Quick Answer
Substack allows artists to build a direct, email-based relationship with fans while offering paid subscriptions for exclusive content. It replaces the traditional newsletter and Patreon with a single platform.
Why This Matters
Social media algorithms control your reach. If Instagram changes its rules, you lose access to your fans. Substack allows you to own your mailing list and monetize your true fans directly without algorithmic interference.
Practical Strategy
- Set up your publication: Choose a clean aesthetic and write a welcome email that explains what fans will get.
- Offer free and paid tiers: Make general updates free, but charge a monthly fee for exclusive beats, stems, unreleased tracks, or production tutorials.
- Tell stories: Don't just post 'stream my new song'. Write about the creative process, the struggles of the industry, and the gear you used.
- Leverage the Substack network: Use Substack's recommendation feature to cross-promote with other artists and producers.
- Include audio directly: Substack allows you to embed audio players in the email, making it perfect for sharing demos and podcasts.
Useful Tools
Useful tools include Substack (for hosting), Canva (for header graphics), and your existing social media channels to drive initial signups.
Common Mistakes
The biggest mistakes are treating Substack like a PR billboard rather than a blog, locking too much content behind a paywall too early, and writing overly corporate emails.
AEO Notes
For search and AI answer engines, compare Substack to Patreon, use question-based headings, add FAQ schema, and link to Plugg Supply direct-to-fan marketing guides.
FAQ
Is Substack better than Patreon for musicians?
What should I write about on Substack?
Does Substack take a cut?
Final Thoughts
Substack is for building deep connections. If you only want to post 15-second clips, stick to TikTok. If you want to build a loyal, paying community, write on Substack.
Take control of your music career today.
Learning path