Newsletter Creation & Curation
by @shashwatgtm
Industry-specific newsletter creation with cadence recommendations and automation workflows
clawhub install newsletter-creation-curationπ About This Skill
name: newsletter-creation-curation description: Industry-specific newsletter creation with cadence recommendations and automation workflows metadata: {"clawdbot":{"emoji":"π§","homepage":"https://github.com/shashwatgtm","always":true}}
π― Multi-Dimensional Navigator
Newsletters serve different purposes depending on your context. Find your path:
STEP 1: What's Your Goal?
Your primary goal determines everything about your newsletter strategy:
β LEAD GENERATION - Generate inbound leads for sales team
β THOUGHT LEADERSHIP - Build authority in your category
β PERSONAL BRAND - Build your individual reputation
β CATEGORY OWNERSHIP - Own the conversation in your space
STEP 2: What's Your Industry Vertical?
Your industry determines:
β Sales Tech - Tactical sales tips, conversation intelligence insights
β HR Tech - People operations, employee engagement, compliance
β Fintech - Financial regulations, payment trends, compliance updates
β Operations Tech - Retail execution, supply chain, distribution
STEP 3: What's Your Company Stage?
Your stage determines:
β Series A ($1M-10M ARR) - Lead gen focus, founder-led
β Series B ($10M-50M ARR) - Thought leadership, team-led
β Series C+ ($50M+ ARR) - Category ownership, dedicated team
STEP 4: Are You Founder or Employee?
Your role determines:
β Founder - Full autonomy, personal = company brand
β VP/Director - Partial autonomy, manager approval
β PMM/Content Lead - Team collaboration, brand guidelines
β Employee (Non-Leadership) - Significant constraints
STEP 5: What's Your Primary Market?
Your geography determines:
β India-first - IST times, local examples, price-conscious
β US-first - EST/PST times, US examples, premium positioning
Quick Navigation by Common Scenarios
Most Common Use Cases:
1. "I'm a Sales Tech founder, want to generate leads via newsletter" β Go to: Section A1 (Sales Tech, Series A, Lead Gen Focus)
2. "I'm VP Marketing at Series B HR Tech, want thought leadership newsletter" β Go to: Section B2 (HR Tech, Series B, Thought Leadership)
3. "I'm at Series C fintech, want to own the category conversation" β Go to: Section C3 (Fintech, Series C+, Category Ownership)
4. "I'm PMM at ops tech, my VP wants me to start a newsletter" β Go to: Section D2 (Operations Tech, Employee-Led, Approval Workflows)
π SECTION A: SALES TECH NEWSLETTERS
When To Use This Section:
A1: Sales Tech @ Series A (Founder-Led Lead Generation)
Your Reality Check:
COMPANY PROFILE:
Size: $1M-10M ARR, 10-100 employees
Stage: Series A, need inbound leads
You: Founder (or early marketing hire)
Newsletter goal: Generate 10-20 SQLs per month
Time available: 3-5 hours/week
Budget: $0-200/month
The Sales Tech Newsletter Formula:
Why Sales Leaders Read Newsletters:
SALES LEADERS DON'T READ:
β Generic sales tips ("7 ways to close more deals")
β Long-form essays (no time)
β Theory without tactics
β Anything that doesn't help THIS QUARTERSALES LEADERS READ:
β
Data-driven insights ("Gong analyzed 1M calls, here's what top reps do")
β
Tactical playbooks (copy-paste into next call)
β
Competitive intelligence (what competitors are doing)
β
Quick wins (implement in <30 minutes)
Series A Sales Tech Newsletter Strategy:
GOAL: 10-20 SQLs per month from newsletter
Week-by-Week Startup Plan:
WEEK 1: POSITIONING & SETUP (4 hours)Day 1-2: Choose Your Angle (2 hours)
SALES TECH NEWSLETTER ANGLES:
Option 1: "Conversation Intelligence Insights"
Example: Analyze sales calls, share patterns
Audience: Sales leaders at B2B SaaS (50-500 employees)
Frequency: Weekly
Differentiator: Data-driven (use your product's data) Option 2: "SMB Sales Playbook"
Example: Tactical plays for small sales teams
Audience: Founders, sales managers at startups
Frequency: Weekly
Differentiator: Practical, not theoretical Option 3: "AI Sales Coaching"
Example: How AI changes sales coaching
Audience: Sales enablement leaders
Frequency: Bi-weekly
Differentiator: Future-focused, contrarian takes YOUR DECISION:
Pick ONE angle. Stick to it for 12 weeks minimum.
Example: "AI Sales Coaching for SMB Teams"
Day 3: Setup Publishing (2 hours)
SALES TECH PUBLISHING OPTIONS:
FREE OPTIONS:
β‘ LinkedIn Newsletter (RECOMMENDED for Sales Tech)
- Why: Your audience is already on LinkedIn
- Setup: 15 minutes
- Reach: Notifies your connections
- Downside: LinkedIn owns the list
β‘ Substack (RECOMMENDED if building owned list)
- Why: Own your subscribers, email delivery
- Setup: 30 minutes
- Cost: Free (5% fee on paid subscriptions)
- Downside: Cold start (need to drive traffic)
β‘ Medium (NOT RECOMMENDED)
- Why: Audience is too broad, not B2B sales-focused
- Skip this for Sales Tech
HYBRID APPROACH (BEST):
Publish on Substack (own the list)
Cross-post to LinkedIn (distribution)
Repurpose on Twitter threads (amplification) SETUP CHECKLIST:
β‘ Substack account created
β‘ Newsletter name: [Your Angle] Newsletter
Example: "The AI Sales Coach" or "SMB Sales Playbook"
β‘ About section: 2-3 sentences on who it's for
β‘ First post published: "Issue #0: What to expect"
WEEK 2: WRITE & PUBLISH ISSUE #1 (4 hours)
Monday: Research & Outline (1 hour)SALES TECH CONTENT SOURCES:
PRIMARY (Use These):
β‘ Gong blog (conversation intelligence leader)
β‘ Sales Hacker (community content)
β‘ r/sales on Reddit (real sales rep pain points)
β‘ Your own sales calls (if you have product data)
β‘ Customer interviews (ask: "What's your biggest sales challenge?")
SECONDARY (Reference):
β‘ Pavilion community (CRO insights)
β‘ SaaStr blog (B2B SaaS sales)
β‘ LinkedIn posts from sales leaders (Jason Lemkin, Jacco van der Kooij)
WHAT TO LOOK FOR:
Data-driven insights (numbers, stats, research)
Contrarian takes (what everyone gets wrong)
Tactical playbooks (step-by-step processes) Tuesday-Wednesday: Write Issue #1 (2 hours)
SALES TECH NEWSLETTER STRUCTURE:
βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
β SUBJECT LINE (Critical for Sales Tech) β
βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€
β β BAD: "Issue #1: Sales Tips" β
β β
GOOD: "Why 73% of SDRs fail [data]" β
β β
GOOD: "The 2-minute discovery hack" β
β β
GOOD: "Gong is wrong about cold calls"β
βββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
FORMAT (600-900 words):
OPENING HOOK (50-100 words)
Start with: Data point, contrarian take, or bold claim
Example:
"Gong analyzed 1 million sales calls and found the average
discovery call is 38 minutes. But the top 10% of reps?
They keep it under 25 minutes. Here's why..."
