Every week someone publishes a "Substack growth tips" article that's 80% generic advice and 20% things that worked for one specific person in one specific niche at one specific moment. This is different. These tips are based on patterns across the top newsletters on savd.site's leaderboard — newsletters that have actually grown to 10,000+ subscribers from scratch.
"This newsletter is for [specific person] who wants to [specific outcome]." Fill in that sentence before you write anything else. Everything — your content, your subject lines, your recommendations — should flow from this definition. The more specific it is, the faster you'll grow. "Newsletter for startup founders" is too broad. "Newsletter for first-time SaaS founders navigating their first enterprise sales process" is a real reader definition.
Weekly is the most common cadence for successful newsletters — frequent enough to stay top of mind, infrequent enough to maintain quality. But the right cadence is the one you can actually sustain, not the one that sounds most impressive. A monthly newsletter sent on the same day every month, forever, beats a weekly newsletter that misses issues and goes dark for three months at a stretch.
Most newsletter writers wait until they have "enough" subscribers to bother with directories. This is backwards. List your newsletter on savd.site on day one. Discovery platforms generate passive, consistent subscriber growth — every day you're not listed is a day you're missing subscribers you could have had for free.
This sounds counterintuitive, but newsletters that make unsubscribing difficult or guilty have worse open rates and engagement than newsletters that make it frictionless. Readers who don't want to be there drag down your metrics. An unsubscribe is better than a passive subscriber who never opens.
Your Substack archive is indexed by Google. Every issue you publish is a potential organic search landing page. "Issue 47: Some thoughts on productivity" gets zero search traffic. "The complete guide to Notion for freelance designers" gets traffic from Google forever. This single habit, maintained consistently, can add hundreds of organic subscribers over the life of your newsletter.
The single highest-ROI sentence in any newsletter is: "If this was useful, forward it to one person who'd find it valuable." Add it to every issue. It converts because people who've just finished reading something they found genuinely useful are in exactly the right moment to share it.
Your best newsletter issue can also be: a LinkedIn article, a Twitter/X thread, a blog post, a short video script, or a podcast segment. Repurposing your best work across multiple channels multiplies your discovery surface area without requiring additional content creation. The LinkedIn article version of your best newsletter issue consistently outperforms original LinkedIn content because it's already been proven to resonate with readers.
A simple format that works reliably: email another newsletter writer in your niche a few questions, publish their answers, and tag them when you share the issue. They almost always share it with their audience. This cross-promotion tactic generates subscriber spikes without requiring anything more than a thoughtful email.
Substack's recommendation network is genuinely powerful — when another writer recommends your newsletter, their new subscribers are shown your newsletter automatically. But you have to ask for recommendations. Most writers who'd happily recommend your newsletter never think to do it unprompted. Email three newsletters in your niche, tell them specifically why your audiences overlap, and ask if they'd be open to swapping recommendations.
The best newsletters solve specific problems. Find the subreddits, Slack groups, and forums where your ideal readers hang out — and when you write an issue that answers a question those readers commonly ask, post the key insight with a link to the full issue. Do this non-spammily: add genuine value to the conversation, don't just drop links.
Set up Substack's referral feature before your newsletter is big enough for it to matter. The readers who refer others are your most engaged subscribers, and they'll start referring on day one if you ask them to. By the time you have 2,000 subscribers, even a basic referral system that's been running since issue 1 has compounded meaningfully.
Writing a guest issue for a newsletter with 5,000 subscribers in your niche can add 300–800 new subscribers in a single week. Guest writing is the highest-leverage single action available to newsletter writers who have something to say and can find the right partnership. Most newsletter writers are open to it — they get a week off and their readers get a fresh perspective.
A brief personal email — "Hey, I noticed you just subscribed. What brought you here?" — converts passive new subscribers into engaged ones at a remarkable rate. It doesn't scale perfectly past a few hundred subscribers, but at the early stages it's worth every minute.
If your newsletter has multiple types of readers — some beginner, some advanced; some individual contributors, some managers — use Substack's sections feature to create content that signals clearly which type of reader it's for. Readers who feel seen stay subscribed. Readers who feel like an afterthought churn.
Newsletters that publish their open rates, subscriber counts, and growth milestones publicly tend to grow faster than those that don't. Transparency builds trust. It also makes for compelling content — your readers are interested in how your newsletter is doing, especially if they've been around since early days.
Buying a sponsored placement in a well-matched newsletter is typically 3–5× more efficient than social ads for newsletter growth. The readers of a newsletter are pre-qualified for exactly the behaviour you want from them: opening emails and reading content. Budget $500 for a test, measure cost per subscriber, and scale what works.
A free resource — a template, a checklist, a short guide — offered as an incentive to subscribe consistently outperforms standard newsletter landing pages. The key is making the lead magnet genuinely valuable and directly relevant to your newsletter's topic, not a generic PDF that has nothing to do with what you write.
The tools your readers use have marketing budgets and audiences that overlap with yours. A partnership with a relevant tool — a joint webinar, a co-written piece, a featured integration — can expose your newsletter to thousands of pre-qualified potential readers in a single campaign.
On savd.site, every newsletter gets a saves count from real readers. Save rate — saves per visitor — is one of the best leading indicators of newsletter quality. If your save rate is low, it means visitors aren't finding your newsletter compelling enough to bookmark. This is a signal to improve your headline, tagline, or first-impression content before spending anything on promotion.
Substack shows you when people unsubscribe. If you're getting a spike after a particular issue or around a particular topic, that's data. Most newsletter writers never look at this. Your unsubscribe pattern is one of the most honest pieces of feedback you'll ever get about your content.
The newsletters at the top of savd.site's leaderboard almost universally have one thing in common: they've been publishing consistently for more than two years. Newsletter growth compounds, but it compounds slowly. The writers who grow to 50,000 subscribers are the ones who were still publishing at issue 100 when everyone else had given up at issue 12.
savd.site is the discovery platform for growing newsletters — 500 to 50,000 subscribers. Get found by readers actively looking for new newsletters to follow.
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