How I Consistently Make $5K / Month on Substack (Without a Single Paid Subscriber)
The counterintuitive monetization strategy that generates more revenue than traditional paid subscriptions—and why charging $5/month might actually be hurting your income potential
I remember the exact moment I realized I needed to change things.
It was January of last year, and I was sitting in my home office staring at a calendar packed with back-to-back client calls. Seven calls that day. Seven hours of being "on" as a career coach and resume writer, helping people while slowly burning myself out.
Don't get me wrong—I loved helping people land their dream jobs. But the daily reality? No flexibility. No freedom. And definitely no time to think about anything beyond the next client call.
As an introvert, those marathon days left me completely drained. I'd need two full days to recover from a single day like that. I kept thinking, "There has to be a better way to help people without selling my soul one hour at a time."
That night, exhausted and frustrated, I was venting to a friend about feeling trapped in my own business. He reminded me about the Substack I'd started a few years earlier but had let fizzle out.
"Why don't you start your newsletter back up?" he asked.
Something clicked.
What if I could help people at scale instead of one hour at a time? What if I could build something that worked even when I wasn't actively working on it?
So, I decided to restart my Substack, but this time with a completely different approach. I was going to treat it like a real business from day one, not just a hobby.
Here's what happened next: I grew that newsletter from absolute zero—no email list, nothing—to over 9,000 subscribers in just over 9 months.
But here's the part that actually changed everything: that newsletter now consistently generates $5,000+ per month. And I can run the entire thing from anywhere.
Some days I work 30 minutes on it. Other days I might spend a few hours writing. But it's completely on my terms, fitting around my life instead of consuming it.
The best part? I'm helping more people than I ever could in those exhausting one-on-one sessions. And I've been able to scale back my resume writing clients because my Substack supplements that income beautifully.
But here's what really surprised me about building this newsletter business: I'm doing it without a single paid subscriber.
While other writers are struggling to convert their audience to $5 monthly subscriptions, I discovered a completely different approach to monetization—one that generates more revenue with less pressure and actually accelerates your growth instead of limiting it.
Let me show you exactly how this works.
The Problem with the Traditional Substack Playbook
Here's what every new Substack writer gets told: grow your free list, then convert some percentage to paid subscriptions at $5-8 per month.
Sounds simple enough, right?
But let's do the real math that nobody talks about.
If you're lucky enough to convert 5% of your audience to paid (which is actually above average), you'd need 2,000 free subscribers to get 100 paid subscribers. That's $500-800 per month after months or even years of consistent writing.
And here's the kicker: to get those 2,000 subscribers, you need to create amazing content consistently. But once you turn on paid subscriptions, you're supposed to gate your best content behind a paywall.
See the problem?
Your best content—the stuff that attracts new readers and grows your audience—is now hidden from the people who need to discover you. You're literally limiting your own growth potential to chase small monthly payments.
I watched this happen to writer after writer. They'd build momentum with great free content, turn on paid subscriptions, and suddenly their growth would stagnate. They were stuck in this weird middle ground: not enough paid subscribers to make real money, but enough gatekeeping to hurt their reach.
Meanwhile, they're spending the same amount of time and energy creating content, but now serving two different audiences with two different value propositions. It's exhausting.
The worst part? Most writers quit long before they ever see meaningful revenue from paid subscriptions. The math is just too demotivating. You're looking at months or years of consistent effort before you earn enough to make it feel worthwhile.
There had to be a better way.
What if instead of trying to convince 1,000 people to pay you $5 monthly, you could help 100 people solve a real problem for $50? Same revenue, but completely different energy.
Instead of subscription fatigue, you'd be delivering immediate, transformational value. Instead of gating your content, you'd be using your best ideas to attract even more readers. Instead of waiting years to see real income, you could start generating revenue from your first month.
That's exactly what I did. And it changed everything.
How I Accidentally Discovered a Better Way
The shift happened almost by accident.
One to two months into my new Substack, I was getting the same questions over and over again in my DMs and comments:
"How did you grow so fast?"
"What's your content strategy?"
"Can you help me with my newsletter?"
