• Published On: March 12, 2022Categories: Email Marketing, Social Media Escape Club

    A few years back I sent out a company-wide email for a client. After I hit send, a few emails came in.

    I spelled the company’s name wrong in the FROM field.

    I didn’t get fired, chewed out, no one unsubscribed. Life went on.

    Was I bummed? Absolutely.

    But it’s a learning experience. Every show you play, ever release you put out, and every email you send – each time there’s the possibility of royally fucking up.

    And fucking up is how we get better.

    If you’re a photographer, you tried some different settings, then learned what to use under different conditions.

    If you’re a designer, you might be more happy with your recent work than the first few pieces you delivered.

    Tattoo artists, producers, guitarists, song writers, editors – we are all where we’re at right now by learning from our earlier work and the mistakes we made.

    I bring this up because I keep hearing about this fear of UNSUBSCRIBES.

    Unless you’re losing DOZENS of subscribers per email, don’t sweat it.

    Stop fretting over the eight people that unsubscribed, and pay attention to the 100+ that clicked a link to your new offering.

    “Unsubscribes are not personal, but they’re beneficial to both the subscriber and you. If someone doesn’t want to be on your email list, you don’t want them there. Having people on your list who don’t actually want to be there is guaranteed to damage your deliverability, ultimately hurting your ability to reach those people who do want to be on your list,” says Alyssa Dulin at ConvertKit.

    If people ain’t opening your email, that can damage your “deliverability.” Enough damage, and your emails might end up in SPAM folders, or the Promotions tab in GMail.

    Don’t worry about unsubscribes. Let ‘em go.

    Don’t worry about unfollows on Twitter or Facebook.

    Don’t figure out – find out what works for you and your fans.

    It’s a never-ending discovery, and you’ll get there quicker if you just keep your head down and keep in touch with your fans directly via you email list.


    YOU STILL DON’T HAVE AN EMAIL LIST?

    Algorithms limit your reach. Platforms can suspend your account at any time. Make sure you’re able to reach your fans directly with an email list!

    Your 2022 is going to be a bloodbath if you rely 100% on socials to keep in touch with your fans. Especially if you lose access to any of your social accounts.

    It pains me that so many bands, brands, artists, and creative individuals are losing touch with their audience. If you’re lucky you’re reaching 5% of your fans.

  • Published On: March 6, 2022Categories: Email Marketing, Social Media Escape Club

    The subject line of your next email campaign competes with the subject lines of everyone else in your subscribers inbox – so it’s worth taking a minute (or 30) and getting it right.

    I always recommend sending weekly emails (“your fans subscribed because they love you, and want more of you”) so you can find out what “works” much faster than sending a once a month email, but if you’re still wary, you should at least be A/B testing your subject lines.

    That just means sending your email with two different subject lines to a small section of your subscribers (Mailchimp and Klaviyo make this super easy).

    After a few hours, the one that was opened the most is the “winner,” and the email gets sent to the rest of your subscribers with that subject line.

    Sending with just one subject line might get you 11% opens. Or 20%! Sure.

    But by testing two different subject lines with your audience, you might learn they like things short and sweet. Maybe they like super long, descriptive subject lines.

    You won’t know until you try.

    Let’s say you have a new video that just went live, and you want to let your fans know about it. You could write a subject line like this:

    Subject line: NEW VIDEO!

    Then maybe that gets a 24% open rate.

    Or you could try A/B testing your subject lines, and try something like this:

    Subject line A: NEW VIDEO!
    Subject line B: Three cats, a car chase, and a surprise guest – check out our new video!

    Subject A might get a 22% open rate, but Subject B might get a 34% open rate – that’s a lot more people opening your email by just testing out a different subject line style.

    “On a list of 10,000 people, an open rate of 20% gets you 2,000 readers. If you can bump that up to 25%—which is totally possible with a great email subject line—you’ve earned another 500 readers.

    Even at a meager 1% conversion rate, that’s 5 new customers,” from Active Campaign.