THE INSIGHT (200-300 words)
Explain the data or framework
Use: Numbers, quotes, examples
Avoid: Fluff, generic advice
THE TACTICAL PLAYBOOK (250-400 words)
Step-by-step: How to apply this
Format:
1. Preparation: What to do before
2. Execution: How to do it
3. Follow-up: What happens after
THE CALL TO ACTION (50-100 words)
Next step for reader:
Try this technique
Reply with your experience
Book a demo (if relevant - sparingly) Thursday: Edit & Polish (30 minutes)
SALES TECH EDITING CHECKLIST:
β‘ Cut 30% of words (sales leaders are busy)
β‘ Check: Every paragraph has data or tactics
β‘ Remove: Theory, fluff, obvious advice
β‘ Add: Specific numbers, examples, names
β‘ Verify: All claims have sources
Friday: Publish (30 minutes)
TIMING (CRITICAL FOR SALES TECH):
β Monday morning (busy, planning week)
β Friday afternoon (checking out for weekend)
β
Tuesday 9 AM EST (best open rates for sales)
β
Wednesday 10 AM EST (second best)
β
Thursday 9 AM EST (third best)
If India-focused:
β
Tuesday 9 AM IST
β
Wednesday 2 PM IST (after lunch)
POST-PUBLISH AMPLIFICATION:
β‘ Share on LinkedIn (tag relevant people)
β‘ Post Twitter thread (key points)
β‘ Share in Sales Hacker Slack
β‘ Email to 10 sales leaders: "Would love your take on this"
WEEKS 3-12: WEEKLY RHYTHM (3-4 hours/week)
MONDAY (1 hour):
β‘ Review last week's open rate, clicks
β‘ Brainstorm this week's topic
β‘ Collect 2-3 data sourcesTUESDAY-WEDNESDAY (2 hours):
β‘ Write 600-900 words
β‘ Edit ruthlessly
β‘ Get feedback from sales team (if you have one)
THURSDAY (30 minutes):
β‘ Final edit
β‘ Create subject line (test 3 options, pick best)
β‘ Schedule for Friday 9 AM EST
FRIDAY (30 minutes):
β‘ Newsletter goes out automatically
β‘ Amplify on social media
β‘ Respond to replies (engagement signal)
Sales Tech Newsletter: Content Ideas (First 12 Issues)
Tactical > Theory
ISSUE 1: "Why 73% of SDRs fail [Gong data analysis]"
ISSUE 2: "The 2-minute discovery question framework"
ISSUE 3: "Gong is wrong about cold calls [contrarian take]"
ISSUE 4: "How top AEs use silence in demos [behavioral science]"
ISSUE 5: "The 'negative close' technique [with script]"
ISSUE 6: "Why your CRM is killing your close rate [data]"
ISSUE 7: "The 3 questions top closers always ask [Chorus analysis]"
ISSUE 8: "How to compete against Gong/Outreach [battle card]"
ISSUE 9: "The follow-up cadence that actually works [A/B test results]"
ISSUE 10: "Why most sales coaching fails [research + fix]"
ISSUE 11: "The pricing objection framework [copy-paste]"
ISSUE 12: "How AI will change sales in 2026 [predictions]"PATTERN:
50% data-driven insights
30% tactical playbooks
20% contrarian/provocative takes
Measuring Success (Sales Tech Newsletter KPIs)
MONTH 1-3 (Building):
Goal: 100-300 subscribers
Opens: 30-40% (industry average)
Clicks: 3-5%
SQLs: 2-5 per month
Quality over quantity MONTH 4-6 (Growing):
Goal: 300-800 subscribers
Opens: 35-45% (improving)
Clicks: 5-8%
SQLs: 5-10 per month
Start seeing inbound "I read your newsletter" MONTH 7-12 (Scaling):
Goal: 800-2,000 subscribers
Opens: 40-50% (well-established)
Clicks: 8-12%
SQLs: 10-20 per month
Newsletter = #1 inbound lead source SALES TECH SPECIFIC:
Track: "Mentioned newsletter" in CRM (lead source)
Track: Demo requests that cite specific issue
Track: LinkedIn engagement (comments, shares)
Sales Tech Newsletter: Growth Tactics
FREE GROWTH (Series A Budget)
WEEK 1-4: Foundation
β‘ Every LinkedIn post ends with: "Full analysis in my newsletter [link]"
β‘ Comment on sales leader posts: "I wrote about this in my newsletter"
β‘ Join Sales Hacker Slack, share newsletter (not spammy)WEEK 5-8: Partnerships
β‘ Guest post on Sales Hacker: CTA to newsletter
β‘ Interview 3 sales leaders: "Subscribe to get more interviews"
β‘ Cross-promote with other sales newsletters (smaller ones will say yes)
WEEK 9-12: Amplification
β‘ LinkedIn polls: Drive traffic to newsletter for "full results"
β‘ Twitter threads: Newsletter issues β threads (expand reach)
β‘ Podcast guesting: "I cover this in my newsletter"
AGGRESSIVE TACTICS (Sales Tech Appropriate):
β
Call out competitors in newsletter ("Gong vs us")
β
Contrarian takes ("Why sales playbooks fail")
β
Provocative subject lines ("Your CRM is lying to you")
AVOID (Even for Sales Tech):
β Spamming LinkedIn DMs
β Buying email lists (deliverability death)
β Fake urgency ("Last chance to subscribe!")
A2: Sales Tech @ Series B (Thought Leadership Team Effort)
Your Reality Check:
COMPANY PROFILE:
Size: $10M-40M ARR, 150-500 employees
Stage: Series B, scaling marketing
You: VP Marketing or Content Lead
Team: 1-2 content writers + designer
Newsletter goal: Thought leadership + lead gen
Budget: $2K-8K/month for content
Time: Team effort, 10-15 hours/week total
Why Series B Newsletter Strategy is Different:
SERIES A NEWSLETTER:
Founder-led, scrappy
Goal: Lead gen (10-20 SQLs/month)
Frequency: Weekly
Content: Tactical, founder voice
Budget: $0-200/month SERIES B NEWSLETTER:
Team-led, professional
Goal: Thought leadership + pipeline
Frequency: Weekly or bi-weekly
Content: Data-driven, brand voice
Budget: $2K-8K/month NEW CHALLENGES:
Multiple stakeholders (CEO, Sales, Product)
Brand voice vs founder voice
Higher quality bar (professional design)
Scaling from 800 β 5,000+ subscribers
Measuring pipeline impact (not just leads)
Series B Sales Tech Newsletter: Enhanced Production
TEAM STRUCTURE:ROLES:
β‘ Content Lead (You): Strategy, editing, stakeholder mgmt
β‘ Writer: Research, drafting (10 hours/week)
β‘ Designer: Graphics, charts (3 hours/week)
β‘ Founder/CEO: Guest contributor (1 hour/month)
TOOLS ($2K-5K/month total):
β‘ Substack Pro or ConvertKit ($300-500/month)
β Advanced analytics, segmentation, A/B testing
β‘ Graphic design ($500-1K/month):
Option 1: Hire part-time designer
Option 2: Canva Pro + templates ($45/month)
Option 3: Fiverr designer ($100-200 per issue)
β‘ Research tools ($200-500/month):
β LinkedIn Sales Navigator (audience research)
β Gong/Chorus access (conversation data)
β Industry reports (Gartner, Pavilion)
β‘ Content tools ($100-200/month):
β Grammarly Premium
β Hemingway Editor
β Headline analyzer
WEEKLY WORKFLOW:
MONDAY (3 hours):
Content Lead: Review last week's metrics
Team sync: This week's topic, angle
Assign: Writer starts research TUESDAY (4 hours):
Writer: First draft (800-1,200 words - longer than Series A)
Designer: Concept graphics WEDNESDAY (4 hours):
Content Lead: Edit, provide feedback
Writer: Second draft
Designer: Final graphics THURSDAY (3 hours):
Stakeholder review: CEO/Sales leader feedback
Writer: Incorporate feedback
Content Lead: Final approval FRIDAY (1 hour):
Schedule send (9 AM EST Tuesday)
Pre-schedule social amplification
Prepare LinkedIn post for Monday
Series B Content Strategy: Data-Driven Thought Leadership
DIFFERENCE FROM SERIES A:SERIES A CONTENT:
"Here's a tactical tip I learned from my sales calls"
SERIES B CONTENT:
"We analyzed 10,000 sales calls across 200 companies.
