Build your Newsletter Website with AI in under 5 minutes

Build a newsletter website with a public archive, subscribe forms, issue delivery by email, and growth analytics — a Substack-style publication on your own domain.

Cómo funciona

Paso 1

Describe tu idea

Escribe un prompt describiendo lo que quieres.

Paso 2

La IA lo construye

FloopFloop genera código listo para producción al instante.

Paso 3

Despliega y publica

Tu proyecto se aloja en su propio subdominio en minutos.

¿Por qué construir con IA en lugar de contratar un desarrollador?

FloopFloopDesarrollador tradicional
Tiempo de lanzamientoMenos de 5 minutos2-8 semanas
CostoDesde $0$5.000 - $50.000+
MantenimientoIncluidoContrato continuo

What is a newsletter website?

A newsletter website is a publication with two faces: a public archive that grows your audience through search and shares, and an email list that delivers each issue to people who asked for it. That pairing is why newsletters outlast social platforms — the archive compounds like a blog while the list is a direct line no algorithm can throttle. Substack productised the format and takes 10% of paid subscriptions; beehiiv and Buttondown price by list size. The publishing loop is simple — write, preview, send, archive — but the details carry the trust: double opt-in so the list is real, one-click unsubscribe so it stays wanted, and a subscriber table you can export because the list is the asset. Writers move off hosted platforms for exactly one reason: ownership of the reader relationship.

Common features

  • Public archive with an SEO-friendly page per issue
  • Subscribe form with double opt-in confirmation
  • Markdown writing with preview before publish
  • Publish-once: email to subscribers + archive post together
  • One-click unsubscribe and bounce handling
  • Weekly/monthly delivery preference per subscriber
  • Tagged and searchable back-catalogue
  • Free and members-only issue tiers
  • Subscriber growth and churn dashboard
  • CSV export of the full list — it's your table

Real-world examples

Industry analysis weekly

A consultant publishes one deep-dive every Thursday. The archive ranks for niche industry queries; a third of new subscribers arrive from two-year-old issues.

Curated dev links

Ten links with sharp commentary, tagged by topic. The browsable tag archive turned a disposable email into a reference site readers actually return to.

Paid local news

A city newsletter with free weekly roundups and a members-only investigative issue each month. Keeping 100% of subscription revenue beat the platform's reach.

Why FloopFloop fits newsletter website projects

Newsletter platforms trade convenience for a cut — of your revenue, your data, or both. FloopFloop generates the whole publication as an app you own: the archive on your domain accruing search equity, subscribers as rows you can export without asking, delivery preferences and paywall rules encoded exactly as you want them. The format is stable enough that owning it is cheap — write, publish, send is the same loop forever — and when you want something platform users can't have (a custom digest cadence, a sponsor slot only in the email version, archive pages styled per series), it's a sentence in chat rather than a feature request on someone's roadmap.

Prueba estos prompts

Copia cualquier prompt y pégalo en FloopFloop para empezar.

Build a newsletter site: a homepage pitching the newsletter with a subscribe form, a public archive of past issues with clean typography, individual issue pages with share links, and a double-opt-in subscribe flow with a confirmation email.

Create a newsletter platform where I write issues in markdown, preview them, and publish — publishing emails the issue to all confirmed subscribers and adds it to the public archive. Include an unsubscribe link in every email and a subscriber count on my dashboard.

Design a curated-links newsletter site: each issue is a list of links with one-paragraph commentary, tagged by topic. The archive is browsable by tag, there's a search box over all past issues, and subscribers can pick weekly or monthly delivery.

Build a newsletter with a free and a members-only tier: free issues are public, premium issues show a teaser and a paywall prompt, and members sign in to read everything. Show me a dashboard with subscriber growth, open-ready export, and churn per month.

Preguntas frecuentes

Do subscribers get the issues by email?
Yes — publishing an issue sends it to every confirmed subscriber and posts it to the public archive at the same time. Every email carries a one-click unsubscribe link (legally required and good practice), and bounced addresses are flagged so your list stays clean.
Why does the public archive matter?
It's your growth engine. Email is private — search engines never see it — but an archive page per issue accumulates rankings for every topic you've ever covered, and each becomes a shareable URL. Substack figured this out early: the archive does the marketing, the email does the retention.
Is the subscriber list really mine?
It's a table in your own database — export it as CSV any time, no platform permission needed. That's the core difference from publishing on a hosted platform, where the relationship with your readers is ultimately intermediated by someone else's terms.
How does double opt-in work?
A new subscriber gets a confirmation email and only joins the list after clicking it. It filters out typos and bots, keeps engagement rates honest, and is required by anti-spam rules in much of the world. Unconfirmed signups expire automatically after a few days.
Can I run a paid tier?
Yes — mark issues free or members-only: free issues are fully public, premium ones show a teaser with a join prompt, and signed-in members read everything. Start free until the archive proves the writing has an audience; converting later is a flag on the issue, not a migration.
Why not just use Substack or beehiiv?
Substack takes 10% of paid revenue forever and owns your discovery; beehiiv meters by subscriber count. Both are great for starting fast. Building your own wins when the newsletter is part of something bigger — your domain, your design, your data — and when 10% of a growing paid list starts looking like real money.

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