I turned my Substack around

For a long time, I believed growing my Substack, and my income, was straightforward.

– Write consistently.
– Improve quality.
– Grow free subscribers.
– Convert them into paid ones.

That was the model. It made sense on paper.

I wasn’t lazy.
I wasn’t inconsistent.
I wasn’t unclear about what I was writing.
And yet the results were fragile.

I did everything I was told:
– Three posts a week
– Two Notes a day
– Recommendation swaps
– Weekly Lives

Still, growth and income stayed unpredictable.

By the end of November 2025, I had to admit something uncomfortable:
The problem wasn’t my newsletter.

It was the way I was trying to build a business on top of it.

In December, I stopped trying to grow my newsletter.

And that’s when everything changed.

Instead of asking, How do I get more subscribers?
I asked, What am I actually building?

That question changed everything.

I stopped treating my newsletter as the product.
I stopped relying on paid subscriptions as the business model.
I stopped optimising for activity and started optimising for outcomes.

I wrote a book.

Not as a passion project.
Not as “content.”
But as an anchor.

That single decision did what years of consistency couldn’t:

It clarified my message.
It positioned me as someone with a point of view.
It gave people a clear reason to trust me—and pay me.

The newsletter didn’t disappear.
It became a support infrastructure.

Content stopped being scattered.
Offers stopped feeling forced.
Income stopped being accidental.

The mistake most creators make isn’t lack of effort.
It’s trying to build a business on top of content instead of building content around a business.

If your growth feels fragile, it’s not because you’re doing it wrong.

It’s because you’re building without an anchor.

And once you have one, everything else gets easier.