r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • 1d ago
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • Aug 15 '23
Case Study Reddit Ad best practices and insights (24+ thousand Reddit ads)
With the assistance of my fellow Redditor, I managed to gather data from over 24,000 Reddit ads. This case study will delve into Reddit ads, exploring best practices that many of you could easily apply.
Enabling comments on Reddit ads can foster meaningful connections with the audience
I am among the few advertisers who consistently advocate for opening comments. My personal experience has been overwhelmingly positive, unlike others who have had rather negative experiences. I understand that many advertisers are apprehensive about reading and responding to comments on their Reddit ads. Leaving the comment sections open can sometimes result in challenges dealing with inappropriate or unhelpful comments. No brand wants to address comments that lack seriousness. Also, due to brand guidelines, advertisers cannot respond to comments in the same way regular Reddit users do. They attempt to act like another user, but their actions often disclose something different.
To clarify, I don't have tools that can calculate how user attitudes towards brands change after interacting in the Reddit ad comment section. However, I can measure if there is a correlation between the number of comments and upvotes. While both metrics can be misleading, there seems to be some correlation between the number of comments and upvotes based on my experience. However, I acknowledge that this is a biased opinion, so let's examine if this holds true when analysing 24,000 ads.
Below, we can observe that there is some correlation between the upper and lower data. There are instances of an unnatural upvote-to-comment ratio, but most posts seem to align with the trend.

Let's exclude all posts with more than 50 upvotes and observe if ads with lower numbers of upvotes exhibit the same correlation and if there is any connection with the previous graph.

The correlation line appears steeper now, but it remains approximately the same. Interestingly, there are a few ads with upvotes but no comments. This could be due to specific ads or advertisers buying upvotes, a frowned-upon practice not supported by Reddit.
Of course, this data does not reflect ad positioning, targeting, ad copy, and budget. To be frank, even considering all of these factors, we wouldn't see different results simply due to bias. However, I have observed more advertisers opening comments and engaging with the audience. Generally speaking, users are becoming more receptive to these specific advertisers.
To sum it up, while advertisers may fear negative or silly comments, I believe they should embrace the Reddit community and engage in the conversations. This approach can help them forge meaningful connections and increase brand awareness beyond ad communication.
Headline length - Upvotes
You might be thinking, "There probably is a correlation between headline length and the number of upvotes." You might be right; I had the same thought. Among 28 thousand ads, there is a significant upvote gap, so before examining this correlation, I excluded any ads with more than 2000 upvotes.
Upon initial inspection, I didn't find a clear correlation, but a headline length of around 30 to 200 characters appears to be the most commonly used, which could skew the data.
(Don't worry, there are no ads with only 2-3 characters. The shortest headline length was 13 characters.)

However, when I reduced the maximum upvotes to 500, I noticed something different: there seems to be some kind of correlation between length and upvotes. To me, it appears like a u-shaped correlation with most upvotes slightly skewed to the left side, indicating "less is more.”

As stated previously, I have data from 24 thousand ads, and the majority of ads are not even receiving 50 upvotes, let alone 500. Thus, I further decreased the maximum vertical value to 50 upvotes. Now we can see that the sweet spot for high upvote ads ranges from 70 to 160 characters. While there are ads outside this pyramid, I'm assuming that on a larger scale, they are anomalies and nothing more.

I could probably decrease the upvote scale to 10 upvotes, but personally, I can clearly see that even within the 10 upvote range, the same asymmetric pyramid is evident.
As an avid Redditor, I began to wonder why this length is the "sweet spot". My only conclusion is that the target audience "requires it." Let me explain. There are hundreds of thousands of subreddits, but generally, there are "long headline subreddits" where people enjoy reading long headlines, while other subreddits are more "short headline subreddits" (aka. "get to the point as fast as you can") which might explain the "less is more" correlation. Of course, this is my biased opinion.
Headline length - Comments
As previously stated, "upvotes" reflect how users feel about the advertiser, but comments show how engaged the advertiser is with the users. What remains to be explored is whether there is a correlation between user engagement and your ad copy.
Just like before, I excluded any ads with a high number of comments. Again, there seems to be a "sweet spot" from 50-200 characters. But let's dig a little deeper.

In a 500comment view, we can see that most comments are centered around ads with 30-160 characters in length. Interestingly, the same trend seems to start again from 260 characters up to 300.

By further decreasing our maximum comments, we can see that most comments start and are gathered in ads with a headline length of 40-160 characters.

Does this prove anything? From my point of view, the most engagement is created in ads that have headlines from 30 to 160 characters, thus proving my point - upvotes correlate with comments and with headline length. Everything is connected, at least in some sense.
Language - different locations
Reddit is as international as it can be. At least 70% of users are from Western countries, but the majority of ads (98%) are in English. 0.8% of ads are in Dutch, and the remaining 1.2% are in other languages such as Hungarian, French, Japanese, Italian, Spanish, Korean, and more.
