Substack's Index Fund of Culture (with Chris Best and Hamish McKenzie)
Newcomer PodMay 17, 202300:51:5735.68 MB

Substack's Index Fund of Culture (with Chris Best and Hamish McKenzie)

I caught up with Substack co-founders Chris Best and Hamish McKenzie at Substack’s office in San Francisco last week. They’re fresh off raising a community fundraising round and launching their social network Notes.

I wrote in March about my decision to invest $5,000 in Substack’s fundraising round, even though the company revealed that it had negative revenue in 2021:

I’m already compromised when it comes to Substack. They’ve made my job possible. And while I already have plenty of financial exposure to Substack’s performance just by dint of running my business on Substack’s platform, I’m eager to have a chance to show my support.

So this is the rare — hopefully singular — interview where I can’t claim true editorial independence. I’m compromised on this one. Still, I think you’ll find it an informative and entertaining conversation. I’m able to bring my perspective as a Substack writer to the conversation and I can’t help but fish for drama and news.

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In our conversation, I asked McKenzie and Best about Twitter’s one-sided war with Substack. Elon Musk has at times throttled links to Substack. It is impossible to imbed tweets in Substack posts anymore.

Adding some intrigue to the tensions, Andreessen Horowitz, Substack’s largest outside investor, is an investor in Musk’s Twitter.

And, Musk actually long ago hired McKenzie, a former PandoDaily reporter, to write for Tesla.

“I try to think about Elon as little as possible,” McKenzie said in our conversation at Substack’s office. “What we’re trying to do here is not build the anti-Twitter or build the anti-Instagram or anything like that. We’re trying to build the first Substack. The vision for what we think it can become is an amazing, beautiful thing and it’s bigger and more important than social media.”

McKenzie acknowledged that “arguably Twitter is trying to kill Substack.”

I asked about newsletter godfather Ben Thompson’s critique of Substack’s community round in his newsletter.

Thompson wrote in April:

We know that valuation because Substack asked its writers to fund a round at the same $650 million post-money valuation it achieved in 2021, despite the fact the company failed to raise money last year; the company never released its 2022 financials.

Frankly, I think this request was shameful: Substack has rightly earned the affection of a lot of writers by providing them with a new way to earn money, and of course those writers want Substack to succeed. Keeping such a lofty valuation, though, is effectively asking for a donation from an audience that almost by definition doesn’t know any better. That doesn’t seem very writer friendly! Nor, for that matter, does this fight with Twitter. Again, I think this is a product bet that makes a lot of sense: Substack needs to take big swings if it’s ever going to reach its valuation. Writers, though, who need Twitter’s distribution, didn’t sign up for this fight; they are simply stuck in the middle.

We also talked about Best’s botched podcast interview with The Verge’s Nilay Patel. In the interview (here’s a link to the key exchange), Patel hammered Best on Substack’s stance on blocking overt racism on Notes. In that interview, Best declined to say that Substack would ban particular objectionable racist comments from the platform unilaterally.

In my conversation with him, Best continued to oppose “centralized censorship” on Substack’s platform. And he doubled-down on his answer, saying that he had “basically the same answer.”

Best said, “We do have a content policy. It allows a lot of stuff we don’t like. It bans only very extreme things. If people are putting things that are against the overall content policy, they are taken down by us. However, that allows a lot of stuff that we find very objectionable. Then we try to build a system that puts people in control of what they see and who they interact with.”

As should be pretty obvious from the conversation, I think that if Substack Notes is successful, it will actually be much more curated than many other social networks. Writers want to give their readers a premium, elevated experience — not just a platform that does the bare minimum of content moderation. So I’m optimistic over time that Substack will find ways to empower writers to curate the platform. Even though Substack often finds itself talking about free speech and tough moderation decisions, in many ways what the company has built is a system where writers are given the power to moderate the platform themselves.

The last thing I’ll tease from the conversation is that the Substack founders no longer come off as diametrically opposing to supporting advertising. Judge their answer for yourself.

In the conversation we name-dropped a bunch of newsletters and Substack writers, including Gergely Orosz Jesse Singal Heather Cox Richardson Matthew Yglesias Substack Writers Andrew Sullivan The Ankler. Bulwark+ Bari Weiss The Free Press The Pillar

Give it a listen.

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00:00:01
Hey, it's Eric newcomer. We've got a great episode for

00:00:03
you this week. I went to sub Sachs offices to

00:00:06
interview subjects, CEO, Chris fast, and co-founder Hamish

00:00:09
McKenzie had a really fun conversation.

00:00:12
The company has released notes which is a basically a Twitter

00:00:16
copycat though. I'm sure they wouldn't want to

00:00:18
frame it that way but micros social messaging platform which

00:00:22
sort of moves them further Beyond just publishing

00:00:25
newsletters like my own. I recently invested five

00:00:29
thousand dollars. Is in sub Stacks Community

00:00:32
round, I publish on sub stack. So this is the rare and

00:00:36
hopefully just singular case where I don't have to editorial

00:00:40
Independence. I think that said you can see, I

00:00:42
can't help myself but ask probing questions, we talked

00:00:45
about the fight with Elon Musk and Twitter and of course, Chris

00:00:49
past was on the verge is podcast.

00:00:52
I think by Chris's own estimation flubbed the interview

00:00:56
with him about how subsequent handle racism on its Form.

00:01:00
So we get into that. So a fun and timely interview

00:01:03
with a company that I think a ton about so I think you'll

00:01:07
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00:01:09
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00:01:56
newcomer All right. Now my interview with Chris past

00:02:01
and Hamish McKenzie co-founders of sub sack at their offices in

00:02:05
San Francisco. Give it a listen.

00:02:08
Thanks, I'm in subjects offices. This is the most compromised

00:02:12
episode I could ever have. I've donated, you know, we're

00:02:15
invested just write what the do invested five thousand dollars

00:02:21
and obviously, you know, we're closely with your platform, but

00:02:24
thanks for having me into the office and great to talk to you

00:02:26
both. Thank you.

00:02:28
Yeah, yeah. Yeah there's so much to talk

00:02:30
about right now but notes is obviously sort of the new

00:02:33
exciting future so I'm curious. Yeah.

00:02:37
What What sort of your view on how the notes rollout has gone

00:02:41
so far? We're really pleased with it.

00:02:43
We're pleased with how the feature Works.

00:02:45
We've been really pleased with how writers have received it.

00:02:49
The launch itself. Got a little bit more attention

00:02:52
than we expected. Is that good or bad?

00:02:54
Most isn't this supposed to be? Yes, I think on the whole I

00:02:56
think on the whole that it's good.

00:02:58
I think it's on the whole a good thing was a little bit of chaos

00:03:01
but we don't mind a little Cass. What was chaotic about it?

00:03:05
The problem we had Tessa pated. Having was kind of like Getting

00:03:08
everyone to pay attention to this thing you are doing and we

00:03:11
sort of had the reverse problem where all of a sudden everybody

00:03:13
was paying super close attention to it.

00:03:15
Everybody was heralding. It is this very exciting thing

00:03:18
that was going on which on the whole is great.

00:03:20
It is very exciting by them and it is very exciting.

00:03:23
We just we just we were anticipating having to convince

00:03:26
people of that, right? And then it just worked out a

00:03:28
different way, right? Well, I appreciate that.

00:03:31
You're coming back on a podcast after you're on a podcast before

00:03:34
and getting grilled over, like the edge case of moderation.

00:03:38
Ocean right after launching like sort of a new fish social

00:03:41
product so I'm glad you're back in front of the microphone.

00:03:44
Yeah, my view on the moderation things, it's a lot for you guys

00:03:48
are gonna have to like solve this sort of overtime.

00:03:50
Do you see yourself as a totally different company?

00:03:52
Now, I guess, having a notes thing, been somewhat resistant

00:03:56
to like social or like, how much does it change?

