Before there were social media influencers, there were bloggers. But as more writers and creators create email newsletters about everything from cooking to fashion trends on platforms like Substack, it seems we’re coming full circle.
“It’s the biggest new platform that I know of since I don’t even know,” Tiffany Lopinsky, co-founder and COO of affiliate marketing platform ShopMy, told Marketing Brew.
As platforms change (and, in some cases, face a potential ban), Substack has emerged as a way for writers and creators to engage with their biggest fans in a direct and often intimate-feeling way. Brands and brand founders are also noticing the value of Substack as an affiliate marketing channel with its more than 3 million paying subscribers, even in spite of some recent backlash over its content moderation policies.
“Social media has just become overloaded,” Libby Strachan, director of brand marketing at Free People, told us. “I think going back to the old-school blog world was almost inevitable.”
Read it and click: Melanie Masarin, founder of non-alcoholic apéritif brand Ghia, created her Substack newsletter, Night Shade, in 2023 to write about her interest in fashion and travel while seeking to build a follower community through longer-form content.
“Sometimes, when you’re the founder of a visible brand, it feels like there’s this unilateral image of you,” said Masarin, who has around 6,000 subscribers. “It’s nice to be able to add a little bit of depth and show some behind the scenes for the more engaged people who are interested.”
- In addition to plugging Ghia every now and then, Masarin said she’s worked with fashion resale platform Vestiaire Collective and travel app Amigo on co-branded newsletters, and she uses commissionable and affiliate links generated through ShopMy.
Continue reading here.—KH
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