How I built a 1M+ subscriber newsletter and top 10 tech podcast | Lenny Rachitsky
Lenny Rachitsky's million-subscriber newsletter and top-10 tech podcast were never part of the plan. When he left Airbnb after seven years, his roadmap included startups, PM roles, consulting — nowhere on that list was «I have wisdom to share.» Yet a psychedelic experience in Joshua Tree, a friend's unexpected advice, and a wife who thought writing online was a dead end all converged to launch one of the most influential voices in product management. This conversation, led by his wife Michelle Rial, pulls back the curtain on the moments of doubt, the fraudster attacks that cost him sleep, and the relentless weekly grind of the «Indiana Jones boulder» chasing him down. How does someone who never sought the spotlight build a media empire — and still wake up asking where it all goes long term?
Ключевые выводы
Lenny never planned to be a newsletter writer or podcaster; the path emerged from following what worked and what he enjoyed, guided by the rare overlap of «you're good at it, people like it, and you enjoy doing it.»
The newsletter's success is rooted in practitioner-driven content: guest posts from people sharing the best thing they learned in their careers, not pontificating from the clouds.
Lenny iterates 50+ times on every newsletter post, refining obsessively until it feels genuinely interesting and high-quality to him — not waiting for external validation.
Running a solo media business means constant pressure: the «Indiana Jones boulder» of weekly deadlines, no co-workers to jam with, and an uncertain long-term endgame.
A major crisis hit when fraudsters in China exploited his product perks offer, creating sleepless nights and risking his reputation — a reminder that scale brings new, unexpected dangers.
Вкратце
Lenny Rachitsky's success came not from a master plan but from following pull over push: writing what felt interesting, iterating relentlessly (50+ times per post), and extracting wisdom from practitioners doing real work. The cost? A weekly treadmill with no obvious exit and the constant stress of chasing the next deadline.
The Unexpected Origin Story
Lenny's newsletter was never the plan — it emerged from pull, not push.
When Lenny left Airbnb after seven years, his playbook was clear: start a company (Plan A), join a startup as first PM (Plan B), or consult (Plan D). Nowhere in that hierarchy was «become a newsletter writer and podcaster.» His wife Michelle openly doubted the economics: «You can't make money putting writing on the internet.» Yet Lenny kept writing on Medium, and the pull was undeniable. His first post went viral, Airbnb leadership shared it company-wide, and a VC friend told him: «You seem to be enjoying it, people seem to like it — that Venn diagram is rare.»
Nine months into the weekly newsletter grind, Lenny had a realization rooted in the Lindy effect: if he'd done it for nine months, he could probably do it for nine more. That's when he added a paywall. Co hit days later, Airbnb's stock cratered, and suddenly making money wasn't optional. The paywall worked. Within a month, he was earning «meaningful dollars.» The lesson: the best paths often reveal themselves through experimentation and following what feels intrinsically right, not what looks rational on paper.
A lesser-known moment sealed his confidence. On a bachelor-party trip to Joshua Tree involving psychedelics, Lenny sat on a rock for three hours, a phrase looping in his mind: «I have wisdom to share.» He describes it as a Buddha-like visualization that gave him permission to believe he had something worth saying. It wasn't a plan; it was a permission slip.
The Weekly Treadmill and the Indiana Jones Boulder
Lenny loves his work but lives under relentless weekly deadline pressure.
The Weekly Treadmill and the Indiana Jones Boulder
Lenny describes his life as an Indiana Jones boulder constantly chasing him: every week, a new post and podcast episode must ship, no matter what. He can't imagine doing anything more fulfilling, yet he wrestles with the long-term sustainability. «Where does this go when I'm 60, 70, 100?» he wonders. The Lindy effect suggests seven more years — but then what? The tension between loving the work and feeling trapped by its cadence is the hidden cost of solo media success.
The Fraudster Crisis: Sleepless Nights and Stripe Firefights
A too-good offer for free tools unleashed fraud rings that nearly broke him.
About a year ago, Lenny launched an offer through his Product Pass: subscribers got a free year of Cursor, Lovable, Bolt, Replit, and v0. The offer was so generous it attracted bad actors — specifically, fraud rings in China. Attackers exploited API holes, set up fake accounts, and the abuse went viral in Chinese student networks. Lenny and his engineer Estee didn't sleep for a week, working with Stripe and Substack to plug vulnerabilities as fast as they emerged.
The stakes were existential. If the fraud spiraled out of control and subscribers lost trust, the entire business could collapse. Lenny recalls lying awake, repeating his mantra: «It's going to be okay.» The crisis passed, but it left a scar. Scale brings new, unforeseen dangers — and when you're a one-person media company, there's no ops team to offload the panic to. Every night, he was the one refreshing dashboards, watching for the next wave of attacks.
The Practitioner-First Philosophy
Stress, Tools, and the Happiness Baseline
Lenny appears calm but uses deliberate mental tools to manage hidden stress.
Michelle's Creative Process: Coffee, Deadlines, and Overthinking
Michelle Rial needs a single-shot latte, a two-hour window, and good sleep to create.
Single-Shot Latte (Not Too Much) Michelle gets a single-shot latte — just enough to feel like a genius, not enough to trigger a panic attack. Too much coffee, and the ideas become erratic spiderwebs instead of coherent charts.
Two-Hour Window with a Deadline Her optimal creative window is about two hours, with a hard stop (like needing to be somewhere). The time pressure forces her into machine mode.
Good Night of Sleep Without sleep, even caffeine won't save her. A bad night plus too much coffee equals frantic mental energy with no actual ideas.
Live Life, Notice Patterns Her best ideas come from observing real life — especially while meditating, which trains her to notice her own thinking. If she focuses too much on work, she stops living and the ideas dry up.
At Least Five Iterations Michelle refines each chart at least five times (Lenny does 50+ on his posts). She often sets ideas aside, then returns with fresh eyes when something in the world clicks the missing piece into place.
Key Numbers from Lenny's Journey
The quantitative milestones that mark Lenny's media business growth.
What Would Lenny Be Doing Without the Newsletter?
Probably failing at another startup, then joining a company as a PM.
“I'd probably find another company to start and I probably would have failed considering most startups fail. So I'd probably be on the struggle bus of startup life probably. And then probably after that failed I would have joined some company I guess as a PM.”
Люди
Глоссарий
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