00:03:59
How you guys think about the company with this sort of

00:04:01
pseudo, social media platform? Now, I think it's an extension

00:04:06
philosophically. A lot of the things that we have

00:04:09
already been doing, right? One of the things we've been

00:04:11
working on for a while is building up the sub stack

00:04:14
Network right? The idea that on sub stack, your

00:04:17
independent you and your connection with your audience

00:04:19
but also you get the benefit of being part of this network being

00:04:23
part of this like subscription Network people.

00:04:25
Thank you. Mandarin J is pragmatic

00:04:26
engineer. So, recommend alert, right,

00:04:31
right? So recommendations, are a great

00:04:33
example of a feature that works in the network where it's like,

00:04:35
hey, you know, writers are recommending other writers,

00:04:39
they're sort of, you've got this network feature, but the humans

00:04:42
are in charge of how it works and we see notes as sort of an

00:04:46
extension of that, right? It works the same way, people

00:04:48
are allowed to, you can share short thoughts, you can share a

00:04:51
piece of writing you can share quotes.

00:04:52
You can recommend stuff. Yeah.

00:04:53
But it is it's sort of like this multiplayer piece of the subs

00:04:57
deck Universe. It definitely means that we have

00:04:59
to update our sort of approach on how some of the stuff works

00:05:03
but it doesn't change the sort of philosophically what we're

00:05:05
doing. Yeah, we're you guys, totally.

00:05:08
Both on undoing Adder, was it? We argue for years.

00:05:11
Now, this now we've been such a status of Stack, we thought in

00:05:15
wanted to make it a network, not just a tool, but the tool is

00:05:19
something you have to start with.

00:05:20
But the big game for us as always been how can we make this

00:05:23
a network? How can we give people the

00:05:25
superpowers of the internet Beyond, just a simple and

00:05:29
elegant and beautiful publishing system, the right to collect

00:05:32
money easily. And so notes is a natural

00:05:35
extension for us writers want to Post short things and share,

00:05:39
casual content, and publish them stuff that they don't

00:05:42
necessarily want to email to all the subscribers, right?

00:05:44
And think readers and I'm both of these people, right?

00:05:47
I'm a writer and a reader this way readers want to sometimes

00:05:50
snack on stuff from their favorite writers, rather than

00:05:53
just being these fully immersed experiences with a long form

00:05:56
post or a podcast episode. So, notice in The Sweet Spot for

00:06:00
both of those use cases. So far, you know, these social

00:06:03
networks are very much defined with how they're designed by,

00:06:06
who's on them. And I feel like, Like early on

00:06:09
it's like, oh, it's all writers. So it's a fun little, you know,

00:06:12
I like nerds the vibe at the moment I mean, that's sort of

00:06:15
which funny with the like line of questioning about, you know,

00:06:19
the level of moderation. When right now, you have sort of

00:06:22
almost like overly polite. Like it's too nice.

00:06:24
Yeah. But I mean, I'm going to get

00:06:27
into the moderation question, but I want to set it up a

00:06:29
different way. I mean, it's sort of funny like,

00:06:33
You're almost, you're coming into this, like, oh my God, I

00:06:35
almost went to Big like, don't you want it to be as big as

00:06:38
possible? And really, like, don't you want

00:06:41
to, like, present some sack as like this Foyle to Twitter or

00:06:44
like, isn't this a moment where it's like, you're starting to

00:06:47
compete with Twitter? Are you not willing to lean into

00:06:49
the like direct competition with Twitter?

00:06:52
So I say there's a way that we do want to draw that contrast.

00:06:57
Yeah like we see this as almost like a battle of competing

00:07:01
philosophies or Items like the big vision of what we think of

00:07:05
sub stack as, is this new economic engine for culture,

00:07:10
right? We're like okay, there was this

00:07:11
old class. The first generation of social

00:07:13
media companies got built on this one model.

00:07:15
Everything had to be free. There's this big land, grab for

00:07:18
attention. Yeah.

00:07:19
And these giant sort of attention monster money

00:07:22
printing, add fueled set of companies grew up in this age

00:07:27
and we're tremendously wildly successful at what I did.

00:07:31
And You know, I think in retrospect that had certain

00:07:34
consequences, it destroyed a lot of the business model, for sort

00:07:40
of, written culture, and smart content, without adequately,

00:07:43
replacing it, with something, it created a bunch of incentive

00:07:47
systems that pull in a certain direction, no matter what your

00:07:50
intention is. If the way you make money as

00:07:53
maximizing time spent and engagement, cause you're selling

00:07:56
ads, the things that you end up optimizing for pull in a certain

00:07:59
direction, it has certain consequences.

00:08:01
We see sub stack as A whole as being created kind of in

00:08:06
opposition to that Trend and kind of in the vacuum that's

00:08:09
created by the evolution of that whole ecosystem.

00:08:12
Like, the way I think of this as everybody sort of having to

00:08:14
become Tick-Tock, right? Right.

00:08:16
Like the natural perfect version of the super attention monster

00:08:21
social media, people what they want, give the people what they

00:08:23
say, and what they want, but what they want in what way,

00:08:26
right, what they want in their bassist in their lizard brain,

00:08:29
right? And the thing that's, you know,

00:08:30
the old version of us, you had to click on it, the new version.

00:08:32
A you just don't even have to click on it and just like it's

00:08:34
just there you're sort of staring at it.

00:08:36
Mesmerised you go there, thinking it's going to take

00:08:39
three seconds and you spend five hours.

00:08:41
It's the perfect, it's The Logical.

00:08:43
Conclusion of that, whole business model of that way of

00:08:48
interacting with the audience. We think that there's like this

00:08:50
tremendous thing that's working there and it's going to pull

00:08:54
everything that's in that mode of working in that same

00:08:57
direction, you know, Instagrams. Going to have to become more

00:09:00
like Tech talk Twitter's going to become more like Right?

00:09:02
And if you as a reader want, something else you're going to

00:09:07
feel increasingly ill-served. And so there's going to be this

00:09:10
new space where you say, what if I want to go somewhere where I

00:09:15
can use my attention wisely, where it's giving me, what I

00:09:18
want. Not in sort of the back of my

00:09:21
lizard brain of, like, what will I not click a head-on.

00:09:23
But what are the things that I value?

00:09:25
One of the things that I might choose to, you know, sit back

00:09:29
and subscribe to on a Sunday when I'm thinking of how I I

00:09:32
want to stay well, informed or what do I actually want to pay

00:09:34
the money supply? Almost be aspirational?

00:09:36
Or it's like this is the stuff I want to support like people are

00:09:39
supporting them and it's also yet sort of a reason like this

00:09:43
is, yeah, like we're you know, we're helping you.

00:09:46
Ideally we're helping you construct for yourself.

00:09:50
The media diet that you want, we're helping you put the things

00:09:53
in your mind that you aspire to put there to become more.

00:09:56
The person you want to be as opposed to kind of like eroding

00:10:00
your defenses to turn you into the person that Basement self.

00:10:03
Once those are different things. So in that grand Battle of ideas

00:10:08
then yeah, I think sub stack is an anti Twitter.

00:10:10
I think it is an anti Tech talk. I think it is an anti, it's a

00:10:13
different idea. To all those things sub stack as

00:10:16
a whole is built on this different economic system where

00:10:20
we don't need to keep you glued to the thing.

00:10:22
We want to find you, things that you decide you care about enough

00:10:26
to pay for, that's not just a different way to make money from

00:10:28
the same stuff. It's the kind of things that you

00:10:30
make, as you know, When you're trying to succeed in that system

00:10:34
are just different and better better by, you know, who says

00:10:37
better, I say better, I think it's better.

00:10:39
So it is different in that way. The other way that you could

00:10:41
construe it though is and the way that I think a lot of people

00:10:44
wanted to construe it is, it's like, oh, like we are mad at

00:10:48
Twitter, right? This is a new thing.

00:10:51
This is the new Twitter, right? Everyone's going to leave

00:10:53
Twitter and come here and that's how it's going to work.

00:10:56
And I just that story to me, doesn't ring true, right?

00:10:59
That's not the thing that we're building.

