The bait, then the rug-pull.
Sinem Günel opens with a credibility story — eight years of writing online — and a single piece of advice she heard from everyone: build your email list. Then she pivots to the reframe that powers the whole video: visibility without an email list is just a hobby, not a business. Everything from minute three onward is engineered to deliver one answer — start on Substack.
What the video promised.
stated at 01:05“In this video I'm going to show you the fastest and honestly the easiest way to build your email list in 2026. You don't need a following, you don't need a complicated tech setup, and you definitely don't need to be on every social media platform.”delivered at 13:58
Where the time goes.

01 · Cold open
Personal credibility story plus the reframe: followers don't belong to you, only email subscribers do. Promise stated at 01:09.

02 · Point 1 — The Problem
Creators treat list-building as a phase-two thing. The visibility you build on social media doesn't belong to you. Followers are not the same as subscribers.

03 · Point 2 — Why most email tools fail new creators
Kit, Beehiiv, Mailchimp are powerful but have learning curves and monthly costs before you've made a dollar. Friction stops people from ever starting.

04 · Point 3 — What changed on Substack
Substack Notes (April 2023) added a built-in discovery feed. Now you can start with zero audience and grow inside the platform. Recommendations, cross-promos, guest posts, live streams, recording studio.

05 · Mid-roll: Substack Starter Kit
Soft pitch for the free Starter Kit lead magnet at writebuildscale.com/ytstarterkit. Setup checklist, content planner, strategy guide.

06 · Point 4 — Profile vs. Publication
Your profile is you (name, photo, bio) and follows you everywhere. Your publication is your brand — its own name, identity, homepage. Most newbies collapse the two and never name their publication.

07 · Point 5 — Posts vs. Notes
Posts build depth (trust, SEO). Notes build reach (cold readers via the algorithm). Cadence: one post per week, daily Notes.
08 · The paid tier is a milestone, not day one
Substack's paid tier is real and proven (her own publication: 1,600+ paid subs in <2 years) but launching it with no list is pointless. Build the free audience first.
09 · Realistic first-week plan
1) Create account + name your publication. 2) Publish your first post (intro, short, just to practice). 3) Show up on Notes daily. The culture is collaborative — comment, restack, have real conversations.
10 · Closing CTA + next-video loop
Grab the Starter Kit (linked below). Then watch her next video on building a paid Substack tier that generates recurring revenue.
Visual structure at a glance.
Named ideas worth stealing.
Followers vs. Subscribers reframe
Followers belong to the platform; subscribers belong to you. A follower isn't even likely to see your next post; a subscriber is committed to hearing from you.
Profile vs. Publication
- Profile = the person (name, photo, bio, follows you everywhere)
- Publication = the brand (its own name, homepage, identity, what people subscribe to)
Most new Substackers collapse the two and end up with a publication named after themselves with no clear focus. Treating them as separate forces you to name your brand and articulate its angle.
Posts vs. Notes (depth vs. reach)
- Posts build depth (trust, SEO, the thing they subscribe to stay for)
- Notes build reach (the algorithm pushes them to cold readers)
Posts convert; Notes acquire. You need both, but they do different jobs.
Weekly Substack cadence
- One long-form post per week
- Notes daily (or at least a few times a week)
- Engage in other people's Notes and comments authentically
The minimum viable rhythm she recommends to her clients. Posts do the depth job, Notes do the reach job.
Paid tier as milestone, not day one
Setting up paid subs with no list is pointless — you'll be writing premium content for five people. Build the free audience first, then activate paid when you have enough subscribers to launch to.
Lines you could clip.
“Visibility without an email list is just a hobby. It's not a business.”
“Your followers don't belong to you. Your YouTube subscribers don't belong to you. But every single person on your email list — that's really yours.”
“Followers are not the same as subscribers. A subscriber is committed to hearing from you. A follower, on the other hand, isn't even likely to see your content when you hit publish the next time.”
“The tool you actually use is always better than the perfect tool you never even set up.”
“Publish one post per week and show up on Notes daily. The more consistently you show up, the faster the list will grow. It's as simple as that.”
“The paid tier is not a day one decision. It's a milestone.”
How they spent the runtime.
Things they pointed at.
How they asked for the click.
“And if you want to get started right away, the Substack Starter Kit is linked below. It's waiting for you. It's free and it will walk you through everything we covered today.”
Lead-magnet CTA, not subscribe-CTA. Soft-mentioned at 05:52 (mid-roll), explicit at 13:58 (close). Followed immediately by a next-video loop pointing at her paid-tier breakdown — keeps the viewer inside her funnel either way.
Word for word.
Steal the lead-magnet funnel.
Don't sell the channel — sell the lead magnet. Use the talking-head longform to build the reframe, recommend the tool, and dump the viewer into a free download that captures their email.
- Open with a reframe, not a feature pitch. Sinem spends 3 minutes establishing 'followers are not subscribers' before naming any tool. The reframe is what makes the tool sound inevitable.
- Use white-card 'Point N' section titles every 2-3 minutes. Cheap to produce (bold black text on white BG), and they function as re-hooks for the watch-time graph.
- Make the primary CTA the lead magnet, not subscribe. A YouTube view is worth ~$0. An email goes into your funnel forever. Mid-roll soft mention + explicit close.
- Disclose before the audience suspects. 'I recommended Substack before I was on it myself' kills the shill objection in one sentence — borrow this pattern for any tool you endorse.
- End on a next-video loop pointing inside your funnel — never 'thanks for watching.' Hand the viewer the next click before YouTube does.
- Acknowledge the alternatives by name (she named Kit, Beehiiv, Mailchimp). Trying to pretend they don't exist would make her sound like a hustle bro; naming them makes her sound like an honest guide.
- Build the cadence into the lesson: 1 long-form per week + daily short-form is the platform-agnostic creator rhythm. Repeat the prescription explicitly so viewers screenshot it.
What this could mean for you.
If you've been putting off building an email list because the tools feel overwhelming, Substack is engineered exactly for the version of you that hasn't started yet.
- Sign up for Substack today — not Kit, not Beehiiv, not Mailchimp. The goal at this stage is to send your first email, not pick the perfect tool.
- Name your publication something other than your own name. Even something simple like 'Notes on [your topic]' forces you to declare what it's about.
- Write your first post this week — even a 200-word 'hi, here's what I'm going to write about and why' intro counts. Almost no one will see it. That's the point: you're practicing in silence.
- Post one long thing per week. Post on Notes (the short-form feed) most days — even just a single sentence reaction to something you read.
- Comment on other people's Notes and posts before promoting your own. Substack culture rewards genuine engagement; restacks from people slightly ahead of you are the fastest growth path.
- Ignore the paid tier for the first 6-12 months. Set it up when you have an audience to launch to, not before. Free posts + free Notes is the entire job at the start.









































































