Reddit Ads Strategy: Subreddit Targeting and Community-Aware Advertising (WIP)

v1.0.0

Run Reddit advertising campaigns: subreddit and interest targeting, native ad format, community-aware copy, and performance optimization. For B2B SaaS, devel...

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byNico@jeannen

Install

openclaw skills install reddit-ads-strategy

Reddit Ads Strategy

Guide Reddit advertising decisions. Ask before advising — tailor every recommendation to the user's situation. Reply in the same language as the user.

Understanding Reddit as an Ad Channel

Reddit is unlike any other ad platform. The audience is highly engaged, highly skeptical, and acutely aware when something feels like an ad. A promotional tone backfires. A community-aware, genuinely useful ad can outperform the same message on any other platform.

Who Reddit works for:

  • Developer tools and technical products — r/programming, r/webdev, r/devops, r/MachineLearning
  • SaaS targeting niche professional verticals — r/smallbusiness, r/entrepreneur, r/marketing
  • Consumer tech with passionate communities — r/productivity, r/homeautomation, r/software
  • Products where the audience actively searches for recommendations ("what's the best X?")

Who it doesn't work for: broad consumer brands, anything that needs mass reach, anything where the core message is "buy now" with no community angle.

Targeting Options

MethodDescription
Subreddit targetingPlace ads in specific subreddits where your ICP lives. Highest precision.
Interest targetingReddit's behavioral interest categories. Broader, less precise.
Keyword targetingShow ads alongside Reddit search results for specific terms.
Custom audiencesUpload email lists or pixel-based retargeting.
Lookalike audiencesExpand from a customer list or pixel seed.

Subreddit targeting is the core lever. Build a list of 10–30 subreddits where your target users spend time. Think beyond the obvious — find the adjacent communities where your ICP hangs out outside of work.

Ad Format

Reddit Promoted Posts appear native in the feed — they look exactly like regular Reddit posts, with a "Promoted" label. This is both the challenge and the opportunity.

The ad must earn its place. If a Reddit user wouldn't upvote it as an organic post, it'll be downvoted (yes, users can downvote ads) and ignored.

What works:

  • Educational angle: share something genuinely useful — a data point, a lesson, a how-to
  • Community-aware copy: reference the subreddit's context. "For those of you building in r/SideProject..."
  • Product comparison or "we built this" posts: Reddit users respect founders who are direct about what they're selling, without overselling
  • Free tool or resource offer: drive traffic to something valuable, not a generic landing page

What doesn't work: traditional ad copy, heavy branding, stock imagery, aggressive CTAs.

Campaign Structure

  • Objective: start with Traffic (CPC). Convert to Conversions once the pixel has data.
  • Budgets: minimum $20/day. Reddit CPMs are low ($0.75–$2.50) but conversion rates can be lower than other platforms.
  • Ad groups: segment by subreddit cluster (technical communities, business communities, etc.)
  • Creative: write 2–3 copy variants per ad group. Test angles — educational vs direct, problem-first vs solution-first.

Moderation Awareness

Reddit communities have moderators who can flag or remove ads that violate subreddit rules. Before targeting a community:

  1. Read the subreddit rules
  2. Check if the subreddit allows promotional content (some explicitly ban it)
  3. Make sure your ad doesn't feel like spam

Reddit also shows how many comments and upvotes your promoted post has received — negative engagement is visible. Monitor this and pause ads that are accumulating downvotes.

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