
Nashra
Turn followers into clients.
245 followers
Turn followers into clients.
245 followers
Your followers live on platforms you don't own. Nashra gives experts one home for everything: newsletter, blog, bio Hub, and landing pages, all on a single subscriber spine. Post on social, build here. Leave whenever, take everything. What's new in 2.0: AI landing page builder, an AI Strategist that lifts your open rates, full RTL (write in Arabic, Farsi, and more), SEO-optimized blogging, and white-glove migration. Free up to 500 subscribers.
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Nashra
Congrats on the launch! 🚀
I like the idea of bringing newsletters, blogs, landing pages, and lead magnets together instead of managing multiple disconnected tools.
I'm curious: if someone already has an audience on platforms like Mailchimp or Beehiiv, how smooth is the migration? Do subscribers, automations, and historical analytics transfer over as well?
Nashra
@prashant_patil14 Thanks, Prashant! 🙏 That's exactly why we built it.
Quick rundown on migration:
Subscribers — easy CSV import, with tags and custom fields preserved (your list stays yours, always exportable).
Automations — rebuilt in Nashra, but most can be recreated in minutes.
Historical analytics — stay on your previous platform; Nashra starts fresh from your first send.
If you're on a paid plan, we also handle the full migration for you at no extra cost—just point us to your setup and we’ll move everything over (posts, subscribers, segments, tags, automations, etc.).
We’re engineers at core, so we’ve focused heavily on making this process clean, and painless.
Nashra
@prashant_patil14 Hey, so here's what we tryna do. The point is they're not three tools stitched together. It's one subscriber spine, so a follower who reads your blog, joins your newsletter, and lands on your course page is the same tracked person the whole way. That's what turns a follower into a client. Most setups lose that thread across Linktree, Mailchimp, and your site..
Laravel + Stripe, nice combo. How are you handling deliverability when people migrate their sending domain? Warmup on your side, or shared pool to start? That's usually the tricky part...
Nashra
@benjouss Good question, and since you clearly know this space I'll actually get into it. 🙂
We start everyone on Mailgun's shared pool (but we have a plan to migrate to AWS soon). For the volumes most creators and solopreneurs send at, a well-maintained shared pool with clean auth.
The part we really sweat is authentication. Before a custom domain can send a single campaign, DKIM, SPF, and DMARC all have to verify through Mailgun first, so nothing ever goes out unauthenticated. Until it's verified, we just route through our shared sending domain.
On top of that we watch reputation constantly. Bounce and complaint rates get tracked on a rolling 30-day window plus a burst check so sends, and if things start going sideways sending pauses automatically and the sender gets a heads-up before any real damage is done.
For people sending at serious scale, enterprise plans or as an add-on, we do offer a dedicated IP with a proper warmup ramp, so volume builds up gradually and the IP earns its reputation instead of getting throttled on day one.
So shared pool plus strict auth plus reputation circuit-breakers for most folks, dedicated IP with warmup for the heavy hitters. Happy to dig into any of it, always fun to talk shop with someone who's been through it. 🙂
@saleem_hadad Appreciate the detailed breakdown 🙂 the circuit-breaker on reputation is smart, most platforms wait until damage is done before pausing. One last question, when you flag a sender and pause, is it fully automatic or does someone on your side review before resuming?
Nashra
@benjouss Yeah I remember that phase. I think we just started slowly with Mailgun and built up that sending reputation.
Also, we built 2 or 3 tools to help with spam. For example when people import their .csv lists we scan it for spam. Which is also important since you don't want to charge someone for say 3,000 audience list when in actuality they only have say 1,000 subsribers.
@saleem_hadad can share more..
@saleem_hadad @moalhakeem That CSV scanning approach is clever. Billing on actual valid contacts rather than raw imports is the kind of thing users really appreciate.
While exploring Nashra, I noticed the platform seems to put a lot of emphasis on audience understanding and publishing decisions, rather than simply helping creators produce more content. Did that come from a belief that the real challenge is knowing what should be published next and why?
Nashra
@razan6 Thoughtful read, thank you.
I'd reframe it slightly, though. It's less "analytics over output" and more calm over clutter. Most tools add noise, and noise is what actually stops creators from publishing. So we surface only what matters, so your energy goes into writing.
Underneath it all is one idea: every page exists to move a reader through discover → subscribe → return. Understanding your audience matters, but only in service of that relationship, not producing more for its own sake.
Appreciate you thinking this deeply about it! 🫡
Nashra
@razan6 We try to see patterns. that's the only way to learn actually. Through our own audience feedback. Usually dashboards are useless. So we introduced the AI agent.
I use it a lot to come up with ideas for my posts, youtube vids and podcast ...etc.
Mailwarm
How stress free is migration from something like WordPress and Mailchimp, do you import posts and lists cleanly?
Nashra
Hey, @thamibenjelloun
Subscribers list: easy .csv import within the app
Posts: at the moment we handle it on your behalf using our internal tools.
We're actually debating wether to provide the tools for the users so they self-migrate or we do it for them, concierge service style. What do you think?
The "take everything when you leave" line, how far does that actually go? A CSV of emails is easy. But the valuable bit is the journey: who read what, when, across blog and newsletter. Does that come with me, or do I just walk off with a flat email list?
Nashra
@angelika_dev that’s actually a great point. Will make sure to add features supporting this asap.
I’m thinking a smart export function through the AI strategist. So it creates the file u want in real time.
The 'AI Strategist' feature for enhancing open rates caught my eye immediately. As a marketer, I'm curious... does it analyze historical list data to suggest optimal send times, or is it primarily focused on scoring and generating subject line A/B variations?
Nashra
Hi, @min_minn1 We have everything you mentioned above.
But the AI strategist is more into answering questions like:
What to write about next? actually in the new update it proactively suggests without you even asking. and it will outline your posts for you, but never write on your behalf.
It sees patterns through your actual data: open rates, a/b tests data, blog analytics and so on.
We simply connect to Claude. Always the best model available.
Right now we're researching similar use cases within the CRM. The goal is followers to clients.