Moving to Substack

TL;DR—I’ve decided to move my blog to the Substack platform. You can find it at https://emilysmucker.substack.com/

If you want to know more details, along with the journey that led to the switch, keep reading!

Why Substack?

Sometimes I feel like I’ve given every website/social media platform a try at some point or another. Not just consuming content, but making content. If you dig deeply enough you can find little traces of me almost everywhere.

But blogging is my first and longest love. I’ve been doing this for twenty years, folks. Twenty years!

Yes, I’ve moved around somewhat. I started on Xanga, then moved here to WordPress a few years later—a good move, in hindsight, as Xanga eventually disappeared into the Great Void of the Internet.

Then, a little over six years ago, I added a “bonus blog” on Patreon. This allowed me to earn a little money from writing. It also gave me a platform to post more controversial content without worrying it would go viral and cause a firestorm in the comments.

(Yes, I have thin skin, but I’d rather be thin-skinned than be the sort of person who would rather have negative attention than no attention at all.)

When I started my Patreon, I’d never heard of Substack, as it was only two years old at the time. But as Substack gained popularity, I realized it might be a better fit than Patreon. In a nutshell, Patreon is a platform for paying content creators of all types, but it’s not really a blogging platform. Substack is designed as a blogging platform, and it’s much more intuitive for readers to use as well.

Additionally, if I used Substack, I wouldn’t have to blog on two platforms. I could put my free blogs and my bonus, paid blogs on the same platform.

..So I Though I Would Try It

Of course, I’ve spent many years building an audience here and on Patreon. The idea of moving it to a new platform was a bit daunting.

But at the same time…

I miss trying out new platforms. I miss the old days of the Internet when there were always new websites.

So I set up a Substack and had fun with it. I called it “Red Boots and Rabbit Trails,” playing on the Red Rubber Boots theme without having to call myself a “girl” at age 35, and set my profile pic of a female Mad Hatter drinking tea and wearing red rubber boots.

Then I re-posted my red rubber boots blogs, as well as my Patreon blogs, onto Substack as well.

Very quickly, I started having more fun blogging than I’d had in ages.

On Substack, folks are engaged. They like things. They comment. They somehow started to find me, even though I didn’t advertise my Substack at all.

Re-Branding as a Comedian?

I did run into a slight issue when I set up my Substack, which was that I had to say what category of blog I was writing, and the options were pretty limited. There was no “thoughtful discourse” option. There was no “stories about my life” option.

Was my blog more “Faith and Spirituality” or “Literature”? “Travel” or “Humor”?

I chose “humor,” assuming it didn’t matter that much. What I didn’t realize was that

A. Substack has lists of the 100 “top” blogs and 100 “rising blogs in each category

B. Apparently, not many people choose to be in the “humor” category

Because next thing you know, without advertising my blog at all, I was on the “rising” list.

Even weirder, I continued to rise. The day before yesterday, when I announced on my Patreon that I was moving to Substack, I got up to number 15 on the list.

Yep, there I am, only a few places behind Garrison Keillor and Dave Barry.

What the actual bunnyslipper.

Sorry, future readers, if I’m not quite as funny as you hoped I’d be.

How Substack Works

If you head over to my Substack at https://emilysmucker.substack.com/, you’ll be prompted to put in your email address and subscribe. If you don’t want to subscribe, just hit “no thanks,” and you’ll go right to my blog.

On my blog, you’ll be able to read my free posts and see previews of my paid-subscriber-only posts.

If you choose to subscribe, you can do the free option, where you’ll get my free blogs emailed to you. That’s essentially just like being subscribed to this blog.

If you pay, you’ll access the paid blogs too. Essentially, it will be like being subscribed to both my Patreon and this blog.

Fair warning—it does cost more than Patreon. On Patreon I was able to set the monthly rate at $1, whereas the lowest monthly rate on Substack is $5. However, I was able to make the yearly rate $30, essentially halving the base price.

But please don’t feel like you need to pay! I’ll still post just as much free content as I have been in the past.

What About the Girl in the Red Rubber Boots?

All my years of blog archive will live here for now, but emilysmucker.com will become more of a personal website, and a place to purchase my books, than a blog.

What are you waiting for? Subscribe to my Substack today!


Comments

8 responses to “Moving to Substack”

  1. Chrissy Avatar
    Chrissy

    i’m looking forward to reading more of your stories. I was bummed I missed seeing you and your mom at the fair this year. That’s where I bought your book several years ago. It was a good book.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Chrissy Avatar
    Chrissy

    Hey Emily. I’m not super savvy with computer stuff and apps but I already subscribed to sub stack for Bob Welch column. If I wanna follow you and other people on sub stack do I have have to pay more? Do you know how that works? Thank you in advance for any help you can give me

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Emily Sara Smucker Avatar
      Emily Sara Smucker

      Hi Chrissy! You can follow me for free and see all my free posts, the same types of things you see normally from me. If you want to see my paid content you’ll have to pay me on top of what you already pay for Bob Welch.

      Like

  3. Chrissy Avatar
    Chrissy

    Hi Emily. Thank you for getting back to me so quickly. I appreciate the information for now. I will just follow you for free. I look forward to reading more of your great stuff.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I appreciate your reasons for moving, but Substack is really irritating to navigate as a non-subscriber because you can’t tell whether you’re allowed to read something or not until you hit the orange box. Might you be able to label which posts you can read free and which you cannot in some way that it’s possible to see instantly? While I appreciate that you need a paywall for part of your content for various reasons, I cannot afford that subscription for this type of content at this time, yet as someone who’s valued your reflections for a long time, I’d really like to be able to go on reading your free content… which is really difficult as that forum is set up currently…

    Like

    1. Emily Sara Smucker Avatar
      Emily Sara Smucker

      Thanks for the feedback! I’m not sure I understand the issue, though. Let’s see…when you go to emilysmucker.substack.com, a page should come up asking if you want to subscribe. If you subscribe for free, all my free posts will automatically get emailed to you when I post.
      If you want to read without subscribing, hit the “no thanks” button on the bottom. That will take you to my blog page.
      On the blog page, the blogs that are behind a paywall have a little padlock symbol next to the date they were posted, and the free blogs do not.
      Is the padlock hard to pick up on? Would you prefer if I put (free) or (paywall) in the title itself? Or is there a different issue I’m not understanding?
      Thanks again for your feedback! I want to get all the little kinks like this worked out if possible!

      Like

      1. Thanks 🙂

        Yes, there is a padlock, very tiny and in a very low contrast grey-on-grey and with no explanatory tooltip… I think it’ll probably be all right now I know what I’m looking for! (I am half-blind, so it may be more of an accessibility thing than a general navigation problem – it’s hard for me to tell).

        “Free” or “Paywall” in the title or preview itself would certainly be very helpful, but I can understand that it’s more complicated.

        In case it’s any help to know, I tend to stay off email-subscriptions and read blogs I like by opening them from my favourites list – I find that works better for time management – whether that’s a typical habit or not is anyone’s guess.

        Like

      2. Emily Sara Smucker Avatar
        Emily Sara Smucker

        That makes sense! Thanks for your feedback!

        Like

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