Newsletters should be letters!
And maybe all writing should be epistolary, while we're at it
Hey y’all,
I’ve been sending out newsletters for over a decade. Perhaps paradoxically, the way I keep an element of fun and spontaneity in the process is to be totally militant and rigid about blocking off every Monday and Thursday on the calendar so I can come out here to the studio and write a letter to you.
I thrive on the challenge of coming in here with nothing and leaving with something. Even if I try to plan ahead, I never know exactly what’s going to happen. I’ll often think all weekend about what I want to write, take notes, research, get it fixed in my mind before going to bed on Sunday night, and then when I sit down the next morning at my desk I’ll look up at a sticky note that says “What feels urgent?” and write something completely different than what I had planned.
People often ask me for advice on how to write a newsletter. I usually tell them some variation of what I wrote in Steal Like an Artist: “Write a newsletter you’d like to read.”
I have a few more tips, like “Pick a repeatable format” or “Be consistent at a regular frequency.”
But my current personal motto is: “Newsletters should be letters.”
What I love most about newsletters is the letter part — the epistle, the missive, the bulletin, the dispatch! What’s going on — in the studio, in my life, in my mind — that’s worth sending out? Worth opening? Worth reading?
Not only do I think newsletters should be letters, I’m starting to think that all writing gets better — and maybe even easier — when we simply try to sit down and write a letter.
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