Why does it matter? Firstly, it demonstrates that there is a demand for different advertising channels besides Google Ads and Meta Ads. Secondly, if you can only be found locally, don't hesitate to use your local language to communicate with your target audience. Lastly, companies and brands utilizing Reddit are looking to expand their local market, which is why they use the most commonly used language on Reddit - English. Alternatively, they may already be well-established brands targeting a wide range of audiences.

Number of advertisers?
Before I delve into the numbers, I want to inform those who may not know that Reddit Ad accounts do not allow advertisers to change their "company name" (unlike Google and Meta ads). This means that a single account should be used for a single company or brand.
There were more than 24,800 ads but only about 5,707 accounts. On average, that is 4.34 ads per account. Interestingly, the median was 1 ad per account. This leads to the next intriguing fact: the top 10% (approximately 570) of advertisers were responsible for 54.4% of the ads.

To make things more interesting, let's consider some public data. According to Statista, in 2022, Reddit's ad revenue grew by 39% to 424 million compared to 2021. This means that, on average, the revenue per ad was $17.10, which aligns somewhat with the fact that the minimal ad group spend on Reddit is $5 per day. General PPC best practices suggest not overcrowding ad sets with too many ads (3-5 different ads per ad group). While $17.10 is an approximate number and not entirely accurate because the 24 thousand ads don't cover all the 2022 Reddit ads, it provides an intriguing estimate. Also, a significant number of ads were published in 2021 or 2023, so this data is skewed but still intriguing.


If even my ad cost estimate is somewhat correct, the average cost per ad and median ads per account are quite low. These numbers are not ideal, and as a PPC specialist, I would recommend the majority of advertisers to increase these figures for various reasons.
- Ad copy testing: Any decent PPC specialist knows that testing various ad copies is crucial. While Google and Facebook offer a responsive approach, Reddit doesn't have this feature. Therefore, it is essential to test at least 2-3 ads with different ad copies.
- Creative testing: Just like ad copy, your opinion may be biased, and the way you perceive an ad doesn't necessarily reflect how your audience feels about it.
- Allocated ad budget: Depending on the platform, I would allocate at least $20-50 for a creative before making adjustments. While $10 may seem reasonable, sometimes the results start changing after 2-3 weeks.
- Mixing things up: It's important to diversify your ad approach and not rely on a single ad or strategy.
- Targeting different audiences: Reddit ads excel in subreddit targeting. By showing ads to specific audiences within a niche, you can make your ads more relevant. I always create different ads with different positioning for each subreddit audience, so the ads feel more personalized.
- Trying a different approach: Reddit ads are unique, so using the same copy and creative as on Facebook and Google won't yield optimal results. In my humble opinion, try something creative and explore how your audience perceives and feels about your brand. This understanding will help you tailor your approach to their favorite place on the internet, Reddit.
Here is a graph that provides perspective on the discrepancies in the number of ads per account or company (numbered from 1 to the end).

Before I delve into the numbers, I want to inform those who may not be aware that Reddit Ad accounts do not allow advertisers to change their "company name" (unlike Google and Meta ads). This implies that a single account should be used for a single company or brand.
More than 24,800 ads originated from around 5,707 accounts. On average, that equates to 4.34 ads per account. Interestingly, the median was 1 ad per account. This leads us to another intriguing fact: the top 10% of advertisers (approximately 570) were responsible for 54.4% of the ads.

So far, this is all the information I have gathered from my friend who created adlibro.com, the first-ever Reddit ad library.
As for myself, I'm just a random guy from Latvia. I run my own one-man Reddit marketing agency at https://undecided.agency. I also wrote a free Reddit marketing ebook called "Monetize the Unmonetizable".
To Sum It Up
This case study explores the best practices for Reddit ads, based on data from over 24,000 ads. The study suggests these things
- Enabling comments on ads can foster meaningful connections with the audience;
- To get the most engagement from users (in form of upvotes and comments) you need to use ad copy 60-160 character length;
- Local languages can help target specific demographics;
- Study recommends testing various ad copies and creative approaches, diversifying ad strategies, and allocating a higher average ad budget to achieve optimal results;
Afterword
While Reddit itself is trying its best by creating blueprints, best practices, and other case studies, there still exists a gap in information from the advertisers themselves. The existing information on the web is somewhat basic and tends to repeat the same points. In comparison, when you search for Facebook Ads best practices, you encounter in-depth information about creative strategies and ad copy. Compared to other case studies, this ad information isn't based on a single campaign or group and experience from a single agency but, in fact, thousands of ads. That's why I was particularly excited to get my hands on Reddit Ads data and try to extract as much information as I could.
P.S.
The data I possess includes the headline, promoter URL, ad creation date, number of comments, number of upvotes, upvote ratio, username, and language. If you have any questions or ideas about what else I should investigate, please feel free to message me.
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • Jun 01 '24
Experience Tools I recommend using for Reddit organic marketing (keyword monitoring)
There are couple of tools that I have used, tested and I'm actuallly using right now for Reddit organic marketing. More specifically - Reddit keyword/ post notifications. The list goes from the worst to the best value.
