
Kate Kendall’s startup newsletter The Fetch collects the best events, meetups, and conferences for technologists, creatives, and entrepreneurs. Right now, Quibb is invite-only, so ask around and keep an eye out for this useful content-sharing platform. In short, Quibb is a “ Reddit for professionals”, and its weekday digest, the Quibb Daily, provides a handy roundup of the top links from the people you follow. With initial membership limited to professionals in the tech and startup realm, Quibb will eventually expand to additional industries. Sandi MacPherson’s Quibb is a new engaging way to share what you read for work, with a follower model, focused newsfeed, and a commenting feature. Subscribe if you’re eager to hear what founders, hackers, marketers, and other interesting people have to say in a Startup Townhall of sorts every Tuesday. Ryan Hoover’s novel Startup Edition gathers folks in the startup community to drop some weekly knowledge by responding to a single question like “What’s the greatest startup hack you’ve seen?”.Īfter a short introduction to the topic of the week, the email dives right into links to contributors’ answers on their respective blogs. Subscribe if you’d like a quick dose of entrepreneurial mentorship every Thursday. This is a snack-sized, sometimes-themed startup newsletter, with a max of five links. 500startupsĬurated by LaunchBit’s Elizabeth Yin, the 500 Startups Newsletter is a roundup of the best blog posts by founders and mentors from 500 Startups, a startup accelerator program, and community. Subscribe if you want a mini-conference about tech and management held in your inbox every Friday, with a max of about 8 posts, to round out your workweek. Oren also provides a handy Trello board of newsletter issues, including the upcoming week’s edition-in-progress. SLW has some thoughtful bonuses for the busy reader, with time investment estimates and a 1-click “read later” integration with Pocket and Instapaper.
BEST TECH NEWSLETTERS 2017 SOFTWARE
Oren Ellenbogen’s Software Lead Weekly leans towards practical pieces and lessons learned on topics of culture, managing yourself and people, and entrepreneurship.

Subscribe if you want an intelligent, comprehensive startup newsletter, generally sent on Sundays or Mondays, to start your week off hip to the tech groove. TLN is like getting the best links in your in-the-know tech friends’ Twitter feeds all in one place. Kate Matsudaira and Kate Stull’s TLN is the gourmet grocery of newsletters, providing a luscious trove of links on subjects ranging from product to process to productivity, as well as skimmable commentary if you aren’t feeling click-happy. Subscribe to these startup newsletters not only to stay up-to-date but to help yourself, your teams, and your communities grow. The common thread running among these eight tech and startup newsletters is a sense of community and care, that these curators and creators want to share content that bestows value and connection. While we’re launching our own exciting newsletter here at I Done This, we wanted to highlight some of our favorites from the tech and startup world.*
