blog

How to build a culture of shipping

The best time to write is when you're excited about an idea. Strike when the iron is hot.

Stripe’s a payment processor. A publisher of books about technology and progress. A purveyor of services to register a company, invoice customers, and raise capital.

And, to the folks who worked there, it’s perhaps best remembered for email.

For behind the scenes of the global payments giant, email is the common currency of productivity. “The vast majority of Stripe email remains publicly available throughout the company,” shared the team in 2014. That transparency was built around Google Groups-powered mailing lists around projects, operations, ideas, and more—enough that there were 2.6 email lists for every Stripe employee.

One list loomed above all: The Shipped list. Fueled by the high of a just-completed project, the shipped email helped the Stripe team maintain shipping momentum, celebrate accomplishments inside the team, and draft blog posts and presentations ahead of time.

It’s an email list your dev team might want to copy, and make part of your internal and external dev relations.

Epiphany, execution, email.

Stripe was known for rapidly releasing new stuff. Their changelog lists 95 new things shipped in the first quarter of 2024 alone, from new features and regional support to entirely new services.

“What I miss most about working there is the culture of shipping,” remarked @spudlyo on Hacker News. There’s a momentum of building then sending new things into the wild, a contagiousness to seeing other teams’ work that makes you want to wrap up and ship your own projects.

That spirit was spurred on with the shipped email list. You’d wrap up a project, open your email app, and address a new email to Stripe’s shipped@ Google Group.

“A project in the Atlas team was considered done when a Shipped email was sent,” wrote Zack Steinkamp of his experience at Stripe. But the email itself wasn’t done once it was sent.

“A lot of our blog posts start as [shipped] e-mails, like this one.” said @edwin on Hacker News. Blog posts weren’t the only end result for shipped emails. “Once I was invited to convert one of my shipped emails into a presentation for a company all-hands meeting,” said @spudlyo. “It was perhaps my favorite memory of my time at Stripe.”

The Anatomy of a Shipped Email

“You should send a shipped@ email when wrapping up a unit of work,” echoes Stripe’s Scaling Engineering Organizations guide from their internal defaults.

A shipped email, describes Steinkamp, “summarizes the problem and context around the problem, describes the solution approach (usually with screenshots or screen recordings), and quantifies the impact with metrics.” Those would be highlighted with the project’s background and motivation, how to use the new item, what didn’t ship and why, cool things to know about the process of getting this out the door, along with what’s next for the project. “It helps see the forest for the trees,” says Brie Wolfson of her personal OKR shipped list styled on Stripe’s emails.

That’s not all. Shipped emails also often included GIFs, along with extensive links to learn more, shared @spudlyo. And most emails would wrap up with “a ‘we haven't won yet...’ section where future phases or strategies may be laid out,” said Steinkamp.

You can see traces of the style in Stripe’s Online Migration post. It covers why this problem was important, how Stripe solved it, and unique challenges faced along the way.

Then the kudos would roll in. “That feeling you get when you finish a challenging project, write a great shipped email, and get a bunch of feedback from folks throughout the company is pretty amazing,” shared @spudlyo. And you’d be off to the next project, perhaps jumping into something outlined at the conclusion of your last shipped email. Perhaps, even, you’d kickstart the next project with a draft shipped email; “it's not uncommon for a project to begin with writing (but not sending!) the Shipped email, serving as a north star for understanding the scope and goals of a project,” mentioned Steinkamp.

How to build a shipped list in your team

Stripe’s shipped list relies on Google Groups—which can work if your team’s ok managing an onslaught of both shipped emails and replies.

Another option is to build an internal-facing email newsletter with a tool like Buttondown, which with a Professional plan lets multiple people send messages to your lists. Make an internal list, add each of your employees’ addresses to it, then start sending messages to the list every time something ships. Buttondown automatically saves an archive of your emails so your team can reference them later. With Buttondown’s Zapier integration, you could have your shipped emails automatically copied to Slack (as Stripe does) or any other team chat app you rely on.

That same setup could work for your public-facing developer relations. Edit the shipped email copy to remove any private data or internal references, and tweak the “we haven’t won yet” copy to be a positive hint at what’s coming next. Then send this to your company’s email list as a more human, exciting take on the changelog—with Buttondown’s archive serving as an easier-to-maintain developer blog.