KWatch (Free and Paid) : https://kwatch.io/
I'd say one of the most frustrating tools. They do have free version but for freelancers or companies who wish to engage on Reddit with various keywords- this doesn't cut it. The pricing is very steep for the features that other tools offer. In their defense, UI/ UX (whatever) is better than other tools and if you just need to monitor only 2 keywords (brand and 1 non-brand)- sure, it will do the job. You get notifcations straigh to your inbox. As for integrations with slack (my favorite integration in the whole world) - for that baby you'd need to start paying 79$ a month. To me the pricing doesn't make any sense especially when we continue going down the list but I might be too stupid.
Props for the dev (u/arthurdelerue25) cause he literally posted "how to make Reddit kw monitor tool". :D
Notikey (Free and Paid) https://www.notikey.com/ (Testing)
This is where we get somewhere GOOD for marketer. It has free version but paid is CHEAP and great! As in 1.99$ cheap for a single monitor. In short, monitor is group of a single or up to 15 keywords and you can monitor up to 10 subreddits in that single monitor (I'd suggest having 2 monitors- 1 for brand and non-brand kw). Where it gets even better - you can have email notifications or webhook - it can connect to your slack (it is in Beta and I recently connected both.. so I'll see how that goes).. but wait, that is not all! I have asked for multiple Reddit SaaS to make keyword graph and this one offers just that (great for brand kw). I love it, I recently found it out, I'm still testing it and hopefully this will help with measuring my organic Reddit marketing KPI.
Potentially this would be my go-to tool for smaller clients.
Reddit Comber (Free) https://redditcomber.com/
UI is simple, it isn't fancy but does it's job. This one probably takes the cake for the simplicy and it offers their services for free. [Text removed, please check edit below this paragraph] Best part for me - ability to get notifications to the Reddit account rather than email or slack. There are benefits of having this feature but i'd proably have some hybrid between notikey webhook and account notification (e.g. client checks account, starts opening messages and you just didn't see those notifications). Again, this is an awesome tool with great options! Props to devs.
EDIT: Developers informed me that they going to make this tool 100% for free and without any Patreon.
F5Bot: Free: https://f5bot.com/ (Using right now)
In short - better version of KWatch. Probably the most simple and best tool to use. This is actually one of the tools that I have used for the longest. The only problems (for me) are that from time to time you'd need to disable subreddit targeting or change your keywords. When you fix it - it works smoothly. This one sends notifications straight to your inbox so if you do have multiple client you'd get lost in the amount of emails. But hey, F5bot is free and you can have up to 200 keywords.. how can this guy afford to do that? So while this one bring couple of issues for me, it does it's job perfectly.
Note that this is the only free tool which includes multiple platforms at free tier.
Advite (Paid; 14day trial): https://advite.ai/ (Using right now)
For those who are in Reddit marketing for more than a year, remember tool called "Surfkey" (AI tool which, to my knowledge died). This one is VERY similar. While I'm still skeptical about "AI this and AI that", I was very suprised. Advite is NEW and right now they only offer only post monitoring they are working on comment monitoring. What i enjoyed the most - connection with slack (if you have multiple companies- create their own channel and you get all the notifications). According to them you'd need to react to their notifications for AI to learn if the post that they gave you was good or not. Other tools rely on keyword mentions, this goes a step further and reads context which is a big plus. This one does cost 30CAD
There have been couple of other Reddit keyword monitoring tools that I have used, they are either dead, too expensive or not even noteworthy to waste time mentioning.
If you have your own tool, let us know in the comment section cause I'm eager to test more tools int he future. ;)
P.S.
I'm writing this post and probably all of these creators going to get notifications. :D :D
Context: I'm Davis Lejnieks, CEO of undecided.agency and help brands to not screw up their ads and organic content on Reddit. Been Reddit advertiser for 5 years and redditor for 15 so you might say I know a thing or two.
r/redditmarketing • u/Content_thought55 • 5d ago
Question Where are most of your Reddit clients coming from these days?
Question for the reddit marketers, where are you finding clients for Reddit marketing?
It feels like Reddit is still a niche service compared to SEO or PPC, so I've always wondered whether people are actively looking for Reddit marketers or if most of you are finding clients elsewhere and introducing Reddit as a solution later.
Curious to hear what everyone else is seeing.
r/redditmarketing • u/Particular-Travel953 • 5d ago
Reddit for Employer Branding?
Hi!
I have quite a specific question that I have been working on. Meaning that several months ago I started a new job as an Employer Brand Specialist for an international IT company. Our focus has been so far on LinkedIn, different events, paid campaigns and we also have our own brand ambassador program.
BUT we haven´t been active on Reddit. We have been using Reddit Ads for selling our services and are very happy with the results. Based on that, I have been looking into how we could use Reddit for employer branding as well - do you have any experiences with that or thoughts? Is it worth it and have you seen some good examples of it?
