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Many coaches make the same mistake with Substack.
They treat it like just another newsletter platform.
That approach sounds harmless, but it can quietly limit your visibility, weaken your authority, and make content creation feel more fragmented than it needs to be. When Substack is only used as an email tool, its bigger potential gets missed.
For coaches, spiritual entrepreneurs, and transformational leaders, Substack can be much more than a place to send updates. It can become a publishing platform, a content hub, a relationship-building tool, and a visibility engine that helps your work reach more of the right people.
In this Monetize Your Mission Mastermind session, Jill Hart breaks down what Substack really is, what it is not, and how to use it in a more strategic way so your content supports audience growth, authority building, and aligned client attraction.
The Mistake: Using Substack Like a Simple Newsletter
A lot of coaches hear about Substack and assume it is basically a newsletter tool with a little extra polish.
That is the mistake.
When you see Substack only through that lens, you miss the social side, the discoverability features, the publishing tools, the podcast support, the repurposing opportunities, and the ways it can help your content live longer and work harder.
Instead of becoming a central home for your message, it gets treated like one more channel to keep up with.
That usually leads to one of two outcomes. Either it gets neglected, or it becomes another task on the content checklist without producing much momentum.
What Substack Actually Is
One of the most useful distinctions Jill makes is that Substack has two sides.
There is the publication side, where you create long-form content, posts, podcast episodes, and written pieces. Then there is the social side, where people can follow you, discover your content in the feed, and engage with what you share.
That matters because it changes how you think about the platform.
You are not only sending content to people who already know you. You are also creating content inside a system that can support discovery and conversation.
For coaches, that is important. Visibility grows faster when your content is not trapped in one format or one delivery method.
Why This Mistake Costs Coaches Visibility
When Substack is underused, coaches often lose visibility in a few key ways.
* First, they miss the opportunity to build a body of work that shows their thinking. A thoughtful archive of posts, podcasts, notes, and conversations builds trust over time.
* Second, they miss organic discovery. Followers may see your work in the feed even if they are not email subscribers yet. That creates a softer path into your world.
* Third, they miss the chance to repurpose content efficiently. One strong episode or post can become multiple assets, but only if you use the platform strategically.
The result is a business that keeps creating content but does not get the full return on that effort.
Followers, Subscribers, and Smarter Audience Building
Another useful point from the session is the difference between followers and subscribers.
Followers can see your content in the social feed. Subscribers receive your content in their inbox. Both matter, and both serve different purposes.
This gives you more flexibility in how people enter your ecosystem. Not everyone is ready to join your email list right away, but they may still want to follow your work. That means Substack can support relationship-building at different stages of readiness.
This is especially helpful for coaches and service providers. Audience growth is not only about collecting emails. It is also about creating enough resonance and visibility that the right people want to stay connected.
Notes Are a Visibility Tool, Not Just a Feature
Jill also emphasizes the role of notes, and this is one of the most practical takeaways in the whole training.
Notes help drive visibility.
They give you a lightweight way to stay present, start conversations, resurface ideas, and bring attention back to your longer-form content. They can also be scheduled, edited, and used more intentionally than many people realize.
For coaches who feel intimidated by long-form publishing, notes can be a great entry point. They create momentum without requiring a full article or full episode every time.
And for coaches already publishing deeper content, notes help extend the life of that content and bring more eyes to it.
How One Episode Can Become Much More
This is where the visibility piece really starts to click.
Jill shows how one video or podcast episode can turn into a whole ecosystem of content. A native video post on Substack can lead to clips, notes, transcript downloads, longer-form written content, and wider distribution.
That means one original conversation can become:
* A full video or podcast post
* Multiple clips
* Notes for visibility and engagement
* A written article based on the transcript
* Additional content for social platforms
* Searchable, evergreen content inside your publication
This is a much smarter model than creating from scratch every time.
For coaches with limited time, it creates a more sustainable content rhythm. For coaches who want authority, it creates more touchpoints around the same core message.
Why Native Publishing Builds More Authority
One of Jill’s strongest recommendations is to publish natively on Substack rather than using it only as a place to embed content from elsewhere.
Why?
Because native publishing gives you access to more of the platform’s tools. It allows you to work with clips, notes, transcripts, and built-in publishing features in a way that better supports visibility over time.
This is not just about convenience. It is about authority.
When your work lives natively on the platform, it is easier to organize, repurpose, discover, and revisit. It creates a stronger home base for your thought leadership.
For coaches, that matters. Authority is built when your message is easy to find, easy to engage with, and clearly connected across formats.
📌Save For Later
Small Optimization Choices Matter
The session also highlights the importance of titles, subtitles, headers, and structure.
This may seem like a smaller detail, but it plays a major role in discoverability. Clear titles help people know what your content is about. Strategic subtitles help reinforce the topic. Headers improve readability and help organize longer pieces.
These choices do more than make a post look polished. They help both humans and search systems understand your content.
If your work is transformational, nuanced, or rooted in deep coaching conversations, clarity matters even more. The clearer your structure, the easier it is for the right people to recognize the value of what you do.
