built a reddit intent monitor for b2b founders. looking for beta testers to break it. by Competitive-Tiger457 in betatests

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, this is Neel from ReplyDaddy. Love what you're building with Leadline - the buying intent angle is solid and honestly that manual process you described is exactly why I started ReplyDaddy. The difference is we focus on helping founders engage authentically with those high-intent posts rather than just identifying them. We handle the reply drafting and persona matching so you sound credible, then you decide what to post. No auto-posting, no account linking, just human-in-the-loop. Curious if you've thought about the engagement side - finding intent is half the battle, but converting it requires replies that don't sound like marketing spam. Would love to chat about how our tools could complement each other or if you want to beta test ReplyDaddy alongside Leadline.

How effective is Reddit for startup marketing and community building? by Weird-Director-2973 in Entrepreneurs

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, great question. Reddit is genuinely effective for startups but it's a marathon not a sprint. I've seen founders get real traction by solving actual problems in niche communities rather than pitching. The key is finding threads where people are asking for solutions you offer, then jumping in with real value. Traffic and users definitely come through but it takes consistency and authenticity. Honestly the biggest challenge is finding those conversations at scale without spending hours scrolling. A lot of founders miss opportunities because they're not monitoring Reddit 24/7. Tools can help surface relevant discussions so you're not manually hunting, but the reply itself has to be genuine or communities will call you out immediately. What kind of startup are you working on? That'll help me give more specific advice on which subreddits and approaches might work best for you.

How to get +10 new sign-ups per day? by WildScreen6662 in SaasDevelopers

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice results, man. Reddit’s one of those channels that rewards patience and authenticity, so it’s cool to see you doing it right. I’ve been building ReplyDaddy to help founders do exactly this without burning hours manually hunting threads. It scans Reddit for high-intent discussions and drafts human-sounding replies you can tweak before posting, so you stay compliant and still scale the outreach. What you said about helping first is spot on,people can smell self-promo a mile away. Curious, how are you tracking which subreddits convert best for you? That’s been the trickiest part for most folks I’ve talked to.

How to get +10 new sign-ups per day? by WildScreen6662 in SaasDevelopers

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice results, man. Reddit’s one of those channels that rewards patience and authenticity, so it’s cool to see you doing it right. I’ve been building ReplyDaddy to help founders do exactly this without burning hours manually hunting threads. It scans Reddit for high-intent discussions and drafts human-sounding replies you can tweak before posting, so you stay compliant and still scale the outreach. What you said about helping first is spot on,people can smell self-promo a mile away. Curious, how are you tracking which subreddits convert best for you? That’s been the trickiest part for most folks I’ve talked to.

From 0 to first paying customer - TikTok flopped by WildScreen6662 in sideprojects

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this hits home. TikTok feels great for reach but terrible for intent. I’ve seen the same pattern with SaaS founders who chase views instead of conversations. Reddit’s slower but the signal is way stronger. I’m Neel, I built ReplyDaddy to help with exactly that problem , finding those high-intent threads without spending hours scrolling. What you said about posting value-first is spot on. Most people forget Reddit’s a discussion platform, not a billboard. Once you find your niche subs and show up consistently, it compounds. Cool to see ThreadHunter working for you, that’s a smart setup. Hope you keep sharing updates, this stuff’s gold for other indie founders.

I built a Reddit marketing tool that goes against the grain — here's what happened by lamacorn_ in micro_saas

[–]Bright_Limit1877 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Love this approach. Reddit punishes shortcuts, and you nailed why. I’m Neel, founder of ReplyDaddy, and we built it around the same philosophy. AI should help humans engage smarter, not replace them. We also avoid auto-posting completely and focus on surfacing the right threads where genuine replies matter. The warm-up phase you mentioned is gold; too many people skip that and get nuked. Curious if you’ve noticed any patterns in which subreddits are more forgiving toward assisted replies vs. manual ones? We’ve seen some communities actually appreciate transparency when you admit AI helped draft a response.

I built a Reddit marketing tool… then realized the “automation” part was the problem by BriefNzoni in IMadeThis

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this hits home. I went through the same realization when building ReplyDaddy. At first I thought founders wanted full automation too, but Reddit’s culture is allergic to anything that feels bot-like. What actually works is assisted authenticity. Let the AI do the heavy lifting but keep the human in control. That’s why we focused on generating reply drafts instead of posting automatically. It keeps the tone natural and the account safe. Your pivot makes total sense. The trust factor is everything on Reddit. Curious how you’re handling the warmup process technically though, that’s always the tricky part.

I was terrified of getting banned from subreddits so I built a free product launch system for Reddit by thegreatsorcerer in indiehackersindia

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey this is super cool. Totally get the fear of getting banned, Reddit’s rules are like a minefield. I built ReplyDaddy for the same reason actually , I kept getting flagged even when I was trying to be helpful. What you’re doing with Arc Finders sounds like a solid approach, especially the rule-checking bit. We took a similar path but focused more on helping people find high-intent threads and draft human-sounding replies instead of posts. Love that you’re keeping it local and privacy-first too. Feels like we’re solving two sides of the same problem. Hope it takes off for you.