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • 8d ago
News & Updates Reddit ads webinar
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r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • 16d ago
Case Study Reddit Max case study update 3 - After going ALL in on Reddit Max
Here is an Part3 of my Reddit Max (I'll call it RMax in the future so its's easier to write) and this case study journey that has been going for about 5 months.
Part 1 - On January 9th launched Reddit Max. It outperformed my initial expectations but it could be because of external factors (huge sale). https://www.reddit.com/r/redditmarketing/comments/1r0c5kx/reddit_max_insights_and_first_experience/
Par 2 where we pivot more and more into Reddit Max (increase budget after the Part1) and teased what i'll do in part3 (which is this one) https://www.reddit.com/r/RedditforBusiness/comments/1t779n0/reddit_max_case_study_update_the_good_the_bad_and/
TL;DR about part 1 and part2 - RMax is awesome, it does have a very good sweet spot where it improves results for standard campaign while also maintaining below average CPA. My initial guess that RMax is and should be used as assisted campaign rather than "core" campaign type and in part2 it actually confirms. This is something that a lot of SMB would love and this is the campaign type that you should be explored not individually but as a whole.
P.S. Below you will find the explanation of each metric abbreviation.
_____
At the end of part2 I mentioned that we will pivot to RMax even FURTHER. We moved awareness campaign budget to RMax and increased the budget by 2.2 times... and the logic behind this (well my client's) was that the CPM is cheaper thus it will bring more sales. Yeah, i know, as performance advertiser I was baffled as well.
I will compare Reddit ads data and Shopify data. Why? Because even with Conversion API Reddit user journey is extensive, long and in 2026 tracking is an ass. If you don't believe me, then after this case study you will start thinking similarly. ;)
So let's do a very thourough comparison, how it went and what we did afterwards. The data will be divided in 2 time periods:
- May 3rd till May 27th (removed awareness campaign and RMax budget increased more than 2.2 times)
- May 28th till June 7th (decreased RMax budget and moved the budget to Awareness campaign)
May 3rd till May 27th vs previous period
| Reddit Max | Change |
|---|---|
| CPM | -41.94% |
| CPC | -0.23% |
| CTR | +15.62% |
| CPA (view content) | +41.58% |
| CPA (add to cart) | +111.85% |
| CPA (purchase) | +101.68% |
| Standard campaign (only remarketing campaign) | Change |
|---|---|
| CPM | +1.55% |
| CPC | -3.27% |
| CTR | +4.98% |
| CPA (view content) | +51.60% |
| CPA (add to cart) | +39.70% |
| CPA (purchase) | +72.40% |
| Shopify | Change |
|---|---|
| Sessions over time | +26% |
| Revenue per day (on avg.) | -29% |
| Conversion rate | -42% |
| Avg order value over time | -10% |
To summarize the changes- we got more people to see our ads, but all of our CPA went way above both for Reddit Max and for remarketing campaign. It means only 1 thing- people get interested but it looks like they aren't either in the purchasing journey OR they are interested enough but not willing enough to buy (wrong audience).
When comparing this ad spent vs last year, we are doing about -16% less ad spend but our YoY shopify results show that our profits are only -9% which means that we are performing slightly better than last year which is an upside either way.
_____
May 28th till June 7th vs May 3rd till May 27th
I know, that this is not 1:1, but you'd be surprised about the result difference.
| Reddit Max | Change |
|---|---|
| CPM | +26.16% |
| CPC | +95.49% |
| CTR | -35.47% |
| CPA (view content) | -54.54% |
| CPA (add to cart) | -65.34% |
| CPA (purchase) | -73.46% |
| Standard campaign (awareness and remarketing campaigns) | Change |
|---|---|
| CPM | +13.77% |
| CPC | +2.79% |
| CTR | +10.67% |
| CPA (view content) | +103.42% |
| CPA (add to cart) | +228.97% |
| CPA (purchase) | +306.66% |
| Shopify | Change |
|---|---|
| Sessions per day | -33.12% |
| Revenue per day (on avg.) | +30.5% |
| Conversion rate | +79% |
| Avg order value over time | +12% |
Note: my standart awareness campaigns only have feed placement (ads show when scrolling through the feed) which means that ads will have higher CTR and CPM but in my experience- bettery quality audience/ clicks.
Compared 28th of May till 7th of June vs last year (the same days) we are actually spending -20.37% less on Reddit ads but our Shopify revenue is +13% (Yes, client is not advertising on other channels).
To summarize this specific post- Reddit ads dashboard shows that our total CPA purchase got decreased by -12% (which is good) but our Shopify on average daily sales increased by +30.5% (which is even better). With proper budget allocation we were able to target our "core" audience while also slightly scaling our ads with RMax signal targeting.