Here's what we learned about discovery calls in 2026."
SERIES B ADVANTAGE:
β
Access to product data (you have 100s of customers)
β
Engineering resources (build custom analysis)
β
Budget for commissioned research
β
Customer interviews at scale
β
Sales team insights
CONTENT PILLARS (Series B Sales Tech):
PILLAR 1: ORIGINAL RESEARCH (40% of issues)
Example: "The State of SMB Sales 2026"
Analyze your product data
Survey 200 sales leaders
Partner with Pavilion for distribution
Turn into: Report + Newsletter series + Webinar PILLAR 2: CUSTOMER INSIGHTS (30%)
Example: "How [YC Company] Scaled from $1M to $10M ARR"
Interview customer
Extract tactical playbook
Position your product subtly
CTA: "Want similar results? Let's talk" PILLAR 3: INDUSTRY ANALYSIS (20%)
Example: "Why Gong's Series D Changes the Sales Tech Landscape"
React to industry news
Position your company
Forward-looking (where is category going?) PILLAR 4: FOUNDER/EXECUTIVE VOICE (10%)
Example: "Our CEO on Building Sales Culture at Scale"
Monthly guest post from leadership
Humanizes brand
Recruiting signal (talented people want to work here)
Series B Newsletter: Advanced Growth Tactics
PAID GROWTH (Now You Have Budget):TACTIC 1: SPONSORSHIPS ($1K-3K/month)
Sponsor Sales Hacker newsletter
Sponsor Pavilion community content
Sponsor Revenue Collective events
β Each drives 50-200 subscribers
β ROI: $5-15 per subscriber (acceptable)TACTIC 2: PAID SOCIAL ($500-1K/month)
LinkedIn ads: "Download our sales playbook"
Gate with email: Auto-subscribe to newsletter
Target: Sales leaders at $5M-50M ARR companies
β Cost: $3-8 per subscriberTACTIC 3: WEBINAR FUNNEL ($1K-2K/month)
Monthly webinar on sales topic
Registrants = Newsletter subscribers
Partner with sales tools (Pavilion, Salesloft, Outreach)
β 100-300 new subscribers per webinarORGANIC GROWTH (Still Essential):
TACTIC 4: LINKEDIN CONTENT MACHINE
3-5 posts per week
Each ends with newsletter CTA
Founder + VP Marketing + Sales leaders all posting
β Compound effect: 5 people Γ 3 posts = 15 touchpoints/weekTACTIC 5: PODCAST CIRCUIT
Guest on 2 sales podcasts per month
Mention newsletter in intro/outro
Provide "bonus content in newsletter"
β Each podcast: 50-150 subscribersTACTIC 6: SALES TEAM AMPLIFICATION
Every SDR/AE signature: Newsletter link
Sales team shares on LinkedIn
Customer asks question? "I covered that in newsletter issue #47"
β Sales team = distribution arm
A3: Sales Tech @ Series C+ (Category Ownership via Newsletter)
Your Reality Check:
COMPANY PROFILE:
Size: $50M+ ARR, 500+ employees
Stage: Series C/D, preparing IPO or market leader
You: Director of Content/Thought Leadership
Team: 3-5 FTE (writers, designers, analysts)
Newsletter: Flagship thought leadership
Budget: $15K-40K/month for content
Subscribers: 10,000-50,000+
Series C+ Newsletter = Category Ownership
SERIES A/B GOAL:
Generate leads
Build thought leadership SERIES C+ GOAL:
OWN the conversation in sales tech
Be THE source for sales insights
Influence industry (Gartner, analysts, media)
Recruiting tool (top talent reads your newsletter) EXAMPLES:
Gong Labs (conversation intelligence category leader)
SaaStr (B2B SaaS category leader)
First Round Review (startup category leader) YOUR NEWSLETTER BECOMES:
Category-defining
Cited by media
Referenced in board meetings (not just your company)
Required reading for sales leaders
Series C+ Production: Media Company Level
TEAM STRUCTURE:EDITORIAL TEAM:
β‘ Director of Content (You): Strategy, stakeholder management
β‘ Managing Editor: Quality, process, timelines
β‘ 2-3 Staff Writers: Dedicated to newsletter
β‘ Data Analyst: Custom research, data visualization
β‘ Designer: Brand-quality graphics
β‘ Video Producer: Multimedia content (future)
TOOLS & SERVICES ($15K-40K/month):
TIER 1: PUBLISHING INFRASTRUCTURE ($2K-5K/month)
β‘ ConvertKit/Klaviyo Enterprise ($500-1K/month)
β‘ Custom website/design ($200-500/month hosting + maintenance)
β‘ Email deliverability service ($100-200/month)
β‘ A/B testing tools ($100-200/month)
TIER 2: RESEARCH & DATA ($5K-15K/month)
β‘ Commissioned research ($3K-10K per report)
β‘ Gartner/Forrester subscriptions ($3K-5K/month)
β‘ Data visualization tools (Tableau, $70/user/month)
β‘ Survey tools (Qualtrics, $200-500/month)
TIER 3: CONTENT PRODUCTION ($5K-15K/month)
β‘ 2-3 staff writers ($8K-12K/month total comp)
β‘ Designer ($3K-5K/month)
β‘ Editor ($4K-6K/month)
β‘ Freelance experts ($500-1K/month for guest posts)
TIER 4: DISTRIBUTION ($3K-10K/month)
β‘ Paid social ($2K-5K/month)
β‘ Sponsorships ($1K-3K/month)
β‘ PR agency (if needed, $5K-10K/month)
Series C+ Content: Industry-Defining Research
QUARTERLY FLAGSHIP REPORTS:Q1: "THE STATE OF SMB SALES 2026"
Survey: 1,000+ sales leaders
Data: Analyze 10M+ sales calls from your product
Partners: Pavilion, Sales Hacker, Gartner (validate findings)
Format:
* 40-page PDF report
* 4-week newsletter series
* Webinar series
* Media tour (TechCrunch, Forbes, etc.)
