I can see the two different purposes. For Chat, I can see it really working for writers with highly engaged audiences who are on the Substack app and who want to talk about something with immediacy – as in, regular post comments and regular threads aren’t enough. If I were ever to try Chat, it would likely be scheduled (so it’s like an event) and for paid subscribers only.
I can see the two different purposes. For Chat, I can see it really working for writers with highly engaged audiences who are on the Substack app and who want to talk about something with immediacy – as in, regular post comments and regular threads aren’t enough. If I were ever to try Chat, it would likely be scheduled (so it’s like an event) and for paid subscribers only.
I can see the two different purposes. For Chat, I can see it really working for writers with highly engaged audiences who are on the Substack app and who want to talk about something with immediacy – as in, regular post comments and regular threads aren’t enough. If I were ever to try Chat, it would likely be scheduled (so it’s like an event) and for paid subscribers only.
Speaking purely for myself, have managed only very minimal uptake from posting chats to subscribers.
Notes has been far more successful in that regard