• Published On: July 21, 2025Categories: Email Marketing, Technology

    Be careful if you’re sending important information in the custom header or footer of your Substack newsletters. If you’re sending Zoom information or Luma invites or other special links to paid subscribers and they’re reading your newsletter in the Substack App, they won’t see it.

    This is troubling, as Substack just recently said this:

    We’re doubling down on the Substack app, which is designed to help audiences reclaim their attention and connect with the creators they care about.

    Get everyone to subscribe to multiple publications, then users have messy inboxes. The cure? Just use the Substack App!

    Then, when a publisher leaves Substack and sends a newsletter via a new service, the email will show up a users inbox again – this can be jarring!

    “Wait, I thought I was getting all my newsletters in the Substack app?!?!”

    So now it’s almost like people won’t be subscribed to a newsletter, they’ll be subscribed to a Substack.

    This seems like a slippery slope.

  • Published On: July 18, 2025Categories: Interview, Marketing, Work

    I first saw Kareem Rahma doing Keep the Meter Runnin on Instagram. Then Subway Takes a bit later. Absolutely fascinating talk about his journey, and just how much work and effort goes into putting these sorts of projects together.

    I love this part so much:

    I had bet on myself so many times that I accumulated so much junk that was useful. Junk knowledge, junk information, junk intangibles. Like, that’s a lot of stuff too—the intangibles. Like, saying “100% agree” or “100% disagree” was not a part of the plan. It’s just what came out of me.

    The biggest hook in the show wasn’t planned, it just happened. But it “just happened” because of the many years of accumulated “junk.” It’s easy to think of things that didn’t quiet make it as failures, but maybe it’s best to reframe those as “junk knowledge!”

    (more…)
  • Published On: July 17, 2025Categories: Community, Life, Technology

    On today’s Escape Pod Zoom Call we got talking about experiences with magazines when we were younger:

    • One story was about a computer magazine with a program written by a young Bill Gates.
    • Another was about buying magazines (plural) with a baggie full of change.

    We don’t just talk about the XYZ’s of quitting social media, but about getting back to the core life experiences that made shit cool before techbro platforms flattened culture and gamified everything.

  • Published On: July 16, 2025Categories: Interview

    I had a great chat with Brie-Anna Willey of Business for Nerds today, where we agreed that it’s okay to not be good at social media, that maybe we should make our websites more like IKEA instead of a grocery store, how your old work is new to someone, and lots more.

  • Published On: July 15, 2025Categories: Community, Life, Marketing, Work, Writing

    My childhood included a home foreclosure and a family split because of it. Calling my parents in their later years meant talking into an answering machine, “hey guys, it’s me, Seth” and then my dad (usually) picking up the phone. “We’re here, we’re here, yes, hello!?”

    They screened their calls to avoid debt collectors.

    Somehow my sister and I have avoided any major financial disasters, so long as you don’t count credit card debts that come and go every few years.

    All that so say, I’ve got some shame around money and (of course) taxes.

    I had a phone call with a good friend and we laughed about a tax situation I’m currently facing (don’t worry, it’s fine). We shared our collective money horror stories and I felt better afterwards. Shame crumbles under the weight of laughter.

    (more…)
  • Published On: July 14, 2025Categories: Interview, Marketing, Social Media

    Here’s a bit from my interview with Rusty Pilgrim:

    Q. I have to be honest —my opinion of marketing is pretty close to that old Bill Hicks joke where he says, “Are there any marketing people here? You? Great. Kill yourself. Seriously —kill yourself.” That’s more or less how I’ve always felt.

    But your approach is completely different. In fact, it’s so different that I wouldn’t even call it marketing. Was there a specific moment or event that led you to take this path?

    A. Lots of Seth Godin books, starting with Purple Cow. Make something remarkable, and people will make remarks. It five people like it, maybe they tell five more. If they don’t, start again. Either re-work everything, or play to the crowd, or double down and find the right five people who might enjoy what you’re doing.

    Not everyone is going to love what we do, and that’s okay. Even the most famous people on the internet are complete unknowns to most of the world. So to me it’s all about making a thing that you can make, making friends, having fun, building community. If that leads to paying some bills, great. If not, at least you’ve enriched the lives of those around you.

  • Published On: July 13, 2025Categories: Marketing, Work

    Michael Gilbride talks about spending big bucks in hopes of a big return. Most of the time we call this gambling!

    “Instead of spending a sh**load of money on a music video and praying it goes viral, what could we do that would guarantee her music gets in front of her target audience?”

    The artist had a song about body dysmorphia. Rather than making a music video and hoping her target audience would see it, she ended up booking a performance at an outpatient center for eating disorders.

    In doing this, she’ll perform in front of an audience more likely to appreciate her message. That’s the guarantee, the possibility of making one fan.

    Spending thousands on a music video may lead to the same outcome, sure, but performing in one space for a few people is a safer bet.

  • Published On: July 12, 2025Categories: Life, Social Media

    From What People Deserve by Sky Fusco:

    “You can’t get enough of a thing you don’t need, and I wonder: Maybe you also can’t get enough of a thing that never ends. It’s like these apps are the cockroach of addictions. They just won’t die, and they’re designed that way.”

    The scroll never ends. You can never catch up. Everything optimized to keep you engaged.

    Sky mentions how social media isn’t like other vices, since you need to leave the house to go buy alcohol or drugs. Consuming enough shuts things down – whether temporarily or by death.

    That’s the sinister thing about social media. “I don’t have a problem with it,” says most people. But some people can’t have just one drink. They can’t just post something about their business on Instagram and duck out.

    Read more here.

Published On: May 6, 2025Last Updated: May 6, 2025By
Seth on the phone

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 membership and hop on our next Zoom call meeting!

Trying to figure out your email strategy, grow without social media, maybe not sure what to send to people? I’ve got Email Guidance spots open, and here’s how it works and how to book.

Prefer a focused conversation instead? Book a 1:1 call and we’ll dig into your work together.

Email me: seth@socialmediaescape.club

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