Production cost: $20K-40K
Impact:
5,000+ new subscribers
500+ SQLs from report
Media coverage (industry authority signal)
Sales enablement (differentiation) Q2: "AI'S IMPACT ON SALES PRODUCTIVITY [2026 RESEARCH]"
Partner with university (academic credibility)
Control group study
Published in journal + newsletter
Speaking opportunities (conferences) Q3: "THE SALES TECH LANDSCAPE [COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS]"
Map 200+ sales tech companies
Funding, features, market positioning
This is YOUR "Gartner Magic Quadrant"
Cited by: Investors, media, customers Q4: "SALES COMPENSATION BENCHMARKS 2026"
Survey 500+ sales leaders on comp plans
Data on OTE, accelerators, commissions
High-value (people will pay for this data)
Newsletter exclusive preview
Series C+ Distribution: Media-Level Amplification
OWNED CHANNELS:
β‘ Newsletter (primary)
β‘ Blog (SEO, long-form)
β‘ LinkedIn (3-5 posts/day from team)
β‘ Twitter/X (5-10 posts/day)
β‘ YouTube (video summaries)
β‘ Podcast (weekly, guests)EARNED CHANNELS:
β‘ Media coverage (TechCrunch, Forbes, WSJ)
β‘ Podcast guest circuit (top sales podcasts)
β‘ Conference speaking (SaaStr, Pavilion, G2 Reach)
β‘ Academic citations (if partnered with universities)
PAID CHANNELS:
β‘ Sponsored content in top newsletters ($5K-15K per placement)
β‘ LinkedIn ads ($5K-10K/month)
β‘ Conference sponsorships ($10K-50K per event)
β‘ Trade publication ads (if needed)
PARTNER CHANNELS:
β‘ Integration partners (Salesforce, HubSpot, Outreach)
β‘ Community partners (Pavilion, Revenue Collective)
β‘ Analyst firms (Gartner, Forrester)
β‘ Academic partners (universities, research labs)
π SECTION B: HR TECH NEWSLETTERS
When To Use This Section:
B1: HR Tech @ Series A (Founder-Led Thought Leadership)
Your Reality Check:
COMPANY PROFILE:
Size: $2M-8M ARR, 20-80 employees
Stage: Series A
You: Founder (often ex-CHRO or People Ops background)
Newsletter goal: Build trust + credibility (lead gen secondary)
Time: 4-6 hours/week
Budget: $0-300/month
Why HR Tech Newsletters Are FUNDAMENTALLY DIFFERENT:
SALES TECH NEWSLETTER:
β
Aggressive, contrarian takes
β
"Gong is wrong about cold calls"
β
Data-driven, ROI-focused
β
Fast decisions (sales leaders act quickly)HR TECH NEWSLETTER:
β NEVER aggressive or confrontational
β NEVER "Competitor X is wrong"
β
Professional, empathetic, research-backed
β
Slow decisions (HR is risk-averse, committee-driven)
WHY THE DIFFERENCE:
HR community is small, tight-knit (everyone knows everyone)
HR leaders value relationships over aggressive positioning
HR buyers are risk-averse (people data = sensitive)
Attacking competitors = unprofessional (damages your reputation)
Series A HR Tech Newsletter Strategy
GOAL: Build trust and credibility, generate 5-15 SQLs/month
WEEK 1: POSITIONING (4 hours)CHOOSE YOUR ANGLE:
Option 1: "PEOPLE ANALYTICS & INSIGHTS"
Example: "Data-Driven HR Decisions"
Audience: CHROs at 200-1000 employee companies
Differentiator: Research-backed, evidence-based Option 2: "EMPLOYEE EXPERIENCE BEST PRACTICES"
Example: "The EX Playbook"
Audience: People Ops leaders at startups/scaleups
Differentiator: Practical, actionable, empathetic Option 3: "HR COMPLIANCE & REGULATIONS"
Example: "The Compliant CHRO"
Audience: HR leaders navigating regulations
Differentiator: Expert analysis, updates PICK BASED ON YOUR PRODUCT:
Engagement platform β Employee Experience
Performance management β People Analytics
HRIS β Compliance & Best Practices SETUP (LinkedIn Newsletter HIGHLY RECOMMENDED for HR Tech):
WHY LINKEDIN FOR HR TECH:
β
HR leaders very active on LinkedIn (not Twitter/Reddit)
β
SHRM, Josh Bersin, lots of HR thought leaders on LinkedIn
β
Professional network = HR's comfort zone
β
Built-in distribution
SETUP:
β‘ Create LinkedIn Newsletter
β‘ Name: "[Angle] for HR Leaders"
Example: "The People Analytics Weekly"
β‘ Post frequency: Bi-weekly (HR leaders prefer quality > quantity)
β‘ First issue: "Issue #0: Why I'm starting this"
WEEKS 2-12: BI-WEEKLY RHYTHM (4-6 hours per issue)
WEEK 1 (Publish Week):MONDAY-TUESDAY (3 hours): Research & Draft
HR TECH CONTENT SOURCES:
PRIMARY:
β‘ SHRM research reports (authoritative)
β‘ Josh Bersin research (HR thought leader)
β‘ Lattice blog, Culture Amp blog (category leaders)
β‘ Harvard Business Review (HBR) - HR articles
β‘ Gartner HR research (if accessible)
SECONDARY:
β‘ r/humanresources (real HR pain points)
β‘ People Managing People newsletter
β‘ HR Tech Conference content
β‘ Academic journals (if employee engagement/performance topic)
WHAT TO LOOK FOR:
Research-backed insights (studies, surveys, data)
Employee experience stories (case studies)
Compliance updates (GDPR, labor laws, etc.)
People analytics frameworks WEDNESDAY (2 hours): Write & Edit
HR TECH NEWSLETTER STRUCTURE (800-1,200 words):
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
β SUBJECT LINE (Professional, not clickbait)β
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€
β β BAD: "Your HR strategy is WRONG" β
β β
GOOD: "3 employee engagement insights" β
β β
GOOD: "New GDPR requirements for HR" β
β β
GOOD: "How top CHROs measure culture" β
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
OPENING (100-150 words)
Start with: Research finding, employee story, or compliance update
Example:
"Culture Amp's 2026 benchmark report analyzed 500,000
employee surveys across 2,000 companies. They found that
manager effectiveness is 3Γ more predictive of retention
than compensation. Here's what that means for your team..."
