Hi! Welcome to Friday Features. Every Friday, I’m exposing you to various perspectives about writing systems and AI. This will help you develop a more holistic outlook on writing faster, better, and more human. Today, our guest is Daniel Ionescu.
Award-winning journalist, editor, and entrepreneur Daniel Ionescu brings 16 years of digital media experience to Millennial Masters, his newsletter and podcast serving the next wave of founders and business builders.
In this guest post, Daniel shares his playbook from running successful multi-author publications, with practical steps you can use to grow your own newsletter, fill content gaps, and finally take a real holiday (without missing a beat).
Collaborating with other writers on Substack is one of the smartest ways to reach new, relevant readers. Done right, you’ll both walk away with more authority, new readers, and a wider footprint.
But like any partnership, it takes more than firing off a DM and swapping bylines. You’ll need clear expectations and good communication if you want your collab to drive real results.
Here’s my 10-step playbook for a guest post collab that actually grows both audiences and actually moves the needle for both sides.
1. Identify the right partners
Find newsletters in your niche or adjacent spaces, ideally with a similar subscriber base. Don’t just cold-pitch the biggest names. If you’re smaller, be realistic: pitch others at a similar level or just above, and offer to take the heavy lifting.
Look for creators who share your values and tone, and whose audience would genuinely be interested in your perspective.
Subscribe, engage, and make it personal. Look at their recent engagement: comments, open rates, and social shares matter more than raw subscriber numbers. A warm intro beats any cold email.
When you reach out, show you understand their work and pitch a genuine two-way value exchange. Persistence pays. If you want it, chase it: follow up at least twice, spaced out. Most inboxes are chaos.
2. Set clear expectations up front
Before you get to the fun stuff, clarify the ground rules. Decide who has final sign-off on edits and if there are any “no-go” content areas. Set deadlines, publishing permissions, and any off-limits topics.
Will posts go to all or just paid subscribers? Are you both open to cross-posting, republishing, or using each other’s content elsewhere?
What are the goals: list growth, brand building, or something else? Double-check if either of you has exclusivity or legal requirements before you commit. A little transparency now prevents confusion (and hard feelings) later.
3. Brainstorm and align on topics
Hop on a call or swap a few detailed emails. Talk honestly about your respective audiences, what topics have landed well in the past, and what feels fresh right now. Be ruthless: if a topic wouldn’t excite your own readers, don’t suggest it.
Don’t just pitch what you want to write: find the angles that genuinely deliver for both newsletters. Bring examples of your most popular posts for inspiration and to spark new angles.
Come up with two or three working headlines and bulletpoint outlines to kickstart the process. If you’ve run reader surveys, use their feedback to spot topics with real demand.
4. Pitch and agree on the direction
Exchange story ideas and settle on your working headlines and outlines. Make sure the chosen angles are actionable, practical, and a fit for both newsletters.
Agree on tone, length, and the voice you’ll use, as consistency helps both audiences feel at home.
Reality check: If you can’t agree on what’s valuable, walk away early.
5. Write and share drafts
Write your draft, making sure it matches the host’s tone and agreed length (plus or minus 10%).
Include any images as high-res attachments, and send your copy in a Google Doc or similar for easy editing. Create a shared folder for drafts, images, and bios to keep everything easy to find.
Missed deadlines kill collabs. Agree, commit, deliver.
6. Review, edit, and polish
Swap first drafts for feedback and tweaks. This is where you iron out any tone clashes or headline style tweaks.
Be blunt: if something doesn’t work for your readers, flag it early. If you hit a dead end on tone or angle, pivot or part as friends, better to walk away than force a collab.
Use Google Docs suggestions or “track changes” to make reviewing painless. Allow at least a day or two for async edits.
Write a short intro about your collaborator and make sure you both have the background to craft proper intros.
And no surprises: send a final version secret preview link via Substack for sign-off before publishing.
7. Lock in the publish plan
Coordinate on publish dates. Will you both launch on the same day for maximum impact, or stagger them?
Replace your usual edition if you want the guest post to get full attention from your readers.
Lock in the schedule before you start promo, and check your timezones so your launch emails don’t cross in the night.
8. Prep CTAs, bylines, and recommendations
Make sure each post has a Substack-native byline (so it can be crossposted later), a clear call to action to subscribe (in the intro and at the end), and a direct link to each other’s Substack.
Swap Substack recommendation blurbs (keep it under 300 characters) and add to your welcome page for bonus credibility.
For extra tracking, set up unique subscribe links (UTMs) for each partner’s CTA, via Google Analytics, or just a shortlink service (like Rebrand.ly), though Substack will keep decent track of that too.
9. Publish and promote everywhere
Go live, then push on all fronts: Substack Notes, LinkedIn, Twitter, and anywhere else your readers are.
Tag each other, and plan at least one follow-up post in the days after publication to keep momentum going. Public shoutouts build trust and credibility.
If you want extra reach, schedule a quick recap post two or three days after launch and push your collab in relevant communities, groups, or forums where both your audiences hang out.
10. Republish, review, and follow up
Two to four weeks later, you can re-post your guest feature on your own Substack with a fresh headline or intro, so your collab brings value back to your own readers too.
Share metrics and feedback with your collaborator: what worked, what surprised you, what you’d do differently next time. One quick recap call now could lead to your next collab or even a bigger project down the line.
Bonus: Pitfalls to avoid
Don’t disappear after a draft - ghosting burns bridges.
Don’t skip clear bylines or links. If you do, you miss the whole point.
Avoid mismatched tone or style that jars the host’s readers.
Never forget to coordinate CTAs and Substack recommendations; you want those subs!
Be honest about results - transparency builds long-term partnerships.
Never overpromise on turnaround; if you hit a snag, let your partner know early.
Most newsletter collabs fizzle after a single post. If you want more than a spike, stick around. Stay useful, stay open, and keep building with people who get it.
Every strong collab starts with clear intent and honest feedback. Don’t stop at one post: stay in touch, look for ways to help each other grow, and build out your circle.
Treat every partnership like the start of a bigger play. Over time, that’s where the real leverage comes in.
Want more like this? Millennial Masters brings fresh, practical ideas for founders and business leaders every week. Subscribe and stay ahead.
Thanks for letting me share my playbook. Hope people find it useful, and I’d love to hear more ideas and tips on how this can be improved.
Collaborating on collaboration guys 🌟 Nice ✨