00:11:02
I saw. Think of it as even if we could

00:11:04
do that, we wouldn't want to because that's not the thing we

00:11:07
set out to build. But I also don't think that

00:11:09
that's how these things work. Basically there's so much to

00:11:12
tease a I mean in some ways you were the Free Speech arguing for

00:11:17
free speech before you had like the musk Ilan coming in and

00:11:21
making Twitter Pro, free speech. So then there's like in terms of

00:11:25
like The Branding of the platform and the openness

00:11:29
they're sort of like a complicated Ting moment for us.

00:11:34
Free speech has never been out. Branding is just something I

00:11:36
really like Taylor Stakes. There was, there was a point

00:11:39
though, like we're a lot of the conversation around sub-sect was

00:11:42
about. Like, people are used to be able

00:11:44
to focus on a lot and we are proud to defend Free Speech but

00:11:48
we don't we're not like Rumble in which we come out and say we

00:11:52
are the free speech platform. Yeah.

00:11:54
We're a platform where free speech is protected and defended

00:11:56
and that's important. But that's just table Stakes for

00:11:59
a good ecosystem, for conversation for Course and

00:12:03
we're willing to stick up for it in a pinch as we've shown but

00:12:06
it's not kind of, you know, we see it as necessary, but not

00:12:10
sufficient to making something great.

00:12:12
Where is the brand? Is just like the writers, or

00:12:14
what is the first thing you want people to think about?

00:12:17
When you talk about sub-sect, I do think it's the writers.

00:12:19
I mean, nobody comes to sub stack because they want to get

00:12:25
more email, right? Right, not a problem.

00:12:29
People have right. Nobody comes to sub stack

00:12:31
because Cuz they don't have enough stuff to read because

00:12:34
they're it really is, you know, first and foremost.

00:12:36
It's what's going to appeal to the writers?

00:12:38
The deal we can offer to writers is luck.

00:12:40
You're going to be independent, you can have editorial Freedom.

00:12:44
Yeah you can have ownership of what you're doing.

00:12:46
You have a direct connection with your audience.

00:12:48
Yes you're going to have free speech.

00:12:49
You're going to be able to write the things you want to write but

00:12:51
it's this package of things that's like you're going to be

00:12:54
able to do the work that you believe in and if you do a good

00:12:57
job, you're going to be able to make a living, may be a fortune

00:13:00
doing this thing. And the Independence of that

00:13:03
buys, makes it very compelling for readers, because the thing

00:13:07
that readers are looking for, is not a theoretical platform with

00:13:11
X, Y Zed. It's like, where am I going to

00:13:12
get the smartest best, most trustworthy, the things that I

00:13:15
value, as I decide to Value them, right?

00:13:18
Yeah. We set it up, like before we

00:13:20
settled on a new economic engine, for culture, as the

00:13:23
mission, which is an updated Mission, we sort of shopped

00:13:27
around or satellite that we're trying to build a better future

00:13:29
for writing so that system that can help.

00:13:32
Typewriters pursue the work that they really think is important

00:13:35
and be able to fly like support it by making money from Rita

00:13:38
subscriptions it's Central to way.

00:13:40
We built sub stacking to can see it in every post that we've

00:13:43
written in the history of our amazing blog on subset of a

00:13:47
subset of your own, my newsletter promoting yours, and

00:13:50
that's the subject. Rewrite should also check out

00:13:53
music, you come. And you need to sell the actual

00:13:57
newsletter better. In this podcast.

00:13:58
Yeah, please make sure you use mansions and all the cost

00:14:00
posting features would be accomplished.

00:14:02
What is it? Has put aside as podcast guest

00:14:05
in the UI. We love that.

00:14:06
Are you trying to move Beyond writing?

00:14:08
I mean, obviously, you just put in a video embedding feature.

00:14:11
You know, this podcast is published through subject but

00:14:13
like, is it truly like video and well yeah, sorry, little writing

00:14:17
already way you host a bunch of people who are not expressly.

00:14:21
Just writers were writing, will always and writers always be

00:14:23
part of the DNA of sub stack and will always be Central to our

00:14:27
identity, but we're starting to see more and more writers and

00:14:31
creators or culture makers generally because some people

00:14:33
aren't sub stack. And they think of themselves as

00:14:35
podcasters primarily or video makers primarily, or they're

00:14:39
sort of shepherds of a community.

00:14:41
And I think we think there's there's room for that to expand

00:14:44
over time. And so I personally have a broad

00:14:47
definition of writers. I think a podcaster is a racer.

00:14:49
I think a Movie Maker as a racer, but we want to have an

00:14:53
expansive tent that people can see themselves as part of, and

00:14:57
we think the subset model can support all these kinds of

00:15:00
creators. Yeah.

00:15:01
Alright so back to Switch, I'm super interested in.

00:15:04
I've been giving all my feedback and like totally iterate it to

00:15:07
me. I think I made I made a note at

00:15:10
one point. Basically being like you should

00:15:11
give things that like help writers that get the pain

00:15:15
audience, right? Or I think one of the

00:15:16
complication of notes is this idea that we want the subset

00:15:19
platform to reward people who are writing stuff that like

00:15:24
people are willing to pay for but then on notes you don't want

00:15:27
to just I don't know handicap any new writer and stop them

00:15:31
from being able to build a following.

00:15:32
Because I happen to be earlier than them.

00:15:34
How do you think about using the actual like money as a signal on

00:15:39
notes while still keeping it sort of a platform that's

00:15:42
appealing to other people right? Chris base question.

00:15:46
You've thought about this right? This is certainly something we

00:15:48
think we do think that the the money is this important signal

00:15:53
and for example you know we have bestseller badges on sub stack

00:15:58
where if you're have a certain number of paid subscribers you

00:16:00
get a little thing or the purple badge which Is 10 paid is

00:16:03
almost like more of an incentive to get to 10.

00:16:06
Maybe I want the money, I'll get the money.

00:16:12
All right, that thing works really well, and I think that

00:16:22
there's a lot that we can do. You know, when we show

00:16:24
leaderboards of one of the top sub Stacks in this category, we

00:16:29
rank it by pain. That's a deliberate thing,

00:16:30
right? We actually way back.

00:16:32
In the day, we had one that was ranked by like how many people

00:16:35
liked it and then there's instantly.

00:16:36
There. Was people gaming it, right?

00:16:37
You're someone that coming in and doing fake stuff and putting

00:16:40
fake sign ups on their email list and the beautiful thing

00:16:42
about the paid subscriptions is like yet.

00:16:44
Go ahead game. It like figure out how to get to

00:16:47
the top of this leaderboard, right?

00:16:48
Whatever you do. That thing is pretty good.

00:16:51
The thing that we don't need to do is sort of like treat that as

00:16:55
you know, it's not like having a lot of paid subscriptions gives

00:16:59
you this magical superpower that.

00:17:02
You know, you get this amplifier where no one else is ever

00:17:05
knowing heard, right? The people who have the big

00:17:07
subscriptions already have large committed audiences and that's

00:17:11
the thing that matters we wanted both of you a place where you

00:17:15
sort of get credit for that, where you can have those signals

00:17:18
of this is where I'm on something.

00:17:20
Like this is all these things but also where, if you're

00:17:22
someone who's just getting started, you know, you're not

00:17:24
shut out from right, what? I guess to me, I don't have a

00:17:27
Content moderation problem on my sub sack because people pay for

00:17:31
it if they like it and like, I'm responsive to what readers want.

00:17:34
And like, the reason I'm successful in some way is that

00:17:36
it's not like unbearably crass, like it goes beyond what any

00:17:39
platform would reasonably moderate, right?

00:17:41
It's like oh, you have to be proactively good and if healing.

00:17:45
So I guess the question is like, are there pieces of what make

00:17:49
like sub sack work and sort of Self moderating in a way that

00:17:52
you can bring to notes or if you like when you're pushing with

00:17:55
the like I don't know. It's a free-for-all and I like

00:17:58
on every Edge case I'm going to defend what people can say on.

