I Went Viral on Substack Notes, Then Studied 100+ Other Viral Notes. Here's What Actually Works
I analyzed hundreds of viral Notes and discovered exactly what drives subscriber growth (it's not what you think)
"Why isn't this working?”
I muttered those words to myself after posting yet another Substack Note that got completely ignored. No likes. No comments. No engagement.
The frustration was real. I had just shared what I thought was a pretty solid insight about escaping the corporate world - something my audience supposedly cared about. But like every Note before it, it vanished into the void without a trace.
Opening Substack that week felt like a punch to the gut. While my Notes collected digital dust, I watched other writers celebrate:
"500 likes on my latest Note.”
"Just got 300 new subscribers from this month…"
"This Note brought in more growth than my last 3 newsletters combined…"
I couldn't figure it out. These weren't big accounts. They weren't famous writers. They were regular writers just like me - but something about their Notes was different.
That's when my obsession started.
Instead of just feeling frustrated, I decided to crack the code. What made some Notes explode while others disappeared? What patterns separated viral posts from forgotten ones?
I did something a bit crazy: I analyzed over 100 viral Substack Notes. I asked my VA to help gather the notes and data. We used AI to find patterns. And most importantly, I started testing everything I learned.
The results were interesting: My next Note didn’t go viral. But after I started implementing what I learned, they were gradually getting traction.
20-30 likes on the next notes.
50+ on a good note.
100+ likes on a really good like.
Then, my next note went crazy hit 1,000+ likes and brought in 280+ new subscribers. In the course of a week.
It confirmed what I believed about Notes: It can be a great tool as long as you know how to write them.
But here's what really matters: It wasn't just luck. After understanding these patterns, I've been consistently gaining 10 to 20+ new subscribers daily through Notes alone.
Why Most Writers Get Notes Completely Wrong
Here's the truth about Substack Notes:
Most writers are leaving hundreds of potential subscribers on the table every single month. They're showing up, creating content, and working hard - but missing the core elements that actually drive growth.
I see it everywhere:
Writers posting into the void day after day
Great insights getting zero engagement
Valuable content disappearing without a trace
Growth opportunities slipping away
Meanwhile, a small group of writers seems to have cracked the code. They're not just getting likes and comments - they're consistently turning Notes into a subscriber growth engine.
Think about it:
While you're struggling to get 5 likes on a Note, others are bringing in 100+ new subscribers from a single one. While your insights disappear into the feed, theirs get reposted and shared across the platform.
The gap keeps widening. But here's what nobody talks about:
It's not about writing better content. It's not about posting more frequently. And it's definitely not about having a huge following.
I discovered this firsthand when I decided to study what actually works.
The Research Deep-Dive
Instead of just guessing, I went all in:
Analyzed 100+ viral Notes across different niches
Asked my VA to gather engagement data
Used AI to uncover hidden patterns
Tested every insight on my own Notes
What we found surprised me. There were clear, repeatable patterns in every viral Note - patterns that had nothing to do with follower count, writing ability, or even topic.
But before I share these patterns, let me be clear about something:
The goal isn't to go viral. Virality is nice, but it's unpredictable and unrealistic.
What you want is consistent, sustainable growth. You want to be the writer getting 10+ new subscribers every day, not the one hoping to get lucky with a viral hit.
Let me show you what I discovered…
5 Viral Notes Patterns Most Writers Miss
After studying over 100 viral Notes and testing hundreds of my own, clear patterns started emerging. These weren't just random coincidences - they were repeatable elements that showed up again and again in Notes that exploded.
But here's what's interesting:
Almost none of the traditional "viral growth advice" mattered. It wasn't about posting times. It wasn't about hashtags. It wasn't even about having a large following.
The patterns that actually drove growth were much more fundamental. Let me break down exactly what we discovered...
Pattern #1: The "Story Hook" Formula
The most viral Notes we studied all started with something counterintuitive:
They didn't lead with advice. They led with story.
Think about your Substack feed. It's probably filled with tips, strategies, and how-to content. But here's what we discovered: The Notes that consistently go viral open with a personal story or specific moment that hooks attention.
Here's what makes this really powerful:
Everyone else is sharing tips
Everyone else is giving advice
Everyone else is trying to teach
But stories? Stories cut through the noise.
You’re a writer. I doubt you’d be reading this right now if you weren’t. So let this encourage you because writers can write stories.
I tested this myself. When I stopped opening every single Note with a piece of advice and started opening with story moments, my engagement tripled overnight.