At first, I'd respond individually, spending 15-20 minutes crafting thoughtful replies. But I quickly realized I was giving away hours of my time explaining the same concepts repeatedly.
Then it hit me: if this many people were asking these questions, maybe I should create something that helps them all at once.
So, I spent a weekend documenting everything I'd learned about growing on Substack. I turned it into a simple PDF guide—nothing fancy, just 25 pages of actionable strategies that had worked for me.
I wasn't even sure anyone would want it. I just mentioned it casually in one of my posts: "I put together a guide on how I grew my Substack if anyone's interested."
Within 72 hours, I'd sold 23 copies at $47 each.
Over $1,000 in revenue from something I created in a weekend.
But here's what really surprised me: the people who bought that guide didn't just disappear after the purchase. They started engaging more with my content, sharing my posts, and several reached out asking if I offered one-on-one coaching.
That $47 purchase became a bridge to deeper relationships and higher-value services.
I realized I had stumbled onto something powerful: instead of trying to extract $5 monthly from my entire audience, I could create something genuinely valuable for the subset of people who needed specific help.
Those 23 people who bought my guide? They received immediate value and got results. I made more in that weekend than most writers make from paid subscriptions in six months. And my free content kept reaching everyone, continuing to grow my audience.
It was a win-win-win.
The buyers got transformation. I got revenue. My free readers kept getting value without any barriers.
Since then, I've created several digital products around different problems my audience faces: growing with Substack Notes, using LinkedIn to drive newsletter growth, creating their first digital product. Each one solves a specific problem and generates consistent revenue.
But the real magic happened when I started thinking of these products not as one-off sales, but as the first step in building relationships with my most engaged readers.
That $50 purchase tells me something important: this person is serious about growing their newsletter. They're not just browsing—they're investing in solutions.
Some of those people come back for coaching at $500-2,500 per month. Others join my premium workshops. A few have hired me for consulting projects.
What started as a simple PDF became a complete business model that generates consistent income while keeping all my content free and accessible.
The best part? I created each product once, and they sell for me repeatedly. While I sleep, while I'm with family, while I'm focused on other projects.
It's the compound effect that paid subscriptions promise but rarely deliver.
Why Digital Products Beat Paid Subscriptions Every Time
After nine months of running this system, I've learned something that completely contradicts the conventional Substack wisdom:
Higher-priced, one-time purchases often generate more revenue than monthly subscriptions—with less stress and better relationships.
Here's the math that opened my eyes:
Traditional Paid Subscription Model:
Need 1,000 paid subscribers at $5/month = $5,000 monthly
Requires gating your best content (limiting growth)
Constant pressure to deliver "premium" content monthly
Churn rate means you're always replacing lost subscribers
Takes 12-18 months to build that subscriber base
Digital Product Model:
Need 100 customers at $50 each = $5,000 monthly
All content stays free (accelerating growth)
Create once, sell repeatedly
No churn—customers own the product forever
Can hit revenue goals in your first few months
But the real difference isn't just mathematical—it's psychological.
When someone pays $5 monthly for your newsletter, they're making a small, low-commitment decision. It's easy to subscribe, but it's also easy to unsubscribe when their credit card statement gets tight or they lose interest.
When someone invests $50-200 in a digital product, they're making a serious commitment to solving a problem. They're not just buying information—they're buying transformation. And because they've invested more, they're more likely to actually implement what they learn.
This creates a completely different relationship dynamic.
Your digital product customers become your most engaged community members. They share your content more, recommend you to others, and often come back for higher-value services. They have skin in the game.
I've seen this play out repeatedly. My most vocal supporters, my best referral sources, and my highest-value coaching clients all started by purchasing one of my digital products.
There's another advantage nobody talks about: creative freedom.
With paid subscriptions, you're constantly asking yourself, "Is this good enough for my paying subscribers?" You start second-guessing your content, creating artificial pressure to make everything "premium-worthy."
With digital products, every piece of content you create serves your entire audience. There's no artificial hierarchy between "free" and "paid" content. You can focus purely on being helpful, knowing that the people who need deeper help will find their way to your products.