00:18:02
It's you, are you like embracing like the writer piece of it?

00:18:07
Yeah, you know you know I'm saying there?

00:18:10
Yeah I think maybe you're pointing at, there's a

00:18:11
difference between sort of taking a stance in favor of free

00:18:17
speech and a free press and not wanting to have like a

00:18:20
centralized sort of like censorship system.

00:18:24
There's a difference between that and saying, anybody can say

00:18:27
everything in any circumstance and that's going to be fine,

00:18:30
right? Right?

00:18:31
Because that lat Either one is going to lead to a thing.

00:18:34
That sucks, right? Like you have a comment section.

00:18:37
You're such that you can limited to paid subscriber, you can kick

00:18:39
people out, you can set rules, eat on whatever.

00:18:41
And there's a little bit of like it's your house, it's your

00:18:43
rules. Right?

00:18:44
To me, that is not only consistent with the sort of free

00:18:47
speech principles actually think it's like a necessary the to

00:18:50
have to go together. If you're gonna have a thing

00:18:52
that says, we're going to have a place where you can say what you

00:18:54
want. Part of that freedom is to say,

00:18:56
I'm going to be able to set the Norms in my space with my

00:18:59
community and we're going to be able to have a space.

00:19:01
That's not only You know, as you said prevents the things that

00:19:04
like everybody everywhere agrees we don't want, but I can set the

00:19:07
rules in my house to be very strict and therefore the people

00:19:12
that come to your comment section can choose to be part of

00:19:15
the community. That's got this like very

00:19:18
specific norms and values and that is actually very valuable

00:19:22
that actually does a better job of creating a space that people

00:19:25
want to be. Then if sub stack said,

00:19:27
everybody has to be polite to whatever that the global

00:19:30
substance that it is because nobody wants to listen.

00:19:32
Some company. But it's like, okay, we can

00:19:34
organize around like a Creator or exactly.

00:19:36
Like the, you know, if we wanted to set up in and set the rules

00:19:39
of politeness in your comment section, the best we could do is

00:19:42
kind of take an average of what everybody's upset.

00:19:44
Once, I'll tell you from experience, the result of that

00:19:47
is you will you will please nobody right.

00:19:49
And the best you can hope for is to have people that are equally

00:19:51
mad on kind of every Side of Everything.

00:19:53
Whereas if we say look, you're going to be able to set the

00:19:55
rules and you know now not everybody in your audience will

00:19:59
be perfectly happy with that but it's your house, you can do it

00:20:01
and people can choose to be a part.

00:20:02
That and you can create something, and somebody else can

00:20:04
have a different space that has different norms.

00:20:07
And that's good. Not only is it, okay?

00:20:09
It's actively good. Now, the challenge with

00:20:12
something like notes exactly how it was.

00:20:14
My next, we're sort of we're like, okay, so now there's two

00:20:17
writers, interacting with each other.

00:20:19
Right. How does that work?

00:20:20
Right? There's places where people are

00:20:22
allowed to publish your thing. Like how does that work, right?

00:20:24
And the approach that we take with this is we want to figure

00:20:28
out how to take the parts of that former system that work and

00:20:32
apply them to this new world. We want to leave the case where

00:20:35
the writers and the readers are in control and this leads to

00:20:39
things that are actually dramatically different than what

00:20:41
other networks have done. For example, when you do a post

00:20:45
on notes, it's your space. You set the rules.

00:20:48
The same way, people commenting on your posts, right?

00:20:51
Works the same way as if they're commenting on your newsletter

00:20:54
post, right? You can go and delete people who

00:20:57
comment on your post, you can delete the comment, you can

00:20:59
block them, you can ban them, you can, you know, you can have.

00:21:02
Of this level of control where you say, this is my space and

00:21:06
within my space, we're going to kind of go by these rules and

00:21:10
we're still figuring out all of the like there's a lot of, you

00:21:14
know, different parts that go into that and what does it mean

00:21:15
over here? And what does it mean, if

00:21:17
somebody does this and that, but in general, that's the principal

00:21:20
were applying. We're kind of trying to say,

00:21:22
look, we want you to be able to set your sort of Rules of

00:21:25
Engagement, like, who do I want to see, who do I want?

00:21:29
How do I want to be able to interact with people?

00:21:30
And we want that to make kind of like, A force field that

00:21:33
governs, your experience on sub stack and that can be much more

00:21:37
specific to the kinds of things you want to do.

00:21:40
Like, it's not just like, whatever.

00:21:42
Don't call me names, you might say, hey, I want everything to

00:21:44
be really productive, which is a kind of standard that would be

00:21:47
untenable to have as like, a global rule to be clear.

00:21:51
What I want from my notes, I want it to be like, you know, an

00:21:54
Ender's Game where, you know, Valentine and like Peter wig in

00:21:58
our writing, I like the global forum.

00:21:59
This is like, you know, you don't want to come to the Rock.

00:22:02
I want to be able to take advantage of the fact.

00:22:03
Okay, I have a pretty successful tech one like but now, do I get

00:22:07
to I get to argue about like, politics or whatever with the

00:22:09
other, you know? I feel like that's the dream and

00:22:12
so to me, you think you should become the hegemon.

00:22:14
Yeah, exactly right. Exactly.

00:22:15
Just for having such great writing and it's Jimmy.

00:22:19
That means that it's like a pretty like buttoned up.

00:22:23
I mean they're not boring but that it's you know I that's what

00:22:26
that's why the when you hear like it's going to be totally

00:22:28
unmoderated, it sounds like the opposite of what most of the

00:22:31
writers. Is want, which is they want to

00:22:33
be in a place where they're like, taking super seriously and

00:22:36
like influencing the culture, you know what I mean?

00:22:39
Yeah, I mean, I think there's a difference between being able to

00:22:42
set norms and participating communities that have very

00:22:44
strong norms and the idea that the way to get there is

00:22:48
centralized censorship. Yeah, and I think we've come

00:22:51
from an era where those two things have been kind of

00:22:53
conflated and people think that the only way to get a platform

00:22:57
to have a certain characteristic is to have a really strong sort

00:23:00
of like centralized set of like Here's the governing rules that

00:23:03
affect everybody. We just don't think that's

00:23:05
worked very well. We think there's something

00:23:08
better that can be made here. So, you know, you got sort of

00:23:10
pounded, on the racism, on the platform question, or has your

00:23:14
answer at all? Change to when you lay asked

00:23:16
about, will you do about sort of a racist incident on the

00:23:19
platform know, it's basically the same answer.

00:23:21
I mean, I think I did a very bad job in that interview, but I

00:23:24
think the answer is look, we do have a Content policy, it's by

00:23:28
Design, like it allows a lot of stuff that we don't like it.

00:23:32
It bans, only very like extreme things.

00:23:35
If people are putting things that are against the overall

00:23:37
content policy, they get taken down by us.

00:23:40
However, that allows a lot of things that we find very

00:23:42
objectionable. And then we try to build a

00:23:44
system that puts people in control of what they see and who

00:23:46
they interact with image. You and you worked with Ilan,

00:23:50
right? You're at test you interact with

00:23:52
him personally or yep? Yeah, he hired me.

00:23:55
Yeah. So what's it like you guys can

00:23:58
decide whether you want to be total foils to him or not?

00:24:01
Or like what's it like to be in a pseudo competitive situation

00:24:05
with him at the moment? I try to think about you Lon as

00:24:07
little as possible. I'm thinking about self stack

00:24:11
all the time and what we're trying to do here is not build

00:24:15
the anti Twitter or build the ante Instagram or anything like

00:24:18
that. We're trying to build the first

00:24:19
sub stack and the vision for what we think it can become is

00:24:23
an amazing beautiful thing and It's bigger and more important

00:24:28
than social media, like a social media for text or social media

00:24:32
for pictures or social media for video.

00:24:35
I spend all my time thinking about how to make that thing a

00:24:38
reality and it's hard just thinking about that.