THE RESEARCH/FRAMEWORK (300-400 words)
Present the data or framework
Use: Studies, benchmarks, expert quotes
Tone: Professional, evidence-based, helpful
Avoid: Aggressive, sales-y, attacking competitors
PRACTICAL APPLICATION (300-400 words)
How HR leaders can apply this
Format:
For small teams (50-200 employees): [Advice]
For mid-market (200-1000 employees): [Advice]
For enterprise (1000+): [Advice] RESOURCES & NEXT STEPS (100-150 words)
Link to: Full research report
Suggest: Further reading (SHRM, HBR)
Soft CTA: "Thoughts? I'd love to hear your experience"
Very soft: "If you're navigating this, happy to chat [calendar link]" THURSDAY (1 hour): Edit & Finalize
HR TECH EDITING CHECKLIST:
β‘ Tone check: Professional, empathetic (not aggressive)
β‘ Remove: Any criticism of competitors
β‘ Verify: All research properly cited
β‘ Add: Disclaimers if needed ("I'm not a lawyer, consult legal")
β‘ Check: Inclusive language (they/them, not he/she)
FRIDAY (Publish)
TIMING FOR HR TECH:
β
Tuesday 9 AM EST (best for HR leaders)
β
Thursday 10 AM EST (second best)
β Monday (too busy)
β Friday (checking out for weekend)
POST-PUBLISH:
β‘ Share on LinkedIn (your profile + company page)
β‘ Post in SHRM Connect community (if member)
β‘ Email to 5-10 CHROs: "Wrote about X, would love your perspective"
β‘ NO aggressive self-promotion
HR Tech Newsletter: Content Ideas (First 12 Issues)
ISSUE 1: "The 2026 employee engagement benchmarks [Culture Amp data]"
ISSUE 2: "Why manager training fails (and what works instead)"
ISSUE 3: "New GDPR requirements every CHRO should know"
ISSUE 4: "The 4 questions top performers want answered in 1-on-1s"
ISSUE 5: "How 3 startups scaled culture from 50 to 500 employees"
ISSUE 6: "The people analytics frameworks CHROs actually use"
ISSUE 7: "What the research says about hybrid work policies [HBR review]"
ISSUE 8: "How to measure DEI progress (beyond vanity metrics)"
ISSUE 9: "The performance review alternatives that work [case studies]"
ISSUE 10: "Navigating layoffs with empathy [practical guide]"
ISSUE 11: "Employee retention in 2026: what the data shows"
ISSUE 12: "Building HR tech stack for 200-500 employee companies"PATTERN:
60% research-backed insights
30% practical frameworks
10% compliance/regulation updates
0% aggressive competitive positioning
HR Tech Newsletter: Conservative Growth Tactics
FREE GROWTH (Professional, Non-Aggressive):WEEK 1-4: SHRM Community Participation
β‘ Join SHRM Connect
β‘ Answer HR questions (be helpful, not sales-y)
β‘ Signature line: "I write about [topic] at [newsletter link]"
β‘ Share newsletter when directly relevant to discussion
WEEK 5-8: LinkedIn Engagement Strategy
β‘ Comment thoughtfully on CHRO posts
β‘ Share HR research (not just your newsletter)
β‘ Build genuine relationships
β‘ Newsletter mention in profile: "I publish bi-weekly on [topic]"
WEEK 9-12: Webinars & Guest Content
β‘ Partner with SHRM local chapter (co-host webinar)
β‘ Guest post on People Managing People blog
β‘ Interview 3 CHROs in newsletter (they'll share with network)
WHAT NOT TO DO (Even Though Sales Tech Does It):
β Aggressive LinkedIn outreach
β Controversial/clickbait subject lines
β Calling out competitors
β "You're doing HR wrong" positioning
B2: HR Tech @ Series B (Team-Led Professional Content)
Your Reality Check:
COMPANY PROFILE:
Size: $12M-40M ARR, 200-600 employees
Stage: Series B
You: Director of Content or Head of Marketing
Team: 1 writer + designer
Newsletter: Brand-building + thought leadership
Budget: $3K-10K/month
Goal: 3,000-8,000 subscribers, 10-25 SQLs/month
Series B HR Tech: Elevated Content Quality
TEAM & TOOLS:TEAM:
β‘ Content Director (You): Strategy, stakeholder management
β‘ HR Content Writer: Dedicated writer with HR background
β‘ Designer: Professional graphics (people photos, infographics)
β‘ Founder/CHRO: Monthly guest column
TOOLS ($3K-7K/month):
β‘ ConvertKit or ActiveCampaign ($200-400/month)
β‘ Graphic design: Part-time designer ($1K-2K/month)
β‘ Research subscriptions:
- Josh Bersin Academy ($1K/month)
- SHRM membership ($200/month)
- HBR subscription ($20/month)
β‘ Photography: Stock photos (iStock, $30-100/month)
β‘ Survey tools: Typeform or SurveyMonkey ($50-100/month)
WEEKLY WORKFLOW (BI-WEEKLY PUBLISHING):
WEEK 1 (Prep Week):
Monday: Topic selection, research phase
Wednesday: Writer starts first draft
Friday: Draft review, feedback WEEK 2 (Publish Week):
Monday: Final draft + design
Tuesday: Stakeholder review (VP/CMO approval)
Wednesday: Final edits
Thursday: Publish at 9 AM EST APPROVAL WORKFLOW (HR Tech Specific):
β‘ Writer completes draft
β‘ Content Director reviews (you)
β‘ Legal review if: Compliance topics, GDPR, labor laws
β‘ Executive review: Founder/CHRO for sensitive topics
β‘ Final approval: Content Director
WHY MORE APPROVAL IN HR TECH:
People data = sensitive (can't make mistakes)
Compliance risk (GDPR, EEOC, labor laws)
Reputation risk (HR community is small)
Series B Content Strategy: Original Research
QUARTERLY RESEARCH PROJECTS:Q1: "THE STATE OF EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT 2026"
Survey: 500 HR leaders
Partner: SHRM local chapter (distribution)
Format:
* 25-page report
* 3-week newsletter series
* Webinar with findings
Cost: $5K-8K (survey tools, design, writer time)
Impact:
500-1,000 new subscribers
20-40 SQLs
Industry credibility
Media coverage (HR Dive, HRExecutive) Q2: "PEOPLE ANALYTICS BENCHMARKS"
Your product data: Anonymized benchmarks
Customer interviews: 20 case studies
Academic partner: Validate findings Q3: "HYBRID WORK POLICIES [2026 RESEARCH]"
Timely, relevant
Multi-company case studies
Expert commentary (industrial psychologists) Q4: "HR TECH STACK REPORT"
Survey: What tools do CHROs use?
