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Showing posts from August, 2025

How to Find High-Quality Leads on Reddit with Subreddit Signals

If you’re a founder or marketer, you already know that Reddit is one of the most underrated platforms for lead generation . Unlike Twitter or LinkedIn, where ads are expected and conversations are often shallow, Reddit is where buyers go for real research, unfiltered opinions, and product recommendations . But here’s the problem: Reddit has thousands of active subreddits. Threads move fast and are buried within hours. If you miss the right conversation, you miss the lead. That’s where Subreddit Signals comes in. Why Reddit is a Goldmine for B2B and SaaS Lead Generation Before we dive into the tool, let’s zoom out. Reddit users aren’t browsing for entertainment alone—they’re: Asking real purchasing questions (“What’s the best SaaS tool for lead gen?”). Comparing products head-to-head . Trusting community recommendations more than ads. A single authentic comment in the right thread can drive: Direct sales (users click and buy). Organic SEO boosts (...

Before It Peaks: Rank in Google & AI Overviews with Rising Reddit Threads (Playbook + Templates)

TL;DR Use a Rising Thread Score (RTS) to find posts before they explode. Ship a “SERP-first” Reddit post + cross-comment pattern within 24–48h. Target intent-rich subreddits and answer gaps AI/Google love to surface. Track view/day velocity , keyword coverage , and comment saves as leading indicators. Why this works (and why now) Google and AI Overviews surface Reddit because: Fresh, specific answers → high intent satisfaction Community validation (upvotes, saves, comments) → quality + authority signals Structured titles and summaries → easy snippet extraction Your top posts consistently win when they combine Reddit SEO with trend detection . This playbook fuses both. The Rising Thread Score (RTS) Score threads 0–10 before you commit. Aim for ≥7 . Signals Velocity (0–4) – New comments in last 90 min (4 = 15+), upvote rate vs age, OP replies. Gap Fit (0–3) – Clear unanswered angle you can fill (framework, data, checklist). Search Intent (0–3) – ...

Why 80% of Founders Fail at Reddit Marketing — And How to Be in the 20%

  Reddit can be a goldmine for founders. It’s full of high-intent communities where people are literally asking for solutions to their problems. So why do 80% of founders who try Reddit marketing crash and burn ? Because they treat it like every other social platform. In this post, I’ll break down: The three biggest mistakes founders make on Reddit How to avoid them The simple framework that’s gotten me paying customers without getting banned Mistake #1 — Pitching Too Early Most founders join Reddit, find a relevant subreddit, and immediately drop a link to their product. Here’s the problem: Reddit’s culture is anti-promo . If you come in cold and pitch, you’re not just ignored — you get flagged, banned, or downvoted into oblivion. How to be in the 20%: Spend your first week in a subreddit just engaging (commenting, upvoting, asking questions) Earn karma and recognition before you share anything about your product Treat your first product mention li...

The 3 Reddit Posts That Brought Me 40 Paying Customers (Without Ads)

  If you think you need to spend money on ads to get paying customers from Reddit, think again. In this post, I’ll walk you through three real Reddit posts that together brought in 40 paying customers — without spending a single dollar on promotion. I’ll break down: The exact post format I used Why it resonated with the community How you can replicate it without getting banned Post #1 — The Transparent Build-in-Public Update Subreddit: r/SaaS Post Type: Build-in-public progress report Results: 16 paying customers in 7 days I posted an honest, screenshot-heavy update on my SaaS journey — including my mistakes, failed experiments, and small wins. Instead of selling, I simply shared my numbers, what I learned that week, and where I was stuck. Why it worked: Transparency builds trust fast Screenshots and metrics made it real I answered every comment (doubling post visibility) How to replicate: Share specific results (MRR, user count, or traffic) ...

The 5 Reddit Comments That Turned Into $500+ in Sales (Real Examples)

At Subreddit Signals, we live and breathe Reddit. But sometimes, even we’re surprised at just how powerful a single well-placed comment can be. In this post, we’re breaking down 5 real Reddit comments that each led to $500 or more in sales —and what you can learn from them. These aren’t magic tricks or spammy links. Just smart, authentic contributions that hit the right audience at the right time. ๐Ÿ’ฌ 1. The Honest Answer in r/SaaS Subreddit: r/SaaS Context: A founder asked, “How do you find customers without paid ads?” Comment: "Honestly, we built our first 20 customers just by being active on Reddit. I’d search for threads where people complained about a problem we solved and just left a helpful comment—not even pitching at first." Eventually, I’d link to our tool in follow-ups if it made sense. Subtle always beats salesy. Why It Worked: It told a story . No links in the first reply. It built curiosity. The user ended up getting 11 DMs—3 converted, totaling $...

๐Ÿง  How to Find Customers on Reddit Without Getting Banned: A Guide for SaaS Founders

Reddit can be a goldmine for SaaS founders looking to connect with early users, get real feedback, and even convert lurkers into paying customers. But let’s be honest — Reddit is also one of the hardest platforms to promote on without getting roasted… or banned. So how do you tap into this massive traffic source without breaking the rules? This guide breaks down exactly how to find customers on Reddit for your SaaS without getting banned , and how tools like Subreddit Signals can make that process 10x easier. ⚠️ Why Reddit is Risky (But Worth It) Reddit isn’t like Twitter or LinkedIn. It’s built around tight-knit communities that despise self-promotion unless it’s done right. That’s also why it works: Reddit users are highly engaged and looking for real solutions . If you solve a problem, you win. But most SaaS founders fail because they: Don’t read subreddit rules Drop links like cold emails Don’t provide value first Underestimate how seriously mods take spa...

๐Ÿช™ The Hidden Goldmine in Reddit Comments:

  ๐Ÿ’ฅ Intro: The Best Leads Don’t Fill Out a Form By the time someone fills out your lead form, they’ve already Googled competitors, read reviews, and maybe even posted on Reddit. Now imagine if you could find those conversations in real-time , days or weeks before they convert. No forms. No ads. Just people talking. And buying. The goldmine isn’t in Reddit posts — it’s in the comments . ๐Ÿ‘€ What Makes Reddit Comments So Powerful? Comments are where people let their guard down. They share pain points: “Anyone else frustrated with how clunky Mailchimp has gotten?” They drop intent signals: “I’m looking for an alternative to Notion that’s more ADHD-friendly.” They ask for recommendations: “Has anyone tried XYZ CRM for solopreneurs?” These aren’t casual browsers. These are buyers in research mode . And unlike Google, they’re not just typing keywords — they’re starting conversations you can join. ๐Ÿงจ The Problem: You Can’t Search for Buyer Intent Reddit’s nativ...