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How I 30x my traffic and got 70 new users (from 0) in 3 days with Reddit

Last Wednesday, I wanted to experiment with Reddit one more time and see how it went. I tried to post on Reddit a few times, but all of them went cricket ๐Ÿฆ—.

And to my surprise, This attempt was a great success ๐Ÿ’ช ๐Ÿฅณ.
So this is the traffic during my post on Reddit that went wild.

I got 30x ๐Ÿคฏ number of unique visitors compared to a typical boring day. And the avg visit duration is not bad > 1m10s ๐Ÿค”, enough for people to finish seeing essential parts of the landing page.

By the way, here is my product for context: https://sendtopod.com - "Bookmark your article, and listen to them later on your favorite podcast".

And the best thing about this is that it converted to 76 people clicked on Signup, which resulted in a conversion rate of sweet 8.6% (from Landing page -> Sign up page).
Signup conversion rate

And it resulted in 70 new accounts created.
SignUp conversion rate

How It started

It started pretty boringly, depressing even. On Wednesday morning, I felt that my product was a failure; it was not going well (Hint: I still don't know if it's going to be a success or not), and I began to think about buying other people's side projects, which at least validated (have paying users) and had some tractions.

But I know that I need to put on some reps even if I don't want to.
How I felt

How I posted on Reddit

The first step I took was to do some keyword research. As you already know, Reddit is huge, and finding where to post your stuff is quite a challenge in itself because:

  • There are so many subreddits. Each has different requirements for self-promotion
  • Each of them has a different affinity toward each kind of content

My product is pretty niche. And my assumption is that its best customers are people who are interested in consuming long-form content. And even this assumption seems incorrect (more on this in another article.)

Being pragmatic, what I searched for keywords like "listen later", "PodQueue" (similar app) and see where similar content is posted, and I found a few candidates r/longform , r/longread and r/productivityApp, finally r/InternetIsBeatiful

Reddit search

So I went ahead and read through each of sub-reddit rules to adhere to them while also trying to tell a story about how my product was created, hoping to make it exciting enough for people to check it out.

Here is the actual post:
Post on reddit

Focus on what works

After a few hours, posts on LongRead, LongForm, SideProject, ProductivityApp did not gain many upvotes, but... InternetIsBeautiful got quite a lot of views and even positive comments. So I stayed active on that post and answered any comments that came across.

This post on Reddit got 40K+ views after a few hours, and eventually got to 90K+ views.

Reddit post go wild

After that, what I mostly did was to keep responding to comments and messages on Reddit

Lesson learned

To summarize, here are a few lessons I learned:

  • Building a SaaS product is hard, especially the mental aspect of it. You'll always be uncertain whether you should abandon it or keep going.
  • Experiment with posting on different marketing channels, with different wording, perspective, presentations...

Thanks for reading, love to hear your thought and experience with reddit post as well.

If you are interested, follow me on twitter @tuancm

  1. 3

    Very awesome! First off, congrats on growing your platform and I hope you continue to prosper in your endeavours!

    1. 1

      Thanks @LystenMobileApp! Same to yours as well.

  2. 2

    Congrats! This is exactly the type of service I've been searching for my blog posts. As you grow, please consider working with a professional editor. I found a few spelling and grammar issues on the site.

    1. 1

      Thanks Jaehermann, I will ๐Ÿ’ช . I'm using Grammarly at the moment, but I'm sure I missed something.

      1. 1

        Oh, yes, Grammarly is great! Be sure to use the Pro version... it'll catch more stuff :)

        One to fix on your homepage video, Step 3: Listen... 1. Open "your" podcast app.

        1. 1

          Haha, you have a very keen eye. I'll fix that one. I've been procrastinating on it.

          1. 1

            It takes time to work out all of the kinks. As an editor, there are some things I can't unsee, but even I miss things, which is why I have an editor too ;)

  3. 2

    Awesome article and even great product. Thanks for sharing

    1. 1

      Thanks so much for the compliment! Mean a lot to me!

  4. 2

    Thanks for the post. Reddit is a great way to get your first users for sure and in the WBE Space most of us use this technique. However, a reddit post is like a PH launch, it only works every 3 months or so but you can always find similar posts and answer in a valuable way while plugging your product.

    1. 1

      Indeed Tiago, for long term reddit and product hunt will not sustain traffic to our product. But it super useful for me because SendToPod is still in its early place, finding first users.

  5. 2

    Good article! I never try reddit for promoting my product, it looks like it's worth it. Would it work for b2b as well? For the context, I have made solution to bypass adblock blocked analytics. I think it is for data accuracy analytics maniacs.

    1. 1

      This will definitely work for b2b, you just have to post to a different set of subreddits

    2. 1

      I think itโ€™s definitely worth a try, given that The total time I spent was about 0.5 day.

      But I think I got pretty lucky as well. It would take a few attempts to see good results. So if you fail, just try again after sometime. Itโ€™s like posting too Hacker News, sometime the only difference is timing or just pure luck.

      1. 2

        It sound like startup in micro ๐Ÿคฃ. Thanks, that is really supportive ๐Ÿ™. Let's connect on Twitter if you don't mind, I'm also starting there slowly.

        1. 1

          Yeah. I think getting from $0 to $1000 is the hardest part! Itโ€™s like from zero to one.

  6. 2

    Nice article! As you said, reading each of the sub-reddit rules is critical... I remember it took me a week for noticing I got shadowbanned. I wish I had read your article when I started ๐Ÿ˜ฌ

    1. 1

      Yeah. And I donโ€™t want to create negative impressions to people in each community. I might do more harm than good ๐Ÿ˜Š.

  7. 1

    Try hackernews as well, if you get to the top you will get much more attention, but is also much harder to get there

  8. 1

    Maybe seo is better for you, I have 10 downloads per day by covering keywords

    1. 1

      Yes, I totally agree.

      But in early phase, I also want to gauge users interest first, SEO is a long game. I don't really want to find out 3 months later, that nobody signup even good amount of traffic being generated by SEO.

    1. 1

      Haha, thanks Stefan! Nothing you want to add? ๐Ÿ˜†

      1. 1

        Can't steal your clout brother

        1. 1

          Haha, thank Stefan. But I want to listen to other kinds of feedback from you, not compliments ๐Ÿ˜†.

          1. 1

            Take it.

            It's the only time you're gonna get it ;)

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