Pattern #2: The "Contrarian Truth" Effect
Here's something interested I discovered:
Notes that challenged common beliefs consistently outperformed "helpful tips" posts by 3-4x.
The most viral Notes didn't just share information - they made people think differently about a topic they thought they understood.
Some examples of contrarian Notes that performed well:
"Why Your Small Subscriber Count is Actually an Advantage"
"Most Writers Focus on Growth Too Early (Do This Instead)"
"Why I Stopped Writing Daily and Started Growing Faster"
But here's what really matters: These weren't hot takes for the sake of being controversial. They were genuine insights that challenged conventional wisdom with real experience.
Pattern #3: The "Network Effect" Technique
This was perhaps my most surprising discovery:
The initial surge of engagement on viral Notes didn't come from random readers. It came from intentional networks of writers supporting each other.
Top writers aren't just posting and hoping for the best. They're building genuine connections with other writers who show up to support each other's content.
I found that Notes with 10+ comments in the first hour were 5x more likely to go viral than those without early engagement.
Focus on reaching out to a few new Substack writers per week who you admire on Notes. Just engage with their content and introduce yourself. You’ll be surprised how this builds a nice little engagement tribe of writers supporting each other’s notes.
Pattern #4: The "Value-First" Framework
The most shared Notes weren't just personal stories or contrarian takes. They were insights that helped people solve real problems.
Think about it:
While everyone else is sharing vague motivational posts or basic tips, the Notes that consistently explode offer specific solutions to painful problems.
Here's what makes this really powerful:
People don't just like these posts
They don't just comment
They save and restack them to help their own audiences
I found that Notes offering clear, actionable solutions got 4x more restacks than general advice posts. Focus on identifying and clearly solving your audience’s problems in some of your notes.
Pattern #5: The Engagement Multiplier
This pattern changed everything about how I approach Notes:
The first 60 minutes after posting determine whether your Note dies or flies.
Most writers post and move on. But after studying viral patterns, we discovered that writers who actively engage in their own comment sections during that first hour see 3x higher reach.
The data was clear:
Notes with author responses in comments got more visibility
Active comment sections attracted more engagement
Early conversation led to higher restack rates
Think of your comment section like a cocktail party or a book club. Ask and answer questions; offer prompts for more discussion; acknowledge your audience.
But here's what nobody talks about: You don't need hundreds of comments. We found that just 5-10 genuine conversations in your comments can trigger Substack's amplification.
Let me show you exactly what types of Notes consistently drive this kind of engagement...
The 3 Types of Notes That Actually Drive Growth
After all our research, we discovered that nearly every viral Note fell into one of three categories.
Let me break them down:
1. Collaboration & Introduction Notes
These are pure gold for growth. Why? Because they tap into something every creator wants: genuine connection.
Instead of just broadcasting content, these Notes create spaces for real interaction. They're like hosting a dinner party where everyone gets to meet someone interesting.
Here's what makes them work:
Invite people to introduce themselves
Create natural networking opportunities
Let people share their recent wins
Build genuine connections through comments
But here's what really matters: These aren't just networking threads. They're community-building moments that turn casual readers into active participants.
2. Educational Notes
The best educational Notes aren't comprehensive guides. They're quick, actionable insights that solve one specific problem.
Think about it:
Everyone else is writing long, detailed how-tos
Everyone else is trying to teach everything at once
Everyone else is overwhelming their readers
But the viral educational Notes? They focus on one clear insight that creates an immediate "aha" moment.
3. Inspirational & Motivational Notes
Now, before you roll your eyes at "motivation" - these aren't your typical toxic positivity posts.
The best inspirational Notes share:
Real struggles and how you overcame them
Specific moments of transformation
Authentic encouragement based on experience
Practical hope people can actually use
We found these posts hit hardest when they combine personal story with actionable hope. Not just "you can do it!" but "here's how I did it, and you can too."
Here’s what ties all three types together:
They're not just content - they're connection points. They don't just share information - they create conversation.
I think it’s important to use all three different styles of posts. If you only ever write educational posts, your audience might get worn out.
But if you share an introduction post one day, the next day educate on something, and the next day motivate with a story…you’ll have interested, loyal readers engaged in what you have to say.
Let me show you some specific tips that make these Notes even more powerful...
Essential Tips That Changed Everything
After writing and testing hundreds of Notes, these simple tweaks made the biggest difference in growth:
Ask for Engagement (Actually Ask)
Here's something that surprised me:
Simply asking for restacks increased my restack rate by 300%.
