Category: WebsitesCategory: Websites
1. PITCH YOURSELF
Social media isn’t the only way to build an audience – pitch yourself!

Tawny teaches how to do this, too. Check out their class schedule here.
2. ABOUT PAGE COLLABORATIVE WORKSHOP!
◼️ Feb 13th at 2pm EST.
Click here to add your name to the wait list and I’ll send you an invite link when it’s ready to go.Admission will be free, with a “Pay What You Want” option if you’d like to support this work.
3. THINK ABOUT FOLLOWERS VS COMMUNITY
Consider this quote from Kato McNickle, from a recent Escape Pod Zoom call:
“What I’m hearing though is a conflation of audience, followers versus community, because followers aren’t about engagement. Followers are not comments beyond “oh dazzling,” “oh love it or hate it,” right? That’s that follower mentality. But think about whether which format you’re in; are you trying to stoke community? Because I don’t know that social media, when you’re talking about engagement, you’re talking about community, not really followers. Followers don’t owe you anything.”
Don’t lose sight of the people who are already on your list, the people who’ve already signed up and said “I want more of what you’re doing.”
Consider what might happen if you took half the time you spend on getting MORE FOLLOWERS and instead invested that time in the people right in front of you.
4. THINK ABOUT YOUR ARCHIVES
This came up in this week’s Escape Pod Zoom call; what happens to our website when servers crash? Or climate disasters lead to mass outages?
As we’ve seen recently (TikTok?!), platforms come and go. My first music blog is only archived on the Wayback machine going back to 2013 (so everything going back to 2001 is gone).
Print an archive of your work on newsprint.
Make booklets and / or zines.
Make prints of your photos.
Put your music to CDs and cassette.Think of somebody finding a printed artifact of your current project a decade from now while they’re moving. Imagine getting that photo from a friend, with a “look what I found” message. Yeah. It can happen, and it’s great.
I got a great question from Maja Lampa asking about using a stand-alone blogging platform like Pika versus using Substack.

Deciding between Pika (or any stand-alone blogging platform) and Substack depends on what you’re trying to achieve.
Pika gives you more control but no built-in audience, so driving traffic is entirely up to you.
If you want a nice quiet corner on the internet, then Pika is great!
Substack, however, has a built-in network to help readers find your work and makes it super easy to grow an email list, which I think is super important at whatever level you’re at.
Again – it depends on what you’re trying to achieve. I love the built-in network that Substack provides because it makes it super easy for people to subscribe and get my posts in their inbox.
That means if someday I leave Substack, I can export my email list and set up shop somewhere else, and my fans won’t have to find me elsewhere or re-subscribe on another platform.
Spend time setting up a new social media account, and in five years you’ll be right back where you started.
I’ve seen this song and dance before. We’ve learned nothing from the days of Xanga, MySpace, and Facebook. What was the name of the app that’d replace Instagram?
“I’m wondering if another social media network is really the answer we need.”
It’s time to build something that lasts – your own website, a homebase on the internet that becomes the primary source of all the work you put out into the world.
A place where casual fans can turn into bigger fans of your work.
Now, most “build your own website” services make websites that are good enough, but your work deserves so much more.
“We are the creative professionals who base our entire careers on making things look interesting.
Why would we stop with our branding, our collateral material, and – for the love of God – our website?
We are in the world of visual excellence. We should make visual excellence the priority feature of our brand.” Photographer Don Giannatti
- Roman Muradov made a micro-site for his comic, and Diana Pappas & Tom Bland made a site for their photo & video shoot location titled Meadow, both using Cargo.
- Cody Cook-Parrott uses Notion to explain their upcoming classes.
- My interplanetary commuter music project (Hunterthen) needed a website, so I built one using Carrd. MMM is another website builder, but weirder.
- You could upload HTML files to YAY.BOO, made by A Good Enough Newsletter (they make Pika, too, which is a neat little blogging platform).
- I have a WordPress guy, and they set up my blog sethw.xyz in 2018, and I’ve been manually importing photos and posts dating back to 2004. I can introduce you.
You can do whatever you want!
I recently did an email marketing “tune-up” for a record label and got this email soon after:

If you run a small business and want to make a few more bucks every month, you should schedule a time with me to discuss working together.
DON’T LINK TO SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORMS
I will die on this hill – kill all links to places like Spotify and Instagram and Facebook and Twitter – platforms where you can’t reliably reach your own audience.
A higher percentage of your fans will open and read your emails, so link to your website (with Bandcamp or Spotify or YouTube embeds).
START USING SEGMENTS
You can build granular segments with Klaviyo and Flodesk and Mailchimp (like sending to people in a particular zip code or region), but Substack is pretty limited.
Personally, I’d say focus on two segments here – free and paid.
I’m not saying paywall everything, but you can post things on Substack (or your website), and then send an email to just your paid subscribers as a way of making it exclusive. Or maybe it’s an early pre-order link, or to RSVP for an upcoming Zoom call.
From Substack: How do I send an email to one or a select group of subscribers on Substack?
MIND YOUR DESIGN AND LAYOUT
I don’t want to get too deep with this – to each their own, but I feel every email campaign should have your most compelling image at the top. It’s how newspapers, website articles, blog posts, and Instagram work, so it can work for your newsletter.
And please, use your own photos. Stock photos are great for content farms and SEO clickbait articles, but if you’re reading this you’re a smart and creative individual with a phone filled with 100 photos you took last week. Use one of those.
STOP SENDING TRAFFIC TO YOUTUBE
I will die on this hill.
If you’re emailing your fans to let them know about your new video, embed it on your own site and link to it there.
Embed it on the product page of the thing you’re selling.
Embed it on the sign-up page for the course you’re booking.
Embed it on the page of tour dates where people can buy tickets.
When you send people to YouTube, you’re dropping them off in the middle of the busy food court at the mall, and expecting them to not get distracted by all the recommended videos and assorted noise of the YouTube platform.
▪️ Google blows. Give Fastmail a try (affiliate link)
I’m officially in “Not My Business” Season, for which I owe a debt of thanks to Olivia Rafferty for describing how I’ve been feeling most of this year.

This isn’t just for Substack authors- it’s for every creative person.
Social media made us believe we must become graphic designers, video editors, sound engineers, interview hosts, SEO experts, copywriters, and about a dozen other things in addition to the thing we do.
Experts will have you believe that if you tweak your About page a little bit more, focus on SEO, or make better thumbnails, then success is just around the corner!
Not my business.
Sure, there are some “best practices,” but the bar is low (ahem, a website and an email list). We’re not here to chase lowest common denominator tactics, we’re here to shift culture and change the world, right?
- Imagine spending more time on things that rejuvenate your soul instead of cosplaying as an overworked social media manager.
- Instead of learning how to navigate all the new features that Meta has set up on Instagram, imagine becoming a better musician, photographer, or artist.
- Spend most of our non-day job hours honing our craft rather than becoming part-time “content creators” while expecting full-time results.
- There’s a screen time app, but where’s the guitar time app, or painting time app? Imagine if we tracked our creative practice and saw that we spent three hours a day writing. We’d celebrate that, wouldn’t we?

We don’t need more subscribers; we need more heartbreak, laughter, and / or deep metaphysical talks about the afterlife in cemeteries on rainy evenings.
That’s the business I want.
Let’s stop worrying about growing our audience. Open your contacts app and reconnect with the people who came into your life but you stopped talking to because you felt just posting on social media was enough.
Get in the business of building connections instead of shouting.
We’re talking about art here, people. We’re not selling USB cables or homeowner insurance, we’re channeling the divine, spending time in the fog, smelling the flowers, jumping in puddles, and walking around museums.
That’s our business.

I help creative people quit social media, promote their work in sustainable ways, and rethink how a website and newsletter can work together. Find out more here. 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️
Join us — start a 30 day membership and hop on our next Zoom call meeting!
Email me: seth@socialmediaescape.club
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