To Grow Your Audience With Substack

So you want to grow your Substack audience?

98% of Substack writers struggle because no one knows they exist.

Harsh? Yeppo.

But as a new writer, you’re fighting for attention in an ocean full of voices. Hitting ‘publish’ and waiting for readers to roll in doesn’t work anymore.

Today, I have over 6,000 readers on the platform.

But a few years back, I had no audience. Zero.

And like you:

  • I started at rock bottom
  • I was publishing to the void
  • I had no one who give a damn about my “great content”

Substack is an incredible place to start writing online this year.

Here’s how to grow your Substack, even if you’re starting from zero.

1. Find your N-word

99% of you passion-writers don’t want to hear this.

And that’s why most of you fail.

The reason? You have no niche. Many writing gurus tell you to be niche-less. But that’s a stupid lie. THEY ALL HAD A NICHE when they started out and only expanded to generic mumbo-jumbo after having gathered tens of thousands of readers.

Don’t get fooled. Don’t be a sheep.

Writing without having a niche is the perfect recipe to slow reader growth.

If you’re trying to be everything to everyone, you’re nothing to no one.

Do you know how I decide whether or not I subscribe to a newsletter?

I usually discover new writers on Substack, either by Notes or in the comment section of articles.

If I like the content, I hover over their name. I look at their bio. If I like the bio, I check out the latest posts. And if the latest post actually doesn’t speak to me, then I’m out.

I bet most people do the same.

We live in a three-second attention world. So you’ve got to hypnotize your readers quickly. You can’t do that when you’re trying to stretch yourself in every direction like a ballerina.

People don’t subscribe to newsletters. They subscribe to solutions to their problems.

So if you want to grow your Substack audience… You need to give them a real reason to smash that subscribe button.

Riches are in the niches. And without one, you’re broke with glitches.

2. Post Substack notes (or stay invisible forever)

Most people think that Substack is still like in 2017.

Post an article, and that’s it.

Substack rolled out notes back in April 2023. It’s like X/Twitter minus the s*x bots and the stupid character limit.

When I first discovered Notes, I thought they were just another social media time-suck.

Boy, was I wrong.

Notes are Substack’s built-in discovery engine. They’re how hungry readers find new writers to follow. And they’re how you build an audience before you’ve even hit ‘publish’ on your first full post.

I started posting notes daily. Just quick thoughts, insights, observations, or quotes from my articles.

I went from 0 subs a day to 3. From 3 to 10. From 10 to 21+.

You can write a Note in 5 minutes (or less) and get it out there.

Take a look at this simple Note (that generated 106 new subscribers to my publication):

Substack notes to grow audience subscribers

116 characters. 20 words. 106 freakin’ subscribers.

Start posting Notes. Today.

The Substack algorithm will reward you with new email subscribers every day.

3. Give your writing gremlin the finger

I’m a die-hard introvert.

If you’d met me on the street and said “Hi,” I’d turn red like a tomato.

That’s one of the reasons why I love the internet. I can sit alone in my briefs for hours and still be kinda sociable.

And that’s exactly how you should treat Substack. It’s a place to interact with others.

If you’re not interacting on Substack, you’re shooting yourself in the foot.

I see it all the time. Writers publish their posts, maybe throw out a few Notes, and then… crickets. They sit back and wait for the subscribers to roll in.

But that’s not how this works. That’s not how any of this works.

So don’t just post stuff:

  • Interact with other people’s notes.
  • Reply to other writers’ articles.

This doesn’t have to eat up all your day. You can simply dedicate 15 to 30 minutes each day and interact.

Be conscious about it. Don’t treat it like an afterthought.

But please, don’t write stupid comments. You can’t just drop “Great post!” and expect results. Your interactions need to continue the conversations. Add your own 2 cents to it.

Good comments means more exposure.

Interaction = Growth.

4. The forgotten blog post strategy

When I first started blogging in 2011, everyone was talking about “guest posts.”

In short, you write a post for someone else’s blog/newsletter.