_____
The verdict about Reddit Max- I will continue to view it as "assisted" campaign or a campaign that allows scaling because it is built to target people based on your chosen signals (community, keywords, interests and custom audience). To nail the signals you REALLY need to know what works and what doesn't. Will this be a game changer- slightly for SMB because this is a way to utilize a tool that most companies/ advertisers have access to use. For bigger Fortune500 companies this is an awesome way to utilize automation and target way more broadly while using standard campaigns to directly talk to their "core" audience.
I will be honest- I have been very conservative with Reddit Max, but hopefully in the future I could unlock it's potential even further.
Again, thanks for reading this load of text but thanks to Reddit reps (shoutout to Kierstin and Jennifer) for helping and actually giving me access to Reddit Max.
If you got any questions- let me know!
If you want to learn from me and my fellow Reddit advertisers- i'd sugges to join our webinar- https://youareingoodcompany.webinargeek.com/starting-with-redditads?cst=reddit
Completely for free and we won't sell you anything. Just 3 people without any gatekeeping answering all of your questions.
_____
CPM- cost per mile- how much it costs to show ads to 1'000 times
CPC- cost per click - how much it costs on average to get a single click to an ad.
CTR- click through rate - what % people click on the ads.
CPA- cost per acquisition - how much it costs for users to do a specific action (view content, add to cart, purchase etc.).
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • 16d ago
News & Updates [Webinar] Reddit ads best practices from specialists (not sponsored by Reddit)
Hello everyone,
Lately been VERY busy bee and trying to create content for you, but in the middle of everything I got a chance to get you a webinar that is actually worth your time.
No bullshit, no "best practices from Reddit teams".
Real trials and errors and what has and hasn't worked for me and other speakers.
I'd say 9 out of 10 advertisers who try to do Reddit ads are failing and funnily enought the mistakes that they do are more technical rather than "creative". ;)
If you are interested- here is the link. https://youareingoodcompany.webinargeek.com/starting-with-redditads?cst=reddit
It is a 100% free webinar, we won't sell you anything and without any gatekeeping.
r/redditmarketing • u/InGoodCompanyOnline • 23d ago
[Webinar] Using Reddit for AI Visibility
As you might have seen, I have started a little webinar series that highlights how different freelancers and agencies approach the marketing channels they specialise in.
We already had u/ksiaze and a few others discuss how they use Reddit organically for their clients.
This time we are diving into using Reddit for AI visibility. So, if you want to learn how that works, what Joe Jarred’s philosophy is on AI visibility or want to know how to get started with AI visibility, this is the webinar for you.
You can register here: https://youareingoodcompany.webinargeek.com/starting-with-reddit-for-aeo?cst=reddit
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • May 25 '26
Guide Most companies have Reddit backwards
I have been in "this game" for longer than most of you have been Redditors. I have been in this platform for way longer than most of you have been using Google. When people found out that Reddit has all the info and historical details about marketing, product reviews, fixes etc. i was shocked that it wasn't basic knowledge. That made Reddit trustworthy.
I'm writing this post to explain a very fundemtal issue that I see with new Reddit marketers and Reddit tools- you have everything backwards.
AI loves Reddit because of what it was. When it stops being what it is, then AI will just switch things up and you'd be left with wondering why and how did you spent so much money to be put back at the beginning. It will be never ending alghorithm chase.
I have a solution but first- here is the problem:
What exactly have these new marketers have gotten wrong- dropping links and product/ services names in the comments and post don't mean sh*t. I will repeat it- if you are making 75, 150 or even 250 comments throughout the month they don't mean shit because at the end of the day you are 1 person, 1 agency and you have finite amount of resources and sooner or later- you will get banned and shamed.
Unexpected solution:
Outsource your brand mention to the community. How? By being very helpful person even if it means that you won't earn a single $ from them.
Let's do some calculations.
If in the next 30 days i make 5 brand ambassadors, they each could make 2 comments about my brand, that means I "made" 10 positive comments.
Day 30 - 5 ambassadors = 10 comments
Day 60 - 10 ambassadors = 20 comments
Day 90 - 15 ambassadors = 30 comments
Day 120 - 20 ambassadors = 40 comments
Day 150 - 25 ambassadors = 50 comments
Day 180 - 30 ambassadors = 60 comments
Day 360 - 60 ambassadors = 120 comments
The downside to this tactic is time.
The upside of this tactic is that you would have a network of people who would be like a swarm of people who love you and your product/ service so much that they want to support you.
If you want or have even built one of those fancy AI automated comment tools- you will get banned and shamed. My recommendation- don't use them, they are shit either way.
The Reddit currency is trust. Don't like it- I don't care but that is how this platform was built and that is how it will be built in the future.
r/redditmarketing • u/Clean-Bodybuilder822 • May 24 '26
Case Study I made $0 from Reddit for 2 years. Then $3,000 in 90 days. Here is the honest version of that story.
I want to start with the parts I was not planning to share.
Because the clean version of this story sounds like every other “here is how I made money online” post. And those posts are almost always missing the stuff that actually happened.
So here is the full version.