    Think about that, too – you don’t need EVERYONE to place an order (though that’d be great). Increasing opens, or clicks, or conversions by 1% can add up when you do that week after week for a full year.

    “Next time you’re writing the subject line for your email campaign, consider testing the order of the words to see if front-loading the benefit can help improve your open rates,” Campaign Monitor

    Free shipping, a 10% discount, low stock – consider testing where you put that in your next subject line, as it could affect how many people open your next email.

    Remember – you’re competing with maybe 100s of emails in someone’s inbox. There’s nothing wrong with writing 10, 20, even 50 different variations of a subject line, just to practice the craft. That could take you 15 minutes or more, yes, but it could also lead to 10 more orders.

    “Email is one of the few direct to consumer channels, and the more data you have about your audience, the better you can share your music with them,” Berklee Online

    “Try out different subject lines, images, layouts, and send times to see what’s working best,” from Mailchimp

    Think about it – you could try different band photos, album art styles, or sending at different times, and increase the number of clicks from an email. That could mean more selling more records, or tickets for your next tour.

  • Published On: February 26, 2022Categories: Email Marketing, Social Media Escape Club

    Someone just signed up for your email list.

    Make sure you’re including links to “old content” in every email.

    Promote your hot new thing, of course, but remember: not everyone opens every email.

    Your most die-hard fans are busy, and missed your last two (or three) emails.

    • If you’re a label, include some of your older releases (or low stock items).
    • If you’re a podcast, include the most listened episodes in the last six months.
    • If you’re a band, include links to your old videos.

    I’m not saying pack each email full of links, but treat your fans like friends in this case; “oh hey, remember that video we made a year ago? Here’s a photo from when we did that.”

    People still buy Metallica’s “Black Album,” because every day someone discovers that album for the first time.

    You’re not Metallica, so keep talking about the stuff you’re proud of.

    BUILD YOUR EMAIL LIST VIA SOCIAL MEDIA

    “Creators know a long-term career can’t come from rented platforms, for example, TikTok, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook. These are all platforms you don’t own, which means you lose control over the percentage of your audience that sees your content. Growing to 100,000 followers stings when only 5% of your audience saw your latest Reel.”

    From ‘How to use TikTok to grow your email list’ from CovertKit. Also this ‘TikTok For Musicians Masterclass’ from Amber Horsburgh is almost an hour and a half long and loaded with good ideas and insight.

    “It hurt to face the thing I’d always feared – that we were a one-trick pony, sales wise. I always knew we needed another strong sales channel, but we came up during the Instagram storm and stayed in that space because it had always worked for us – it was where our customers lived digitally.”

    From ‘Five things you learn when your social accounts are hacked’ from Courier. Check out ‘What’s Your Social Media Lock Out Plan?’ that I wrote back in December, too.

    NOW IT’S YOUR TURN

    So what’s stopping you from sending an email on Monday? What do you need help with? Are you still picking between Mailchimp or Substack? Design? Reply to this email how you’re stuck and maybe I can help you out.

  • Published On: February 19, 2022Categories: Email Marketing, Social Media Escape Club

    TO: folks that still haven’t started their email list, or are bummed at their “low” subscriber count:
    SUBJECT: What’s the best way to learn how to not lose $1,000?

    Lose $1,000.

    In 2010, before I left NYC with just my bike and the stuff I carried in my messenger bag, I read a lot of “how to be a minimalist” articles and watched a lot of videos.

    But I eventually had to put my bed frame on the sidewalk, lock the door behind me, and ride from Williamsburg in Brooklyn to East Rutherford, NJ by way of the George Washington Bridge on a single speed bike with directions written on folded paper.

    You gotta lock the door behind you and just do the thing.

    There’s always another YouTube video to watch. Another article. But eventually you’ve got to take the first step.

    Jump and pray, like my friend Jocelyn says.

    Because locking the door behind you is the easy part.

    Buying the cool notebook is the easy part.
    Signing up for TikTok.
    Starting a SquareSpace site.
    Going to the gym once.

