A newsletter archive, that Google can find.
Every email you send becomes a clean, hosted web page with a shareable URL — readable by anyone, indexable by search engines, and live forever.
Marketing notes for makers, every Tuesday.





Everything a public newsletter archive needs.
Hosted, indexed, scheduled, and measured.
news.yourbrand.comA URL for every issue
Each send gets a clean hosted page automatically — share it on social, link it from your site, or send it to anyone who missed it.
Indexed by search engines
Archive pages are crawlable with proper titles and metadata, so your newsletter content earns organic search traffic over time.
Published on your schedule
Scheduled sends publish to the archive the moment they go out, keeping the web version and the inbox version in sync.
Measured like the email
Opens and clicks are tracked per issue, so you can see which archived editions keep pulling readers in.
Your back catalog becomes an asset
Without a newsletter archive, every issue dies in the inbox after a day. With one, your best writing stays linkable and discoverable — new visitors can binge past editions, and old issues keep converting readers into subscribers.
Get set up in minutesEvery email gets a shareable page
theweeklybrew.audienceful.com/p/spring-updateCopyWrite once, publish twice
Compose in Audienceful's Notion-style editor and the web version comes free — same content, formatted cleanly for the browser. There's no copying posts between an email tool and a blog platform.
Type / to add images, buttons & more
See what your archive earns you
Link tracking shows which issues get clicked, shared, and revisited long after the send date. That's real data on what your audience wants more of — straight from your own back catalog.
Attribution without the spreadsheet
Emails vanish — archives compound
An email without a newsletter archive has a lifespan of about a day — opened or buried, then gone. Archived issues behave like blog posts instead: they collect links, surface in search results, and give prospective subscribers a reason to trust you before they hand over an address. The writing you're already doing starts compounding instead of evaporating.
Audienceful makes the archive a side effect of sending: compose in the Notion-style editor, hit send, and a clean, indexable web page appears with its own URL. New to the platform? The quickstart guide covers your first send, and email templates keep every archived issue looking consistent.
Every issue, working twice.
Inbox today, search results tomorrow.
Hosted web pages
Every send published automatically
Browsable back catalog
Readers can explore every past issue
Shareable URLs
Clean links for social and your site
Crawlable by search engines
Titles and metadata set for indexing
Publishes on send
Web and inbox versions always in sync
Per-issue analytics
Clicks and reads tracked over time
Join 10,000+ making the switch.
See why modern teams move their email marketing to Audienceful.

“Holy sh*t this is fantastic… I'm really impressed so far. You all have built something special here.”


“I love products like Audienceful — it hints at a better future, connecting creatives with richer workflows.”


“So much easier to use… has already saved us hundreds of hours.”

Newsletter archive FAQs
What is a newsletter archive?
A newsletter archive is a public collection of your past email issues, published as web pages. It lets non-subscribers read your back catalog, gives every issue a shareable link, and makes your email content discoverable through search engines.
Does Audienceful create a newsletter archive automatically?
Yes. Every email you send is published to a hosted archive page with its own URL — no extra setup, no copying content into a separate blog platform.
Can search engines index my newsletter archive?
Yes. Audienceful archive pages are crawlable with proper page titles and metadata, so individual issues can rank in search results and bring in organic readers long after the original send.
Can I share a past newsletter issue with someone who isn't subscribed?
Yes. Every archived issue has a public URL you can post on social media, link from your website, or send directly — readers don't need to subscribe to view it, though the page is a natural place for them to.