Integration insights
Budget benchmarks by company size
B3: HR Tech @ Series C+ (Category-Defining Content)
Your Reality Check:
COMPANY PROFILE:
Size: $50M+ ARR, 800+ employees
Stage: Series C/D, category leader
You: VP Content/Thought Leadership
Team: 4-6 FTE content team
Newsletter: Industry authority
Budget: $20K-50K/month
Subscribers: 15,000-60,000+
Series C+ HR Tech: Josh Bersin Academy-Level
AMBITION:
Not just "a newsletter"
Goal: Be THE source for HR insights (like Josh Bersin Academy)CONTENT STRATEGY:
FLAGSHIP RESEARCH (2-3 per year):
$30K-60K per report
Partner with: Universities, Gartner, Forrester
Published in: Academic journals + your newsletter
Impact: Cited in board meetings, media, Gartner reports MEMBERSHIP MODEL:
Free newsletter (15K+ subscribers)
Premium membership ($199-499/year)
* Exclusive research
* Templates and frameworks
* Private community access
* Quarterly roundtables with CHROsMEDIA PRESENCE:
Regular contributor: Harvard Business Review, SHRM
Conference speaking: SHRM Annual, Josh Bersin Conf
Podcast: Weekly interviews with CHROs
Book deal: "The Future of Work [2027]" TEAM:
β‘ VP Content (You): Strategy, partnerships
β‘ Managing Editor: Quality, process
β‘ 2 Staff Writers: Dedicated to newsletter/research
β‘ Research Analyst: Data, surveys, benchmarks
β‘ Designer: Infographics, reports
β‘ Video Producer: Multimedia content
β‘ Community Manager: Member engagement
π SECTION C: FINTECH NEWSLETTERS
When To Use This Section:
C1: Fintech @ Series A (Conservative, Compliance-First)
Your Reality Check:
COMPANY PROFILE:
Size: $2M-8M ARR, 20-100 employees
Stage: Series A
You: Founder (often ex-banking/finance background)
Newsletter: Trust-building + regulatory updates
Time: 3-5 hours/week
Budget: $0-200/month
CRITICAL: Legal review MANDATORY
Why Fintech Newsletters Are HIGHEST RISK:
SALES TECH NEWSLETTER:
β
Aggressive positioning
β
"Gong is wrong about X"
β
Contrarian takes
Risk: Low (worst case = lose subscribers)HR TECH NEWSLETTER:
β οΈ Professional, empathetic
β οΈ No competitor attacks
Risk: Medium (reputation damage)
FINTECH NEWSLETTER:
π΄ ULTRA-CONSERVATIVE
π΄ LEGAL REVIEW MANDATORY
π΄ NEVER make unverified claims
π΄ NEVER attack competitors (could trigger regulatory scrutiny)
Risk: EXTREME (fines, license revocation, legal liability)
WHY:
Financial regulations: RBI (India), SEC (US), FCA (UK)
Financial advertising rules: Can't make unverified ROI claims
Compliance violations: βΉ1 Cr+ fines, criminal charges
Reputational risk: Finance is trust-driven
Series A Fintech Newsletter: Trust-Building Strategy
POSITIONING:β WRONG POSITIONING:
"We're 10Γ better than [Competitor]"
"Save 50% on payment fees" (unless proven and disclosed)
"The future of fintech"
β
CORRECT POSITIONING:
"RBI-compliant payment insights for CFOs"
"Regulatory updates for Indian fintech founders"
"Finance operations best practices"
SETUP:
PLATFORM CHOICE (Fintech-Specific):
β‘ LinkedIn Newsletter (RECOMMENDED)
- CFOs very active on LinkedIn
- Professional network = trust signal
- Corporate email addresses (not personal)
β‘ Substack (SECONDARY)
- Own the list
- Professional layout
- NOT: Medium, Twitter Newsletter (too casual for finance)
FIRST ISSUE TEMPLATE (Conservative):
Subject: "Regulatory Update: RBI's New Payment Guidelines [January 2026]"
NOT: "How We're Disrupting Payments" (too aggressive)
NOT: "Why Traditional Banking Is Broken" (antagonistic)
BI-WEEKLY RHYTHM (Fintech = Slower Publishing)
WHY BI-WEEKLY (not weekly):
CFOs prefer quality > quantity
Legal review takes time (1-2 days minimum)
Regulatory updates don't happen weekly
Finance decisions are slow (not impulse) WEEK 1 (Research & Draft):
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY (4 hours): Research
FINTECH CONTENT SOURCES:
PRIMARY (Use These):
β‘ RBI website (official regulatory updates)
β‘ Economic Times Finance section
β‘ LiveMint fintech coverage
β‘ NPCI announcements (UPI, payments)
β‘ Ministry of Finance releases
SECONDARY:
β‘ Inc42 fintech coverage
β‘ Medianama (fintech policy)
β‘ YourStory fintech section
β‘ Industry associations (IAMAI)
WHAT TO AVOID:
β Rumors or unverified news
β Controversial hot takes
β Competitor comparisons
β Regulatory speculation
THURSDAY-FRIDAY (3 hours): Draft + Legal Review
CONTENT STRUCTURE (600-900 words):
OPENING: Regulation or Trend
Example:
"RBI released updated guidelines for payment aggregators
on January 15, 2026. Here's what this means for fintech
companies and their merchant partners..."
ANALYSIS: What It Means
Impact on fintech companies
Impact on customers
Timeline for compliance
Resources for implementation PRACTICAL GUIDANCE: What To Do
Steps for compliance
Checklist for CFOs
When to consult legal (always say "consult legal counsel") DISCLAIMER (ALWAYS INCLUDE):
"This newsletter is for informational purposes only and
does not constitute legal, financial, or regulatory advice.
Always consult with qualified legal counsel for your
specific situation."
LEGAL REVIEW CHECKLIST:
β‘ All claims verified (sources cited)
β‘ No competitor attacks or comparisons
β‘ No ROI claims unless proven + methodology disclosed
β‘ No regulatory speculation
β‘ Disclaimers present
β‘ Compliance with financial advertising rules
WEEK 2 (Publish Week):
TUESDAY (Publish 10 AM IST for India, 9 AM EST for US)
POST-PUBLISH (Conservative Approach):
β‘ Share on LinkedIn (professional tone)
β‘ Share in fintech community (IAMAI, if member)
β‘ NO aggressive self-promotion
β‘ NO calls to action beyond "Read the full update"
Fintech Newsletter: Content Ideas (First 12 Issues)
ISSUE 1: "RBI's updated payment aggregator guidelines [Analysis]"
ISSUE 2: "New KYC requirements for fintechs [Checklist]"
ISSUE 3: "Data localization: What fintech CFOs need to know"
ISSUE 4: "GST implications for payment service providers"
ISSUE 5: "How 3 fintechs achieved SOC 2 compliance [Case studies]"
ISSUE 6: "UPI transaction limits: Recent changes explained"
ISSUE 7: "PCI DSS requirements for payment companies [Guide]"
ISSUE 8: "Cross-border payment regulations [2026 update]"
ISSUE 9: "Expense management: Tax deduction best practices"
ISSUE 10: "Corporate card programs: Compliance checklist"
ISSUE 11: "Fintech M&A: Regulatory approval process"
ISSUE 12: "2027 regulatory predictions for Indian fintech"PATTERN:
70% regulatory updates & compliance
20% best practices (backed by data)
10% industry trends (conservative analysis)
0% competitor attacks
0% unverified claims
π SECTION D: OPERATIONS TECH NEWSLETTERS
When To Use This Section:
D1: Operations Tech @ Series A (Industry-Specific Insights)
Your Reality Check:
COMPANY PROFILE:
Size: $1M-5M ARR, 15-60 employees
Stage: Series A
You: Founder (ex-CPG/FMCG or SaaS)
Newsletter: Industry insights for CPG sales leaders
Time: 4-6 hours/week
Budget: $0-300/month
Market: India retail/distribution focus
Why Operations Tech Newsletters Are NICHE:
SALES/HR/FINTECH NEWSLETTERS:
Broad audience: All B2B SaaS companies
Generic insights: Sales, HR, finance tips
Large market: 10,000s of potential subscribers OPERATIONS TECH NEWSLETTER:
Niche audience: CPG/FMCG sales & ops leaders
Specific insights: Retail execution, distribution
Smaller market: 1,000s of potential subscribers (but high intent) ADVANTAGE OF NICHE:
β
Less competition (few newsletters in this space)
β
Higher engagement (exactly what audience needs)
β
Easier to become category expert
β
Stronger community (everyone knows each other)
Series A Operations Tech Newsletter Strategy
POSITIONING OPTIONS:Option 1: "THE INDIA RETAIL EXECUTION REPORT"
Focus: General trade, kirana stores, distribution
Audience: Sales heads at CPG companies (HUL, ITC, Dabur)
Angle: Data-driven insights on retail execution Option 2: "FIELD FORCE AUTOMATION INSIDER"
Focus: Technology for field teams
Audience: Ops leaders implementing tech
Angle: Best practices, case studies, ROI Option 3: "THE CPG DISTRIBUTION PLAYBOOK"
Focus: Go-to-market for CPG in India
Audience: Founders/sales leaders at emerging CPG brands
Angle: Tactical distribution strategies RECOMMENDED: Option 1 or 3 (broader appeal)
SETUP:
PLATFORM:
β‘ LinkedIn Newsletter (CPG leaders active on LinkedIn)
β‘ Substack (own the list)
β‘ WhatsApp Business (India-specific: field teams use WhatsApp)
- Distribute newsletter summary via WhatsApp
- Link to full version on LinkedIn/Substack
CONTENT SOURCES (Operations Tech Specific):
PRIMARY:
β‘ Industry reports: Nielsen, NielsenIQ (India retail data)
β‘ CPG company earnings calls (HUL, ITC, Nestle India)
β‘ Economic Times Retail section
β‘ Your product data (field visit insights)
β‘ Customer interviews (CPG sales heads)
SECONDARY:
β‘ Retail4Growth (industry publication)
β‘ Progressive Grocer India
β‘ Industry events (FMCG sales conferences)
β‘ Field team WhatsApp groups (insights from distributors)
BI-WEEKLY PUBLISHING (Operations Tech Cadence)
WEEK 1 (Research):CONTENT IDEAS:
Distribution Insights:
"State of general trade in North India [Q4 2025 data]"
"How kiranas stock FMCG products [field study]"
"Distributor margin analysis [benchmarks]" Technology Adoption:
"How HUL's field team uses mobile apps [case study]"
"ROI of field force automation [data from 20 companies]"
"Offline-first tech for rural distribution [best practices]" Market Trends:
"Quick commerce impact on FMCG distribution [analysis]"
"D2C brands' distribution strategy [emerging trends]"
"Modern trade vs general trade [2026 outlook]" WEEK 2 (Write & Publish):
STRUCTURE (800-1,000 words):
OPENING: Industry Insight
Example:
"HUL reported in Q4 earnings that general trade grew 8%
while modern trade was flat. We analyzed 10,000 retail
visits across North India to understand why..."
