I help startups grow on Reddit to rank on Google and ChatGPT. See why we're #1 when it comes to led generated on Reddit.

Joined August 2022
196 Photos and videos
why do brands spend thousands on focus groups when reddit exists? people on reddit will literally tell you: what they hate what they love what they'd pay for what made them switch competitors for free.
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our client closed $842,000 in sales from reddit. the funny part? their most successful post had zero links. just genuine advice. sometimes the best marketing doesn't look like marketing.
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one of the smartest things a brand can do is search their company name on reddit. you'll probably find: • complaints your support team never heard • objections stopping people from buying • features customers actually want it's uncomfortable. but it's also incredibly valuable.
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hot take: some brands spend more time creating customer personas than actually reading what their customers are saying on reddit. meanwhile, their audience is openly discussing: • why they bought • why they didn't buy • what competitors they're considering • what they wish existed reddit might be the most underutilized market research tool on the internet.
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if you're marketing on reddit, follow the 80/20 rule:
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people join subreddits to solve problems. not to be sold to.
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the brands that understand this generate the best long-term results.
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hot take: some brands spend more time creating customer personas than actually reading what their customers are saying on reddit. meanwhile, their audience is openly discussing: • why they bought • why they didn't buy • what competitors they're considering • what they wish existed reddit might be the most underutilized market research tool on the internet.
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our client spent $18,000/month on paid ads. then started taking reddit seriously. 12 months later: reddit had generated over $670,000 in revenue. with no ad spend.
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The #1 MISTAKE a lot of BRANDS make on Reddit is acting as "BRANDS" not as HUMANS! Reddit is run by humans with strong personalities and perspectives. Brands often come in acting as "brands," and quickly get called out. Your brand should FEEL, SOUND, AND BEHAVE as any distinct human would If your brand doesn't already have a strong identity, GIVE IT ONE before jumping into discussions. You can do this by: 👇🏾 - Commenting as a single user, with a nameless account ,not a brand. Even if your logo appears on your profile, answer to questions like an human. And for the name, if your brand is "opusbrein" , name your reddit account " opusbrein_353256" instead. - Use the pronoun 'I' not "us". The moment you mention "we "or "us", people will stop reading! - Show up eating, working, living be to serious. Let people see the HUMAN behind the role. -If you want to make a post from your brand account, contact mods of that sub for permission first - it might save your account from trouble. you could be terrorized by mods, shamed by users (they will literally slay you for any misspelled word), and most likely be banned/shadowbanned soon enough
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We tripled our Reddit marketing agency MRR in a month using: -> An incresible offer (page 1 rankings guaranteed) X Reddit Parasite Syndication Cold email free tools as lead magnets.. Now were going to eclipse client MRR with pure affiliate rev. 📈😤
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The internet accidentally built a new kind of moat. Not code. Not distribution. Not even brand. Consensus. The companies winning AI search right now aren’t the ones with the biggest ad budgets. They’re the ones that kept showing up naturally across: → Reddit threads → niche forums → comparison posts → random conversations nobody was paid to have They didn’t game an algorithm. Enough strangers independently arrived at the same conclusion: “yeah, this one’s actually good.” That verdict used to stay buried in a comment from 2022. Now AI reads all of it, weighs it, and repeats it to every buyer asking for a recommendation. Consensus was always the moat. AI just made it searchable.
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Sold my previous project. But before that, I nearly killed it trying to market it. Organic Reddit marketing = hours of manual scrolling, copy-pasting, hoping you find the right thread in time. Everyone talks about "build in public" but nobody talks about how hard distribution actually is. Building is easy. Getting people to find you? That's the real work. So I built Redgrow, a Reddit organic marketing tool that does the scanning for you, so you can focus on genuine conversations that convert. This is what I wish I had from day one.
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You're not selling your product on Reddit because THE PRODUCT IS BAD. You're failing because your posts DON'T FEEL CREDIBLE. Here's the thing about Reddit that most founders/marketers miss: CREDIBILITY AND VULNERABILITY GO hand in hand. So next time you post, admit a FLAW. Talk about something you're still working on. Share a limitation your product has right now. That's exactly how it works. When you're honest about the bad, people ACTUALLY BELIEVE YOU ABOUT THE GOOD. And that's when viewers start turning into real users and customers.
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Reddit comments are the heaviest drag on our agency infrastructure.. They divert our core focus offering which is guaranteed page 1 Google rankings BUT Many of you continue to ask for them because: - Comments are proven to influence LLM citations and AI Overviews - Great for inserting your brand onto existing popular external threads - Increasing general exposure on Reddit So were warming up accounts specifically for dedicated comment service packages. 🤝
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Reddit as a marketing channel took me 15 minutes to properly test yesterday. Not 15 minutes to do it well, 15 minutes to realise why I cut it from Findable v1 lol The noise-to-signal ratio for early SaaS is brutal unless you already have traction there. The right channel at the wrong time is still the wrong channel.
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