Nap Time Builds

How to Launch a Substack During Nap Time

Short answer: Lock in a sharp premise, then use three 45-minute sessions to set up the Substack, write your welcome email, and publish issue one. Use Claude to sharpen your angle and edit drafts while keeping your voice. Commit to a weekly cadence. Substack's discovery features (Notes, recommendations, Reader) mean you don't need a pre-existing audience to start.

Why Substack works for nap-time founders

Substack does the infrastructure for you: email, payments, a reader app, a recommendation network, a built-in surface for short posts (Notes). You don't configure a thing. That's exactly what you want when you have 45 minutes.

The tradeoff: you don't own the platform. For most people starting now, that's an acceptable trade. You can always migrate later.

The 3-session launch

Session 1: Premise + setup

Write your premise in one sentence: "[This Substack] helps [specific reader] do [specific thing] every [frequency]."

Ask Claude to pressure-test it. The worst premises are vague ("thoughts on life"). The best are specific enough that a stranger knows whether it's for them in 3 seconds.

Then: create the Substack account, pick the name, set up the publication, write the one-sentence description, upload a logo (Canva is fine).

Session 2: Welcome email + about page

The welcome email is the single most-read thing you'll ever write. Every new subscriber sees it. Spend this session making it good. Tell them: what this is, who you are in 3 sentences, what they'll get, how often, and one thing they can do right now (read your best post, reply with a question, share it).

The About page is secondary. Claude can draft it from your premise and a few sentences about you. Rewrite in your voice.

Session 3: Issue one

Publish. Don't wait. Don't try to have three issues queued up. One live post is infinitely more valuable than three draft posts.

Send it to 5–10 friends who genuinely care. That's your seed list. Substack's algorithm will do a small amount of work for you after that, but the first real traffic comes from you sharing it.

A repeatable weekly format

Pick one structure and stick with it for at least 10 issues. Options:

Not sure what angle is yours?

The quiz matches a topic and format to your life and voice.

Take the Quiz

The 45-minute weekly session

Growth habits that work without burning time

On paid subscriptions

Don't turn on paid in the first month. You need to know what people actually read before you ask them to pay. Give it 10–15 free issues. Then consider a paid tier with one piece of extra value per week (bonus post, archive, thread, resource).

The bigger picture

A Substack built in nap windows isn't a side hustle in the hustle-bro sense. It's a compounding home for your thinking — somewhere your ideas accumulate and an audience slowly gathers around the specific thing you do well.

The Nap Stack System is the complete setup: Claude configured as an editor, weekly handoff templates, and the workflow that turns 45-minute windows into a sustainable publishing habit.

Get the complete system

Everything you need to launch and run the Substack in nap windows only.

Get the Nap Stack System — €47