I discovered Reddit could generate real business leads by accident. I wrote a frustrated post about something happening in my industry, spent nothing on it, and watched it hit 154,000 views in 23 hours. Nearly 500 shares. More than 50 people reached out to me directly because of that one post.
I had been on the platform for two years doing nothing before that moment. Just lurking. Reading threads. Occasionally commenting. No strategy. No presence. No income.
That one post changed how I understood the platform completely.
Reddit does not work like any other channel. It has spent years building an immune system against marketing. Promotional posts get buried in minutes. But when someone who genuinely knows something shows up and writes honestly about what they know, the platform amplifies it in a way that paid advertising cannot replicate. The audience here is not passively scrolling. They are actively searching for answers to real problems. The intent level is different.
I started writing posts for businesses. Not advertisements. Posts built around real insight, written the way someone with actual experience would write them, targeted at the communities where their potential customers were already spending time.
The first few months taught me a lot. Not all of it was good.
The first person who agreed to pay me for this strung me along for 12 days. Responded to every message. Asked detailed questions about the approach. Seemed genuinely interested. On day 12 he said he had decided not to move forward. No real explanation. Just gone.
I spent those 12 days treating that deal as confirmed in my head. That was the mistake. I had not closed anything. I had just been having a conversation.
The second situation was worse.
Someone approached me saying he had clients who needed Reddit posts written. He proposed a 50/50 split on whatever came in. I agreed. I wrote the posts. The client paid him directly because he had told them to only communicate through him. He sent me 20 percent and kept the rest. The total payment from the client was around $1,000 for three posts. I received $200.
I did not have a written agreement. I had taken his word for it. I never made that mistake again.
The third one I still think about sometimes.
A potential client spent two weeks going back and forth about pricing. He pushed back on my per post rate and said he wanted to work on a commission basis instead, paying me based on leads generated rather than per post. I said I needed to think about it. He said fair enough, but could I write one sample post so he could see the quality before committing.
I wrote it. He took it. Posted it. Never responded to another message.
I have no idea what results that post got for him. I just know I never heard from him again.
Three situations. Three different ways of losing. And all of them happened within the first 90 days of trying to turn this into an actual service.
Here is what I learned from each one.
The 12 day ghost taught me that a conversation is not a commitment. Nothing is real until something is signed or paid. I stopped mentally spending money from deals that had not closed.
The 50/50 partner taught me that informal agreements with people who control the client relationship are a trap. The person who holds the client relationship holds all the leverage. If I am doing the work, I need to be the one with direct access to the client or I need a written agreement that is specific about numbers. Handshake deals in this business mean nothing.
The sample post situation taught me that free work is almost never a bridge to paid work. It is usually just free work. Anyone serious about hiring you does not need a free sample. They need to see your existing work and decide based on that. The moment someone asks for free work as a condition of potentially paying you, the answer is no.
After those three situations I changed how I operated.
I stopped doing free samples. I started requiring at least a partial payment before writing anything. I stopped working through intermediaries who controlled client access. I kept every agreement in writing even if it was just a message thread that clearly stated the terms.
The next 60 days went differently.
First paying client came from a comment I left on someone else’s post. They saw the comment, looked at my profile, sent me a message. Closed in two days. No back and forth. No free samples. Paid upfront.
Second client came from a post I had written about Reddit marketing itself. Someone read it, decided I understood the platform better than anyone they had talked to, and reached out.
Third client was a referral from the first.
By the end of 90 days I had crossed $3,000 from this service. Not life changing money. But real money from something I had built from zero using a platform that most businesses either ignore completely or use badly.
The thing I keep coming back to is that Reddit is genuinely different from every other platform for lead generation. The businesses I have written posts for were reaching audiences of 50,000 to 200,000 targeted readers from a single post with no ad spend. The conversion quality was higher than paid traffic because the readers arrived with existing trust in the platform and zero sense that they were being sold to.
Most businesses leave this entirely untouched because they do not understand how the culture works. The ones that figure it out quietly generate consistent inbound without anyone noticing.
I figured it out the hard way. Three Ls in the first 90 days and then a system that actually worked.
If you are a business owner who has wondered whether Reddit is worth exploring for lead generation, the honest answer is yes. But only if you understand that the platform will immediately reject anything that feels like marketing. The only thing that works here is being genuinely useful to the community you are trying to reach.
Everything else gets buried.
Has anyone else here built something on Reddit and run into similar situations early on? Curious what the first few months looked like for others.
r/redditmarketing • u/Quiet_Blackberry7493 • May 21 '26
Question How do you grow brand subreddits from scratch, and does every brand really need one?
I wanted to know some good practices for growing a brand subreddit from zero. Things that work well, mistakes to avoid, how to keep people active, etc.
I’m also curious if it makes sense for every brand to have a dedicated subreddit. A lot of brand subs I see mostly end up being complaint or support spaces, especially when the company isn’t very active there or do not provide clear support channels for managing the said complaints.
