
Are we nearing the end of peak newsletter?
Alem Tedeneke is media lead at the World Economic Forum.
Newsletters have been having a moment. For the past decade, they’ve been a reliable tool for communicators: a direct line to audiences, measurable, relatively inexpensive and free of the algorithm swings that frustrate social media teams.
But the golden age of newsletters is peaking and may already be on the decline.
The reason is simple. There are too many of them. Inboxes are crowded, attention spans are stretched and AI co-pilots like Microsoft Copilot and Google Gemini are changing how people consume information. Instead of opening your carefully crafted email, more readers will rely on AI digests to summarize it for them.
That doesn’t make newsletters irrelevant. But it does mean the rules have changed.
Why the old playbook won’t work
The first wave of newsletter growth was a reaction to declining organic reach on platforms like Facebook and Twitter. A newsletter was your owned channel: direct, trackable and personal.
Now, the environment has shifted. Readers can’t open everything that lands in their inbox, and AI is starting to filter what they see.
Simply launching a newsletter is no longer a strategy.
What still works (and always will)
Here’s the good news: not all is lost. The newsletters that will survive the shakeout share three qualities AI can’t replicate: voice, authenticity and trust.
Think about the emails you always open. It’s not because of a catchy subject line. It’s because you trust the voice behind it. That trust is what keeps newsletters relevant, even in an AI-driven world.
The next phase won’t be about reaching everyone. It will be about reaching the right people — and going deeper with them.
5 strategies to future-proof your newsletter
- Build audiences beyond the inbox
A newsletter should be one piece of your strategy, not the whole plan. Extend reach through LinkedIn, podcasts, events or online communities. If inboxes are crowded or AI filters the first pass, you’ll still have ways to connect. - Write for humans and AI
You now have two readers: the subscriber and their AI assistant. Write with both in mind. Lead with clear headlines, source transparently and make your structure easy to scan. If an AI summarizes your work, your key points should still show up. - Give readers choice
Some days people want quick hits; other days they want depth. The strongest newsletters offer both: a skim-friendly list and one bigger idea. Flexibility builds loyalty. - Invite interaction
Polls, Q&As and spotlighting reader perspectives turn newsletters into communities. Engagement also builds credibility, which will matter more as AI tools start ranking “trusted” sources. - Be intentional about platforms
Substack and Beehiiv are driving the next phase. Substack focuses on simplicity, discovery and community. It suits independents and publishers testing free and paid models. Beehiiv emphasizes growth with analytics, referral programs, ad networks and Shopify integrations. Many communicators see it as the Shopify of newsletters: infrastructure that powers businesses as well as content. Choosing — or combining — platforms is now part of the strategy.
Who’s already adapting
Axios shows how format innovation works. Its “Smart Brevity” style is built to be skimmed quickly by humans and machines. Morning Brew has grown from a single newsletter into a franchise spanning podcasts and events.
LinkedIn has become another force. Its newsletter product now reaches more than 500 million subscriptions across the platform, making it one of the fastest-growing distribution channels. For many teams, the winning play is hybrid: use LinkedIn for visibility and maintain an email list for depth and loyalty.
Platforms are evolving too. Substack thrives on built-in discovery, while Beehiiv, now valued at about $20 million ARR, positions itself as the growth engine for brands and creators.
And major outlets are adapting. The New York Times is doubling down on niche newsletters. Axios is rolling out local editions. Forbes has built AI into its newsroom workflow. Even the largest players see the shakeout coming.
The same lesson applies to companies. The newsletters that win sound human. A candid CEO note will always land better than a jargon-heavy update.
Why this moment matters
Generative AI is shifting habits quickly. We’re entering a world where audiences might “read” your newsletter without opening it, because their AI already has.
Meanwhile, Substack grows in one direction, Beehiiv in another. LinkedIn offers reach but not ownership. Media outlets are optimizing for AI visibility.
That competition is forcing communicators to raise their game.
The takeaway
The golden age of newsletters may be ending, but the shakeout creates opportunity. If you adapt now — diversify your touchpoints, write for humans and machines, choose platforms with intention and lean into authenticity — your newsletter can remain one of the most effective tools in your comms toolkit.
So here’s the action item: audit your current strategy. Where are you relying only on the inbox? Where could you experiment with platforms, AI-readiness or reader interaction? The sooner you adapt, the more resilient your communication will be.
Formats will change. Trust won’t. And trust will always be the metric that matters most.
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