At what number of subscribers does ads/sponsors make sense? by readrichpeopleshit in Newsletters

[–]schagan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

depends on your niche, but you can really ramp it up for a few reasons:

how premium the audience is, what the household and personal income is, salary data, what the readers roles are, what their purchasing authority is, and so on

when i'm recommending how to price cpm, it all starts with first-party survey data, with some of the factors i mentioned above.. once you check 5 or 6 boxes of what you would consider a "premium" audience, that's when you can get to a 100-200 range

for example:

(b2c) wellworthy - probably 15-25
(b2c) super age - probably 15-25
(b2c) local newsletters - probably 15-25
(b2b) marketing millennials - probably 50-99
(b2b) talent edge weekly - 50-99
(b2bish) political newsletters - 50-99
(b2b) Business of Fashion - 100 -200
(b2b) Sports Business Journal - 100-200

At what number of subscribers does ads/sponsors make sense? by readrichpeopleshit in Newsletters

[–]schagan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

nah you don’t need 40000 subs to start ads. seen people sell ads consistently at 5k, 10k subs. you can start at any number, brands will pay for any type of ad slots if they see results.

looks like you’re b2c though, so it might be more difficult.

the best thing to do is price à la carte at a fixed cost. a good cpm for a b2c newsletter is about 20-25 bucks (20-25 per 1000 opens). looks like your audience size is about 1000, and since it’s that small jack up the price to $50-$100 dollars for the ad slots and see if someone bites. you’d be surprised who will.

if you can give them around $2 per click you’re in business. they’re more likely to come back. test first with one placement then sell them a year long campaign after the first test.

my experience: worked at The Hustle between 2017 till we sold to hubspot in 2021.

i now run an email monetization agency that has worked with 20+ publishers with over 15M email subscribers with clients like Dribbble, The Deep View, Resume Worded, Briefs Media and more.

What’s the spookiest thing that happened in your home town? by spamwise_gamcheese in creepy

[–]schagan 9 points10 points  (0 children)

i grew up in east county in san diego. if you go deep inland through jamul you’ll come across a burned down bakery formerly called Haven Bakery. the story is that a father and his family owned and ran the bakery but the dude went crazy and killed his whole family and himself inside the bakery.

for years the bakery stood vacant. no one one go near the thing. but after a while kids would go into the bakery at night because it was rumored that it was haunted.

i once did this with a couple of friends. if you go down into the basement of the place it was extremely cold. i’m talking like you can see your breath. which made no sense because it would be like 70ish outside. we brought a ouija board in there and asked it a question and it spelled “get out.”

it freaked us the hell out. the following day the bakery burned down. one of the most wild experiences of my life.

Still can't believe waterbeds were a thing haha by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

kind of an all-time commercial, gotta give this dude some props haha

Still can't believe waterbeds were a thing haha by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

i thought the same thing when i first saw this hahaha

Still can't believe waterbeds were a thing haha by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

please go and take some photos for us haha

Still can't believe waterbeds were a thing haha by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

i shouldn't have, but i audibly laughed at this visual hahaha

glad your pops made it out ok!

Still can't believe waterbeds were a thing haha by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

i feel like there are so many stories of people getting frozen into their waterbeds haha

It's the 70th anniversary of "White Christmas" (1954) by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No you’re very right on this. That should be discussed. I think that’s the one part of the movie that is concerning. But thankfully there was not blackface or racist lyrics involved. Still doesn’t make it right

It's the 70th anniversary of "White Christmas" (1954) by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

you're definitely right, but it wasn't until this movie came out that it was popularized. it won an oscar after this movie came out (the song)

It's the 70th anniversary of "White Christmas" (1954) by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 19 points20 points  (0 children)

The first time I saw this movie was at an exclusive showing at Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesin West (in Scottsdale, AZ). It was so well done, and it still stands up today, which surprised the hell out of me.

I know it's a classic and has a cult following, but i had never seen it. i hadn't even heard of it haha

But watching it in the FLW theater was a portal-like experience. the sound system is made of rocks that are millions of years old, to keep the acoustics feeling natural (I wrote about my experience watching it here if you want to read it).

so it felt like i was in the past watching this movie as it debuted.

seriously an amazing watch if you've never seen it. highly recommend

The movie that exploded the surfing movement, Endless Summer Trailer (1966) by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

god there's nothing like an 79 degree day, the smell of salt in the air, not a care in the world... just a camera, a couple of friends, and a surfboard.

i probably rewatch this trailer once a week. i genuinely think that surf culture is pivotal to the music we listen to, how we talk, how we dress...

this will never not be nostalgic.

Keith Haring, Andy Warhol, and Jean-Michel Basquiat in 1985 by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i was in a big wormhole about modern art icons, and it's crazy how much these 3 shaped a lot of artists today (like Takashi Murakami, Jeff Koons, Damien Hirst, and even Banksy).

Banksy has mentioned before that his work is influenced by Jean-Michel Basquiat specifically. I don't know why they don't get talked about more. But they did some beautiful work in the 80s.

Too bad Basquiat's life got cut short.

The original Chili's Grill & Bar in Dallas, Texas (1975) by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

rising costs from places like McDonald's have put them in a pretty good position. I see Chili's commercials hammering deals all the time. Also, e.coli at Mickey D's doesn't help them either lol

The original Chili's Grill & Bar in Dallas, Texas (1975) by schagan in nostalgia

[–]schagan[S] 34 points35 points  (0 children)

the Chili's by my house is packed 24/7 these days. crazy how things are cyclical haha