- Newsletter Circle
- Posts
- The Steal Club by Alex Llull
The Steal Club by Alex Llull
"You are better off with 500 high-quality, targeted subscribers than 10,000 random people who don’t even remember why they signed up."
Learn how to level up your newsletter from successful creators.
Sundays 👉 The unique journey of a different newsletter creator
Wednesdays 👉 Articles with unique insights and recommendations
CREATOR INTERVIEW
Alex Llull shows us how to steal growth & monetization tactics from top creators like a pro in The Steal Club. Today, it’s our turn to steal from him!
It all started when he realized that competition was not something to get frustrated with but actually, a true source of inspiration to improve his work.
Since then, his newsletter, which now reaches over 6,000 subscribers, has helped him build a solid audience, land his current job at Taplio and form valuable relationships in the industry. Beyond all that, he’s having fun doing it.
In our discussion today, we talked about:
How his perception of consistency evolved over time and why he failed with a daily publishing schedule
His growth strategies, including his 2 favorites for growing on social media
How his podcast and newsletter complement each other
The most critical information to share in sponsor decks
4 pieces of golden advice to aspiring creators
Let's dive in!
🛠 TOOL STACK
ESP → Beehiiv
Task Management → Notion
Curation & Note taking → Notion
Design of visuals → Canva
Website → Framer
Digital products → Hosted in Framer + FramerAuth
Social Media Tools → Taplio, Tweet Hunter
Sponsorship → Passionfroot
Podcast (recording, editing, transcript etc) → Mumbler.io, Otter.ai & Streamyard
Payments → Lemon Squeezy
👋 MEET THE CREATOR
Welcome Alex. Let’s start with getting to know you.
Hey! My name is Alex, and I'm from Mallorca, an island on the west coast of Spain, but I currently live in Madrid.
My background is in advertising. I have five years of experience working in different ad agencies on all kinds of projects (from beer brands to gaming brands). From there, during the 2020 pandemic, the agency office where I worked closed, so I started freelancing until very recently when I joined Taplio to lead the growth there.
On the side, I’m also running The Steal Club.
🥁 START
How and why did you start The Steal Club in the first place?
The Steal Club's first version was born in 2020, after leaving the agency and figuring out what’s next.
During that time, I thought building my personal brand would be a great idea to get freelance clients, so I turned to Twitter. However, despite my initial efforts, I struggled A LOT.
My content wasn't getting any engagement, traction, or followers. The frustration increased as I saw others who started simultaneously grow an audience faster than me.
And that’s when it clicked.
My problem before was that I saw these people as competition. But they were not.
They were an inspiration. They cracked the code, and I hadn't.
So I could actually go see what they were doing and "steal" it. As a result, things finally started falling into place, and my personal brand grew way faster.
I figured that if this “stealing” thing worked for me, why not for others?
I started compiling the tactics and playbooks these people were using and sharing them in a weekly email. That's how The Steal Club was born.
🔄 CONSISTENCY
You started The Steal Club as a daily newsletter, but it failed for you because it was too stressful. Based on your experience, what are the most critical questions creators should ask themselves when deciding their publishing frequency?
We need to backtrack here. Before publishing frequency, the most important thing is the topic. Choose a trending topic you are not passionate about and you’ll burn out quickly. Choose a topic that you are obsessed with, and you can write about it daily.
That said, weekly publishing is a great frequency to get started, but everyone should evaluate how much time they can dedicate to it.
You’ve been publishing content almost daily on X for three years. Recently, you gave a one-week break since you didn’t feel fresh. You also shared this in your newsletter, saying, “In the past, a break like this would have scared me. Now, I see it as an opportunity to come back even stronger.”.
How is your approach to the concept of “being consistent” changed over time as a creator?
Consistency is essential when starting, not so much because of the audience growth side of it but because it’s great to find your own voice. The more posts you publish, the more content formats you play with, the easier it will be for you to find it.
Once that happens, pulling the plug and shifting the focus from quantity to quality is easier. With so much noise out there these days about AI and all that, I think that the creators who focus on quality will win.
🚀 GROWTH
A few years ago, it was as easy as putting a plug under your most popular tweets, and that’s it. That doesn’t work as well anymore. What I see working right now are two things:
Automated giveaways type of posts where you give something of value (usually a lead magnet) out in exchange for a like or RT or comment on that post
Teaser posts, teasing the upcoming day’s newsletter topic. Great example.
Which growth strategies did you utilize to reach over 6,000 subscribers?
It has been the same ever since I started, in all stages of growth:
Form relationships with other creators so you can cross-promote with them.
Share free quality content online and prompt the people for the newsletter if they “want more of the same.”
Casually mention the newsletter whenever it makes sense on social media.
And that’s about it! I don’t have lead magnets (although that is changing very soon), and I haven't invested in paid growth either (yet).
You're also running a podcast alongside your newsletter. What prompted you to start a podcast in addition to your newsletter? How do these two mediums complement each other?
If I’m honest, it was born as an excuse for me to get in conversations with other creators. Instead of a “can I pick your brain” type of invitation, I invite them to my podcast.
The podcast and the newsletter complement each other because both are branded under the “Steal” umbrella. Since the conversations tend to be very tactical, some of the nuggets they drop are also shared in the newsletter. Then, if someone wants to dig deeper into that creator, they can listen to the pod episode.
Reply