The Creator’s Communication Problem
Email used to be the go-to for creators, but as you probably know, open rates are falling fast. In fact, with a younger demographic that doesn’t open emails as often, average open rates are now under 20% and still dropping. The big challenge now is keeping your creator audience engaged when fans scroll through notifications, not inboxes. How many emails from creators do you actually open? Or even receive? You may own the relationship with your audience through your email list, but if you’re not reaching them, that connection isn’t working, and it’s something that needs fixing now, not later.
Why Email Still Matters (But Has Its Limits)
Of course, email still does matter. There are plenty of reasons when you do need email to reach people. Log form messaging should 100% be by email. It takes time and effort, and it is absolutely worth it. It builds trust and connection, and it’s still great for storytelling, but it’s not really built for real-time short-form messaging. It’s also slow to produce and it gets buried very easily in marketing boxes or even spam in some cases, and also can get very easily ignored.
I always say email is like sending a letter. PushPass is like sending a SMS. Creators need a way to reach fans more regularly than an email could ever achieve. You can’t send more than two to four emails a month without mass unsubscriptions, when actually most of the time, you’re just trying to get across a very quick short-form message that’s direct. And leads them potentially to a place that you want to; a website, Spotify, YouTube, Instagram, your store, anywhere! Even your sponsors will benefit from this.
With so much to do as a brand, email marketing is yet another thing you need to keep on top of. Creative communication tools need to be quick and easy. That’s what PushPass gives you.
How Audience Habits Have Changed
There’s definitely a shift in the way that people communicate, especially when it comes to how creators communicate with their fan base.
There’s more people that use mobile now than ever. It’s fast-moving and notification-driven. Fans check social updates 10 times a day, but leave emails and unopened for days. And that’s even if they see them. There’s so much competition out there with TikTok and reels and short-form dopamine hits that email just seems totally uninteresting. None of this means that you’re losing fans; it just simply means that you’re losing visibility, and that’s a problem that needs to be sorted. If you’re new to growing your channel or brand, you might also want to read The Smart Creator’s Guide to YouTube Success. It covers the essential tools and strategies every YouTuber needs to grow faster and build a loyal fan base.
The Attention Economy in 2026
There’s so much content, especially when you add in all of the AI content that’s being uploaded to every platform currently. Scarcity in time is the currency now. If you don’t show up instantly on somebody’s feed, somebody else will. The worst thing is that could be a I generated creator. Engagement is dropping, so it’s important to make sure that you end that relationship with your fan base and always remember how to reach your audience and how creator audience habits are changing.
Creators Need Speed and Ownership
So now we know the problem, we need to figure out the solution, the framework to that solution. As a creator, you don’t just need followers, and those subscribers aren’t doing it anymore. You need access to those subscribers and those followers. Algorithms are shifting quickly, and you really don’t know what the next move by any social platform is going to be. One change in the algorithm, and you’re demoditized or lost in the feed. And then your fans simply just won’t hear from you.
I’m all about owning data. You need to own that relationship with your fan, and if you can get the name, email, and the country or city that they live in, it means you’ve got full independence of the platforms that you’re on. And it’s not that difficult to do. If you don’t do this now, other creators will. And they’ll be able to communicate with their audience more efficiently and effectively than you. And that’s when creator tools and notification marketing for creators comes in. It’s all mobile-first, in short form.
We cover exactly how this new communication channel works in The Rise of Push Notification Marketing, where creators are taking back control of their reach.
The Solution: Notification Marketing
This is when notification marketing comes in. Now, it’s important to remember that notification marketing on mobile devices is very different to notification marketing on desktop browsers. I know for one, I don’t turn on notifications when I visit a website, I just don’t want that clutter. But when it comes to mobile, habits are really different, and followers and fans do use this method of communication. Especially when it’s important to them.
Notification marketing simply means sending short-form, direct messages directly to the audience’s phone. It’s not spammy, it’s opt-in, it’s brandable, and it’s immediate. What more could you ask for? And now with FanCircles PushPass, fans add a branded wallet pass to their mobile wallet. They can do this with one click on a link or a scan QR code, then instantly you can reach them. Mobile wallet passes sit in prime real estate on your phone’s wallet, alongside your credit cards and loyalty cards. It’s your brand front and center all of the time. It’s like SMS marketing but cheaper and with many other major benefits.
So, how can you use push notifications? Well, you can automate the whole process and have notifications automatically go out when you upload a new video to YouTube, for example, or make a new post to Facebook. You can remind fans of a live broadcast before it happens. You can announce a merch drop instantly, and you can push sponsorship notifications sparingly, of course. Don’t forget, this is your data; it doesn’t belong to the platform. With the FanCircles wallet pass creator platform, you could do this in minutes and start distribution of free passes to your fans. And if they no longer want those, they simply delete the pass from their wallet.
How PushPass Complements Email (Not Replaces It)
What’s important to know about push/pass is that it’s just one of the many forms of marketing that you should be doing as an influencer, as a creator, as a YouTuber. It doesn’t replace anything, it adds to it. Emails build depth, push/pass builds immediacy. You can use emails for weekly updates and push/pass for real-time notifications, and together they form a complete communication loop, natural and active all of the time. Notifications on mobile via push/pass don’t land in spam, and click-through rates are high and can be tracked as well as sales. Maybe you send your newsletter by email every Friday, or even once a month, but with PushPass. You can send non-intrusive messages multiple times a week. So email and push notification strategy is a two-pronged approach in creative communication tools.
The Takeaway? Reach Fans Instantly and Own the Relationship
As I said before, email isn’t dead by no means, but it is a different kind of communication than notifications, and it’s not enough to keep fans engaged. Creators need speed, control, and most importantly, data ownership to thrive. PushPass gives you that instant reach, measurable results, and full ownership of your audience. You’ve built your following, now it’s time to own it. Wallet Pass platform gives you the creator to do this.
Do Fans Really Want Notifications?
When it comes to fan engagement, post notifications are opt-in and they’re direct to fan marketing. What’s really important is fans don’t mind notifications when they’re relevant and they’re opt-in. And notifications aren’t spam. It’s for people that really want to connect with you and stay connected. But of course they can unsubscribe at any time. And that’s very important. But the interesting thing is most people don’t. And that’s because notifications aren’t intrusive. They pop up, they disappear, and importantly they can still be read from the back of the pass.
And there’s a really big difference between social media notifications and the noise that comes along with that. This is permission-based, and it’s personal to the fan and follower.