> No, they also provide the platform, the tools, the analytics
Maybe I'm in a bubble but I don't see it as their main value for successful users who make money from their newsletter. I've setup a newsletter with analytics a few weeks ago without writing a single line of code and with a fixed cost (and custom domain...). Yes, starting with Substack is cheaper to start with but long term it'll cost you).
> Marriott has to pay for every transaction, just like someone using Substack. You pay per transaction.
I guess I'm not familiar enough with Substack. What does it mean you pay per transaction? It's a newsletter - you make money from paying subscribers who pay monthly let's say. Are you saying Substack users pay per email sent to their paying subscribers?
> No, I was referring to the whole Marriott thing. If you book a Marriott hotel with an aggregator (like Kayak), Marriott has to pay for that booking. If you do it the next week again, Marriott has to pay again.
> Substack fees work the same, you pay a fee to Substack whenever a person renews (transaction).
> So to make the loop back, no the Kayak example works the same way as Substack does.
Replying here since HN doesn't let me reply to the comment directly (probably reached the max number of nested replies).
I now understand your example but I disagree with it. A newsletter, unlike a hotel, relies on a small number of paying users who are likely to renew their membership. Many even pay for annual membership. The main cost is finding a new paying user. Once the user is subscribed it's the newsletter's job to keep that user paying. Marriott pays Kayak only for new users. Next time the user can book a room via the Marriott site. It doesn't need to keep paying Kayak for life every-time that user books a room.
> Are you saying Substack users pay per email sent to their paying subscribers?
No, I was referring to the whole Marriott thing. If you book a Marriott hotel with an aggregator (like Kayak), Marriott has to pay for that booking. If you do it the next week again, Marriott has to pay again.
Substack fees work the same, you pay a fee to Substack whenever a person renews (transaction).
So to make the loop back, no the Kayak example works the same way as Substack does. It just happens to be the case, that customer retention is higher with Substack (or lower-cost transactions in general)
Maybe I'm in a bubble but I don't see it as their main value for successful users who make money from their newsletter. I've setup a newsletter with analytics a few weeks ago without writing a single line of code and with a fixed cost (and custom domain...). Yes, starting with Substack is cheaper to start with but long term it'll cost you).
> Marriott has to pay for every transaction, just like someone using Substack. You pay per transaction.
I guess I'm not familiar enough with Substack. What does it mean you pay per transaction? It's a newsletter - you make money from paying subscribers who pay monthly let's say. Are you saying Substack users pay per email sent to their paying subscribers?