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What To Do If Your Substack Set-Up Isn’t Working

Substack can be confusing, but I’m here to help

4 min readOct 3, 2025

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This post is for anyone who’s trying to set up a Substack publication and found they can’t get their publication name or description to work correctly, or the result just looks wrong.

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Image: Freepik

Hey I’m Karen and I’m here to guide you through the maze of Substack. I’ve been on the platform for 4 years, published more than 900 posts, made over $100K 😮 and I still find it confusing sometimes!

If you’ve just set up a new publication, or you’re trying to set up a new publication, you might have discovered the publication (a newsletter + website) looks exactly like your personal profile.

… you might be wondering “What gives?”

Reminder: Substack has a ‘personal’ universe where you can post Notes, read newsletters and collect followers, and a ‘publication’ universe where you can run a newsletter and publish posts that are sent to your subscribers’ inboxes.

If your publication isn’t working and doesn’t look like other Substack websites, don’t worry, it’s not your fault!

The problem is a default setting for new users that syncs your publication name to your personal profile name and won’t let you change it. This makes it impossible to distinguish between personal posts and publication posts. And makes it impossible to have a ‘normal’ looking publication webpage.

The default setting is called ‘Match profile’.

The solution

The way to fix the problem is to deactivate the ‘Match profile’ setting for your publication.

After you’ve done this, you will be able to have a publication that looks and works like other Substack publications, with its own name, description, website and logo — something that is different to, and well-separated from, your personal profile.

To deactivate ‘Match profile’, follow the steps below.

  1. Go to your publication dashboard. To get to your dashboard, look for a button that says ‘Dashboard’ somewhere on your screen while logged into Substack. Or go to https://substack.com/settings and look for the ‘Dashboard’ menu item. 💡 Hint: If there’s no dashboard option, you may not have a publication at all
  2. Once inside the dashboard, find ‘Settings’ near the bottom left corner of the screen. Click ‘Settings’.
  3. In Settings, scroll to ‘Website’.
  4. In ‘Website’, find the button labelled ‘Match Profile’. Click this button to see a two-option dropdown list. 💡 Hint: If you don’t see ‘Match profile’ then the setting is not active in your publication
  5. Deselect ‘Match profile’ by clicking ‘Custom theme’.
  6. ‘Custom theme’ is now activated and you will be able to edit the name and description of your publication and upload a logo.

Navigation path

Publication dashboard > Settings > Website > Match profile [button + dropdown arrow] > [deselect ‘Match profile’] > Select ‘Custom theme’

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How to switch off the default ‘Match profile’ setting and get a normal-looking Substack newsletter

Important: If you already have a publication website that looks different from your personal profile, don’t switch from ‘Custom theme’ to ‘Match profile’: you could lose all your website customizations in a single click!

Summary

If you’re new to Substack and confused about why your publication (=newsletter + website) doesn’t seem to exist or looks exactly like your personal profile or seems to redirect visitors to your personal profile…

… Or if you’re new to Substack and you thought you’d written a newsletter post but it just ended up looking like something in Notes…

… then the reason is probably a publication setting called ‘Match profile’.

Fix the setting from the ‘Website’ part of the ‘Settings’ part of your publication dashboard.

Warning

Substack user-interfaces, settings and back-end systems are in a constant state of flux. That means this post could be completely out of date by the time you read it. If in doubt, ask the chatbot to assist, and let me know if this post needs updating.

Get more help

Substack’s automated help system is genuinely helpful (if you can find it). It’s a chatbot, but it’s pretty good.

Access the help bot from the bottom left of the publication dashboard page, inside a menu item called ‘🗨 Help’. Click that menu item to open the chatbot conversation pop-up.

Or get help from me, a real human with thousands of hours of experience on Subtack and hundreds of happy clients.

I can give you a personalized Substack tutorial, guide you through your dashboard, help you optimize your settings and get you set up right. Or, if you’re already set up and confident, I’ll give you a backstage tour of my $26K dashboard and strategies for swiping — your choice.

Get 60 minutes of my undivided, honest attention here: Substack Strategy Session (60 min) | Zoom Call with Karen

Get help from Karen

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This post was originally published at Pubstack Success on Substack. Subscribe to get one no-nonsense Substack tip each week.

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Karen Cherry
Karen Cherry

Written by Karen Cherry

Substack writer. Secret tree hugger. Aussie business owner with >$20K revenue on Substack. Refusing to dumb it down.

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