Substack vs Blogging in ai era
Substack vs. Blogging in the AI Era:
Learn all about both of them, and decide which One Fits Your Business Best?
Substack came in hot during Covid, and blogging had been sluggish for a while. And it makes sense why Substack experienced skyrocketing growth. People were home, routines were upside down, and suddenly a lot of smart, creative women—many of them mothers balancing work, kids, and an entirely new kind of daily chaos—were looking for more than content. They were looking for connection, identity, rhythm, and maybe even a new income stream. And that’s exactly what they found!
Substack offered all of it in one tidy little package.
Write what you know. Build an audience. Send it straight to inboxes. Get paid if people want more. I fell in love with Substack immediately.
That simple model turned everyday writers, niche experts, artists, home cooks, and compelling storytellers into real businesses. Some built loyal paid communities. Some built media brands. Some built businesses making serious money through subscriptions.
And now, while Substack continues to grow, blogging is having a comeback of its own.
Why? Because AI has changed the game, making blogging easier than ever.
Writing a fully optimized blog article is faster than ever when you know what you’re doing. You can move from idea to outline to structure much more efficiently. And for businesses that want stronger discoverability, greater domain authority, and better visibility in search—especially local search—blogging still holds enormous value.
So now we have two very different content paths that are surprisingly similar at the core.
Both can build audience.
Both can create trust.
Both can support monetization.
But they do different jobs—and one may be much better for your business than the other.
Why Substack Took Off During Covid
Substack arrived at exactly the right time.
During Covid, people weren’t just consuming content. They were craving voices that felt real. They wanted insight, companionship, honesty, and perspective from actual humans—not polished brands speaking in marketing jargon.
That’s where Substack felt fresh. It’s a refreshing change from the LOOK AT ME entertainment screaming on Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat.
It gave people a place to write with personality, build niche communities, and get paid without needing a huge team, a complicated tech stack, or a perfectly polished website. It lowered the barrier to entry, but it also raised the emotional stakes in a good way. The best Substacks feel personal. Direct. And human.
And that intimacy matters.
A publication like Caroline Chambers What To Cook When You Don’t Feel Like Cooking is a perfect example. It’s wildly successful because it meets readers exactly where they are: tired, busy, hungry, and not interested in pretending they have the energy to become a gourmet goddess on a Tuesday night. That kind of specificity is gold. I signed up immediately for the upgrade at the early rate of (I think it was) $5 a month. Not only have I learned how to cook, I’ve also learned how to do Substack well!
The same goes for artists like Wendy MacNaughton, whose Substack @drawtogether creates not just content, but a feeling of participation and belonging. That’s one of Substack’s greatest strengths. It doesn’t just distribute content. It creates a community around a voice and a shared interest in drawing.
Why Substack Feels Like the Old Twitter
For a lot of us, Substack feels like the internet we miss. Not the noisy, performative, algorithm-choked version. The older one. The Twitter from 2009.
Back when people actually talked to each other. Back when interesting strangers became real friends. Back when you could reach out to someone brilliant, funny, or accomplished and sometimes get a surprisingly thoughtful response back.
There was more curiosity then. More openness. More direct connection.
That’s part of what makes Substack so appealing now. It brings back some of that energy. Writers can talk directly to readers. Readers can reply. Communities can form around shared obsessions, humor, taste, craft, or lived experience.
For creators, that’s incredibly powerful.
For the right business, it can be even more powerful than traditional social media because the audience is warmer, the relationship is deeper, and the path to monetization is built in.
Why Blogging Is Making a Real Comeback
At the same time, blogging is no longer the clunky old workhorse people ignored while chasing shiny social platforms.
Blogging is back—and AI is one reason why.
Not because AI should be used to crank out lifeless content by the gallon. Please no. I tried that on behalf of a client—and while our stats showed that it helped, it was a touch niche to crack which required more than simply blogging could accomplish. (Plus the internet has enough beige sludge). But when used well, AI can help speed up research, structure, ideation, optimization, and first drafts. That means thoughtful businesses can create strategic blog content more consistently than before.
And that matters because your blog does something Substack usually doesn’t do nearly as well.
Blogging builds your own domain.
It strengthens your website.
It supports your SEO strategy.
It improves discoverability.
It helps search engines and AI-driven search tools understand who you are, what you do, and where you do it.
If you’re a local business, that becomes especially important.
A strong blog can support local discoverability, service relevance, and geo-targeted search intent in a way that a newsletter platform simply can’t fully replace. For businesses trying to show up in search results, AI summaries, and location-based queries, blogging is still one of the smartest long-term moves on the board.