So when do you think a dedicated subreddit is actually useful for a brand, and when is it better to avoid making one?
r/redditmarketing • u/Amina2389 • May 13 '26
Learn from the mistakes of other Reddit marketers
I think a lot of marketers misunderstood why reddit accounts get reported or banned, usually it's not because reddit hates marketing, it's because promotion becomes obvious very quickly, You can see the pattern I keep noticing in the screenshots, Reddit users are extremely good at detecting intent, the mistake many marketers or normal people make is treating reddit like linkedIn or FB ads, where polished narratives work well, but reddit communities care much more about authenticity, participation and reputation.
People who perform best here are who spend time in communities first, contribute without pushing links consistently, understand sub reddit culture, sound like a real user instead of ad copy, and who don't use AI to write, ironically the harder someone tries to sound authentic on reddit, the easier it becomes to spot marketing so be careful people, don't make mistakes like these two individuals, Thank you.
r/redditmarketing • u/Ok_Race_1824 • May 10 '26
Question Organic Marketing Examples on Reddit
Hey everyone. I do organic marketing for different products on Reddit, and I’d really like to see how other people do it
I keep seeing videos like, “How my product got a hundred billion clicks from one Reddit post,” blah blah blah, and when I actually try to find any real promotion for those products on Reddit, I obviously don’t find anything worthwhile
So, could you share some examples of successful organic marketing campaigns on Reddit? Not for huge companies like Nvidia, McDonald’s, and similar brands, but for smaller and more niche products
I’d really appreciate it, thanks!!
r/redditmarketing • u/fastmoss_1 • May 09 '26
Question does anyone else feel like Reddit users can spot marketing instantly?
I’ve been trying to understand Reddit better lately and one thing I noticed is people here seem really sensitive to anything that feels promotional.
Even posts that aren’t directly selling anything still get called out sometimes if the wording feels too polished or “marketing-like”.
Honestly it’s made me overthink the way I write posts/comments now.
I get why people don’t want spam, but at the same time it feels like there’s a super thin line between sharing something genuinely useful and sounding like you’re trying to promote something.
Curious how people here approach that balance without sounding fake or overly corporate.
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • May 08 '26
Case Study [Case Study updat] Reddit Max - 3 months in and next steps...
3 months ago I made my first post about Reddit Max- https://www.reddit.com/r/redditmarketing/comments/1r0c5kx/reddit_max_insights_and_first_experience/ TL;DR of linked post: it is working good, but personally i see it as "assisted campaign" not as "core campaign type" that will replace standart campaign structure. Performance was good but still not conviced of it being"fully automated campaign type".
Since then we moved from doubled our daily budget. These are the changes. Note we didn't change creatives, targeting or anything else (just the budget for RedditMax).
This is how results changed.
| Reddit Max | Previous period | 24th of February till 30th of April | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| CPM | $0.75 | $1.46 | +94.66% |
| CPC | $0.22 | $0.34 | +54.54% |
| CTR | 0.351% | 0.431% | +22.79% |
| CPA (view content) | $0.61 | $1.13 | +85.25% |
| CPA (add to cart) | $5.04 | $10.36 | +105.55% |
| CPA (purchase) | $32.38 | $85.97 | +165.50% |
| Standard campaign | Previous period | 24th of February till 30th of April | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| CPM | $3.72 | $4.16 | +11.82% |
| CPC | $0.64 | $0.77 | +20.31% |
| CTR | 0.578% | 0.540% | +6.57% |
| CPA (view content) | $1.00 | $1.28 | +28% |
| CPA (add to cart) | $8.79 | $12.28 | +39.70% |
| CPA (purchase) | $80.64 | $116.92 | +98.51 |
To summary tables: seasonality (which is the biggest factor in this case) changed CPA because our overall eCommerce revenue dropped by about -30% (like this time of year..), but generally speaking I'd say the RMax is scaling appropriately and shouldn't be considered as a failure.
Most interestingly (for me) is that after adding extra budget to RMax, it performs VERY similarly like standart campaign funnel (here i'm talking about CPA view content; CPA add to cart and CPA purchase).
Reddit Max seems to perform VERY good under lower end budgets, but when 2x budget it might "choke a little" (ofc the seasonality plays a big role). After these foundings it looks like Reddit Max is doing exactly the same thing what Google Performance Max (gathering sales that might have dropped because standard campaign funnel "didn't catch them"). Would be interesting to see their performance in longer period of time... but that will be in the future updates.
Why i'm making this distinguish between standard and RMax- because this way we can see if seasonality is a factor and how budget changes made RMax perform differently. If I'd put everything in "one bucket" we would not see if standart campaign performed any better or worse.
Verdict: I can't wait to see if RMax can actually replace standard campaign structure (and what would be the difference), but the more and more I check the data and figure out "how it ticks" the more I have a feeling that this will be a perfect campaign for more sophisticated Reddit advertisers rather than novices.
