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How to create and maintain an email newsletter for your podcast (without overextending yourself)

Your podcast speaks to many listeners at once while connecting immediately with an individual. Turns out, so does an email newsletter. You send an update, and poof, it arrives as a personal message right into the inboxes of your audience. Sounds a little like a podcast delivery, doesn’t it?

Why should I create an email newsletter for my podcast?

Adding depth to your podcast and strengthening a direct connection with your audience are the two primary reasons to create an email newsletter.

The benefits go way beyond that as well:

Are these actions inspiring you to create your own newsletter for your podcast? Excellent! Here are the basics of what you need to know as you start you own.

Who reads your newsletter?

Anyone who signs up and opens messages in their inboxes! More likely than not, your newsletter subscribers will fall into one of two groups:

See it in action: Household Name’s Brand New(s) includes a peek behind the scenes on a recent episode.

See it in action: Footnoting History sends an update every time a new episode comes out, complete with emoji-filled subject lines and a link over to an article on their podcast website.

Definitely makes you want to click, doesn’t it?

When do I send it?

It’s up to you, though we encourage you to start small. Consider this: a newsletter adds value to your podcast, so if you don’t have anything specific to share, you don’t need to send an update. Luckily: you have something worthwhile to share regularly—a new episode of your podcast!

Additionally, if your episode includes visuals or supplementary reading, that’s a good thing to add. Make the most of those additions by adding them to an article on your Podsite to ensure that all your listeners—not just the ones reading your newsletter—can access them too.

See it in action: The Titanic Minute’s weekly updates written by a friend of the show included expanded musings beyond the week’s episode, additional stories, and cross-promotional plugs for other minute-by-minute podcasts.

See it in action: Death, Sex & Money’s newsletter has three segments: a compelling introduction to a new episode, follows up with discussion and listener responses from recent episodes, and closes with podcast recommendations.

See it in action: An Arm and A Leg’s newsletter publishes every other week in the off season, ramping up to weekly in the month building up to season two launch. Here’s a blog post edition of their season two announcement to get a taste of their newsletter (with a handy call-to-action to sign up for said newsletter at the top of the article).

Yes, that’s a gif of a cat shaking its head no, so… click on the article link we provided.

See it in action: Ear Hustle’s Webby and Peabody nominations along with the launch of their new website.

See it in action: that wouldn’t exclusive any more, would it? (Well, more accurately: none of the email newsletters we’re subscribed to have done a newsletter-only exclusive—yet! Is this you? Email details of your exclusive newsletter offers to librarian@radiopublic.com)

Now, all these newsletter examples focuses on an episode or a specific moment. These timely messages can be planned for in advance, though they’ll almost always be reactive: something’s happening, and you want to tell people about it.

If you’re offering a consistent message, opportunity, or benefit to your audience, a drip campaign could be appropriate. These planned, proactive emails are automatically sent to a newsletter subscriber based on an action they took.

Some ways to use a drip campaign to prompt audience engagement:

Where can I build my newsletter?

Using a third-party tool like Mailchimp, Tinyletter, or Constant Contact helps you both manage your mailing list and provide well-designed templates that work on mobile and desktop. These third-party tools also grow as your email newsletter audience grows, so you don’t need to worry about reaching capacity as your show continues to gain listenership.

How do I get people to read it?

This is a question born of both “How do I direct people to sign up for my email newsletter?” and “How do I make my email newsletter worth reading?” Luckily, the answers are intertwined.

First question first: building your mailing list. Directing people to sign up for your email newsletter is an off-shoot of your podcast website. Include a signup link in a prominent place on your website, and link to your website in your show notes.

For Podsite users, you can easily add your signup URL from the Show basics section of your dashboard.

Making the case to your audience that your newsletter is worth receiving is all about creating an email newsletter worth reading. Here are some questions to get into the mindset:

What goes into an email newsletter?

An email message has a structure, much like an episode of your podcast has structure. Same goes for voice: email newsletters that reflect your own emailing style are the easiest to create. Think of your podcast listeners as a friend you get in touch with every so often to say hello and share something cool you just made (and ask them how they’re doing and to share something cool back every so often, too). Simple gets the job done.

Create a single template for your newsletter once, then reuse that design every time you send a message. This consistency keeps each new edition of the newsletter focused on filling in the words and then sending. All email messages include:

From there, you can get more elaborate in the contents of your message. Mimic the segments of your podcast in your newsletter. Include an “ad break” text box to mention a show sponsor or a podcast cross promotion. Close out a message with credits and thanks.

…and with that: thanks for reading, dear podcaster, and go forth and write great emails!


Do you have a podcast newsletter you’re proud of? We’d love to read it. Tweet a link to your podcast website’s newsletter signup page to @radiopublic.

Want a podcast website that encourages newsletter signups? A Podsite will do just that. Start your free 14 day trial today.

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