Templates Make Consistency Easier
Another practical strategy Jill shares is the use of templates.
Templates reduce friction.
When you already have a repeatable structure for calls to action, signature sections, community invitations, or bio blocks, it becomes much easier to publish consistently. You spend less time reinventing the format and more time focusing on the message.
This matters because many coaches do not struggle with ideas. They struggle with turning those ideas into repeatable, visible content.
Templates make that easier. They support consistency, and consistency supports authority.
Want aligned clients? Get daily momentum and proven visibility strategies inside.
A Better Way to Use Substack for Your Coaching Business
The real shift is this:
Stop using Substack like just another newsletter.
Start using it like a visibility system.
That means seeing it as a place where your long-form content, short-form content, social visibility, podcasting, and audience growth can work together. It means building from one strong piece of content instead of scattering your energy across disconnected platforms. It means using Substack as a strategic home for your message, not just a delivery tool.
For coaches, this creates a more grounded and sustainable way to grow. It helps your ideas travel further. It helps your audience understand your work more deeply. And it helps you build authority without needing to be everywhere all at once.
Ultimately,
The Substack mistake that costs coaches visibility is not being on the platform.
It is using the platform too narrowly.
When Substack is treated as just another newsletter, its real value gets lost. But when it is used as a publishing hub, a relationship-building tool, and a content repurposing engine, it becomes a much stronger asset for your business.
For coaches, spiritual entrepreneurs, and transformational leaders, that shift can support more visibility, stronger authority, and more aligned growth.
Substack works best when it becomes the place where your message lives, expands, and keeps working for you long after you hit publish.
With love & clarity,Jill Hart | The Coach’s Alchemist
Most coaches are doing all the things… posting, showing up, creating content…
…and still not seeing consistent clients.
Not because the content is bad.
Because there’s no clear client acquisition system behind it.
That’s exactly what the Client Acquisition Audit is designed to fix.
In this 30-minute session, we’ll look at your current setup and identify the specific gaps that are keeping you invisible or inconsistent with clients.
If your message is there but the clients aren’t… this will show you why.
👉 Book your Client Acquisition Audit here
Hi, I’m Jill Hart, The Coach’s Alchemist. I help spiritual entrepreneurs and coaches amplify their voice, attract aligned clients, and monetize their mission through Substack and podcasting.
If you’ve been creating content but not seeing it turn into conversations, clients, or consistent income, You World Order is for you.
It’s where we simplify visibility, build authority, and create a clear path from your content to your offers without chasing algorithms or trying to be everywhere.
By by Jill HartMany coaches make the same mistake with Substack.
They treat it like just another newsletter platform.
That approach sounds harmless, but it can quietly limit your visibility, weaken your authority, and make content creation feel more fragmented than it needs to be. When Substack is only used as an email tool, its bigger potential gets missed.
For coaches, spiritual entrepreneurs, and transformational leaders, Substack can be much more than a place to send updates. It can become a publishing platform, a content hub, a relationship-building tool, and a visibility engine that helps your work reach more of the right people.
In this Monetize Your Mission Mastermind session, Jill Hart breaks down what Substack really is, what it is not, and how to use it in a more strategic way so your content supports audience growth, authority building, and aligned client attraction.
The Mistake: Using Substack Like a Simple Newsletter
A lot of coaches hear about Substack and assume it is basically a newsletter tool with a little extra polish.
That is the mistake.
When you see Substack only through that lens, you miss the social side, the discoverability features, the publishing tools, the podcast support, the repurposing opportunities, and the ways it can help your content live longer and work harder.
Instead of becoming a central home for your message, it gets treated like one more channel to keep up with.
That usually leads to one of two outcomes. Either it gets neglected, or it becomes another task on the content checklist without producing much momentum.
What Substack Actually Is
One of the most useful distinctions Jill makes is that Substack has two sides.
There is the publication side, where you create long-form content, posts, podcast episodes, and written pieces. Then there is the social side, where people can follow you, discover your content in the feed, and engage with what you share.
That matters because it changes how you think about the platform.
You are not only sending content to people who already know you. You are also creating content inside a system that can support discovery and conversation.
For coaches, that is important. Visibility grows faster when your content is not trapped in one format or one delivery method.
Why This Mistake Costs Coaches Visibility
When Substack is underused, coaches often lose visibility in a few key ways.
* First, they miss the opportunity to build a body of work that shows their thinking. A thoughtful archive of posts, podcasts, notes, and conversations builds trust over time.
* Second, they miss organic discovery. Followers may see your work in the feed even if they are not email subscribers yet. That creates a softer path into your world.
* Third, they miss the chance to repurpose content efficiently. One strong episode or post can become multiple assets, but only if you use the platform strategically.
The result is a business that keeps creating content but does not get the full return on that effort.
Followers, Subscribers, and Smarter Audience Building
Another useful point from the session is the difference between followers and subscribers.
Followers can see your content in the social feed. Subscribers receive your content in their inbox. Both matter, and both serve different purposes.