Most writers feel awkward about this. I get it. But I tested Notes with and without direct calls to action, and the data was clear:
Notes where I asked for restacks got 3-4x more restacks
Posts where I invited comments got 2x more engagement
Direct questions led to more meaningful conversations
The secret? Be specific with your ask:
"If this helped you, hit the restack button so we can help the next writer"
is much more effective than
"Hope this helps! Hit restack"
Build Your Writer Network
This was a game-changer for my Notes growth:
Instead of just posting and hoping, I started actively connecting with other writers in my niche.
Here's what actually works:
Send genuine DMs to writers you admire
Comment thoughtfully on others' Notes
Build real relationships, not networking transactions
Create small groups that support each other's content
You’re not trying to game the algorithm. You’re simply building a group of likeminded people who support each other’s work.
We do this in almost every other area of life (business, church, networking group, etc.), so why not Notes?
But here's what really matters: This isn't about gaming the system. It's about building a genuine community of peers who help each other grow.
Stay Positive (It Actually Matters)
Positive, encouraging Notes consistently outperformed critical or negative ones by 2-3x. I’ve seen some negative people out there, and I just don’t think they ever win.
Sure, they might get some people in the comments joining in with their cynicism, but overall it leaves a bad taste in people’s mouths.
Remember that most people won’t remember what you say, but they’re remember how you make them feel. Leave someone with a positive feeling and they’ll be looking for your next note.
Think about it:
Everyone else is complaining about platforms
Everyone else is criticizing other writers
Everyone else is focusing on what's wrong
But the Notes that consistently went viral? They offered hope, solutions, and encouragement.
People share content that makes them feel better, not worse. Not all “viral” is the good kind of viral.
The Path Forward: Your Next Steps on Notes
Let me bring this all together with a confession:
Six months ago, I was ready to give up on Substack Notes. I had no idea what I was doing…Nothing was working. Every note disappeared into the void. And watching others succeed while I struggled was killing my confidence.
But that's exactly why I'm sharing this with you today. Because if I can go from zero engagement to consistent daily growth, you can too. I'm nobody special - I've just tested, studied, and discovered what actually works.
Those patterns we just covered?
The Story Hook Formula
The Contrarian Truth Effect
The Network Effect Technique
The Value-First Framework
The Engagement Multiplier
And those three types of high-performing Notes?
Collaboration & Introduction Notes
Educational Notes
Inspirational & Motivational Notes
They're not just theory. They're the exact framework that took me from posting into the void to consistently gaining 10 to 20+ new subscribers daily through Notes alone.
But here's the truth: Knowing these patterns isn't enough. You need a system for implementing them consistently.
That's exactly why I created the Substack Growth Notes Workshop.
Inside, I'll show you:
My exact templates for crafting viral Notes
How to build genuine writer networks that support your growth
The engagement triggers that amplify your reach
Step-by-step implementation plans for each Note type
Join hundreds of other newsletter writers who are already using these strategies to grow their audiences through Notes. If you're ready to turn your Notes into a consistent growth engine, click below to join us:
Remember: Your Notes aren't just social media posts. They're opportunities to build something meaningful. Something that doesn't just share information, but creates real connection and growth.
A great read, thank you! It inspired me to write this note - would really appreciate any feedback!
When I was a child, I used to write stories
I journaled a lot and took so much joy in writing
Then I stopped
I stopped for many many years
I started writing newsletters in my role as CEO and publishing on LinkedIn
I loved writing and tried to prioritise it but the day to day was too busy
Since deciding to step back from my business late last year, I have started writing again
After reading others work on Substack for years, I decided to finally take the leap
I set up a newsletter and wrote to my audience of zero
After a few short months, I now write weekly, have grown an entirely organic audience and have reached so many people across the world
I feel like a writer!
As Florence Given wrote this week - ‘to be a writer, you just have to write. So go, write!
Restack for anyone who may need to feel like a writer today and let me know what was the catalyst for you in getting started on here?
Curious if you have any advice for folks outside the type of pubs that would post this kind of content. For example, I'm in the Humor section of the site. So I go on and post short jokes a lot. None of that really fits into this formula BUT I see other humor writers doing similar and their stuff gets picked up way more.
Now obviously they have a lot more subscribers than I might, so they're working from a stronger base. And maybe that's all the difference is. But I'm trying to work out a way to get to that higher level with more humorous content vs. all of the "I can help you solve X pain point" kinds of posts. Because that's not really what I do regularly.