How To Newsletters Chris Coyier

Posted by Reinaldo Massengill on Saturday, July 20, 2024

Tina Roth Eisenberg the other day:

I get way too much email. Reading newsletters in my inbox has never been the right context for me to actually enjoy content I am subscribing to. Looks like I am not the only one who is struggling with a workflow that makes sense for consuming newsletters. (Dennis’ Crowley’s Tweet above) I am asking you, my readers, how do you make sure you actually get to the newsletters you subscribed to?

I don’t hate the idea of email newsletters, but actually reading them in your email inbox just ain’t the way for a lot of people, myself included. Many people’s email inbox is already a source of anxiety or at least gives off a feels-like-work vibe which is usually not what you want to bring to reading a newsletter you subscribe to for possibly non-work reasons.

My way, and a suggestion if I may be so bold, is to set up your own reading system. I see a couple of comments on her blog post suggesting Feedbin, and I also agree there. It’s good (📢). There are plenty of alternative feed readers, but I bring up Feedbin specifically here again because it has a specific feature of not just reading RSS feeds but email newsletters as well. Feedbin provides a unique email address for you, and if you use that to sign up for the email newsletter (only do that if the newsletter doesn’t have an RSS feed directly), the email will come into your Feedbin and you can read it there.

There is one additional trick though.

Rather than using the Feedbin email address directly (look under Settings > General > Sources for yours), use an intermediary email address. I set up a Gmail email just for this, and have it auto-forward to my Feedbin email. Then when I sign up for a newsletter, I use:

new-secret-email+specific-newsletter@gmail.comCode language: JavaScript (javascript)

The + sign in the email address is unique to each newsletter. That way, if the email address ever gets leaked/sold/etc and spam starts arriving at it (it’s happened to me), you can set up a rule at your email provider to auto-delete email that comes to that specific +scoped email. Otherwise, if your Feedbin email itself leaks, and you start getting spam at it, there is no way to filter on the Feedbin side and you’ll be stuck looking at spam until you rotate the Feedbin email, which means you’ve effectively unsubscribed from every email newsletter.

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