Your growth accelerates because your best ideas reach everyone, not just the small percentage willing to pay monthly fees.
Plus, you're building multiple assets instead of relying on a single revenue stream. Each product becomes a lead magnet, a relationship builder, and an income generator all at once.
The compound effect is real: one great product can generate revenue for years while simultaneously growing your audience and building deeper relationships with your most committed readers.
That's leverage. That's sustainability. And that's why I'll probably never turn on paid subscriptions.
The 5-Step Digital Product System That Changed Everything
After creating multiple products that consistently generate revenue, I've developed a simple system that any newsletter writer can follow. Here's exactly how to build your first digital product:
Step 1: Identify Your Expertise (The Problem You Already Solve)
You don't need to be the world's leading expert to create a valuable digital product. You just need to be a few steps ahead of your audience on something specific.
Start by auditing what people already ask you about:
Look through your DMs, comments, and email replies. What questions come up repeatedly? I kept getting asked about Substack growth, so that became my first product.
Review your most popular content. Which posts generated the most engagement or saves? Those topics are goldmines for product ideas.
Notice what you do naturally that others struggle with. Maybe you're great at writing hooks, organizing content, or building email lists. What feels obvious to you might be exactly what someone else needs to learn.
The sweet spot is the intersection of your knowledge and your audience's pain points. You don't need a PhD—you just need practical experience solving problems your readers face.
Step 2: Package Your Knowledge into a Simple Solution
Here's where most people overcomplicate things. They try to create the comprehensive course that covers everything about a topic.
Don't do that.
Instead, focus on solving one specific problem really well. My first product wasn't "Everything About Newsletter Growth." It was "How I Grew My Substack from Zero to 4,000 Subscribers in 6 Months"—much more focused and actionable.
Choose your format based on what you enjoy creating:
PDF guides (easiest to start with)
Email courses (great for building relationships)
Video trainings (higher perceived value)
Templates and frameworks (immediate implementation)
Mini-courses with 3-5 lessons
Keep it simple enough that someone can consume and implement it quickly. You want quick wins, not overwhelm.
Step 3: Price for Results, Not Hours
This is where most creators sabotage themselves. They price based on how long it took them to create the product instead of the value it delivers.
Stop thinking about time. Start thinking about transformation.
If your guide helps someone gain their first 100 subscribers, what's that worth to them? If your template saves them 10 hours of work, what's their time worth? If your strategy helps them land their first paying client, what's that opportunity worth?
I price my products between $47-$197 because they solve real problems and deliver measurable results. A $47 product that helps someone gain 500 subscribers is incredibly cheap when you consider the alternative of trial-and-error for months.
Higher prices also filter for serious buyers. Someone who invests $97 in a solution is much more likely to implement it than someone who downloads a $7 impulse purchase.
Don't apologize for charging what your knowledge is worth.
Step 4: Create Once, Sell Forever
The magic of digital products is that you can sell the same product repeatedly without additional work. But to make this system truly passive, you need to integrate promotion into your content strategy.
Instead of random product launches, work your products into your regular content:
When you write about newsletter growth, mention your newsletter growth guide in context
When you share a framework, link to the expanded version in your paid product
When someone asks a question in comments, answer publicly and mention the deeper resource
I use content cycles: I'll write about a topic for 2-3 weeks, providing tons of free value, then naturally mention the related product. This doesn't feel salesy because I'm genuinely helping people while giving them an option to go deeper.
Your content becomes a funnel that consistently drives product sales without constant "buy my stuff" posts.
Step 5: Use It as a Bridge to Higher-Value Offers
Here's the part that transforms everything: your digital products aren't just revenue generators—they're relationship builders and credibility assets.
Someone who buys your $97 guide has demonstrated three important things:
They have the problem you solve
They're willing to invest in solutions
They trust your expertise
These are exactly the people who might be interested in higher-value services: one-on-one coaching, done-for-you services, or premium workshops.
I don't pitch coaching to my entire audience. I offer it to people who've already invested in my products and gotten results. The conversion rate is significantly higher because trust is already established.
