Brands are now using Substack, a cool online tool, to talk straight to their fans, like having a private chat. This helps them ditch old-fashioned ads and tricky computer rules that hide their messages. Substack lets them see who’s listening and truly build a loyal group, turning simple emails into powerful connections. It’s like finding a secret path to real conversations, helping big companies and small creators shine brightly and connect deeply. This fresh approach makes customers feel special and part of a brand’s exciting journey.
Why are brands like American Eagle embracing Substack?
Brands are utilizing Substack to gain direct access to their audience, bypassing algorithmic complexities. The platform offers robust analytics, CRM integration, and fosters community building through authentic content, moving beyond traditional advertising. This allows for direct engagement, providing valuable data and fostering brand loyalty.
A Digital Jolt From the Algorithmic Void
Sometimes, a piece of content leaps out at you with the force of cold water splashed on your face. This morning, a Substack newsletter landed in my inbox, and it yanked me back to 2009—back when my digital ambitions meant wrestling clumsy Mailchimp templates, hoping analytics would reveal the secrets of community-building. Back then? Nothing was simple. There were no seamless subscription tools or slick, brand-ready solutions.
Now, Substack sits at the crossroads of a transformed landscape, offering the kind of all-in-one publishing I would’ve begged for during those late-night caffeine binges. I can still picture a founder I met at Punspace in Chiang Mai, raving about Substack’s analytics. She called it “therapy for her marketing anxiety”—an odd metaphor, but I get it. It’s wild: in less than two decades, a humble email has become an enterprise channel, with both indie creators and behemoths like American Eagle jumping aboard.
Substack by the Numbers: Not Just for Indie Creators
Let’s get into specifics (because otherwise, we’re just telling ghost stories). Substack boasts over 5 million paid subscriptions. Not free sign-ups—actual paying relationships. The platform has evolved: what started as a haven for lone writers now attracts legacy brands, B2B juggernauts, and consumer marketers.
American Eagle, for instance, has taken the plunge, with CMO Craig Brommers openly discussing their Substack moves. Their “Off the Cuff” newsletter, launched with the tact of a group chat instead of a stuffy ad, drew over 2,000 subscribers in just six weeks. Ann Gynn dissected this phenomenon in Content Marketing Institute, and I found myself nodding along, remembering my own missteps with newsletter launches. (Ask me about the time I sent a test email to 500 people by accident. Oops.)
Other brands, from Rare Beauty to The RealReal, are also leveraging Substack, sharpening their edge with features like advanced analytics and CRM integration. Suddenly, the humble email feels electric—like a vinyl record with the fidelity of FLAC.
The Real Magic: Community, Data, and a Little Vulnerability
What’s the true draw here? Substack hands brands the keys to their own audience castle. No more algorithm-induced ulcers. Brands see who opens, who clicks, who converts. For a marketer, it’s like mainlining clarity straight from a spreadsheet. The days of guessing are, if not gone, at least numbered.
Take American Eagle’s approach: instead of sterile product pitches, they’re serving up culture commentary and behind-the-scenes snippets, written by the likes of Casey Lewis. It’s a little like inviting your subscribers to an exclusive backstage party—the kind where you can smell the burnt coffee and hear the clack of laptop keys.
Gen Z, I’m told, has a sixth sense for inauthenticity. Substack’s frictionless mechanics let brands experiment, fumble, and—if lucky—strike gold. I’ll confess: when I first saw the analytics dashboard, my heart thumped. Relief? Excitement? Maybe both. But I was also wary—surely it couldn’t be this easy? Turns out, sometimes it is.
From Silo to Ecosystem: Integration and Network Effects
Substack isn’t a lonely island anymore. Integration with CRM suites, analytics platforms, and custom domains means brands can coordinate campaigns like a conductor with a full orchestra. I still shudder remembering the cobbled-together systems of 2009. Smooth, it was not.
The network effect is real, too. As more brands and creators set up shop, discoverability snowballs. Cross-promotions become second nature: once you’ve paid for one subscription, you’re statistically more likely to buy another. It’s social proof rolling downhill—a snowball that builds with every click.
But let’s not kid ourselves: this playground isn’t for the timid. Substack rewards vulnerability and experimentation, which can make risk-averse brands sweat. Still, for those bold enough to try? The potential payoff is enormous, even if you sometimes stumble on the way to the gold.
ใครไม่กล้า…ไม่ได้โต (If you’re not brave, you don’t grow.)
I’ll leave it at that. For now.