    That’s easy shit.

    Now the hard part. The resistance. The pain. The uphill struggle.

    Just remember – you’re spending HOURS a day on social media. Week in, and week out. Of course that’s why you have a few thousand followers.

    So don’t expect to send one email per month and get a hundred subscribers in a day. Growing your list is hard, which is why I recommend you send something every single week.

    The faster you learn what works for your fans, the faster you lean into that.

    Last week I gave you a pretty solid strategy on what to actually put in your emails:

    Even if your fans do follow you on Twitter, chances are 70% of them won’t see your post because of ALGORITHMS.

    Summary: sure, keep posting on socials. Then take what “works,” the stuff that resonates, and gets your followers engaged, start putting some of that into your email list.

    Even if you post just once a week on one of the social media channels, you should send that to your email list, too. Build trust. Build community.

    Don’t just email when you got something for sale.

    Tell some stories, spill your guts, go on a rant, include a playlist – whatever.

    Or… just keep shoveling all your “content” into the constantly running social media wood chipper and (hopefully) increase your chances of any of it being seen by your fans.


    TO: folks who already have an e-commerce store
    SUBJECT: Automations will make you money while you sleep (or watch Netflix)

    From Mailchimp: “We’ve found that product follow-up emails get 5 times more orders than bulk emails.”

    Think about that – you spend the day crafting the perfect email campaign, hyping your latest drop, and an automated email sent two days later might lead to more orders.

    Klaviyo has nice “Browse and cart abandonment” and “Back in stock” automations (among others), which integrate super well with Shopify.

    The point here being that sending a gentle nudge to a potential customer can put more money in your bank account. That person looking at your deluxe edition bundle? You can automate and send an email to them a few days later if they don’t order right away.

    IT’S OKAY TO NUDGE.

    Will some people unsubscribe? Sure. Will more people order something? Probably. But you won’t know until you start trying it out for yourself. Don’t write off automations like this just because you don’t like them. They exist because they work!

  • Published On: February 11, 2022Categories: Email Marketing, Social Media Escape Club

    Social media is how we reach our fans, right? How can we ever decrease our social media time?!

    Consider this – all your fans don’t follow you on Twitter.

    You realize there are people out there that don’t “get” Twitter, right?

    There’s people who’ve ditched Facebook and Instagram for, umm… reasons.

    And TikTok, which is now the bigger than Google, is a whole other beast.

    While a handful of your fans are on all those platforms, I bet 99.9% of them have an email address.

    It’s how they buy concert tickets, order snacks from Amazon, and pay their bills online – all with an email address.

    So while email might not be the hot new cool thing, it fucking works.

    That said, if you’re spending all this time on social media like a good online marketer, how are you supposed to make time for preparing an email newsletter?

    “It’s so much work,” you say.

    Except, you already did the work.

    You wrote the Tweets, you made the images, you uploaded the audio… that’s the hard part, the dreaded “content creation” process.

    Now you just copy and paste that into an email newsletter, so your fans who aren’t following you on every social media platform can see it!

    Like Joan Pope said in a recent interview with HEAVY METAL EMAIL, “A lot of people will tell me that they can’t keep up and the newsletter helps them do that.”

    Even your spontaneous remarks about albums, sports, design, shows, movies, whatever – I bet your fans who don’t sit on social media for 5+ hours a day would like to see that stuff.

    Don’t just send emails when you got something for sale.

    Speaking of “what will I even write,” this Tweet was the basis for the email newsletter you’re reading right now:

    Oh, look – a photo of my cat that you might never see if you don’t follow me on Instagram:

    Even if your fans do follow you on Twitter, chances are 70% of them won’t see your post because of ALGORITHMS.

    Summary: sure, keep posting on socials. Then take what “works,” the stuff that resonates, and gets your followers engaged, start putting some of that into your email list.

    “Hey, want more of this thing you seem to like? Click here and get that thing right in your inbox!”