This creates a natural progression: free content → digital product → higher-value services. Each step builds deeper relationships while generating more revenue.
Your $50 product becomes the foundation for $500 coaching packages, $2,000 consulting projects, or $5,000 done-for-you services.
The system compounds: more product sales mean more potential coaching clients, which means more testimonials and case studies, which means better products and higher prices.
That's how you build a sustainable newsletter business that grows your income without burning you out.
You Know More Than You Think (And Your Audience Needs It)
I can already hear the voice in your head: "But I don't have enough expertise to create a product. Who am I to charge people for what I know?"
I felt the exact same way.
When I created my first Substack guide, I had been writing newsletters for exactly three months. Three months! I kept thinking, "Surely someone else is more qualified to teach this."
But here's what I learned: your audience doesn't need you to be the world's leading expert. They need you to be a few steps ahead of where they are right now.
That person struggling to get their first 100 subscribers? Your experience getting to 500 is incredibly valuable to them. The writer who can't figure out how to be consistent? Your simple daily routine could change their entire trajectory.
You're not competing with the gurus who have 100,000 subscribers. You're helping the people who are exactly where you were six months ago.
Think about it this way: you probably have skills and knowledge that you take for granted because they come naturally to you now. But you didn't always know these things. You learned them through trial, error, and experience.
That learning process—complete with the mistakes, breakthroughs, and shortcuts you discovered—is exactly what someone else needs to hear.
Maybe you've figured out how to write engaging LinkedIn posts that drive newsletter signups. Maybe you've developed a system for coming up with content ideas. Maybe you've learned how to batch your writing to save time.
These aren't world-changing innovations, but they're incredibly valuable to someone who's struggling with these exact challenges.
Your "obvious" solution is someone else's breakthrough moment.
Stop waiting for permission. Stop waiting until you feel "ready." Your audience needs your help now, and you have more to offer than you realize.
📌 Ready to Build Your Own $5K Monthly System?
Here's what I wish someone had told me when I was stuck in that endless cycle of client calls and burnout: you don't need to choose between helping people and having freedom. You can have both.
The digital product approach I've shared isn't just about making money (though the consistent $5K+ monthly revenue is pretty nice). It's about building a business that works for your life instead of consuming it.
When you create digital products that solve real problems, you're not just generating income—you're building assets that compound over time. That guide I created nine months ago? It's still selling every week without any additional effort from me.
But here's the thing: knowing the strategy and implementing it are two very different things.
I spent months figuring out what products to create, how to price them, how to structure them for maximum sales, and how to build systems that sell automatically.
The breakthrough came when I developed what I call the "Profit First Product Framework"—a system for creating products people actually want to buy.
If you're ready to transform your expertise into a profitable digital product business, I've put everything I've learned into my Six-Figure Digital Product Masterclass.
This isn't just theory from someone who's never actually built a digital product business. This is the exact system I've used to generate over $60,000+ in digital product sales in just the last 9 months—without running expensive ads or having a massive audience.
Inside the masterclass, you'll learn:
✅ The exact system I've used to generate $60,000+ in digital product sales in just 9 months without running expensive ads or having a massive audience
✅ How I built an automated sales machine that generates 80% of my revenue while I sleep, travel, or focus on creating new content
✅ My 7-day product creation process that eliminates overwhelm and gets high-quality products to market fast
✅ The marketing system that attracts eager buyers automatically so you never have to feel pushy or chase customers again
✅ How I scaled to $5K+ monthly revenue without doubling my workload or sacrificing my freedom (this is the key to sustainable growth)
This masterclass is perfect for you if you want to build a profitable digital product business without constant launching, attract buyers who are eager to purchase your products, and create a system that generates sales 24/7. You can join us below:
Remember: Your newsletter doesn't have to be just another hobby that might eventually make money. It can be the foundation of a business that supports the life you actually want to live.
💡 Question: What's holding you back from creating your first digital product? What problem do you help people solve that could become your first offer? Let’s talk about it in the comments
I’m so tired of this type of content.
This works if you have a Substack that teaches something. What about people who just write? It’s the same amount of work, it’s even harder in my opinion, and no digital product to sell.