DATA/RESEARCH
Field visit insights
Sales data (if anonymized)
Industry benchmarks PRACTICAL TAKEAWAYS
For Sales Heads:
What this means for your distribution strategy
Which channels to prioritize For Field Teams:
Tactical execution tips
What to focus on in store visits CASE STUDY (If Available)
"How [CPG Brand] increased distribution by 15%
in general trade using [strategy]"
PUBLISHING:
β‘ Tuesday 10 AM IST (India CPG leaders)
β‘ Share on LinkedIn
β‘ Share summary in WhatsApp groups (with link)
β‘ Email to CPG sales heads in network
π CROSS-CUTTING: UNIVERSAL FRAMEWORKS
Role-Specific Workflows
FOUNDER-LED NEWSLETTERS (Full Autonomy)
ADVANTAGES:
β
No approval needed (publish freely)
β
Personal voice = authentic
β
Company brand = personal brand
β
Can share metrics ("We're at $5M ARR")
β
Can be aggressive (if industry allows)DISADVANTAGES:
β οΈ You are the bottleneck (can't delegate fully)
β οΈ Personal reputation tied to company
β οΈ If you leave company, newsletter goes with you
BEST PRACTICES:
β‘ Publish consistently (don't miss issues)
β‘ Maintain quality (represents you + company)
β‘ Build email list on Substack (own the list)
β‘ Consider: What happens if you leave/sell company?
EMPLOYEE-LED NEWSLETTERS (Approval Workflows)
SCENARIO: VP Marketing Wants Personal NewsletterCHALLENGES:
β οΈ Company may want control over messaging
β οΈ Can't share company metrics without approval
β οΈ Must add "Views are my own" disclaimer
β οΈ Manager needs to be aware
APPROVAL WORKFLOW:
STEP 1: Get Manager Buy-In
β‘ Pitch: "I want to build my personal brand in [category]"
β‘ Position: "This will raise awareness for our company too"
β‘ Clarify: Personal newsletter, not company newsletter
β‘ Agree: What you can/cannot share about company
STEP 2: Set Boundaries
Can Share:
β
Industry insights (not company-specific)
β
Your perspective on trends
β
Case studies (with approval)
β
Public company information
Cannot Share:
β Revenue, ARR, growth numbers (unless public)
β Roadmap, unannounced features
β Customer names (without permission)
β Internal metrics, team size
STEP 3: Disclaimer
Every issue includes:
"Views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily
represent the views of [Company Name]."
STEP 4: Periodic Check-Ins
β‘ Monthly: Show newsletter to manager
β‘ Quarterly: Confirm still aligned with company
β‘ Annually: Review and renew agreement
ENTERPRISE EMPLOYEE (Corporate Comms Controlled)
SCENARIO: CMO at Public SaaS CompanyREALITY:
π΄ EVERYTHING requires PR approval
π΄ Can't publish without 1-2 week review
π΄ Corporate Comms writes/reviews all content
π΄ No personal opinions on industry
π΄ Ghost-written by PR team
CONSTRAINTS:
β‘ Pre-approved topics only
β‘ No hot takes, no controversy
β‘ Company messaging only
β‘ Legal review for anything financial
OPTIONS:
1. Don't have personal newsletter (wait till you leave)
2. Ghost-write for founder (they publish under their name)
3. Internal newsletter (employees only, less restrictions)
Geography-Specific Tactics
India Newsletter Strategy
PUBLISHING TIMES:
β
Tuesday 9 AM IST
β
Wednesday 2 PM IST (after lunch)
β
Thursday 10 AM ISTDISTRIBUTION CHANNELS:
β‘ LinkedIn (primary - India B2B very active)
β‘ WhatsApp Business (field teams, distributors)
β‘ Email (Substack/ConvertKit)
β‘ Twitter/X (growing for India B2B)
CONTENT EXAMPLES:
Use Indian companies: FieldAssist, not Gong
Use rupee pricing: "βΉ5K/month" not "$50/month"
Reference: Indian regulations (RBI), not US (SEC) COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT:
β‘ SaaSBoomi (India B2B SaaS community)
β‘ IAMAI (fintech, if applicable)
β‘ LinkedIn India Groups (sales, HR, tech)
US Newsletter Strategy
PUBLISHING TIMES:
β
Tuesday 9 AM EST/6 AM PST
β
Wednesday 10 AM EST/7 AM PST
β
Thursday 9 AM EST/6 AM PSTDISTRIBUTION CHANNELS:
β‘ LinkedIn (primary)
β‘ Email (Substack, ConvertKit, Beehiiv)
β‘ Twitter/X (B2B SaaS community active)
β‘ Slack communities (SaaStr, Pavilion, Revenue Collective)
CONTENT EXAMPLES:
Use US companies: Gong, Lattice, Stripe
Use dollar pricing: "$500/month"
Reference: US regulations (SEC, GDPR if EU) COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT:
β‘ SaaStr (B2B SaaS)
β‘ Pavilion (sales, marketing, CS leaders)
β‘ Revenue Collective (CROs, RevOps)
Worked Examples: Multi-Dimensional Scenarios
Example 1: Sales Tech Founder, Series A, India β Newsletter for Lead Gen
SCENARIO:
Company: AI sales coaching, $3M ARR, 30 employees
You: Co-founder & CEO
Goal: Generate 15 SQLs/month via newsletter
Market: India B2B SaaS (SMB focus)
Budget: $0-100/month NEWSLETTER STRATEGY:
NAME: "The AI Sales Coach" (your positioning)
PLATFORM: LinkedIn Newsletter + Substack
FREQUENCY: Weekly
AUDIENCE: Sales leaders at $1M-10M ARR B2B SaaS companies (India)
CONTENT ANGLE:
"AI-powered sales insights for Indian startup sales teams"
ISSUE PLAN:
Week 1: "How AI analyzes top sales calls [your product data]"
Week 2: "The discovery framework for SMB sales [tactical]"
Week 3: "Gong vs affordable alternatives for Indian startups"
Week 4: "Sales coaching at scale: AI vs human [research]"
GROWTH TACTICS:
β‘ Every LinkedIn post β CTA to newsletter
β‘ Guest post on SaaSBoomi β Newsletter signup
β‘ Interview 3 Indian startup founders β They share with network
β‘ Comment on sales leader posts β Newsletter in profile
TIMELINE:
Month 1: 50 subscribers, 2 SQLs
Month 3: 200 subscribers, 8 SQLs
Month 6: 600 subscribers, 15+ SQLs
RESULT:
Newsletter becomes #2 lead source (after LinkedIn posts)
Cost: $0 (your time: 4 hours/week)
