Category: Email MarketingCategory: Email Marketing
Hey, so it’s been 500 days since I launched HEAVY METAL EMAIL, and here’s some things I learned along the way about running a very niche email newsletter.
➡️ I got more sign ups from Substack than all of the social media networks put together. Lots of people subscribe to various newsletters on Substack, which makes it easy for them to subscribe.
➡️ I mostly stopped promoting HEAVY METAL EMAIL on social media months ago, and stopped the LINKINBIO dance.
Now I use the extra time to write better newsletters – take care of the people in front of you, and stop chasing MORE subscribers / fans.
Hone you craft, learn new skills, build better.
➡️ One of my most popular posts was my interview with Matt DeBenedictis, Manager of Compliance at Mailchimp.
Think of all the different people you could collaborate with in your orbit.
Not just because they’ll share it with all their social followers (and reach like 5% of their audience, bah!) – but because you’re making something awesome together, and that good energy flows in places that aren’t controlled by algorithms.

I hit 250 subscribers around December 24th, 2022 (and wrote about it here), so in the last 74 days I grew HEAVY METAL EMAIL by 58 subscribers, mostly without social media.
I get it – the allure of social media is real. But here in 2023 we’re all spending multiple hours a day on these platforms already.
What’s next? More hours?
That’s the only thing these platforms are interested in – keeping you hooked on what they offer so they can mine your data and show you more ads.
I’ve been saying it for years – it will never get easier to reach your fans on social media. It was hard last year, it’ll be harder this year. Best of luck in 2024.
Get a website, build an email list, and develop a real connection with your fans.
I was sick last week, so it’s taking me a minute to get back into the swing of things around here.
From ‘Leaving Social Media?’ by Lachrista Greco:
“My lit agent advises I keep the account active and I understand why. But I also know there was a time before social media. There was a time when none of us relied on this shit. There was a time before the tornado of “content creation” and “influencers” and “doomscrolling.”
Yes, “there was a time when none of us relied on this shit.”
I started my first music blog in 2001, five years before Twitter showed up (it was called Twttr back then).
Dillinger Escape Plan didn’t go viral on a social media platform, they just put on such an insane show that people had to talk about them. The old-school viral, I guess.
Music blogs, record stores, local venues, groups of friends, email lists – those things worked, and they still do.
It’s getting harder to say the same about social media.
Social media accounts are easy to make, which then makes it easy to impersonate official accounts and rip people off.
Big time jerks are pretending to work for Rolling Stone and taking money from artists in exchange for coverage.

We know this not just because someone from Rolling Stone Tweeted about it (could that be a fake account maybe?!?), but because it’s on the Rolling Stone website. And apparently it’s happening to Billboard reporters, too.
Metallica had to issue a statement back in December because scammers were streaming on, “fake YouTube channels posing to be ours and all pointing to websites that we do not run. Please remember — all of our official social media channels are verified.”
Then this weekend Avenged Sevenfold announced some festival appearance cancellations:

Metal Injection published it as a news piece, which makes sense, since the news came from the band’s official social media accounts.
But oops – it wasn’t true, at least according to the two festivals involved.

Bummer for the Welcome To Rockville and Sonic Temple social media teams to have to handle something like this on a Sunday afternoon, but hey – social media sure keeps you on your toes, right?
The posts on the A7x social media platforms have been removed, but as of writing this post (Feb 27, 2023 around 11am ET) no official explanation has been posted either on the band’s social media nor their official site.
Be sure to review all online security procedures, friends. And make sure you have an official website where you can publish announcements when shit like this happens, so your fans aren’t left in the dark!
I don’t care what sort of team you got, what gear you roll onto stage, or who took your band photo – you still gotta write a good song.
Same goes for this email marketing thing – your 10,000 subscribers don’t count for much when no one is opening them.
Write better songs.
Send better emails.Check your social media feeds – what gets more likes? The most comments?
Make a social media post the start of your next email, like Church Road Records did back in December:

Make sure your writing and imagery are a reflection of your creative spirit:
We can see this in the heavy metal world in terms of sameness – same looking websites and social media feeds.
For a genre with such imaginative artwork, tour posters, and shirt designs, we can be pretty bland when it comes to actually promoting these things in creative ways.
Putting it all together into an email shouldn’t be difficult, as you’ve got an archive of material to work with, content you posted on social media over the years.
Remember, not everyone who follows you on social media will see every post. Hell, people who subscribe to your email newsletter won’t open every email, either.
Re-purposing the content you’ve already posted means less time thinking about your next email newsletter, and gives you a jump on the creative process.
Work on writing great songs, and turn your best social media content into an email newsletter that people look forward to and want to open.
Are (email newsletters) a temporary solution? An early bird gets the worm type scenario?
If I subscribed to an email list for every band that I would want to see on tour / buy a record from, then I would be getting TOO MANY NEWSLETTERS.
It’s a full time job to keep up with all the new songs, videos, and tour announcements from bands everyday. I ran Noisecreep for a few years, I know.
There was too much in 2009, there’s too much today. It’s impossible to keep up.
You also got newsletters from TV streaming services, clothing stores, Spotify, and Bandcamp when a band uploads a patch or sticker.
But you still announce your upcoming tour, even when Guns N’ Roses announces a bigger tour.
You still announce your tour, even though Furnace Fest just announced their line-up and everyone will be talking about it today.
When we post something on IG, send a press release, or upload to a DPS or YouTube, it’s lost in the shuffle the second it’s live.
So write a good subject line for your next email, use a good photo, and send it out.
And though I can’t promise anything, I can promise this; your first newsletter is gonna suck.
Garbage.
Just like the first song you ever wrote, the first show you ever played, the first tour you ever booked.
But the second one is slightly better, and the 10th one is okay, and by the 100th you’re a fucking pro.
So start today, while you can still reach some of your fans on social media, and tell them to sign up for your email list.
Our minds are twisted because we’re all “social media pros,” all because we’ve been on these platforms like Twitter since 2009. That’s 14 years (I’m one of the first 3000 people to sign up back in 2006).
But when Twitter goes away (and someday it will), kiss all those followers goodbye. They’re gone.
And if you’d been running an email newsletter for 14 years, and “only” signed up 1,000 people a year, you’d be able to reach 14,000 people the day Twitter goes offline.
I started my “Social Media Escape Plan” with this newsletter back in 2021.
I write about the nerdiest, most niche thing ever, but today I’ve got over 300 subscribers. If Twitter disappears tomorrow, I can still reach those 300 wonderful readers.
Social media is sexy, absolutely, but email is the long game.

You’re tired of social media, but wondering if there’s life after the newsfeed. That’s exactly what we figure out here – together. 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️
→ See our upcoming Zoom schedule
Say hello. Ask about working together. Tell me how you’re doing: seth@socialmediaescape.club
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