Software isn’t the hardest part of starting a shipped list. Building a writing habit, team-wide, is both the challenge and reward of a shipped list. Start at the top, share interesting stuff in your internal and external-facing lists, then encourage team members throughout your company hierarchy to start sharing. One email at a time, with luck, your shipped list will turn into a new company tradition.

“I feel energized when someone I’ve sponsored sends an announcement that they’ve shipped their work,” said Stripe Payments Products Tech Lead Michelle Bu. Your shipped list might have those same knock-on effects, leading to a faster shipping cadence throughout your firm.

Writing emails as a productivity system

“Stripe is a celebration of the written word which happens to be incorporated in the state of Delaware,” wrote Patrick McKenzie, and it’s only partly a tongue-in-cheek joke when the company’s as well known for their documentation, startup guides, and books as they are for payment gateways. Yet they’re not alone in discovering the value of writing alongside their core product.

Jeff Bezos, famously, required Amazon staff to write 6-page memos detailing ideas instead of building slide decks, to in his words “create the context for what will then be a good discussion.” Y Combinator has portfolio founders write a weekly sprint update, something alum companies like Zapier have carried forward in Friday Updates. Stripe alums, as well, have taken the shipped list to their next startups. “At Retool we have a shipped email list. If you ship something, you'll always send to that,” mentioned then-Head of Product (and Stripe alum) Eeke de Milliano in a podcast.

Having a developer blog to announce new features and updates is modus operandi in the software world. But it’s far too easy for those blogs to become formulaic, one more task to check off that few will notice let alone read.

Launches—even the smallest of them—should instead be a chance to share you story. And perhaps, if they’re an email addressed to your team and followers, written right when the update just got pushed to main, when the excitement and challenges are still top of mind, they’ll be interesting enough to get people as excited about what you built as you are.

You might not need a dev blog at all. A shipped list might be all your developer team needs.

