Hero + value prop
Tight headline ('Get the X newsletter — every Tuesday'), one-sentence promise, frequency, and what the reader gets. The AI nails the format newsletter creators use.
Sample issue preview
Below the fold: a 'recent issues' grid or a preview of last week's edition — the social proof that converts skeptics into signups.
Email capture
Hero CTA plus a sticky footer signup. Submissions go to your Forms dashboard; export to your email tool when you're ready to send.
About + archive sections
Optional 'about the author' section and a permalinked archive — gives the site enough depth to rank on your name + newsletter topic.
Try this prompt
“Build a landing page for a weekly newsletter about indie game development. Hero with the promise, sample of last 5 issues with titles + summaries, a quote from a happy subscriber, and an email signup at the top and bottom. Optional 'about me' section under sample issues.”
Paste this into InBuild to see the result. Try it free →
Frequently asked questions
Should I use this or Substack/beehiiv?
If you want a custom domain, your own design, and ownership of your subscriber list — use this and connect to Resend or ConvertKit for sending. If you want the network effect of Substack's recommendation engine, stay on Substack. Many creators do both: Substack for sending, a custom InBuild landing page for marketing.
How do I send the actual newsletter?
InBuild captures signups. To send issues, connect your list to a sender: Resend (developer-friendly, $20/month), ConvertKit (creator-focused), or Buttondown (minimal). The exported `.env.local.example` includes placeholders for these.
Does it include unsubscribe handling?
The signup capture does — collected emails are stored in your Forms dashboard which you can manage. Real unsubscribe links happen in your email-sender tool, which handles deliverability and compliance.