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Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Home / Personal FInance / Side Hustles & Freelancing / How to Build a Newsletter From Zero in India (And Why It’s Your Most Valuable Asset)
  • Side Hustles & Freelancing

How to Build a Newsletter From Zero in India (And Why It’s Your Most Valuable Asset)

May 15, 2026

I started my newsletter with 12 subscribers.

All of them were people I personally knew. Three were family members who signed up because I asked them to. Two were college friends who probably never opened a single issue. One was my own test account.

By any conventional measure, this was not a promising start.

But I sent the first issue anyway. Then the second. Then the third. Twelve issues later, I had 847 subscribers — people I had never met, from cities I had never visited, who had found my newsletter through a blog post, a recommendation, or a search result and decided they wanted more.

That newsletter has generated more income per subscriber than any other channel I use. It has outlasted algorithm changes, platform outages, and the general chaos of building something online. And it cost me nothing to start.

If you are building any kind of online income in India — freelancing, blogging, selling digital products, affiliate marketing — a newsletter is not optional. It is the foundation everything else should be built on.

Here is how to build one from zero.


Table of Contents

Toggle
  • Why a Newsletter Beats Every Other Channel
  • Step 1: Choose Your Platform
  • Step 2: Define What Your Newsletter Is Actually About
  • Step 3: Set Up Your Welcome Sequence
  • Step 4: Write Issues People Actually Open
  • Step 5: Grow It Without Buying Followers
  • The Monetisation Timeline
  • Start Today, Not When You’re Ready

Why a Newsletter Beats Every Other Channel

Before the how, the why — because understanding this will change how seriously you take it.

Every other distribution channel you use is rented. Your Instagram followers belong to Instagram. Your YouTube subscribers belong to YouTube. Your blog traffic belongs to Google. Any of these platforms can change their algorithm tomorrow and cut your reach in half overnight. It has happened to thousands of creators who built everything on a single platform and woke up one morning to find their traffic had collapsed.

Your email list belongs to you.

No algorithm decides who sees your newsletter. No platform can deplatform your subscribers. If MailerLite shuts down tomorrow, you export your list and move it somewhere else. The relationship between you and your reader is direct — no intermediary, no feed, no competition for attention from seventeen other creators.

This directness translates into money. Email consistently outperforms every other channel for conversion. The average email open rate across industries is 20–30%. Compare that to the organic reach of an Instagram post — typically 3–8% of your followers. A reader who opens your email is far more engaged than a follower who scrolls past your post.

And in India specifically, email penetration is growing fast. As more people move online for commerce, content, and communication, email remains the most reliable way to reach them directly.


Step 1: Choose Your Platform

For a newsletter starting from zero in India, you have three realistic options:

MailerLite — My recommendation for most beginners. Free up to 1,000 subscribers, includes automations, landing pages, and a basic website. The interface is clean and intuitive. Pays out affiliate commissions if your audience grows and you recommend it. One downside: the template editor can feel limited for complex designs.

Beehiiv — Growing fast and popular among newsletter-first creators. Generous free plan, built-in referral programme, clean reading experience. Slightly newer platform with less established support documentation than MailerLite.

Substack — Zero monthly cost, takes 10% of paid subscription revenue. Ideal if you plan to eventually charge readers for access. Not ideal if your primary monetisation is affiliate marketing and digital products — because Substack’s format makes external links less prominent.

For Eueezo — a blog focused on income reports, freelancing, and affiliate recommendations — MailerLite is the right choice. Free, flexible, and designed for exactly this kind of content.


Step 2: Define What Your Newsletter Is Actually About

The most common newsletter mistake is being too broad.

“A newsletter about making money” competes with thousands of publications. “A monthly income report from someone building an online income in India from scratch” competes with almost nobody.

The narrower your focus, the easier it is to grow — because every person who finds your newsletter knows immediately whether it’s for them. And the people who subscribe do so with strong intent, which means higher open rates, more trust, and better conversion on your recommendations.

For Eueezo, the newsletter focus should be one sentence: “Monthly income reports and honest freelancing lessons for Indians building an online income from scratch.”

Every issue should deliver on that sentence. If an issue doesn’t, either rewrite it or don’t send it.


Step 3: Set Up Your Welcome Sequence

Most newsletter advice focuses on getting subscribers. Almost none focuses on what happens immediately after someone subscribes — which is arguably more important.

The first 48 hours after someone subscribes are when their interest is highest. This is the window where you earn their trust or lose it. A welcome sequence — a short series of automated emails that every new subscriber receives — is how you use that window well.

My welcome sequence has three emails:

Email 1 (sent immediately): Welcome and orientation. Who I am, what this newsletter is about, what they can expect, and a link to my most popular post. Keep it short — under 200 words. The goal is to confirm they made the right decision subscribing.

Email 2 (sent Day 2): My origin story. The honest version of why I started building an online income, what the first few weeks felt like, and what I’ve learned since. This email exists to build a human connection — to make me a real person rather than just another newsletter in their inbox.

