The garden has no guru. It has biodiversity.


I’ve been thinking about this since Hamish McKenzie’s TED Talk in April. He laid out three eras of media:



The temple had priests. The chaos had influencers. The garden has gardeners.


And gardeners are structurally incapable of becoming gurus. Not only because of culture (although that’s a big part of it), but also because of Substack’s product architecture.


I’m an AI product manager, builder of StackShelf.app, Attitudevault.dev, and I build platforms for a living. The platform model behind Substack is one of the most fascinating I've ever studied. Today, I'll show you why.

The Business Model Killed Guru Energy Before It Started

Substack’s founding story is itself an anti-guru parable.


Chris Best drafted a blog post in 2017 about everything wrong with the attention economy. Hamish McKenzie read it and said: everybody already knows the problems. Nobody knows what to do about them.


Chris never finished the blog post. He built Substack instead.


The core insight was a single structural inversion:


When advertisers pay, writers serve the algorithm. When readers pay, writers serve readers.


This is a product decision with massive second-order effects.

Hamish put it sharply: traditional media has a physical illness (broken business model). Social media has a mental illness (broken discourse). Substack was designed to treat both.


Gurus need algorithms that amplify a single voice to millions.
Gardeners need relationships rooted in trust.

Trust As The Growth Engine

I went from I’ll never pay for anyone's writing to having 25 paid subscriptions in 12 months. Here's why.

Trust builds slowly on Substack. Post by post. Month by month.

There are writers like , , , , , , , and (to name a few) that I trust so much, I’d be willing to like their post without reading them.

They’ve all earned it.


Each of their articles delivered something I could take home and use, or nudged my thinking just enough that I had to stare at the wall for a minute, or gave me something that my brain flagged as interesting before I could even articulate why.


And here’s the product angle: that kind of trust only exists because the system rewards consistency, not virality.

When a writer isn't chasing virality, they can be the same person in post #3 and post #300.


But if we look at gurus, we’ll notice that they don’t actually need trust. They need algorithms.

Discovery by Peers, Not Machines

The guru model needs an algorithm to function. It concentrates attention on a few voices through virality loops:


This is the winner-take-all distribution pattern that most social platforms are designed around. The algorithm identifies high-engagement content, amplifies it, which creates more engagement, which triggers more amplification. It’s a positive feedback loop that mathematically guarantees power concentration. Substack’s discovery system breaks that loop.


Writers recommend writers. Not machines. People.


Recommendations now drive 50% of all new subscriptions and 25% of paid subscriptions on Substack. All peer-driven. Not because an algorithm surfaced our work, but because a reader found value in it and told someone.


When Substack rebuilt its algorithm in late 2025, the design philosophy was explicit:


You can’t become a guru on a platform where other writers and readers control who gets recommended.

Exit Rights Are Anti-Lock-In

This is the one that product people should pay the most attention to.


Every PM knows the two approaches to retention:


When both the writer and the reader can leave at any time, the relationship has to be continuously earned, not extracted.


Most platforms treat lock-in as a moat. Substack treats portability as one. That’s the kind of counterintuitive product decision that only makes sense when you’ve correctly identified what you’re actually selling: not content, but trust.

Horizontal, Not Vertical

Gurus need an audience that looks up.


Substack’s best features create a space where people look across, at each other. This maps directly to a product architecture choice every platform makes: hub-and-spoke vs. mesh network.


From a product metrics standpoint, this is also revealing. Hub-and-spoke platforms measure follower count as the primary creator metric. Mesh networks measure engagement depth: insightful comments, cross-recommendations, community activity.


Those metrics tell you what the system values:


That’s garden energy.

Long-Form Is Naturally Guru-Resistant

This one is under-appreciated.


Yes, you can send reels on Substack; but it’s not the core of their product architecture. Reels and tweets are the guru’s natural habitat. You can consume a 60-second reel passively. The guru talks. The audience absorbs. Nobody has to think.


In product terms, reels have zero cognitive friction. It’s designed that way:


Reading a 2,000-word essay is different. The reader has to think. We have to actively engage with each paragraph, each argument, each turn. That’s inherently resistant to guru dynamics.


The choice to build around long-form writing isn’t just a content preference. This is a format-as-feature decision. You can’t parasocially bond with someone whose work requires you to disagree, highlight, re-read, and form your own opinion. That’s not discipleship. That’s dialogue.

And here’s where AI makes this even more interesting.


AI can produce a guru's output. Confident pronouncements, one-size-fits-all advice, polished authority. That's 100% automatable today. Many of my readers could ship content like that tomorrow. We choose not to.

And my assumption is that the more AI floods the internet with guru-energy content, the more valuable the anti-guru, original voice becomes.

Six Product Decisions, One Architecture

Let me pull this together as a product lens:


Substack isn’t just culturally anti-guru, it’s architecturally anti-guru. Baked into the business model, the discovery system, the community features, and the founding philosophy.


This is what good product thinking looks like: not a mission statement about being different. Six interlocking design decisions that make a specific outcome, like guru concentration, structurally difficult to achieve.

Key Takeaways

If you’re building on Substack, optimize for the things the platform rewards. Consistency over virality. Depth over reach. Trust over follower count. Conversation over broadcasting.


And stop optimizing for the things it doesn’t. Algorithmic hacks. Growth shortcuts. Content that sounds impressive but says nothing. The platform wasn’t designed for that.


And neither were your readers.