You might be thinking, “Matt, why the hell would I write for someone else’s newsletter when I’m trying to grow my own?”

I get it.

But guest posting on other Substacks is like injecting your subscriber count with a vitamin IV.

Why?

Because you’re tapping into an already engaged audience. You’re borrowing someone else’s credibility and getting to speak in front of their audience.

But you can’t half-ass it.

Your guest post needs to be your best work. It needs to be so good that readers can’t help but click through to your Substack.

I remember spending a whole weekend crafting a guest post for Write with AI – a Substack pub with over 20k subs.

As a result, I got hundreds of new subscribers out of it:

Grow substack subscribers with guest posting

After writing two guest posts, we also launched a course together.

That’s even more free exposure for your Substack publication.

I’m not promising you’ll get the same results.

But I am promising that if you do this right, you’ll see your subscriber count go up.

5. Get endorsed

“Do you want fries with that?”

That’s how McDonald’s upsells you on a menu when you just came for a burger.

And this strategy also exists on Substack. It’s called recommendations. You can recommend other Substack publications. And they can recommend you in return (if they aren’t b-holes).

I got over 1,639 new Substack subscribers with recommendations alone:

grow audience substack recommendations

Every time a new subscriber joins, they get prompted asking them if they want more fries with that.

It’s like a secret backdoor to an audience you haven’t tapped yet.

Your recommendations need to be strategic. They need to be relevant to your niche. They need to provide value to your existing subscribers.

I only recommend Substacks that I genuinely read and enjoy. Ones that complement my content without directly competing with it.

It’s a fine line to walk, but it’s worth it.

Most writers are too scared to recommend others. They think they’re sending their audience away. They don’t realize that by curating great content for their readers, they’re actually building trust and authority.

It’s not just about what you write. It’s about who you know – and who knows you.

Your network = Your net worth.

6. Get new subs on autopilot

Most people hate SEO.

It takes MONTHS to get to 3 consistent visitors a day. I get it.

But I’ve been using SEO for a decade to drive traffic to my websites and email lists. So you might throw tomatoes at me, saying I’m biased.

But what I love about SEO is that it brings in subscribers, even though you don’t publish.

When you’re just getting started on your blog, nobody will ever visit it simply because you don’t have any SEO authority. You start with a brand-new, virgin blog.

Substack has a domain authority of 92:

grow audience substack with SEO

For those of you who don’t speak SEO, that’s like having a VIP ticket to the top of Google’s search results.

So here’s an easy way to get started:

Think about all the potential keywords your target audience might search for. Then, write cohesive blog posts around it.

Use Substack’s built-in features to optimize your:

  • Article outline using proper H1/H2/H3
  • Meta descriptions
  • ALT descriptions
  • Titles

If you want more info on that, check out my free SEO course.

7. The bonus tip (that will piss off most of you $8 subscription fanboys)

Most of you writers are too impatient to start making money.

Yeah, I know. You’re itching to slap a paywall on that newsletter and watch the dollars roll in.

But you’ll get 100x more leverage by keeping things free.

When I started my Substack, I was tempted to go paid right away. Everyone’s pounding their chest on my newsfeed about their paid subscriber count.

I’m not new to this.

After all, I’ve been selling online courses for 10 years.

Charging for content is my bread and butter.

But resist the urge. First, paid subscriptions are a terrible business model. Second, free content spreads. Paid content doesn’t.

When your stuff is free, people share it. They forward it to friends. They post it on social media. Each share is a chance to reach new subscribers.

But the moment you put your best stuff behind a paywall, you kill that momentum. You’re basically saying, “Hey, please don’t share this.”

Now, I’m not saying never charge. In fact, I recommend charging from day 1.

But not stupid $9 PDFs or substack subscriptions. That’s not worth your time.

Instead, create an online course or offer personalized coaching.

Want more cheat codes to grow on Substack?

Then subscribe to my free email course and take the fastlane:

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Grow Your Audience On Substack
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