This gives you more flexibility in how people enter your ecosystem. Not everyone is ready to join your email list right away, but they may still want to follow your work. That means Substack can support relationship-building at different stages of readiness.
This is especially helpful for coaches and service providers. Audience growth is not only about collecting emails. It is also about creating enough resonance and visibility that the right people want to stay connected.
Notes Are a Visibility Tool, Not Just a Feature
Jill also emphasizes the role of notes, and this is one of the most practical takeaways in the whole training.
Notes help drive visibility.
They give you a lightweight way to stay present, start conversations, resurface ideas, and bring attention back to your longer-form content. They can also be scheduled, edited, and used more intentionally than many people realize.
For coaches who feel intimidated by long-form publishing, notes can be a great entry point. They create momentum without requiring a full article or full episode every time.
And for coaches already publishing deeper content, notes help extend the life of that content and bring more eyes to it.
How One Episode Can Become Much More
This is where the visibility piece really starts to click.
Jill shows how one video or podcast episode can turn into a whole ecosystem of content. A native video post on Substack can lead to clips, notes, transcript downloads, longer-form written content, and wider distribution.
That means one original conversation can become:
* A full video or podcast post
* Multiple clips
* Notes for visibility and engagement
* A written article based on the transcript
* Additional content for social platforms
* Searchable, evergreen content inside your publication
This is a much smarter model than creating from scratch every time.
For coaches with limited time, it creates a more sustainable content rhythm. For coaches who want authority, it creates more touchpoints around the same core message.
Why Native Publishing Builds More Authority
One of Jill’s strongest recommendations is to publish natively on Substack rather than using it only as a place to embed content from elsewhere.
Why?
Because native publishing gives you access to more of the platform’s tools. It allows you to work with clips, notes, transcripts, and built-in publishing features in a way that better supports visibility over time.
This is not just about convenience. It is about authority.
When your work lives natively on the platform, it is easier to organize, repurpose, discover, and revisit. It creates a stronger home base for your thought leadership.
For coaches, that matters. Authority is built when your message is easy to find, easy to engage with, and clearly connected across formats.
📌Save For Later
Small Optimization Choices Matter
The session also highlights the importance of titles, subtitles, headers, and structure.
This may seem like a smaller detail, but it plays a major role in discoverability. Clear titles help people know what your content is about. Strategic subtitles help reinforce the topic. Headers improve readability and help organize longer pieces.
These choices do more than make a post look polished. They help both humans and search systems understand your content.
If your work is transformational, nuanced, or rooted in deep coaching conversations, clarity matters even more. The clearer your structure, the easier it is for the right people to recognize the value of what you do.
Templates Make Consistency Easier
Another practical strategy Jill shares is the use of templates.
Templates reduce friction.
When you already have a repeatable structure for calls to action, signature sections, community invitations, or bio blocks, it becomes much easier to publish consistently. You spend less time reinventing the format and more time focusing on the message.
This matters because many coaches do not struggle with ideas. They struggle with turning those ideas into repeatable, visible content.
Templates make that easier. They support consistency, and consistency supports authority.
Want aligned clients? Get daily momentum and proven visibility strategies inside.
A Better Way to Use Substack for Your Coaching Business
The real shift is this:
Stop using Substack like just another newsletter.
Start using it like a visibility system.
That means seeing it as a place where your long-form content, short-form content, social visibility, podcasting, and audience growth can work together. It means building from one strong piece of content instead of scattering your energy across disconnected platforms. It means using Substack as a strategic home for your message, not just a delivery tool.
For coaches, this creates a more grounded and sustainable way to grow. It helps your ideas travel further. It helps your audience understand your work more deeply. And it helps you build authority without needing to be everywhere all at once.
Ultimately,
The Substack mistake that costs coaches visibility is not being on the platform.
It is using the platform too narrowly.
When Substack is treated as just another newsletter, its real value gets lost. But when it is used as a publishing hub, a relationship-building tool, and a content repurposing engine, it becomes a much stronger asset for your business.
For coaches, spiritual entrepreneurs, and transformational leaders, that shift can support more visibility, stronger authority, and more aligned growth.
Substack works best when it becomes the place where your message lives, expands, and keeps working for you long after you hit publish.
With love & clarity,Jill Hart | The Coach’s Alchemist
Most coaches are doing all the things… posting, showing up, creating content…
…and still not seeing consistent clients.
Not because the content is bad.
Because there’s no clear client acquisition system behind it.
That’s exactly what the Client Acquisition Audit is designed to fix.
In this 30-minute session, we’ll look at your current setup and identify the specific gaps that are keeping you invisible or inconsistent with clients.
If your message is there but the clients aren’t… this will show you why.
👉 Book your Client Acquisition Audit here
Hi, I’m Jill Hart, The Coach’s Alchemist. I help spiritual entrepreneurs and coaches amplify their voice, attract aligned clients, and monetize their mission through Substack and podcasting.
If you’ve been creating content but not seeing it turn into conversations, clients, or consistent income, You World Order is for you.
It’s where we simplify visibility, build authority, and create a clear path from your content to your offers without chasing algorithms or trying to be everywhere.