00:24:40
It's hard just to get to year 5 of a network that let's write as

00:24:46
publish directly to the audiences and serves so far,

00:24:49
mostly just writers. So I don't ya.

00:24:53
I'm not thinking. I'm not gonna be totally, ignore

00:24:55
the know. Not thinking about them because

00:24:57
I mean an awkward thing about the argument of the moment, is

00:25:00
it like Twitter in some ways is trying to switch to like just

00:25:04
charging people instead of attention, arguably Twitter's

00:25:08
trying to kill subset. Yeah, I mean, what do you make

00:25:11
like the Blue strategy to me? I mean, it's paying the company

00:25:15
rather than a writer or like how would you distinguish like the

00:25:18
Blue strategy from your approach and like how that plays out sort

00:25:22
of differently in the product? Either of you can answer this

00:25:25
strategy? All's totally different.

00:25:27
It's like medium on Netflix. Yeah, it's like, you're paying

00:25:31
for the platform. I do think in general anything

00:25:34
where we're setting writers up to make money from what they're

00:25:39
doing, we are in favor of this is you know very important piece

00:25:42
of what subject does. It's not the only thing that

00:25:45
subject does and this is something that you know we've

00:25:46
had people try to copy sub stack in various ways over the years

00:25:53
and often what happens is the look at one piece of the A pie

00:25:56
and think that that's what it is.

00:25:58
So, we went through a wave where a bunch of people looked at some

00:26:00
stack and said email newsletters, right?

00:26:03
That's what's going on over there.

00:26:04
Email newsletters are so good. Facebook, did this Twitter

00:26:07
bought a different company? A bunch of the Atlantic design.

00:26:09
There's like can use letters. We're going to cut, we're going

00:26:12
to make a newsletter thing and that's going to be it in.

00:26:14
The newsletter is very important.

00:26:16
It's a big part of what a sub stack is, but it's not the whole

00:26:19
thing, right? The whole thing is, it's your

00:26:22
publication. You own the connection with your

00:26:25
audience. Hey you directly you have this

00:26:27
independent site that you can do.

00:26:29
You can leave some stack with your audience you can bring your

00:26:32
audience to sub stack. This piece of that is a huge

00:26:35
ship on control I really I can't underline enough it's easy for

00:26:39
people to abstract away but the fact that you know I could walk

00:26:42
away is key to the relationship working.

00:26:44
Well you know. Yeah.

00:26:45
It's the difference between me saying, come on, trust us and me

00:26:49
saying okay, trust us like we know we know we have to keep

00:26:53
entering your trust because you can't leave They're just

00:26:56
different relationships to be under with a platform it is

00:26:59
fundamentally different and so you know I think with blue it's

00:27:03
not really even the same thing at all.

00:27:05
There's others some other monetization tools that Twitter

00:27:07
is testing that we're excited that they're doing that.

00:27:10
I think it helps to be paid but it's still not the same thing

00:27:13
right now. They're trying to create crater,

00:27:16
do you part of your delicate dance with Twitter is, is it

00:27:20
that you think writers your subset Riders are still

00:27:23
dependent on Twitter for audience?

00:27:26
I don't think they're dependent on it for audience, but I think

00:27:29
they are dependent on it in other ways.

00:27:32
Let me put it this way. A lot of writers are just heavy

00:27:36
Twitter. You can just like it, right?

00:27:38
It takes up a lot of their mind, share.

00:27:40
A lot of our customers are all. They use it a lot in spite of,

00:27:42
not like we use a lot in spite of not liking it or they

00:27:45
convince themselves that they need to use it and then because

00:27:48
they want to use it a lot. And even though like if you look

00:27:53
at exactly the traffic stats like how much traffic is Coming

00:27:56
from Twitter, it's really not that much.

00:27:58
I don't know if it's that, if if you see this in your neighbors

00:28:01
but like, five maybe for me, I mean, obviously my actual

00:28:03
newsletter people underestimate just what a large percentage, it

00:28:07
is because you're sending it to everybody every time.

00:28:09
So yeah emails. Um, and then right and then

00:28:11
direct and obviously, Google searches actually becoming a

00:28:15
better one over until searches over what I mean that, you know,

00:28:17
we've added a bunch of network features that are an order of

00:28:20
magnitude more than the actual traffic.

00:28:22
But all of that said, it's still a major place where people are

00:28:25
spending a lot of time. It's still like a

00:28:26
quality-of-life Thing If It just like it just sucks.

00:28:29
It sucks. When you can't embed your Tweet

00:28:31
and your sub S letter. Like that should just work,

00:28:33
right? It sucks that I can't.

00:28:35
It doesn't sometimes it messes with my link when I share it

00:28:37
it's just hard links working for, what's your view?

00:28:40
What's your sense of how throttled it is?

00:28:43
I do think that there is some throttle and going on.

00:28:45
I think the previews are not being enrolled in some cases and

00:28:49
I think in some cases, it's the distribution is different, you

00:28:53
know, Andreessen Horowitz is a major sub Wester in a Twitter

00:28:57
investor, have you tried to ask them to Broach a piece or

00:29:01
anything like that? I mean we've been talking to

00:29:03
them about the stuff. We're very much in favor of a

00:29:06
piece. We didn't start any of this, we

00:29:08
don't think that it makes any sense.

00:29:10
Frankly for Twitter to be feuding with sub stack we'd love

00:29:13
to not have any of this, not any of his annoying bugs for writers

00:29:19
but at the same time it is kind of out of our control.

00:29:21
Just today. I like coming into this like

00:29:23
Tucker Carlson saying he's going on Twitter.

00:29:26
And there's still like this sort of, you know, platforms are

00:29:30
identified with the like huge craters on top of them.

00:29:33
What sort of sub Stacks view right now in terms of like

00:29:37
cording writers, this is going to lead us to the financials

00:29:40
that you disclose, what's the view on?

00:29:42
Sort of handpicking writers, unlike the strengths and

00:29:45
weaknesses of that. For like your strategy, we have

00:29:48
always taken an approach of Going in like recruiting

00:29:55
specific writers right from the start of some stack, when we've

00:29:59
always had, you know, the same way that readers don't come to

00:30:02
sub stack because of sub stack, they come to sub stack because

00:30:04
of writers, I think the same is true of writers in general.

00:30:08
Like there's every kind of pocket of people.

00:30:11
The people that come to some stack come because of other

00:30:15
people who are on the platform and we've gotten to the point.

00:30:17
Now, I think used to worry a lot in the early days about getting

00:30:20
identified with some Particular slice.

00:30:22
Like you get a pocket of this type of people, and then it's

00:30:25
like, well, all of this people are on substract all that people

00:30:27
in such tag. I think we successfully got to

00:30:29
the point where it, it really does feel like, sort of an index

00:30:33
fund of culture. Like you have a bunch of

00:30:35
different slices from all across the map.

00:30:37
People still have these opinions often hear someone say, oh some

00:30:39
stack. That's where, you know, that's

00:30:41
all the people of X, Y Zed, but that's just their world.

00:30:43
They just happen to know, all those people, and it's one of

00:30:45
many world, right? So, I think, you know,

00:30:47
recruiting writers, helping them come to some stack, helping them

00:30:50
succeed remains a core. Of what we do the piece, where

00:30:55
it's something that has changed over time is in the past.

00:30:57
We've experimented with using money, as a way to help

00:31:01
accelerate that. Yeah, we do something that we

00:31:03
did, pretty extensively a couple of years ago, I think with great

00:31:06
success, but we no longer have to do basically, since abstract,

00:31:10
was not a big believer in you. Come, you guys were willing to

00:31:12
give me advance, but you were not like, oh, we're going to

00:31:15
break. It might have been sort of tale

00:31:16
as the particular timing of that vitamin B.

00:31:19
Yeah, but I did it anyway, but you You what we, what we did in

00:31:23
the lot of those cases was trying to push people to not

00:31:26
take right in advance because the deal is better if you don't

00:31:29
the deal, was you keep 90% of your right, right?