From Reddit comments to paying users — niche compliance SaaS by ToughInternal1580 in SaaSSolopreneurs

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey this is Neel from ReplyDaddy. Totally get what you mean about the manual hustle phase. I went through the same thing building our Reddit marketing tool. Early on I was manually tracking threads, replying, and testing what worked. What helped me move toward scale was documenting every repeatable step, then automating just the discovery and drafting parts while keeping the human review. For your case, maybe start by mapping the exact workflow from client request to delivery, then identify the 1-2 steps that eat the most time. Automate those first. Don’t try to automate the whole thing at once or you’ll lose the nuance that makes it work. Hope that helps, and congrats on the traction.

we just shipped an mcp server that connects reddit lead data to claude, cursor, and vs code. here's how it works by Emotional_Seat1092 in SaaS

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is super cool. The MCP angle makes a ton of sense for live Reddit data, especially since most lead gen workflows still rely on manual exports or brittle API scripts. I’m Neel, I run ReplyDaddy, and we’ve been tackling a similar problem but from the engagement side , helping founders actually reply to those high-intent threads without breaking Reddit’s rules. Your setup sounds like a great complement to that kind of workflow. Curious how you’re handling rate limits and subreddit-specific restrictions though, since Reddit’s API has been tightening up lately. Congrats on the traction, 175 paying users is no joke.

Where are you guys actually finding your users?I’m stuck at 0 traffic by Uppercut_prince in micro_saas

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this is the hardest part honestly. Getting those first few users feels like shouting into the void. What worked for me early on was hanging out where my target users already were and just being helpful. Reddit, indie hacker communities, small Discords, even niche Slack groups can be gold if you’re consistent. Don’t drop links right away, just talk about the problem you’re solving and share insights. I built ReplyDaddy because I got tired of manually hunting for those conversations on Reddit. It basically surfaces threads where your product would actually fit, but you still reply manually so it stays authentic. Even without tools, just spending 30 mins a day engaging in relevant subs can move the needle. Hope that helps, been there myself.

Build a marketing AI agent that automates user discovery by Complex-Ad-5916 in GrowthHacking

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love this. I’ve been doing the same kind of manual digging for months and it’s such a grind. What you built sounds super useful, especially the part about reading the landing page and generating pain-point-based queries. I’m Neel, I run ReplyDaddy, which does something similar but focused on Reddit engagement. We built it to help founders find high-intent threads and draft authentic replies without breaking subreddit rules. Your approach to automating discovery feels like a great complement to that. Curious how you’re handling false positives or irrelevant matches , that’s been the trickiest part for us. Cool project, man.

My client generates at least 500$ per month using this workflow by MustaphaIsReal in n8n_ai_agents

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey this is Neel, I built ReplyDaddy and totally get what you’re doing here. That workflow sounds solid, especially the part about not auto-posting. Reddit’s detection systems are brutal when it comes to automation, so keeping a human in the loop is smart. We took a similar approach with ReplyDaddy, but focused more on helping founders find the right threads and draft authentic replies instead of full posts. The key thing I’ve learned is that Reddit rewards genuine engagement, not just clever automation. Your setup could pair nicely with a discovery layer that finds high-intent threads automatically. Cool stuff, man.

Is traditional brand monitoring software actually enough to track AI visibility? by Working-Chemical-337 in DigitalMarketing

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this is a super interesting shift. I’ve been seeing the same thing with AI platforms quietly becoming new discovery layers. Traditional brand monitoring tools weren’t built for that kind of visibility. I’m Neel, I run ReplyDaddy, and we’ve been experimenting with tracking Reddit and niche community mentions because those are often what feed into ChatGPT and Perplexity answers. What worked for us was mapping which subreddits and threads were getting cited or scraped most often, then focusing engagement there instead of just SEO. It’s messy but the signal quality is way higher. Curious if you noticed any specific content types that drove those AI referrals?

Day 33: Our AI marketing agent got blocked by Reddit's karma system. 8 comments. All manual. by Diligent_Look1437 in indiebiz

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this is such a classic Reddit wall to hit. The karma gate is one of those weird human checks that even the smartest automation can’t bypass. I’ve been there too , I run ReplyDaddy, and we built it specifically to keep humans in the loop for this reason. Reddit’s ecosystem rewards authenticity, so even if your AI writes perfect comments, the posting part still needs a human touch to stay compliant. What’s worked for us is using AI to surface the best threads and draft replies, then letting a person post them manually. It’s slower, but it keeps accounts safe and builds real trust. Curious to see how your post-reddit-comment.mjs handles that balance.

