Daniel Weiss
Founder, Revenue Letter
“B2B newsletters are underpriced by a factor of ten.”

The stories behind the newsletters
you open first.
Real dashboards. Real revenue. Real tactics — from the creators who built something people actually pay for.
Every profile is a primary source — dashboards, revenue figures, and the decisions that changed the trajectory.

Founder, The Dispatch Desk
Lena Voss was a senior editor at a business daily when she filed her first Substack post at 11 PM on a Tuesday, half-expecting no one to read it. By Sunday she had 340 subscribers she'd never met. That was three years ago. The Dispatch Desk now lands in nearly fifty thousand inboxes every Wednesday morning, and she's turned down two acquisition offers she won't name.What she will tell you — in the kind of deliberate, editor-trained cadences that make every sentence feel load-bearing — is that the moment she stopped trying to be useful to everyone was the moment the revenue chart changed shape. She cut her topic scope by sixty percent in one editorial meeting with herself, deleted the posts she was least proud of, and raised her paid tier price the same week. Her open rate went up.

Founder, Operator Brief
Marcus Okafor built Operator Brief on a premise most newsletter consultants would call career suicide: every issue opens with his actual Stripe dashboard screenshot, no context, no spin. Subscribers see the number before they read a word. He started doing it because he was bored of vague case studies. He kept doing it because his list grew by four thousand people in the six weeks after the first one.
The newsletter targets operators — a word he uses with precision — running paid communities between five and fifty thousand members. Not founders. Not creators. Operators. The distinction matters to him because the tactics are genuinely different, and he is impatient with advice that flattens that difference. He built his paid tier around a private Slack that runs at a temperature he describes as "a good Tuesday afternoon in a good newsroom." Forty-two percent of his paying subscribers have been there longer than a year.

Founder, Inbox Index
Priya Nair came to newsletters from data journalism, and it shows in everything — the way she annotates her own metrics in the margin of every issue, the way she talks about subject lines as hypotheses rather than headlines, the way she can tell you exactly which Tuesday in March 2023 her growth inflected and precisely what she changed the week before it happened.
Inbox Index covers the newsletter industry itself: open rate benchmarks, platform migration data, monetization experiments, the economics of referral programs. She's been called the Bloomberg of the inbox economy by people who mean it as a compliment. She publishes every Thursday, has never missed an issue in twenty-two months, and recently turned down a staff writer offer from a publication she describes only as "one you'd recognize." The number they offered was less than what she made last quarter.
Every Thursday, one creator. Their actual subscriber count, open rate, and monthly revenue — plus the decisions that got them there. No aggregated advice. No unnamed sources. Just the full picture.
No noise. Unsubscribe any time.
Founder, Revenue Letter
“B2B newsletters are underpriced by a factor of ten.”

Founder, The Quiet Metric
“The open rate is a lagging indicator. I watch reply rate.”
Founder, Stack & Scale
“Distribution is the product. The words are just proof.”

Founder, Creator Economy Index
“Every platform change is a revenue test I didn't ask for.”