Email 3 (sent Day 5): My best resource. A curated list of the most useful posts, tools, or lessons from the newsletter archive. This email says “I’ve been doing this for a while and here’s the best of what I’ve found.” It establishes authority without boasting.

By the end of the welcome sequence, a new subscriber knows who I am, why I do this, and that the content is worth reading. That’s the entire goal.


Step 4: Write Issues People Actually Open

Open rates are the single most important metric for a newsletter. If people aren’t opening your emails, nothing else matters.

Open rates are determined almost entirely by two things: your subject line and your sender name.

Sender name: Use your name or a consistent brand name, not a generic “Eueezo Newsletter.” People open emails from people, not from brands. “Rohan from Eueezo” outperforms “Eueezo Newsletter” in every split test ever run.

Subject lines: The best newsletter subject lines are specific, curious, or personal — ideally all three.

Poor subject line: “Monthly Income Update” Better subject line: “I made ₹26,400 last month. Here’s what changed.”

Poor subject line: “Freelancing Tips for May” Better subject line: “The pitch that got me my highest-paying client”

The subject line is a promise. The issue fulfils it. Don’t bait and switch — deliver exactly what you promised.

Issue structure that works:

Keep a consistent format so readers know what to expect. Mine follows this pattern:

  1. Opening hook — One short paragraph that earns their attention. A story, a surprising number, a question.
  2. Main piece — The core content. Could be a mini income report, a lesson learned, a tool review, or a how-to. Aim for 400–600 words — enough to be substantive, short enough to be read in full.
  3. One recommendation — A single affiliate link, product, or resource, with two to three sentences explaining why it’s worth their attention.
  4. One-line closer — A human sign-off. Not “Best regards” — something that sounds like a real person ending a real conversation.

That structure takes me about two hours to write. I send it once a month. Consistency matters more than frequency — one excellent monthly issue beats four mediocre weekly ones.


Step 5: Grow It Without Buying Followers

Growing a newsletter without paid ads is slower than with them — but the subscribers you earn organically are more engaged and more likely to convert into customers.

Here’s what has worked for me:

Content upgrades. At the end of each blog post, offer something specific in exchange for an email address. Not a generic “subscribe to my newsletter” — a specific resource tied to that post. At the end of a post about freelance pricing, offer a free rate calculator. At the end of an income report, offer a monthly tracking template. Specific offers convert at three to four times the rate of generic ones.

Community posting. Share your newsletter or individual issues in relevant Facebook groups, LinkedIn communities, and Reddit threads. Don’t spam — participate genuinely, and mention your newsletter when it’s directly relevant to a conversation already happening.

Referral incentives. Beehiiv has a built-in referral system. On MailerLite, you can create a simple referral programme manually: “Share this newsletter with one friend and I’ll send you my full freelance pitch template.” Existing subscribers are your best recruiters.

Cross-promotion. Find other newsletters in adjacent spaces — not direct competitors, but complementary ones. Offer to mention their newsletter to your list in exchange for a mention to theirs. Even at small subscriber counts, this can drive meaningful growth.

The blog-newsletter flywheel. Your blog drives newsletter sign-ups. Your newsletter drives blog traffic. The two channels reinforce each other — which is why starting both simultaneously, even at small scale, compounds faster than starting either alone.


The Monetisation Timeline

Here is the honest timeline for newsletter monetisation in India:

0–100 subscribers: Affiliate links only. Low revenue but real. Build the habit of recommending honestly.

100–500 subscribers: Affiliate links + digital product launches. Your list is small but engaged. A well-timed product launch to 300 trusting subscribers can generate meaningful income.

500–2,000 subscribers: Sponsorships become viable. Indian brands and SaaS companies will pay ₹3,000–₹15,000 for a sponsored mention in a well-targeted newsletter. Your niche and engagement rate matter more than raw subscriber count.

2,000–5,000 subscribers: Paid subscription tier. If your content is strong enough, a segment of readers will pay ₹99–₹499 per month for premium content, deeper income reports, or direct Q&A access.

5,000+ subscribers: Full monetisation. Sponsorships, affiliates, digital products, paid tier, and consulting inquiries from brands who want your audience’s attention. At this scale, a newsletter in the personal finance and online income niche can generate ₹1–3 lakh per month.


Start Today, Not When You’re Ready

The most common reason people don’t start a newsletter is that they don’t feel ready. They want more content. More credibility. More clarity about what they’re building.

These are all reasonable feelings. They are also ways of postponing something that will only get easier by doing.

I sent my first issue to 12 people, three of whom were family members doing me a favour. That issue was not polished. It was not viral. It did not generate a single rupee.

But it existed. And because it existed, Issue 2 was easier to write. And Issue 3 easier than that. And by Issue 12, I had 847 subscribers who had found me on their own because the thing existed.

You cannot grow something that doesn’t exist yet.

Start today. Send Issue 1 to whoever will read it. Make it honest and useful and human.

The rest follows.


This is the newsletter I wish had existed when I started. Subscribe below and get the next income report the moment it’s published.

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