HomeTechnologyHow to Migrate Your Newsletter From Substack to Buttondown

How to Migrate Your Newsletter From Substack to Buttondown


master mentalism tricks

Maybe you don’t want to give 10 percent of your revenue to a venture-backed Silicon Valley company. Maybe you don’t trust a venture-backed Silicon Valley company to not eventually pivot away from newsletters entirely and destroy everything you built. Or maybe you just don’t want your newsletter hosted on a service that actively recruits and pays extremists. There are all sorts of reasons you might want to leave Substack, is all I’m saying.

Some writers are leaving Substack for Ghost, which isn’t an altogether natural transition. That’s why I recommend (and personally use) Buttondown. Here’s how you can migrate your subscribers and archive from Substack over to Buttondown.

Buttondown versus Stubstack

Buttondown offers a comparison with Substack, if you want to look at its list, but a few features stand out to me.

The first is pricing. Buttondown is free for up to 100 subscribers, after which it costs $9 a month for up to 1,000, and the price scales up from there. Substack is free but takes a 10 percent cut from any paid subscriptions, which is a big deal if you ever want to make a living from your newsletter. Imagine if you grow a subscriber base that brings in $4,000 a month—you’ll be paying $400 of that to Substack. So even the most expensive tiers of Buttondown are going to cost less than that.

The second thing to think about is features. Buttondown supports all kinds of things that Substack doesn’t, like autosaving. Buttondown doesn’t collect user data unless you intentionally turn those features on. There’s also an API and a Zapier integration, but far more important than that to me is that you can write your newsletters in markdown. (I love markdown with all of my heart.) Basically Buttondown offers all kinds of nerdy stuff that Substack doesn’t.

Also: Buttondown is bootstrapped, meaning it isn’t beholden to any investors. Substack has around $82 million of investor money, which means there’s a powerful group of people hoping for massive growth. Call me a jaded veteran of the content mines—I freely admit that I am—but such entities rarely have the interest of journalists and writers at heart over the long term. Buttondown, meanwhile, is run by a single person—Justin Duke—who responds to emails himself and publicly reports how much money he spends running the service.

Finally, and most importantly, Buttondown sends you a fun GIF every time someone subscribes. That alone is reason to migrate over, so let’s talk about about how you can do that.

Export Your Newsletter From Substack

Log into Substack and head to the dashboard for your newsletter. Click the Settings link in the top bar. Scroll way down to the bottom to find the Export Your Data section. Click Create New Export.

Screenshot of Substack's export your data option

Courtesy of WIRED Staff

Read The Full Article Here


trick photography
Advertisingfutmillion

Popular posts

Hollywood Spotlight: Director Jon Frenkel Garcia
The Dutchman Cast: André Holland, Zazie Beetz & More Join
The Creator Reactions: Gareth Edwards’ Latest Is One of 2023’s
Company Paid Critics For Rotten Tomatoes Reviews
‘Fire Country’ Sneak Peek: Sharon Gets Honest With Vince During
Anna Paquin Reveals Health Issues Have Not ‘Been Easy’ as
Why X-Men 97 is the Greatest Reboot of All Time
The 50 Best Historical Dramas: ‘Shirley,’ ‘The Chosen’ & More
Streaking in Tongues’ “Einstein’s Napkin”
Greye is Back With New Album
Universal Dice’s “Curse”
Society of the Silver Cross’ “Wife of the Sea”
9 Boob Tapes That Work For All Busts, Shapes, and
Here’s Why Apple Cider Vinegar Is the Ingredient Your Hair
I Travel a Lot for Work—These Are the Useful Items
The Best Street Style Looks From the Fall 2023 Couture
Physician by Day, Vigilante by Night in This Action-Packed Cyberpunk
10 Of The Best New Children’s Books Out April 2024
Interview with James Ungurait, Author of I’m The Same
Child Psychologist and Mother Shares CBT Teaching Techniques That Work
Positive associations between premenstrual disorders and perinatal depression
Poem: ‘SnapShot, 1968’
What is the smallest animal on Earth?
Experimental weight loss pill seems to be more potent than
Killing TikTok
Killing TikTok
Comedy or Tragedy?
BYD Atto 3 Electric SUV With Blade Battery Technology Launched