
20 Ways to Grow Your Email List as an Artist (Online and Off)
You don't own your followers. You own your list. Every platform you're on is rented — the landlord can change the rules or close the door anytime. Your email list is the one audience nobody can take from you.
The good news: it doesn't have to be huge. Three hundred of the right people is enough to run a real art business — which is exactly why you want three thousand, then thirty thousand, then three hundred thousand.
This is the foundational one: why email matters, the creative ways to capture it, and the latest tradecraft. Almost no artists do this well. (We covered why the basics outlast everything in The Long Game — this is the basics, weaponized.)
The unlock isn't new places. It's the places you're already standing — the booth, the bio link, the DM, the box you're shipping, the car in your driveway. Every one is a capture opportunity you're wasting.
In this episode:
- The trifecta — phone, email, snail mail — and why email is the cheapest and easiest one to own
- Hobbyist or business? The honest cut, and why every opportunity is an email-capture opportunity
- The four online venues: your website (footer to popup to content upgrades), bio links, DMs, and comments
- The 11–15 second popup rule — the delay that converts at 6.45%, and why a zero-second popup kills it
- The Birthday Club, the new favorite opt-in: some people are birthday people, and if they are, they love it (3–4x)
- Just ask, then shut up — the DM play most artists never run
- The three offline venues: in-person events, the QR-code layer, and direct mail
- The clipboard and the fishbowl — $0 plays that are 150 years old and still work
- QR car magnets — the hero play nobody in art is running yet (about $35 a pair)
- Direct mail at $0.40 a piece — your art in 1,000 mailboxes around your gallery for less than a Meta ad
- The compounding math — how the basics become $800K–$1M over ten years
- Wyland and Gray Malin run this at the highest level — get on their lists and watch (see POD and Samples)
This week's homework: pick three tactics. One online, one offline, and one you'd never have considered. Set them up by Friday. Then reply or DM me your three — I read every single one.
Resources mentioned:
- Art Storefronts — the storefront engine for working artists
- Linktree — a bio-link service that turns your one link into a mini-website
- Sticker Mule car magnets — for the QR car-magnet play
- GotPrint — EDDM direct-mail postcards, ~$0.40 a piece
- Wyland and Gray Malin — get on their lists for the master class
Related episodes:
- The Long Game — Why Your Website Will Still Be Working in 2055
- POD and Samples — What Wyland and Gray Malin Actually Do
- The Gallery Test — Should Artists List Prices on Their Website?
- All Oars In — The Anatomy of a Sale
So pick your three. A clipboard on the table, a real opt-in in your bio, a magnet on the car. You don't have to run every play — just start capturing in the places you're already standing. Followers are rented. The list is yours. All roads lead to email.
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