You started a newsletter. You sent two. The third is in drafts. You hate it.
The misdiagnosisThe misdiagnosis is that newsletters require expertise.
The real diagnosisThey require honesty. Most author newsletters fail because the writer is performing being a writer. The ones that hold are the ones that feel like a postcard from a specific human.
The Postcard Format
| Section | Length | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Opening line | One sentence | A specific image |
| The middle | 2-3 short paragraphs | One thought worth thinking |
| The aside | A line | A craft or life moment |
| The ask | Optional | One link, one ask, max |
| Signoff | One line | Your real voice |
Three Things The Postcard Doesn't Need
- A clever subject line that performs.
- Five links and a CTA stack.
- A long lead-in apologizing for not sending one in months.
A newsletter is not content marketing. It is a letter. Letters do not need a CTA stack.
Send monthly. Send short. Send specific. Build slow.
The dare (not assignment)Draft this month's newsletter as a postcard. One image. One thought. One ask. Send by Sunday.
Image promptA folded paper envelope sealed with a small pink wax mark, on a wooden desk. Painterly. Cream and pink. No people.
— The Book Maven
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