00:31:31
- this is on the record being very happy.

00:31:37
But yeah, but yeah, but you made a smarter Choice by comparison,

00:31:40
right? Well, the thing to remember with

00:31:41
all of those glaciers everybody, it reverted to the normal

00:31:44
substrate. Also, it's not like an ongoing

00:31:46
thing, but there was sort of like a moment where, like, let

00:31:48
us help you get the start. So that this thing, Turnover,

00:31:52
you can see it working. We've done enough of that.

00:31:54
The people see it working now and I don't think we have to do

00:31:57
that anymore but you're out certain still recruiting writers

00:32:00
to come on. It's just not Financial or,

00:32:03
yeah. We are always trying to sort of

00:32:05
unlock new pockets of writers and look for people who sort of

00:32:09
fit the characteristics of whom, I succeed on self stack.

00:32:12
But we're not paying advances and partly, that's because the

00:32:16
market has changed, and we've been more cautious with our

00:32:18
resources and partly it's because the network has been

00:32:21
boots. Trap.

00:32:22
Now things have their own momentum and we have Network

00:32:25
effects that add as much benefit for people as, you know,

00:32:28
upfront, cash mine. So like 20% of paid

00:32:31
subscriptions across sub, stat come directly from the subset

00:32:34
Network. Now it's a, it's a huge benefit.

00:32:37
You get just either you don't need all that much more

00:32:40
encouragement to come. So, you know, you did this

00:32:42
community fundraise. How much did you end up?

00:32:45
Getting the maximum? You can do through a community

00:32:48
around, is five million dollars? Yeah, do you have the money?

00:32:52
I don't even know. I think we're actually not

00:32:54
supposed to talk about the specifics of it yet because of

00:32:57
like it's not officially closed and it's a police unit the right

00:33:01
at first. There was like oh we're just

00:33:02
sort of rethinking but there are lots of sort of language games

00:33:06
going on and not specific to you.

00:33:09
Which is how just wait. Yeah.

00:33:10
How do you play nicely with you? See.

00:33:13
I think we I think I expect we'll be able to but in the

00:33:15
meantime you can go to the page. You can see the things, you can

00:33:17
see the thing we're being very careful to like follow the rules

00:33:20
basically in Anyone, you had negative Revenue because - yeah

00:33:24
- Revenue, which is different, by the way than, that's not just

00:33:28
a loss. That's technically, the revenue

00:33:30
itself was negative because the way we can try something, right.

00:33:33
That's why if you like, look at it without thinking very much,

00:33:36
it seems absurd like people who want to criticize your business.

00:33:39
It's easy to be like - Revenue that, you know, even the top

00:33:43
light. But I mean, you know, the story

00:33:45
of that was, we were spending money to bootstrap this network.

00:33:48
We publish a bunch of numbers around, how that's gone.

00:33:50
What that's meant for people. Or it's pretty clear that it it

00:33:54
worked. It's the you were sort of taking

00:33:57
a loss on these like advances to writers and those come ahead of

00:34:01
Revenue and so then you lose money totally there and whereas

00:34:04
if it was after in 2021 is an especially frothy year as well

00:34:07
in the end as a market. So it may be in a typical year

00:34:11
Ben Thompson, who I'm sure you guys read sort of.

00:34:14
I should have reread it before. But like, I mean, she seems to

00:34:17
really like racial. Like, me are like suckers for

00:34:20
investing in this round, right? He was pretty - he is sort of a

00:34:23
complicated subject View and that on the one hand I feel like

00:34:26
he wants you guys to actually control the list and thinks you

00:34:29
should be sort of more controlled or I don't know any

00:34:32
response to been Thompson's riding on sub-sect.

00:34:36
I'll tell you what will work really hard to make sure that it

00:34:39
goes your way. We can definitely that and we I

00:34:42
have tremendous respect for been like, we looked at him as one of

00:34:47
the examples that made us think that starting substantially be

00:34:49
worth while we talk to him and their early days of I think a

00:34:52
lot of his thinking on this stuff is good but he's wrong

00:34:56
about this one. He can sometimes have this sort

00:34:58
of like I mean he was so successful so early and it's

00:35:02
like he he's the one that, you know, the made it, I don't know.

00:35:07
And like I can be skeptical about the weather.

00:35:10
How big of a trend it will be broadly or whether he sort of

00:35:13
set up a somewhat unique situation and he's belts and

00:35:16
he's built some cool tools and this rest as well.

00:35:19
Like he's right he I think he was now just trying to be He's

00:35:22
trying to be a good faith critic, and a good faith,

00:35:24
analysts and Beyond some things, we agree with him.

00:35:27
Fervently on and some things we just disagree with them on,

00:35:30
right? One thing I'm thinking about

00:35:32
more is building like a publication on top of sub stack.

00:35:35
Like obviously Barry waist is like much further on that

00:35:38
Journey. There's like what the ball work

00:35:41
is sort of a publication Yang Claire's.

00:35:42
Another one? Yeah.

00:35:44
Well ER we gotta you gotta have the in front of the name.

00:35:46
You gotta do this. Oh yeah.

00:35:47
I might not might not make it that the new killer had back.

00:35:53
Yeah, which I mean what's the pitch to The Publications?

00:35:56
And like, how much? I mean there's sort of a

00:35:58
contradiction, right? And I have find this sort of

00:36:00
recruiting writers at the moment that I'm having to explain its

00:36:03
like come to a sub stack, which I'm doing partially for my

00:36:07
Independence but then like you're joining a publication or

00:36:10
like how do you think about publications on subsequent a lot

00:36:13
of the pitches every person sort of on their own as their own

00:36:18
business? I think I look at this through

00:36:22
the lens of Institutions and I think especially in the early

00:36:27
days of sub stack, a lot of what was happening was, people felt

00:36:31
like the especially the writers felt ill-served by the existing

00:36:35
institutions either. They weren't aligned with how

00:36:37
they wanted operate, or those institutions were struggling and

00:36:40
it felt like there wasn't space in the existing institutions for

00:36:43
what they wanted to do. And the option was to sort of

00:36:47
like go outside and start. Your own thing and like be

00:36:50
independent and you know, create this sort of like external

00:36:54
pressure and I think that's wonderful and necessary and then

00:36:58
the other piece that I'm very excited about that can come from

00:37:01
that is the opportunity to build new institutions.

00:37:04
And I think you're seeing this the seeds of this with some of

00:37:07
the people not every some people on some stack get very

00:37:10
successful and make a ton of money and I like this is great,

00:37:12
like, right? This is my perfect life.

00:37:14
I don't want to be anybody's boss.

00:37:16
I don't want to do with this other stuff.

00:37:17
I totally understand that. And I, you know, we will, your

00:37:20
life could be so easy. Eric, if you just don't invite

00:37:23
the others in, we will, you know, we will make sure that sub

00:37:25
stack is great for those people because I think that's a

00:37:27
wonderful thing. But there are other people who

00:37:30
say this actually might be the seed of something new that I

00:37:34
could start. I could start a new kind of

00:37:36
institution that's grown up in this new world that lives by

00:37:39
different rules. And I can build something larger

00:37:42
than myself, and I can give an opportunity to other people to

00:37:45
come and be a part of it. And we're really excited about

00:37:48
that. And we want to make Make sure

00:37:49
that you can keep doing that on some stack basically

00:37:52
indefinitely. And we've got a bunch of work

00:37:54
into you know some of the features that help you with

00:37:57
this. We think of it as sort of like

00:37:59
media Empire mode. It's something that we're

00:38:01
actively building. So the more you build that come

00:38:03
and talk to us we'd love to help you make it, wonderful, right.

00:38:07
You're not against all institutions just just the bat

00:38:09
that's just the ones that don't use some stack yet.

00:38:12
Part of what's going on is like you know the high-profile

00:38:14
writers get to put themselves on top of these media institutions

00:38:18
in the way that they were. Buried under management.

00:38:21
Yeah, it's really interesting as a like, right at from the bias.