What customers say about Buttondown

I made the transition from MailerLite and I have no regrets. I also like that Buttondown focuses on the essentials by design and keeps me grounded and centered on what really matters.
Arthur Cendrier
Author, Thoughtful Inquiry
Overall, Buttondown has been terrific to work with and I recommend them for anybody who's thinking of starting a newsletter or moving over like I did.
Andy Magnusson
Customer Engineering Leader
Wanna know how good Buttondown as a product experience is? I upgraded to Basic before sending the first email, and then upgraded again two days later.
Zak El Fassi
Founder, Zaigood Labs
Mailchimp lost me due to their inferior product and the nightmarish merry-go-around experience with their overseas support team. Buttondown won me over with their superior product and second to none customer service.
Sav Tripodi
CEO, Sanico Software
Your support is amazing and I deeply appreciate how available and helpful you are. I LOVE being able to turn tracking pixels off. I didn't even realize this was an option when I signed up and am SO HAPPY to not track people.
Andrea Mignolo
Method & Matter
I'm also impressed with how responsive you are, and how you directly answer customers. Makes it really clear that signing up for your service was a good decision.
Nicole Tietz-Sokolskaya
Software engineer and writer
Very happy with Buttondown, works smoothly, it's very configurable and I love the minimalist design of the UI. It makes me focus on my writing. Plus, I'm super happy to support independent software and I should mention - the support I receive whenever I have a question is warm and quick :)
Martina Pugliese
Data scientist and storyteller
I just tested the RSS to Email feature for one of my blogs and it was incredibly easy to set up. It took me about 30 mins to figure out the same feature in Mailchimp.
Nicolas Bernadowitsch
Blogger
This long weekend I fulfilled a long-standing promise to myself to switch my RSS-to-email provider from Mailchimp to Buttondown, and it’s been such a great experience. It’s cheaper, more flexible, less cluttered, and it’s run by Justin Duke who is just delightful and answered a bunch of my questions over the weekend (even though I asked him to please not!).
Rian van der Merwe
Director of Product at PagerDuty
I've been wrangling half a dozen tools to get my stuff up and running recently, almost all of which had some hiccup. Buttondown had zero. It did everything I expected and needed the first time.
Catherine Cusick
Self-Employed FAQ
I, like almost everyone else I've seen talk about Buttondown, am IMMENSELY happy and impressed with your customer service. It turns out we can have nice things, which is really refreshing.
Ed Yong
Staff writer, The Atlantic
Email makes the world go ‘round, and Buttondown is how I manage it all for my keyboard projects.
Tim van Damme
Founder, MVKB
It's a truth, that should be more universally acknowledged, that Buttondown is the best newsletter software. Simple, does exactly what it sets out to do, and reasonably priced.
Noel Welsh
Founder, Inner Product
Buttondown is the perfect fit for my headless newsletter use case. And I contacted support with some specific requests and Justin responded within 30 minutes with great answers and a nice pinch of charm.
Sam Roberts
Software engineer, Tamr
Hands down the easiest way to run a newsletter - and the free version is generous!
Javeed Khatree
SEO expert
With API and Markdown support, you can build workflows that make it so easy to write.
Westley Winks
Peace Corps
I’ve never enjoyed writing newsletters as much as I do with Buttondown.
Kevin Lewis
You Got This!
Buttondown remains the easiest thing I use regularly, and I am grateful for that.
Casey
Journalist
It's a humble app doing a common job but with end users in mind.
Si Jobling
Engineering Manager
Buttondown has been an amazing experience for me. The service is constantly being improved and customer service is the best. My newsletter with Buttondown has grown from a fairly small list to over 15,000 subscribers, and it hasn't broken a sweat yet.
Cassidy Williams
CTO, Contenda
I switched over to Buttondown from Mailchimp because of the difficulty I had with Mailchimp's campaigns, so Buttondown's easy and user-friendly system has been a genuine breath of fresh air.
Jessi Eoin
Illustrator + Comic Artist
You’ve truly built a great product that I feel good about using (vs a monopoly from our tech overlords).
Rachel
2030 Camp
I love how personal Buttondown feels, especially compared to Mailchimp, Convertkit, and services like that.
Simen Strøm Braaten
Designer
This product has been exactly what I’ve needed!
Nathan Bird
Podcast host, Chattanooga Civics
It's already so refreshing compared to the mega companies.
Casey Watts
Author, Debugging Your Brain
Definitely will be using for the foreseeable future. It’s a great service and I feel well cared for. Thank you!
Phoebe Sinclair
Author
I’m a sucker for elegant UI and I really love your site, but above that I think your product has so much value for so many different people. I’m not a coder, I’m only familiar with the bare basics, but I was able to figure out and utilise Buttondown quickly.
Claudia Nathan
Founder, The Repository
The killer feature for me: Buttondown will take an RSS feed then automatically slurp up the content (in their words) and then send it to our subscribers. Job done. They seem like a good company too, so I’d say this is a winner.
Andy Bell
Founder, Set Studio
As a recent user of Buttondown, they are super on the ball. A week ago I discovered a security vulnerability and reported it on Friday afternoon. They acknowledged and fixed it in under two hours. On a Friday night! Talk about going above and beyond for your users!
Predrag Gruevski
Principal Engineer, Kensho
Well may I just say your support experience is already approximately 1 billion times better than ConvertKit. Excited to be switching!