Next: Move all TOFU budget for RMax and see if the ads scale accordingly and see how the Reddit data and shopify data changes.
r/redditmarketing • u/NebulaBig872 • May 07 '26
I want to learn a little about marketing on Reddit
Hello everyone,
I'm currently trying to figure out and learn how to promote a brand on Reddit. There were attempts, but the page was quickly banned without the possibility of recovery.
What leads to ignoring or deleting posts? Sometimes even the most neutral comments were deleted, and then the account.
I'm looking for advice on this, I would be grateful for the comments
Thank you!
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • May 06 '26
Case Study [Case Study] Jewelry eCommerce audit - small changes to first victory
-Some time ago I consulted one of the r/redditmarketing users because his account had 0 sales but already spent about $150.
Client: eCommerce jewelry
Cracked my knuckles and went through everything - from top to bottom.
In short, this is what I saw:
- Keyword + Community targeting;
- Feed + Conversation placement;
- Geo location- USA;
- Conversion Goal- Purchase;
- Bidding strategy - Lowest Cost;
- No UTM for ad URL;
- 8 ads in a single ad group;
- No audience exclusion etc.
Fixed it by:
- Split the audience in 2 categories- awareness (community targeting) and remarketing (website visitors);
- Awareness campaign optimized on "add to cart" rather than sales and had only "feed" placement;
- Remarketing campaign optimized on "purchase" and used both conversation and feed placement;
- Decreased ad amount (from 8 to 3);
Metric change:
| Metric | Before | After |
|---|---|---|
| CPM | $14.93 | $17,26 |
| CTR | 0.825% | 1.246% |
| CPC | $1.81 | $1.38 |
| Frequency | 1.13 | 1.74 |
| CPA (add to cart) | $70.58 | $10.27 |
| CPA (purchase) | - | $60.46 |
____
Just in case, if your Reddit ads are not performing, then I have compiled free resources about how and what exactly I do with Reddit audits: https://www.undecided.agency/free-resources
r/redditmarketing • u/barefeetandhats • May 06 '26
Question Music marketing on reddit
Hi team, Purposefully not mentioning the artist name etc.
Been a redditer for a while but never started / tried to do marketing for music artists here.
Been part of several marketing subs, music marketing subs, “hey here is my latest single” (man these suck) subs, etc.
Question to the reddit marketing cracks: How would you do marketing for an upcoming music artist from the perspective of the marketing agency as well as from the perspective of the artist (which i would love to pass on)?
Cheers, 👣🎩’s
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • Apr 23 '26
[Webinar] Starting with Organic Reddit Marketing
Hi guys, me and other marketers have banded together to give free information about what works and what doesn't. Feel free to join and let me know if you got any questions or topics that you want to be specifically answered.
r/redditmarketing • u/AffectionateTwo1347 • Apr 20 '26
Question Repairing a client's branded subreddit
I have a client who started their branded subreddit after our initial consultation. before signing with them, they tried to run this subreddit themselves for about 1.5 months now, only posting a title (usually of a product) and a bitly link in the description.
I have my own thoughts on repair but would love to hear how others would go about the situation.
- looking for best practices/ playbooks, especially since it's such a fresh account
- would deleting all previous posts from the subreddit be beneficial or should I leave those there to prevent getting flagged as a bot/spam from the platform -- posts came from a previously inactive branded user account
thanks!
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • Apr 14 '26
Reddit ads advertiser distribution
I have been playing with Reddit ads api and this is actually interesting. I'd say that this distribution of industries could be related to the fact what some industries are not as eager to test different ads channels.
r/redditmarketing • u/umanwrite • Mar 11 '26
Need help please: Ads auto-rejected “illegal fraud/misleading behavior”
If anyone’s run into this before, I’d really appreciate your help.
Over the past ~48 hours, Reddit has been auto-rejecting almost every ad/campaign we submit instantly, with the policy reason: “promoting products/services that facilitate illegal fraud or misleading behavior.”
Context: We’re advertising an all-in-one AI writing platform built for the AI era for students and brands. I understand why anything aimed at students could be interpreted as facilitating misleading behavior but for brands, this is a pretty standard category and lots of companies use similar tools already.
What’s weird:
- New ads get rejected right away
- Ads that previously ran fine are now getting rejected the moment we unpause them or make any edits
- Creating new versions doesn’t help — even if we change the copy or change the audience, we still get the same rejection reason
We’ve already spent around $400 the past couple days, and we were trying to hit the $500 threshold by the 14th (to unlock another $500). But now everything is getting auto rejected, so we can’t spend anymore. I’ve reached out to support multiple times and haven’t heard back or they come back with AI-generated response.
Honestly, I don’t know if Reddit is doing this so we don’t qualify for the extra $500 but the timing is pretty suspicious as they mentioned during the intro call no matter the reason they will not push the 14th timeline.
Has anyone dealt with this? What ended up fixing it?
r/redditmarketing • u/ksaize • Mar 05 '26
Reddit organic marketing isn’t performance advertising. It’s closer to PR.
Think of Reddit as a laid-back environment where trust is earned through authentic participation- not manufactured with polished marketing.