    Like this – here’s a great example from a reader on how to grow your email list!

    Need some ideas for your own email list? Send me an email and let’s figure it out.

  • Published On: February 4, 2022Categories: Email Marketing, Social Media Escape Club

    When asking any web surfer to click a link, you will see a drop off.

    Let’s say you post a link to buy your new shirt, and 100 people click that link.

    Now they’re on your shirt page, and have to click a shirt size, then add to cart.

    If 25 people even get that far, congrats, you’re a wizard.

    Now that 25 people are looking at their shopping cart, you better make sure your check out system is easy as shit to use, because not all 25 people will complete their purchase.

    Let’s be generous, and say 10 people actually place an order.

    You went from 100 people that clicked a link to your store, 25 people who added your shirt to their cart, then 10 people actually placed an order.

    That’s how the internet works. The numbers keep going down.

    MAKE YOUR SIGNUP PROCESS SIMPLE.

    Check this example from Mailchimp:

    Or this one from Shinesty:

    There’s a reason you see that style so often – it works.

    • Don’t make people DM you their email address.
    • Don’t make people send you their email.
    • Don’t make people fill out a big form.
    • Don’t make people give their first and last name, date of birth, zip code, hair color, and favorite pizza topping.

    Yes, there’s a time and a place for collecting demographic information, just as there’s time for asking someone to marry you, but that’s later on down the road.

    Give it a minute, please.

    There are services like Mailchimp, ConverKit, Carrd, Tally and so many more that let you build simple and effective email sign up forms. Some cost money, but hey – remember, one email could lead to a $25 sale if you play your cards right. Or book your next gig. Or sell a recurring subscription.

    Paying $10/mo for a service that lets you grow your email list is a good investment.

    💥 Still on the fence about using Substack for your band’s newsletter? Check out ‘I Think We’re Alone Now,’ from Tegan and Sara.

    Perfect is the enemy of done. Remember, no matter what email service you pick, if you don’t like it you can export your subscribers and move somewhere else

  • Published On: January 29, 2022Categories: Email Marketing, Social Media, Social Media Escape Club

    I keep seeing the Tweets, and the IG stories… “something is coming!”

    Maybe it’s a new song.
    A new video.
    New merch drop.

    You got lucky if 5 or 10 or 25% of your audience saw your teaser.

    “When you’re ready to release your hot new song, you have to start the attention-roulette game all over again,” from ‘SELL MORE WITH LANDING PAGES,’ which I wrote in November, 2021.

    As I laid out in the link above, give your most curious and dedicated fans something to click, like Ithaca did here:

    Teaser video clip, click the link, and then you can sign up for their email list.

    The people on that email list literally signed up and said, “I want more.”

    So when the time comes to release that video, they know they’ll be able to reach 100% of those people because that’s how email works.

    The Tweet they send might be seen by 20% of their followers. Yuck.


    🔥 SPOTIFY VS. BANDCAMP: I see a ton of artists complain about Spotify rates, but I don’t see a lot of artists linking to their Bandcamp page.

    When you make a sale on Bandcamp, you get actual money to put into your bank account. You also get something worth even more.

    An email address.

    When you release new music, Bandcamp will let them know. Plus, you can export the emails of people who signed up to be added to your email list, and send them personalized emails filled with even more information.


    Finally, I leave you with this:

  • Published On: January 21, 2022Categories: Email Marketing, Interview, Social Media Escape Club

    This week SOCIAL MEDIA ESCAPE CLUB speaks with artist, musician, and video editor Joan Pope about her weekly email newsletter Week in Review.

    Pope’s creative output is epic, and as she explains how a trusty email newsletter keeps her fans in the loop with everything she’s creating on a weekly basis.

    How long have you been doing a newsletter, and what sort of reaction or feedback have you gotten from it?

    I started the Substack newsletter in January 2021. Its the email version of the blog posts I have on my website. I started doing the “Week in Review” compilation posts in 2017. I still do those posts on my website, but driving traffic to my website is probably harder than to deliver the newsletter right into people’s inboxes.