Example 2: HR Tech VP Marketing, Series B, US β Thought Leadership Newsletter
SCENARIO:
Company: Employee engagement platform, $20M ARR
You: VP Marketing
Goal: Build category authority, 20 SQLs/month
Market: US mid-market (500-2000 employee companies)
Budget: $5K/month for content NEWSLETTER STRATEGY:
NAME: "The Employee Experience Insider"
PLATFORM: ConvertKit (owned list) + LinkedIn cross-post
FREQUENCY: Bi-weekly (quality > quantity for HR)
TEAM: 1 writer, 1 designer
CONTENT STRATEGY:
Q1 Research: "State of Employee Engagement 2026"
Survey 500 HR leaders
Partner with SHRM for distribution
3-week newsletter series Q2: Customer case studies (monthly)
Q3: Hybrid work best practices (research series)
Q4: 2027 predictions (thought leadership)
GROWTH TACTICS:
β‘ Sponsorship: People Managing People newsletter ($2K)
β‘ LinkedIn ads: Download engagement report ($1K/month)
β‘ Webinar series: Registrants β Newsletter ($1K/month)
β‘ Conference: SHRM Annual (speaking + booth)
APPROVAL WORKFLOW:
β‘ Writer drafts β You review β Founder/CHRO feedback β Publish
β‘ Legal review: If compliance/regulation content
TIMELINE:
Month 1: 1,000 subscribers (launch with research report)
Month 6: 4,000 subscribers, 20 SQLs/month
Month 12: 8,000 subscribers, category authority signal
RESULT:
Cited by: HBR, SHRM publications
Speaking invites: 3-5 conferences/year
Recruiting: "I read your newsletter" in interviews
Common Newsletter Mistakes & How to Avoid
Mistake 1: "Industry-Agnostic Content"
WRONG APPROACH:
"Write generic B2B newsletter with sales/HR/fintech advice"WHY IT FAILS:
Sales Tech: Tactical, data-driven, aggressive
HR Tech: Professional, empathetic, research-backed
Fintech: Conservative, compliance-first, legal review CORRECT APPROACH:
Choose ONE vertical, go deep
β Section A (Sales Tech) or B (HR) or C (Fintech) or D (Ops)
Mistake 2: "No Clear Goal"
WRONG APPROACH:
"I'll start a newsletter and see what happens"CLEAR GOALS:
Series A: Lead generation (10-20 SQLs/month)
Series B: Thought leadership + pipeline
Series C+: Category ownership
Personal: Build authority for next role MEASURE:
β‘ Subscribers (growth rate)
β‘ Open rate (engagement)
β‘ Click rate (interest)
β‘ SQLs (if lead gen)
β‘ Inbound mentions (if thought leadership)
Mistake 3: "Inconsistent Publishing"
PROBLEM:
Week 1: Publish
Week 2: Skip (too busy)
Week 3: Publish
Week 4: Skip (on vacation)RESULT:
Subscribers forget about you
Algorithm penalizes you (LinkedIn)
Lose momentum SOLUTION:
β‘ Start with bi-weekly (easier to sustain)
β‘ Batch write 2-3 issues ahead
β‘ Have backup issues (evergreen content)
β‘ Use scheduling tools (ConvertKit, LinkedIn scheduler)
Prompt Templates for Each Scenario
Template 1: Series A Sales Tech Founder Newsletter
Using the Newsletter Creation skill, Section A1:I'm a Series A Sales Tech founder in [India/US].
My product: [One-line description]
My ICP: [Sales leaders at X companies]
Newsletter goal: Generate 10-20 SQLs per month
Please provide:
1. Newsletter positioning and name
2. First 3 issue topics (tactical, data-driven)
3. Weekly workflow (3-5 hours/week, $0 budget)
4. Growth tactics (free, appropriate for Sales Tech)
5. Success metrics (what to track)
India-specific if applicable:
IST publishing times
Indian B2B SaaS examples
SaaSBoomi distribution
Template 2: Series B HR Tech VP Newsletter
Using the Newsletter Creation skill, Section B2:I'm VP Marketing at Series B HR Tech.
Our product: [Employee engagement/performance/etc.]
My goal: Build thought leadership + 20 SQLs/month
Budget: $5K/month for content
Team: 1 writer, 1 designer
Please provide:
1. Content strategy (bi-weekly rhythm)
2. Q1 research topic (employee engagement, hybrid work, etc.)
3. Team workflow with approval process
4. Conservative growth tactics (appropriate for HR Tech)
5. Partnership ideas (SHRM, Josh Bersin, etc.)
Remember:
Professional tone (not aggressive like Sales Tech)
Research-backed (cite sources)
Legal review if compliance topics
Tool Comparison Matrix
| Tool | Free | Paid | Best For | Not Good For | |------|------|------|----------|--------------| | LinkedIn Newsletter | β | N/A | Sales/HR/Ops Tech (B2B audience on LinkedIn) | Fintech (want owned list) | | Substack | β | 5% fee paid | Owning list, monetization later | Enterprise employee (no autonomy) | | ConvertKit | $0-25/mo | $29-79/mo | Series B+ (advanced features, automation) | Series A (overkill) | | Beehiiv | β | $49+/mo | Growth features, referrals, monetization | Simple newsletter | | Ghost | $9+/mo | $25-199/mo | Tech-savvy, custom domain, membership | Non-technical founders | | Medium | β | N/A | Consumer content, broad reach | B2B SaaS (wrong audience) |
Quick Reference: Industry-Stage-Role Matrix
SALES TECH:
ββ Series A Founder β Section A1 (Lead gen, aggressive, weekly)
ββ Series B VP Mktg β Section A2 (Thought leadership, team, bi-weekly)
ββ Series C+ Dir Content β Section A3 (Category ownership, media-level)HR TECH:
ββ Series A Founder β Section B1 (Trust-building, professional, bi-weekly)
ββ Series B Dir Mktg β Section B2 (Research-backed, team, bi-weekly)
ββ Series C+ VP Content β Section B3 (Josh Bersin-level, membership)
FINTECH:
ββ Series A Founder β Section C1 (Compliance, legal review, bi-weekly)
ββ Series B VP Mktg β Section C2 (Regulatory insights, team)
ββ Series C+ VP Content β Section C3 (Category authority, conservative)
OPERATIONS TECH:
ββ Series A Founder β Section D1 (India retail, niche, bi-weekly)
ββ Series B Dir Mktg β Section D2 (CPG insights, case studies)
ββ Series C+ VP Content β Section D3 (Industry authority)
END OF SKILL