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The Reddit Marketer
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The Reddit Marketer
@RedditMarketer
Sharing the playbook on how to hack Reddit to drive traffic to your product, join the right conversations, and rank #1 on search
learn reddit marketing → 가입일 Nisan 2025
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Imagine you had access to a platform where thousands of people actively search for YOUR product every day....
And that's exactly what Reddit is.
Want to figure out how to take advantage of this to drive inbound leads for your SaaS?
Schedule a 15-min call here:
cal.com/team/redrover/…
English

3 viral posts frameworks we use for our clients to generate dozens of inbound leads/mo:
(for B2C software companies)
#1: The "Accidental Discovery" Format
Title: "Accidentally found a productivity hack while procrastinating on Reddit (no joke)"
I was avoiding work by browsing r/productivity (ironic, I know) when I saw someone mention the "2-minute rule."
Instead of adding another app to my phone, I just started using my phone's built-in timer differently:
- Set 2 minutes for ANY task I was avoiding
- If I finished early, I could stop OR keep going
- If I didn't finish, at least I started
Sounds stupid simple, but it's been 3 weeks and I've:
- Finally organized my email (been putting it off for months)
- Started that side project I kept talking about
- Actually cleaned my apartment regularly
The weird part? I keep going past 2 minutes because starting was the only real barrier.
Anyone else found surprisingly simple solutions that actually stuck?
#2: The "Contrarian Take" Format
Example:
Title: "Unpopular opinion: Productivity apps are making us less productive"
Hear me out before you roast me.
I spent 2 years obsessing over the "perfect" productivity system:
- Tried 15+ apps (Notion, Todoist, TickTick, you name it)
- Spent hours setting up templates and workflows
- Watched YouTube videos about "optimization"
- Joined productivity communities and Discord servers
Result?
I became productive at... being productive. Not at actually getting work done.
The truth: Most productivity apps solve problems we didn't have:
- We don't need 47 different task categories
- Color-coding everything doesn't make it more important
- Automated workflows often break and need maintenance
- We spend more time in the app than doing the actual work What actually works:
- One simple list (I use Apple Notes)
- Do the hardest thing first
- Time-box everything
- Accept that some days suck
I'm not anti-technology.
But maybe we've overcomplicated something that humans figured out with pen and paper decades ago.
Ready for the hate comments 😅
#3: The "Behind the Scenes" Format
Title: "What 3 years of building a productivity app taught me about how people actually work" Been building a simple time-tracking app and talking to 200+ users. Some patterns blew my mind: Things I expected:
❌ People want complex features
❌ Integration with 10+ other apps matters
❌ Beautiful UI is the priority
❌ Power users drive adoption
What actually happens:
✅ Simple features used daily beat complex features used never
✅ People prefer 1 app that works vs. 5 connected apps that break
✅ Fast loading beats pretty design every time
✅ Casual users drive word-of-mouth more than power users
Biggest surprise: 67% of our most engaged users only use 2 features. The rest is just noise.
Most humbling: 40% of users found us through Reddit recommendations, not our marketing.
Lesson learned: Build for how people actually behave, not how you think they should behave.
Fellow makers: What surprised you most about your users?
-----
This is how to use it for yourself:
1) Copy & paste the exact post and have Claude/GPT write it for your product.
2) Then find subreddits for your niche
3) Post it
English

SaaS Founders:
We'll help you find subreddits in YOUR niche, write 2-5 organic posts/week and consistently drive inbound leads to your SaaS.
Schedule a 15-min call here for a custom walkthrough:
cal.com/team/redrover/…
English

Imagine you had access to a platform where thousands of people actively search for YOUR product every day....
And that's exactly what Reddit is.
Want to figure out how to take advantage of this to drive inbound leads for your SaaS?
Schedule a 15-min call here:
cal.com/team/redrover/…
English

Imagine you had access to a platform where thousands of people actively search for YOUR product every day....
And that's exactly what Reddit is.
Want to figure out how to take advantage of this to drive inbound leads for your SaaS?
Schedule a 15-min call here:
cal.com/team/redrover/…
English

SaaS Founders:
We'll help you find subreddits in YOUR niche, write 2-5 organic posts/week and consistently drive inbound leads to your SaaS.
Schedule a 15-min call here for a custom walkthrough:
cal.com/team/redrover/…
English

SaaS Founders:
We'll help you find subreddits in YOUR niche, write 2-5 organic posts/week and consistently drive inbound leads to your SaaS.
Schedule a 15-min call here for a custom walkthrough:
cal.com/team/redrover/…
English
The Reddit Marketer 리트윗함
The Reddit Marketer 리트윗함
