Turn any newsletter into a podcast with AI

The average person subscribes to 14 newsletters and consistently reads fewer than 4. ListenBrief converts your unread stack into one audio briefing you'll actually finish before work.

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The newsletter subscription problem is universal. You found a writer whose work you respect — a sharp analyst, a practitioner in your industry, a thinker whose perspective is worth your time. You subscribed. Then reality intervened: their issues arrive at a time you're not at your desk, run longer than your attention window allows, or pile up during a busy week until you're 5 issues behind and the entire inbox feels like a burden instead of a resource.

This is not a motivation problem. It's a format mismatch. Text newsletters require a specific kind of attention — seated, focused, deliberate — that competes with everything else demanding that same attention during the workday. Audio doesn't have the same constraint. It's asynchronous in a different way: it plays during the minutes that already exist between other commitments.

The newsletter gap: The average person is subscribed to 14 newsletters but reads fewer than 4 consistently. Substack alone has over 35 million active subscribers. Most newsletters have an RSS feed even if it's not prominently advertised — which means ListenBrief can process almost any newsletter you're already subscribed to.

How newsletter-to-podcast conversion works

Most newsletters — especially those published on Substack, Beehiiv, Ghost, or self-hosted WordPress — automatically maintain an RSS feed. This is the same feed that podcast apps, Feedly, and newsreaders have used for decades. It's public, it's standard, and it requires no special permission to access.

When you add a newsletter's RSS feed to ListenBrief, the process is:

  1. Every morning before your briefing generation, ListenBrief checks the RSS feed for new issues published since the last check.
  2. If a new issue is available, the AI reads the full text from the feed and identifies the key arguments, findings, or developments the author is making.
  3. Those insights are incorporated into your daily briefing alongside your other sources — presented in a synthesized narrative, not as a word-for-word reading of the newsletter.
  4. If no new issue was published, that source is skipped for that day's briefing.

The result isn't a text-to-speech version of the newsletter. It's a synthesis: the AI extracts what matters from the issue and integrates it into a coherent audio narrative with your other sources. A technology newsletter and an industry news feed might both publish on the same theme — your briefing will connect those threads rather than presenting them as separate segments.

Sample briefing:
AI Investor Briefing →
A sample briefing that synthesizes newsletter issues alongside other sources into one coherent episode.

Finding RSS feeds for your newsletters

Substack is the easiest case: every Substack publication has an RSS feed at https://[author].substack.com/feed. Paste that URL into ListenBrief. That's all.

For other platforms:

Some newsletters — particularly those distributed exclusively via email with no web presence — don't have RSS feeds. For those, ListenBrief cannot process the content without the author providing a feed. But this is increasingly rare: the shift to web-first newsletter platforms has made RSS feeds standard infrastructure.

Mixing newsletters with other sources

The briefing is most valuable when newsletters aren't isolated from other sources. An analyst's Substack issue arguing that AI infrastructure spending is peaking means more in context with a news article reporting an AWS earnings miss, or a YouTube channel where a practitioner describes slowing demand from enterprise clients. Your briefing synthesizes all three into a single narrative — not three separate segments.

This cross-source synthesis is what separates a ListenBrief briefing from simply listening to newsletters one at a time. The connections the AI identifies across sources are often more valuable than any single source alone.

On Pro and Power plans, you can add unlimited sources: newsletters, RSS feeds, YouTube channels, and news sites mix freely into one episode. Starter plan allows 3 total sources, which is enough for 2-3 newsletters plus one other feed.

See how feeds are processed in depth at RSS to podcast. For a broader look at morning audio habits, see AI daily briefing. And for a comparison of audio vs. reading formats, read daily briefing vs. newsletter.

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Frequently asked questions

Which newsletters work with ListenBrief?

Any newsletter that has an RSS feed — which includes most Substack publications, Beehiiv newsletters, Ghost blogs, and many email newsletters. Paste the RSS URL into your ListenBrief sources.

How do I find the RSS feed for a Substack newsletter?

Every Substack has an RSS feed at https://[author].substack.com/feed. For example: https://stratechery.com/feed. Paste that URL into ListenBrief and you're done.

Does ListenBrief read the full newsletter or just the summary?

ListenBrief processes the full text available in the RSS feed. Some newsletters truncate their RSS feed to teasers — in those cases, ListenBrief will note the truncation and cover what's available.

Can I mix newsletters with YouTube channels in the same briefing?

Yes. Your briefing combines all your sources — newsletters, YouTube channels, RSS feeds, and websites — into a single coherent audio narrative. The AI synthesizes across all of them.

Will the newsletter author know I'm using ListenBrief?

No. ListenBrief reads the public RSS feed, which is the same feed that newsletter apps, Feedly, and browsers use. No special access or the author's permission is required.

Stop leaving your newsletters unread

Add your Substack feeds today. Your newsletter briefing arrives tomorrow morning as an MP3.

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