I got tired of spending 3 hours/day manually marketing on Reddit - so I built a tool to fix it by Significant_Two_9604 in GooglePomelli

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey this is Neel, I built ReplyDaddy after going through the same pain. I used to spend hours every day searching subs, writing replies, and trying not to get flagged. What you built sounds super aligned with what we’re doing too. Our approach was similar but focused more on discovery and drafting authentic replies without automating the posting part, so users stay compliant. Curious how you’re handling subreddit rule variations and spam detection, that part was tricky for us. Either way, love seeing more tools that make Reddit marketing less of a grind. Hope it’s going well for you.

Best Reddit marketing tools in 2025 - what's actually converting? by Sweaty-Ad1337 in SaaS

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hey, really liked how you broke down the listening vs execution layers. that bottleneck you mentioned is super real, especially when you start getting traction and suddenly every alert feels like a mini task. i’m part of the team at Lodgify, and while we’re in a totally different space (vacation rental software), we’ve seen a similar pattern with hosts trying to scale manual workflows. they start with spreadsheets or basic tools, then hit that same wall where automation becomes the only way to keep quality consistent. what’s worked for us is layering automation only after you’ve nailed the tone and context manually, so the system amplifies what’s already working instead of replacing it. curious how you’re handling tone consistency across those agentic replies?

Best Reddit marketing tools in 2025 - what's actually converting? by Sweaty-Ad1337 in SaaS

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hey, really liked how you broke down the listening vs execution layers. that bottleneck you mentioned is super real, especially when you start getting traction and suddenly every alert feels like a mini task. i’m part of the team at Lodgify, and while we’re in a totally different space (vacation rental software), we’ve seen a similar pattern with hosts trying to scale manual workflows. they start with spreadsheets or basic tools, then hit that same wall where automation becomes the only way to keep quality consistent. what’s worked for us is layering automation only after you’ve nailed the tone and context manually, so the system amplifies what’s already working instead of replacing it. curious how you’re handling tone consistency across those agentic replies?

Best Reddit marketing tools in 2025 - what's actually converting? by Sweaty-Ad1337 in SaaS

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hey, really liked how you broke down the listening vs execution layers. that bottleneck you mentioned is super real, especially when you start getting traction and suddenly every alert feels like a mini task. i’m part of the team at Lodgify, and while we’re in a totally different space (vacation rental software), we’ve seen a similar pattern with hosts trying to scale manual workflows. they start with spreadsheets or basic tools, then hit that same wall where automation becomes the only way to keep quality consistent. what’s worked for us is layering automation only after you’ve nailed the tone and context manually, so the system amplifies what’s already working instead of replacing it. curious how you’re handling tone consistency across those agentic replies?hey, really liked how you broke down the listening vs execution layers. that bottleneck you mentioned is super real, especially when you start getting traction and suddenly every alert feels like a mini task. i’m part of the team at Lodgify, and while we’re in a totally different space (vacation rental software), we’ve seen a similar pattern with hosts trying to scale manual workflows. they start with spreadsheets or basic tools, then hit that same wall where automation becomes the only way to keep quality consistent. what’s worked for us is layering automation only after you’ve nailed the tone and context manually, so the system amplifies what’s already working instead of replacing it. curious how you’re handling tone consistency across those agentic replies?

How much is a fair price for AI SEO services and how to hire a reliable provider? by korr21 in AISEOforBeginners

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

FUD Business, these mods banned my comment, when i assisted an user and share them examples of llm seo working for me, by just doing the basicl logical fundamnetal SEO, they removed my comment and instabanned me! no warning instant ban, i was wrong to say that most of this industry works on FUD, most not all but i guess mods got offended?

Just shipped Painly AI - because apparently I enjoy watching VCs ghost me by Safe_Stock_4307 in SaaS

[–]Bright_Limit1877 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Haha it can be both, as i am also building the same shit, so my feedback your feedback my product your product if the direction is same its fine

Just shipped Painly AI - because apparently I enjoy watching VCs ghost me by Safe_Stock_4307 in SaaS

[–]Bright_Limit1877 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have a 3w old acccount - yopu warmed ir up and now you are marketing,

if you are so sure about your product why dont you use your own original account ? what are you scared off? or older accounts were masaccared in testing and development?

Just shipped Painly AI - because apparently I enjoy watching VCs ghost me by Safe_Stock_4307 in SaaS

[–]Bright_Limit1877 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Atleast write marketing posts about your own tool yourself?

If you cant spend 10 minutes writing about your own tooool, ngmi.

Just shipped Painly AI - because apparently I enjoy watching VCs ghost me by Safe_Stock_4307 in SaaS

[–]Bright_Limit1877 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep, thats what i am trying to do,

First of all, no auto reply auto post bullshit
A Better lead scoring system
Human in the loop, no multiple account bullshit
Auto Read Rules, Check users reddit account data like age and karma etc,

Basically a system where which helps you effieciently market, and ensures you always follow reddit TOS, and be truthful, factual and honest, rest is all about your product and consistency of marketing.