00:38:24
Right? A perspective to see, right has

00:38:26
become owners and set the agenda is themselves.

00:38:28
I think that's really exciting. Dynamic, this developing you

00:38:31
can't even look at it sort of, by analogy with what happened in

00:38:33
Tech where it used to be the norm that the people that built

00:38:37
the tech were sort of underlings.

00:38:40
And at some point that Dynamic kind of flipped and I said, wait

00:38:42
a minute, like these should be our company's, right?

00:38:46
You know, if this was 40 years ago, I probably wouldn't run.

00:38:49
Sub stack, I'm going to be like the whatever.

00:38:51
I'd need some boss. Wearing a suit to tell me what

00:38:53
to do and it just turns out when you let the inmates running the

00:38:56
Asylum, you get more interesting results.

00:38:58
I think the same is going to be true in me, I had never thought

00:39:01
about it that way, but that is super interesting.

00:39:03
It's like okay the becomes much easier to build the actual

00:39:06
company. So the core yet product skills

00:39:09
are enough to become like a company.

00:39:11
The business friction, the admin fresh in the tech friction.

00:39:14
The design friction is removed so you can just sort of focus on

00:39:17
the journalism itself or the In itself, it opens up new

00:39:20
opportunities. How much is like sub sack the

00:39:23
company growing or you know, I wish I'd seen 2022 revenue and

00:39:27
like, what metrics can you share any of my own free list growing

00:39:31
a lot? Obviously, I'm just one

00:39:32
business, you know, will like some of my Revenue growth is off

00:39:35
sub SEC. You know, sponsorships like

00:39:38
events and like that's net. Probably good for you because

00:39:41
I'm hiring another writer who's going to write more posts.

00:39:43
It'll probably translate into subscribers, but like how sub

00:39:47
stack the business. Doing it the moment it's doing

00:39:50
well, the numbers that we shared our two million paid

00:39:54
subscriptions. Now top 10 Publishers, make more

00:39:58
than 25 million dollars, a year of paid three hundred million

00:40:01
dollars out to writers over the course of subsets lifetime

00:40:05
readers have paid writers that should say.

00:40:08
I think we crossed borders at 30 million active subscriptions,

00:40:11
135 million monthly active subscriptions.

00:40:15
There's the best kind of growth. Indicators we can give,

00:40:17
obviously, there are so many lever, your Unemployed at the

00:40:19
moment. Is there like more writers?

00:40:22
It's the existing writers monetizing more.

00:40:24
It's like readers coming on. Its readers, subscribing to a

00:40:29
second publication or like, obviously these are all like,

00:40:31
yes. Well these, yes.

00:40:33
Yes, sir. Give me a top of those like.

00:40:35
Is there one that's sort of at the top of your mind at the

00:40:38
moment, basically your listing, all of the ones that are part of

00:40:41
sort of the core growth equation for sub stack.

00:40:44
And I would say the story of the past year.

00:40:47
Let's say has Has been, we took a really hard.

00:40:51
Look at writers, coming to sub stack like, how are we going to

00:40:55
get more and more writers coming and being able to start and

00:40:57
succeed and kind of the readers, getting their second

00:41:03
subscription like growth from the sub stack Network, the place

00:41:05
where I'm already reader who scrubs one subject do, I

00:41:08
subscribe to a second and a third and how does that happen?

00:41:11
And we've made huge gains in both of those over the past year

00:41:14
and you can see this with the growth of the steps of network

00:41:17
20% of paid. There's across the number come

00:41:20
from the network now. Yeah, a year ago, he's going to

00:41:23
say 8% before that, it was zero percent and so that piece of the

00:41:28
thing has started working really, really well.

00:41:31
So I think we're going to keep doubling down on those areas and

00:41:35
then the other one, that's very interesting.

00:41:36
Of course, is always just like the Top Line growth.

00:41:38
Like how are we letting you bring in readers from

00:41:41
everywhere, the right and you have a sense of like how

00:41:43
penetrated our newsletters right now, have you tried to say,

00:41:47
well, assess what the Total addressable market for

00:41:50
newsletters is I mean, I would imagine another great Chris,

00:41:53
this question. Yeah, I imagine like thinking

00:41:56
about podcasts and video more. I mean, one sort of negative way

00:42:01
to read that. Is that you think?

00:42:02
Well, there's only so many people love to read and pay for

00:42:05
reading and like, people love to watch TV like is there a sort of

00:42:08
a limit? This doesn't affect my business

00:42:10
because I feel like they're plenty more Elites like to chase

00:42:12
into. But for the big big pie is there

00:42:15
just like a limit of how many people will pay for newsletters.

00:42:19
I think in the long run, is there a limit to how many people

00:42:24
will pay? I think of it as like, how many

00:42:25
people will pay for culture that they care about will pay for

00:42:29
things that they value? I think there is a limit to that

00:42:32
it's not going to be everybody in the whole world.

00:42:35
I do think that the limit is going to be sort of hilariously

00:42:39
large. Basically what you're saying

00:42:41
Beyond reading you're saying also for for watching and

00:42:45
listening. Yeah but I think within that

00:42:47
market reading is actually a very large looks like a big

00:42:51
piece of that like if you're looking at not just like

00:42:54
everybody you can see with media but who are the people who are

00:42:56
going to pay for things that are more valuable.

00:42:58
They're much more likely to be readers are much more likely to

00:43:01
be in that Universe. The thing that we keep finding

00:43:03
is that there are new pockets of things that we maybe never even

00:43:11
would have thought of or guessed that they exist that start to

00:43:15
work on sub stack and so they'll be no.

00:43:17
It was like there was you know, the person Pushing like some

00:43:20
book past its copyright. What was that?

00:43:22
Was it like Dracula, Dracula, daily.

00:43:24
Yeah, but what any other it was a human Jesus moment on.

00:43:28
Yeah. Well, I even had the Cox

00:43:30
Richardson is the number one aurangzeb stack is, she's a

00:43:33
history Professor who was publishing books through the

00:43:35
Academic Press at? I think it Princeton the

00:43:38
something, but she wasn't like high-flying journalist or author

00:43:43
before she was on some stack but now she's the number-one earner.

00:43:47
Its new energy that's been unlocked only Is it, you know,

00:43:50
the 2017 version of this question, we got was how many

00:43:53
other been Thompson's do you think there are in the world?

00:43:55
How many other Bill Bishops? There are enrolled.

00:43:58
The question we never got was, do you think there's a history

00:44:00
professor at a college whose potential has been unreal?

00:44:03
Aced. Right.

00:44:05
So yeah, we think it's a massive energy.

00:44:07
Unlocker know what's the most successful like non-writing sub.

00:44:12
So there's actually quite a few of the top sub Stacks that

00:44:17
either have a podcast as The vet or are a podcast like single has

00:44:22
like a podcast or yeah, blocked and reported the fifth column is

00:44:26
unsub stack. Andrew Sullivan has a podcast,

00:44:28
that's very good. Michael shellenberger, who does

00:44:31
public is doing more and more video which is quite good.

00:44:34
Josh barro is going to come up here because there's actually

00:44:37
there's actually quite a lot. I'm just probably not because we

00:44:40
could make it a little bit that we've got the best podcast

00:44:45
platform for this kind of thing, right?

00:44:47
Really your meeting with patreon.

00:44:48
Everybody wants to talk. About Twitter.

00:44:49
But no, I mean I just I think a patreon is once being the best

00:44:53
monetization models. I would be remiss.

00:44:55
If I didn't say I miss my guess if you're thinking about doing a

00:44:57
podcast, you should definitely do it on subtag.

00:45:00
Get the emails charge, paid subscriptions.

00:45:02
It's a tremendous place to build a community around a table.