Michael J. Metts
Author, Writing is Designing
Privacy focused sending and sign up form; lets me focus on writing - editor is "just" markdown; simple, elegant design template looks like a blog post; the founder is amazing - he's helped with every question I've had, even outside of Buttondown.
Joe Masilotti
Founder, RailsDevs
We need more nice and professional services like yours on the web.
Tobias Horvath
Designer and developer
No one is paying me to say this, but I love @buttondown so far for my lil newsletter. It’s so smart, simple, and attractive (and to my knowledge, not actively anti-trans!). Customer service is also legitimately excellent.
Julie Kliegman
Copy chief, Sports Illustrated
I love it! It lets me breathe, not compete as I write with other writers.
Devin Kate Pope
Writer and editor
It’s a pleasure working with you. Thank you! (And what a contrast with Mailchimp, where I spent two weeks and a dozen of emails trying find out why our form goes down sometimes (only sometimes), and never really got a real answer.)
Anton Sotkov
Software Engineer, IA
Buttondown exemplifies how I wish most software worked, and I hope to achieve a similar thing with the software I develop in the future.
Matt Favero
Software engineer
It feels incomparably good to be able to email just like a guy named Justin when you have a @buttondown question 15 minutes before you’re about to blast a Geistlist email. (Not a guarantee but wow this guy is human-level good.)
Jacob Ford
Designer About Town
Enter Buttondown, Justin Duke’s lovely little newsletter tool. It’s small, elegant, and integrates well. And it is also eminently affordable.
Will Buckingham
Author
Your settings page is a joy to use and everything about Buttondown makes me happy.
Gareth Jelley
Magazine editor
have been on Buttondown for ~18 months and I can't recommend it enough.
Elizabeth Minkel
Podcast host
You really do make ALL other customer service look terrible by comparison.
Chris Mead
Improv teacher
There is a caring person on the other side of this software, which is one of the things I like the most about Buttondown.
Keith Calder
Film & TV Producer
I’d also like to add that @buttondown is an absolute joy to use. Hats off, Justin!
Elliot Jay Stocks
Creative Director, Google Fonts
Shoutout to @buttondown and @jmduke for building an amazing bootstrapped product for newsletters, all while being very open to feedback and connecting directly with customers 🙏 Easily one of the most enjoyable product experiences I've had.
Den Delimarsky
Head of Ecosystem, Netlify
if you are looking for "newsletter tool for hackers" i tentatively believe the answer is @buttondown full api, compose in markdown, good docs for setting up domain auth, simple subscribe form HTML that you style yourself (or not)
Brian David Hall
Author, Your Website Sucks
I really like @buttondown as a blogging platform, it has the simplicity of Substack but the corporate culture is less toxic.
Chad Loder
Extremism researcher
I worked with @buttondown and asked for some new payment support beyond the supporter single tier / pay-what-you-want options. Justin was great and built it in just a couple days.
Dan Hon
Author & consultant
I write nonfiction and I use @buttondown buttondown.email/Changeset - indie, GREAT personal customer support, very nice default styling, all the options I want including ones to protect my readers' privacy
Sumana Harihareswara
Open source maintainer
I use @buttondown because it does exactly what I need (manage subscribers and send markdown emails), not more and not less 👍 As a bonus it's made by an indie dev which I love!
Max Stober
Founder, GraphCDN
If you’re considering running an email newsletter, or if you already run one and are considering a change of provider, I highly recommend @buttondownemail. Super-easy app, very fair pricing with a generous free tier, and exemplary support. 💯
Peter Gasston
Technologist and speaker
imo @buttondown is easily one of the best-designed services i’ve used in recent years, if you have a substack you should really consider switching!
Kabir Goel
Engineer, Cal
Thanks for getting me excited about email newsletters again.
Garrick van Buren
I'm very thrilled that I can just write in Markdown without having to deal with email builders and all that crap.
Parham Doustdar
Thanks again for all the help! You’ve really turned something super complex into something super easy – sending new issues is as simple as firing off a text message.
Kartik Chaturvedi
Thanks for creating a simple way for people who want to, like, put words in a hole and have it sent to people... I am just thankful that something just nice and human exists on the internet.
Emmanuel Quartey
I tried 3 other newsletter services today and I felt like wanting to rip my hair out. They were all painfully slow. I'm so glad I found Buttondown.
Mohamed Elbadwihi
I’ve found Buttondown to be a great fit for my workflow and have been delighted by all of Justin’s thoughtful features and improvements to the product.
Michael Lee
Like seriously, so many lovely little easter eggs in one could-be-boring service.
Alexandra Muck
I just switched over from Tinyletter and I'm really excited to have found a place to host my tiny newsletter that doesn't seem like it's assuming everyone sending newsletters is an email marketer / growth hacker.
Tessa Alexanian
I'm in love with the simplicity of Buttondown.
Ekfan
I’ve used similar tools in the past and Buttondown is by far the simplest to use and most promising.
Fabrizio Rinaldi
Thank you for creating such a simple and brilliant tool. I’ve just signed up and the experience has been smooth and painless (the docs are great too!)
Oliver Holms
As a developer who has hated every email system I've ever used this is so nice.
Drew Hornbein
I wish I still wrote a newsletter just so I could use buttondown again. It’s like that.
Steven Kornweiss
No credit card required. Only pay for what you use. Cancel anytime.