•° Transformed 560+ Brands & Businesses
•° Let Your product Be The Top selling
•° Social Media Manager
•° Generate More Revenue
•° AI/Tech SaaS Business Growth
Exactly 👍 that’s probably the biggest difference between Reddit and most platforms.
On X or LinkedIn, polished positioning can carry a lot.
On Reddit, usefulness usually beats branding.
People care more about:
• whether you understand the problem
• whether your insight is real
• and whether your product genuinely fits the conversation
That’s why a lot of technically strong builders actually do well there once they learn the culture side of it.
The tricky part is Reddit punishes “marketing energy” very fast, even when the product is good. So the win usually comes from blending into the conversation first and letting curiosity pull people toward the product naturally.
Good morning everyone 👋 and @X algorithm,
I’m looking to connect with people working in:
🎨 Frontend
💼 Backend
✨ Full Stack
🧑💻 DevOps
🧠 AI / ML
🧱 Web3
📊 Data Science
🧩 UI/UX
📱 Mobile Development
🔐 Cybersecurity
If you’re building in any of these areas, let’s connect and share ideas.
#BuildInPublic #LetsConnect #connect #sales #design #code #marketing #requestforfeedback #milestone #launch
Yeah, and honestly, for a tool like this Reddit could actually be a much better fit than cold DMs if it’s approached correctly.
The mistake most people make is trying to “announce the tool” instead of entering conversations where the pain already exists.
For ClickToGuide, I’d look less at generic startup subs and more at places where people are already talking about:
• onboarding documentation
• SOP creation
• client handoff processes
• support workflows
• VA/team training
• and “how do you document this process?” type discussions
That angle usually performs way better because your tool becomes the solution inside an existing problem.
Communities around productivity, no code, customer support, operations, SaaS workflows, and even freelancer/process related discussions can work surprisingly well when positioned naturally.
And one big thing on Reddit:
comments usually outperform posts early on.
A helpful comment in the right thread can drive more interest than 10 standalone promo posts.
Nice 👍 that’s a good starting point.
Reddit can work really well for tools like BuildAI, but only when you stop treating it like a broadcast channel.
What usually makes the difference is:
• showing up in AI / no-code / builder discussions where people are already comparing tools
• answering real questions before ever mentioning your product
• and only introducing BuildAI when it directly fits the problem being discussed
If you do it that way, it feels like a recommendation instead of a promotion and that’s what actually gets traction there.
Yeah, that’s a common blocker on Reddit 👍
Karma isn’t something you “force,” it builds from small, consistent activity in low-pressure subs first.
What usually works better is:
• commenting early on rising posts (not old threads)
• adding simple but useful input (no links at the start)
• sticking to non-promotional subs first (memes, ask-type communities, hobbies, etc.)
• avoiding any hint of self-promo until you’ve built baseline trust
Once you get that momentum, commenting in more relevant founder/dev subs becomes much easier and stops getting filtered as often.
Most people skip this stage and that’s exactly why they get stuck.
Yeah, that’s usually the right mindset 👍
Reddit tends to reward people who participate naturally and punish anything that feels like distribution-first.
Especially for a product like yours, I’d lean more into:
• dev workflow discussions
• AI coding / agent conversations
• markdown tooling frustrations
• and “how are teams handling prompts/spec files?” type threads
That angle will usually perform much better than direct product posts because the pain already exists in the conversation.
@ClipMidasAI@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@X_Naufil@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@BuddyXTheme@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@IamYashKapoor@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@itsmoni_02@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@iisanidhya@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@marceguerra@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@josef_taticek@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@NehaPawar_1@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@sharmajikaputr@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@juan_allo@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@JavierForge@X Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@mateusmmalencar@X@ProductHunt Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.
@Miracleharbor@X@AvariAi_1 Out of curiosity, are you using Reddit as part of your distribution strategy for reaching early users and builders?
I’ve seen a lot of builder-focused products gain strong traction there when they’re placed in the right communities and conversations.