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量子位

Buttondown's blog

Email could have been X.400 times better The physicists who convinced Fermilab to send Brazil's emails Slack webhooks Better in-app previews Analytics 3.0 Subscriber ID variables Comments! Send latest premium action Automation filtering Free API subscribers Surveys in automations Reply to replies Labels for RSS feeds How Jeremy Singer-Vine curates curious datasets for readers 2023 (and what's next) Email vs web content Sort by engagement Better gift subscriptions How Andy Dehnart built a career reviewing television New email template Email-based automations Opt-in reply tracking Automatic alt text More social network integrations Sort by metadata Overlarge image warnings Automation tag actions Pause emails mid-flight Search tags and automations Gift via automations Subscriber-driving emails Programmatic webhooks Email page views Tag statistics Discord webhook formatting Automatic subscriber cleanup RSS subscriber count Weekly subscriber reports More list columns Customizable list views How Max Voltar turned a side gig into a trusted keyboard resource Made-for-you share images Automation improvements End-of-email surveys Filter by date Survey-triggered automations More automation functionality New webhooks How France Insider built a news service with paid subscribers Email as primary key How John Willshire unites two businesses in one newsletter Confirmation reminders Email churned subscribers Email-to-draft Subscriber metadata columns ChatGPT integration Faster web archives Referral program Better search results TikTok embeds Subscriber timeline Spotify embeds Improved RSS-to-email Subscribe page OG image New analytics page Google Tag Manager Even more subscriber types Integrating Duda with Buttondown Linktree integration guide Advanced and enterprise plans Framer integration guide API requests page Team collaboration In-email surveys Better CSS settings Better RSS automation fetching! Editor toolbar improvements Smart filters Faster emails page RSS automations Faster email analytics Zapier error codes Image accessibility checks Tags vs newsletters OG image picker Image editor improvements API bulk actions Improved OpenAPI spec Mastodon support Better subscriber filtering Better subscriber validation Hotkey support! Programmatic access to analytics Stronger bulk actions Faster archive page Custom canonical URLs Email slug and metadata Improved writing interface Generating a Typescript router in Django Filter emails by source
How Nick Disabato runs two newsletters from one design consultancy
Asharee Peters · 2023-06-08 · via Buttondown's blog

Tell me a bit about yourself and your background.

I’m Nick Disabato, and I run Draft, a small interaction design consultancy. We publish books, research customer behavior, and hopefully make the numbers go up in a way that is not gross.

Tell me a little bit about your newsletter! What do you write about?

I run two:

  • Draft’s Letters, mostly professional stuff about value-based design, 10 years and running.
  • text, more personal/free-form/unhinged.

You say "more personal/free-form/unhinged” and as a ~lifetime subscriber of text I can attest to the kaleidoscopic nature of your subject matter on it. How do you decide what you want to write about on a given week?

I keep a todo list with a bunch of subject headings on key topics, but sometimes I write to what’s happening in my life. For example, I went on a major vacation last month, and it changed me in many ways, so I’ve spent most of the past few weeks writing about it.

Also, if my readers reply in support of something, then I write more text about it. I never know what is going to land for my audience because I’m into so much stuff and can go deep on a lot, so I turn to others for guidance & surrender. Otherwise I’m just going to write about 18th-century Dutch typography & plants all the time, and I don’t think many people want that. (I’m pretty sure Justin is responsible for 80% of my writing about cocktails, haha.)

Three of Draft's books on design and interaction.

What inspired you to get started?

A handful of other bootstrappers told me I should start a mailing list over a decade ago. I watched a few people run theirs for a while and tried my hand at it. People seem to like ‘em!

People are starved for quality writing. In many ways, the current landscape feels like a return to the golden days of blogging – just more private and intimate.

The [gestures broadly] world of emails have changed a lot in the past decade in terms of sophistication and audience. Has your approach to Draft Letters changed at all? Are there things you’re doing now that you weren’t, say, 5 years ago, or vice-versa?

Oh gosh, yes. Draft’s Letters used to be a lot like text, actually – lots of personal ramblings in-between the work stuff. Splitting the two lists into work & personal has been great for us, because some people just want us to stick to design stuff. I’m also writing with a clearer voice, and a better sense of what outcomes my audience wants to create.

Overall I’ve just gotten older and more experienced, and I don’t write if I don’t think it will hit for my audience. That happens regardless of outlet. I don’t think about my other competitors, and I don’t view them as competitors. People are starved for quality writing. In many ways, the current landscape feels like a return to the golden days of blogging – just more private and intimate.

Where did you first learn of Buttondown, and what made you decide to give it a try?

I must admit I don’t remember the first time I ever heard of Buttondown, but I kept it in a note of other email provider alternatives, and when MailChimp got acquired by Intuit I decided to make the switch to something simpler & more in line with my personal values.

What do you mean by 'personal values'?

At the very least, Buttondown’s business looks a lot like ours: solo founder, attentive to individual needs. More importantly, though, the email landscape writ large is pretty rotten. Giant corporations owning everything, bloatware, busted products, horrible deliverability. I’ve been burned by platforms that claim to have my own interests in mind, and then actively hurt the growth of the list by shunting us to low-quality servers while hiking their fees.

Buttondown doesn’t feel like that kind of company. I’m happy to invest in my presence there in the long term.

What matters, really, is knowing that you have a voice.

What are some ways Buttondown has helped you run your publication?

It’s been massively simpler and easier running things with Buttondown. Stuff gets queued easier, deliverability is higher, bugs are fewer. Justin is receptive to feedback and just a wonderful human in general. And on top of all of that, somehow I’m paying less than for one of the big horrible platforms.

What are some things you’d be excited to see Buttondown build in the next few months?

I literally sat in front of Justin and picked the product apart for an hour a few weeks ago, and he seemed to take most of the feedback to heart, which is astonishing and wonderful. As a next step, I’d love more custom-tailored calls to action to sign up for the paid side of text.

What advice would you give to someone starting their own email list?

What matters, really, is knowing that you have a voice. It might take a little work to cultivate, but you have a voice. It is yours alone. What you have to say matters. and nobody can take it from you.