The Pros and Cons of Substack
Let’s Start with the Pros of Substack
Substack is fantastic for creators and businesses with a strong voice and a niche audience. It’s ideal when people are subscribing to you as much as your information. It’s also one of the most natural platforms for recurring revenue through paid subscriptions.
It works especially well for:
- writers
- artists
- chefs
- commentators
- educators
- experts with a clear point of view
- businesses built around community, personality, and insider access
Substack also makes it easier to build a direct relationship with readers. There’s less friction. Less noise. Less dependence on social media antics.
Cons of Substack
Substack is not always the best tool for discoverability through search. It also gives you less control than a fully owned website ecosystem. You’re building on someone else’s platform, even if it’s a lovely one.
And not every business has content people want to pay for every month.
That’s the truth nobody says loudly enough.
Some audiences want connection. Some want utility. Some want transformation. Some want occasional updates and would never pay a subscription fee in a million years. That doesn’t make your work less valuable. It just means your monetization model needs to match your audience behavior.
The Pros and Cons of Blogging
Let’s Start with the Pros of Blogging
Blogging is powerful for discoverability, domain authority, and SEO. It gives you an owned asset that can keep working for you over time. A strong blog can support service pages, internal linking, authority building, and visibility in both traditional and AI-influenced search.
It’s especially useful for:
- local businesses
- service providers
- real estate professionals
- therapists
- consultants
- designers
- contractors
- medical and wellness practices
- businesses that need to be found by people already searching for answers
A strategic blog also helps position your expertise. It gives your audience reasons to trust you before they ever contact you.
Cons of Blogging
A blog without strategy is just a very polite pile of clutter.
You need structure, keyword awareness, audience understanding, internal links, helpful content, and clear calls to action. Blogging is not magic just because it exists. It needs direction.
And yes, AI may make blogging faster, but faster doesn’t automatically mean better. The quality still matters. The originality still matters. The strategy still matters.
When blogging backfires.
In 2025, I published a blog post about memes that became a huge hit. However, it became ‘too successful’ for the wrong reasons. The post generated so much traffic that Google’s bots began misidentifying my site’s niche, diluting my “topical authority” and confusing the ranking signals for my core marketing strategy consulting services. While the viral surge was exciting, it lacked strategic alignment with what I actually want people to contact me for.
Instead of simply deleting the post and losing that hard-earned SEO equity, I’m pivoting the content to focus on the high-level marketing psychology behind meme culture. By transitioning from ‘content commentary’ to ‘strategic implementation,’ I can resolve the indexing confusion with Google while providing a more evergreen, sophisticated resource for brand growth.
Which Platform Is Better for Your Business?
That depends on what kind of business you’re building.
If your brand is driven by personality, intimacy, commentary, creativity, or a highly engaged niche audience, Substack may be the better fit.
If your growth depends on search visibility, stronger website authority, local discoverability, and long-term SEO value, blogging may be the smarter move.
And in many cases, the real answer isn’t one or the other.
It’s both.
Substack can nurture loyalty.
Blogging can improve discoverability.
Substack can deepen connection.
Blogging can widen your reach.
Substack can support subscriptions.
Blogging can support service sales.
They’re different doors leading into the same house.
Monetization Matters More Than the Platform
This is the part that really matters.
In the end, the platform itself is not the strategy. Your monetization strategy is the strategy.
You can have a beautiful Substack and no clear reason for people to upgrade.
You can have a fully optimized blog and no compelling offer behind it.
You can have readers, traffic, opens, followers, and applause—and still not be making money in a way that supports your business.
That’s why the smartest question isn’t, “Should I choose Substack or blogging?”
It’s, “How does this platform help me create value, and monetize what I do well?”
I’m currently working with a client on a unique Substack upsell for a niche audience that will be genuinely interested in it. That’s the key right there. Not everything is for everyone. And thank goodness for that.
The best offers are specific.
The best communities are intentional.
The best monetization strategies are built around what your audience actually wants.
Yes, I’m on Substack
And if you’re on Substack, come find me there. I haven’t posted in a few years, but it’s my favorite place to be. I’ll be sharing occasional sketches, stories, and little glimpses into the things I notice and can’t help but turn into words or color.
I also have plans for an upgraded paid subscription, and truthfully, that’s where I’d really love to hear from you. What would you actually pay a monthly fee for? Sketching tutorials? Downloadable wallpaper or postcards? Behind-the-scenes creative process? Actual monthly mailings? I’d really love to spend more time sketching, and I’d love to hear from you. For now, if you’re interested in seeing my work, you can find my loose, colorful sketches on Instagram.
Let me know what would feel worth it to you. And let me know if you’re on Substack, too. I’d love to follow you there.
—Connie