    Why did you pick Substack for your email list, rather than something like Mailchimp?

    I went with Substack because its sort of a newsletter-blog hybrid. The monetization feature is great, too.

    How long does it take you to put together and send your weekly newsletter? And you do additional posts for paying subscribers, yes? What would you say the total time investment each week?

    It takes me about an hour to compile everything for the newsletter.

    At this point, I don’t really have any posts behind the paywall besides access to one of my poetry books. I really hate having to put my content behind a paywall, I want to be able to share it with everyone and I know not everyone can afford to pay for access. “Exclusive” content isn’t really my thing.

    My approach has been this: pretty much everything is available to anyone, and if you have the means, and you like my work, you can choose to support it by paying for the subscription. Or just enjoy it for free. I leave it up to the fans to decide.

    Vision and Perceptual Limits by Joan Pope, 2021

    Why even have an email newsletter in 2021?

    The fast pace of social media makes it pretty easy for stuff we actually like to get lost in the mix.

    I have a pretty intense level of output, I can barely keep track of my own work, I can’t expect other people to be able to keep up, too. So the weekly compilation of all my creative works helps me reflect on my own work each week and it keeps my audience in the loop. It seems like people like it. A lot of people will tell me that they can’t keep up and the newsletter helps them do that.

    I haven’t noticed any “subscribe to my email list” type posts on your socials – how do you grow your list? Or is that something that just happens organically from your All My Links page and Bandcamp?

    It’s true that I hardly ever make posts like that. I have a link to the signup in my allmylinks link-list thing. I let people find it on their own. However, I usually do at least post the published Substack newsletter on my main Twitter account each week. I usually end up getting a few subscribers each week as new people discover my Twitter account.

    So how do we as writers, artists, bands.. how do we stay motivated at one or two sign ups a week?

    It might not seem like much, but signups do start to accumulate, and when they do, they start to grow exponentially.

    Patience is key.

    It’s important to remember that 10 genuine fans who subscribe to your newsletter, follow you on social media, etc.. are much better than 1,000 bots signing up for your newsletter. Bots don’t buy your albums, they dont come to your shows, they don’t care at all about whatever you are doing.

    Cultivate the audience you have, regardless of the size.

    I try to dissuade people from just shouting “hey, join my newsletter” messaging, which is why I appreciate how you put it on your Substack page: “This email newsletter documents my worship.”

    How important is to you to present your work in such a way vs. the standard marketing speak?

    I don’t exactly have the vocabulary to frame what I do in the typical marketing terms. However, the social-sharing aspect is as important to my work as the work itself.

    I consider every art piece, song, video, etc to be truly complete once I’ve given it to the world. So, getting it out there is all part of the devotion I have to my creative works.

    I guess my work is intriguing enough that it makes people want to dig deeper, they end up finding the newsletter, my bandcamp, my website, etc. I get a lot of people comparing this experience following a breadcrumb trail. Its not my style to do too much outright explicit promotion, I have a more subtle approach.

    I want to close by saying that growing an audience is really hard work, and for most people, it will take a lot of time and effort to see results. It’s really unlikely that you will amass a huge email list or social media following overnight. However, if you are consistent and keep working at your craft, you will eventually succeed.

    It took me over a decade to get to where I am, and the reality is, I’m still a virtually unknown artist. But I keep doing what I do, and I’m not going to stop. If you are just starting out, don’t get discouraged if it doesn’t go the way you hoped on the first day. Set attainable goals, and commit to following through.

    What are some of those goals we can set as we’re just starting out, trying to move some of our fans from social media to an email newsletter?

    You just have to be realistic, and put in the work to get the word out. I am grateful to have a decent social media following, its made getting subscribers to the newsletter much easier.

    I’m pretty passive in my approach… I just post a link on twitter to each week’s newsletter. My way is probably not the best way to get results. If I was going to do it “right” I’d probably add a call to action, asking people to subscribe.

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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