I¡¯ve recently been using Substack to find new music to listen to. °Õ³ó²¹³Ù¡¯²õ probably not quite what its founders had in mind, but it has a ton of newsletters written by people who just really love music. It¡¯s less professional music criticism and more ¡°hey, this album was great, give it a listen.¡±
°Õ³ó²¹³Ù¡¯²õ not the only off-label use for Substack. Today¡¯s master of marketing is also a Substack fan ¡ª and she took a big risk with it.
Meet the Master
MacKenzie Kassab
Director of Creative Strategy,
Claim to fame: Launched Rare Beauty¡¯s ¡°semi-authorized¡±
Lesson 1: Get curious about your own product.
Novelty wears off fast when you¡¯re in the trenches.
¡°Working in the office, [our product] is something¡± ¡ª a new blush, say ¡ª ¡°that we¡®re around all the time. We go to meetings about how products are made every week,¡± Kassab tells me. ¡°It doesn¡¯t feel necessarily thrilling from the inside when you're in it for a year and a half.¡±
But your audience¡¯s first peek at a new product? °Õ³ó²¹³Ù¡¯²õ magical.
When you¡¯re brainstorming new content, think about it from your consumers¡¯ perspective. What do you know that they »å´Ç²Ô¡¯³Ù? If you¡¯re marketing a new product or service, what got you excited about it in the first place?
Even though Kassab might attend weekly meetings about a new product, she¡¯s not necessarily there every step of the way. So for her newsletters, she takes the opportunity ¡°to find out some of the bloopers, or [other] things that happened.¡±
For one newsletter, Kassab sat down with Rare Beauty¡¯s chief product officer to get the scoop on . One reason they developed a powder blush? Some customers found Rare Beauty¡¯s famed liquid blush too pigmented. Not something you¡¯ll hear most beauty companies admit.
¡°To share these and see how excited people get [about this information] ¡ª that is really rewarding and makes it interesting.¡±
Lesson 2: Embrace your imperfections.
Like a middle schooler with their first palette, the road to the perfect liquid blush is lined with some highly pigmented mistakes.
It¡¯s tempting to brush those under the rug, but remember: Everybody loves a blooper reel. Whether it¡¯s from your fav TV show or it¡¯s about a new lipstick, sharing mistakes breaks down the artifice between consumer and producer. Sort of a ¡°Celebrities, they¡¯re just like us!¡± for your marketing strategy.
Plus, it brings a human element to her newsletters.
¡°We are showing the trials and tribulations of making a product. So I think embracing the idea that even as a big brand, we're not perfect either ¡ª we hit bumpy roads and things turn out okay in the end,¡± Kassab says. ¡°I hope that kind of thing is encouraging.¡±
Lesson 3: Respect the platform.
Kassab¡¯s idea to launch a Rare Beauty Substack newsletter had a simple origin: She was already a Substack fan.
Designed to publish individual voices, Substack has built a community that reminds me a bit of early social media ¡ª back when everybody was having a good time instead of doomscrolling ourselves to sleep every night. It¡¯s a place that tends to value good writing over self-promotion. Introducing a brand voice to that ecosystem was always going to be a risk.
But in some ways, Kassab ¾±²õ²Ô¡¯³Ù a brand voice. °Õ³ó²¹³Ù¡¯²õ underscored by her cheeky Gossip Girl-esque signoffs, the ¡°semi-authorized¡± anonymous byline, and even by how lean her team is. (¡°It¡¯s a very scrappy team,¡± she says. ¡°It¡¯s me.¡±) Even though she¡¯s representing Rare Beauty, she¡¯s still a solo content creator.
Don¡¯t worry, the lesson here ¾±²õ²Ô¡¯³Ù to reduce all your content to one person. (Unless you are a very small business, please »å´Ç²Ô¡¯³Ù do that; I beg on behalf of writers everywhere.)
If you¡¯re going to take a risk like Kassab and Rare Beauty did, think about the value that users are getting from the platform ¡ª and work with that, not against it.
Lingering Questions
This Week¡¯s Question
What is your favorite thing about marketing that can¡¯t be easily measured? ¡ªBrenna Loury, CMO, Doist
This Week¡¯s Answer
Kassab: The emotional connection. I love the way marketing can make people feel something. It could be inspiration, motivation, curiosity, nostalgia, or just a moment of joy. For us it comes down to self-acceptance and belonging. That connection drives everything we do, no matter how impossible it is to quantify (although I¡¯m sure AI is trying).
Helping even one person in our community feel seen and comfortable in their skin¡ªI love so much about my work, but that¡¯s really what gives it all meaning.
Next Week¡¯s Lingering Question
Kassab asks: What¡¯s your least favorite part of your job, and how do you motivate yourself to get through it?