They promote writers with big following mainly because that’s the deal they made with those writers when they lured them on Substack, and also offered them a check mark...they keep pushing those writers to grow their follower base feeding off new users...if they don’t do this, then those writers will eventually quit if they don’t see gro…
They promote writers with big following mainly because that’s the deal they made with those writers when they lured them on Substack, and also offered them a check mark...they keep pushing those writers to grow their follower base feeding off new users...if they don’t do this, then those writers will eventually quit if they don’t see growth. Remember that Substack is taking 10% of revenue, so eventually those writers will think twice to stay if they don’t see growth. This is the same situation with Artists on Spotify. Spotify always promotes popular artists to push their catalogue to generate more income for them...if they don’t, then the big artists will quit. Also because Platforms consider there is a much higher chance that content of popular writers/artists will sell easier due to their popularity.
They promote writers with big following mainly because that’s the deal they made with those writers when they lured them on Substack, and also offered them a check mark...they keep pushing those writers to grow their follower base feeding off new users...if they don’t do this, then those writers will eventually quit if they don’t see growth. Remember that Substack is taking 10% of revenue, so eventually those writers will think twice to stay if they don’t see growth. This is the same situation with Artists on Spotify. Spotify always promotes popular artists to push their catalogue to generate more income for them...if they don’t, then the big artists will quit. Also because Platforms consider there is a much higher chance that content of popular writers/artists will sell easier due to their popularity.