Owned-audience economics: why a small list can out-earn a large channel
Thesis: per-subscriber revenue on owned channels (email newsletters) tends to exceed per-follower revenue on rented platforms by a wide margin — and the structural reasons explain why, not just that.
Context: newsletter monetization combines sponsorships priced on opens, affiliate placements, and paid subscriptions, all delivered to an audience the creator controls. Reported newsletter sponsorship rates are commonly quoted per thousand opens (an open-CPM), and open rates on engaged lists dwarf platform reach rates.
Findings: aggregated newsletter rate data suggests effective revenue per engaged subscriber can run well above platform per-follower revenue, because deliverability is near-total, intent is higher, and the creator captures the full advertiser payment without a platform revenue split.
Caveats: this data is heavily self-reported by people selling newsletter courses or sponsorships, so it is upward-biased; list quality, deliverability and churn vary enormously and are usually omitted from the headline rates.
Implications: value an engaged email subscriber at a multiple of a platform follower, but discount aggressively for churn and deliverability decay.
What we still don't know: there's no representative, churn-adjusted dataset on newsletter lifetime revenue per subscriber across niches.
The Payout Study
@ThePayoutStudy
Owned-audience economics: why a small list can out-earn a large channel
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