00:45:05
Pay whining. I don't pay well and you podcast

00:45:07
right now because why is it? This is where you know, I want

00:45:10
like a YouTube channel or like and in part to bring it back to

00:45:13
the Twitter question, there is like you want some platform

00:45:17
diversity as a Creator and like Like Oak, Twitter's going to

00:45:20
die. Then I probably want to be on

00:45:21
YouTube. Also, YouTube is just so good at

00:45:24
like, total rows as much as you guys are, you know, we would

00:45:27
encourage you to be on YouTube. We encourage, you know, if you

00:45:30
publish your podcast on sub, s goes to all the podcast goes to

00:45:32
our robot guys, goes to Spotify. You should take clips and put it

00:45:35
on YouTube. You should take clips and put it

00:45:37
on Tick-Tock. We want you to put it

00:45:38
everywhere. I just as you want to put it

00:45:39
everywhere because it becomes the sort of top of funnel for

00:45:42
the thing you're making. And if you do monetize it with

00:45:44
paid subscriptions in the cool feature on sub stack, which

00:45:47
allows you to put a like an Yo pay wall into the episodes, send

00:45:51
it out. Still goes out to all your main

00:45:53
listeners and then at 20 minutes and they might get you

00:45:56
interrupting them saying, hey this is supported by

00:45:59
subscribers. It's the only reason this

00:46:00
exists. If you want to subscribe, you

00:46:02
don't have to. But some people are, we are

00:46:05
building the tools to let you do so and they're working real.

00:46:08
It's a secret killer feature that we haven't marketed.

00:46:10
Well, there are no that some scale, I will right now.

00:46:13
I just like want to grow it and like, you know, I don't want

00:46:15
some subscribers to subscribe out of the goodness of their

00:46:18
heart as you know, Hey, every subscriber the paid.

00:46:20
So, I mean, I believe in Bay walls, honestly like my readers

00:46:23
convert when they hit up a wall, like I surveyed them and I

00:46:27
thought a larger percentage would say, oh, it's like the

00:46:29
goodness of my heart, like, I believe in you, but in there

00:46:33
like, no, it's like, I believe I want this stuff and like when

00:46:35
you deliver the stuff, I like pay for it, actually for getting

00:46:38
your company to pay for it. It's easier to justify.

00:46:40
If some of the stuff is pay, one kind of like a business expense.

00:46:43
How ideological are you guys on ads right now?

00:46:45
I feel the temperature changing on your views on ads as that.

00:46:49
Wrong or where are you on Advertising right now?

00:46:51
I'll give you my view on this, which I would go back to that

00:46:56
kind of like Grand Battle of Empires picture that I painted

00:47:00
at the start of this to meet one of the big reasons I wanted to

00:47:02
work on subsequent, I think, is fundamentally different on sub

00:47:05
stack. Is that when you do advertising

00:47:08
in the way that the big social media platforms did, when you

00:47:12
say, okay, our business model is we're going to aggregate a bunch

00:47:15
of eyeballs and then we're going to sell off those eyeballs as a

00:47:18
commodity. So that the way that you're

00:47:20
selling the ads are based on who the person is that's watching it

00:47:25
not based on what they came here.

00:47:26
For those things are totally disjoint.

00:47:29
It fundamentally undermines the value of the content that you

00:47:35
have on the platform because the only value of it to the platform

00:47:37
is that people are there. And so, if you make something

00:47:41
that's as cheaply as addictive as possible, like that's how you

00:47:44
win, that's how that Dynamic gets created.

00:47:46
And so, that's the thing that sub stack is kind of Of created

00:47:50
in direct opposition to write the whole thing we want is that

00:47:53
when you come to some stack, we're not valuing you based off

00:47:56
of the time you spend, we're not trying to get you to trick you

00:48:00
in to clicking on them. So that you do an ad impression

00:48:03
than that goes into money somewhere.

00:48:06
Where subscriptions are very aligned with this where you're

00:48:08
saying hey we want to find you something that you value enough

00:48:12
to pay for right. Right.

00:48:13
And you're very much in conscious control of who I

00:48:15
sometimes joke that people will hate read things but they won't

00:48:18
hate pay for it. The question that feels

00:48:20
interesting to me is, is there something that aligns with that

00:48:25
Universe, right? That's me.

00:48:27
Feels like a more of an open question.

00:48:29
This seems like a long way to say, we're no longer.

00:48:32
Totally opposed. I'm not, I'm not even trying to

00:48:34
bait you to some degree, like as a Creator like or whatever.

00:48:38
I am selling like ads independently because our super

00:48:41
tailored to my newsletter is like fine.

00:48:43
I'm not necessarily begging. You guys to get in it, but it

00:48:46
does feel just like looking from a businesslike.

00:48:49
Hybrid, you want Sub saker's, make more money because then

00:48:53
they're more likely to do it. And like, hybrid businesses are

00:48:55
better than pure subscription businesses.

00:49:00
It's not totally clear that that's true but I think the

00:49:03
thing you're pointing out here is like, ultimately, what do we

00:49:05
want? We want writers to succeed, and

00:49:08
we want them to Succeed In an ecosystem that supports them

00:49:11
doing their best work. And that aligns the inside times

00:49:13
makes, it people are consuming at the customer.

00:49:15
That's why subscriptions have been such a strong match and

00:49:18
that's kind of like the north star that will keep following

00:49:21
its sub sack at a point where it could survive without more

00:49:25
Venture funding or like, yes. But I mean, do you think You

00:49:30
will raise more Venture funding. I think the best place for a

00:49:33
company like sub stack to be is the place where in which is

00:49:36
we're like look we have everything, we need not just to

00:49:40
keep going but to win without further outside capital.

00:49:44
And should we find ourselves in a position where it makes sense

00:49:48
to take more investment to accelerate that be a great

00:49:51
option to have? If not, we've got everything we

00:49:53
need. That's kind of where we're happy

00:49:55
to be. Are you guys like personally

00:49:57
close to many, like consumer Founders?

00:49:59
Or it feels like it's been Been a sort of brutal period for like

00:50:03
the consumer startup and obviously got no friends really

00:50:07
like, you know, I like the clubhouse guys.

00:50:09
Like, rose so hot, we just, I think Paparazzi just shut down.

00:50:12
There was like a sense that, you know, team Noah paper.

00:50:15
I see is a neighborhood of it was like, one of the, I think

00:50:17
there's a bench, mark, you know, is like, one of the sort of it

00:50:20
was a teen photo. As, you know, there have been

00:50:23
several. I think be real, as easily as

00:50:25
like, past its peak, you know, I mean subject was always a Mia.

00:50:30
Yeah, yeah exactly. I mean to some degree you know,

00:50:33
subject has been sort of a tool for creators and so hasn't been

00:50:38
always been a pure consumer company though.

00:50:40
Now, with notes, it's more hard to argue that, I think that

00:50:43
somebody makes it different. The money makes it slower to

00:50:47
build, but also more enduring, it's not the same as kind of

00:50:51
like a, you know, a social media app, where everybody kind of

00:50:55
like hops into it. And says this is fun and then

00:50:57
kind of bounces it's like, you know, it's you First of all, you

00:51:00
can't build a subscription business as quickly as that as

00:51:03
as you probably know it can be, can be fast, but it's not going

00:51:06
to be. You're not going to get a

00:51:06
million subscribers overnight, but then once you have it, it's

00:51:09
you've got something that people deeply value.

00:51:12
We think of it as a subscription Network.

00:51:14
It's a different kind of thing that a lot of the sort of free

00:51:18
consumer studies. Okay, payments.

00:51:21
Thank you so much for coming on. Thanks very much for having us.

00:51:24
Yeah, / coming to visit us. That was our episode.

00:51:27
I'm Eric newcomer, there's the newcomer podcast.

00:51:30
Thank you so much for listening. Thanks to vanta sponsoring the

00:51:33
episode. Shout out Tommy Heron, our audio

00:51:36
editor, Riley Consulting my chief of staff and young Chomsky

00:51:40
for the wonderful music. Check out our YouTube channel,

00:51:43
Apple podcast and of course, here to the sub stack newcomer

00:51:47
dotco. Thanks so much for listening.

00:51:49
See you next week, goodbye, goodbye.

00:51:52
Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye.