• Subscribe
  • Have you ever lunched Reddit ads campaigns? Share your experience with us!

    Artem Luko
    3 replies

    Replies

    Raymond Allen
    I'd love to hear your experience with Reddit ads campaigns—head over to the link you provided and share your thoughts, as I'm curious to learn more about it. Thanks!
    Frank Hernandez
    We tried Reddit Ads when we first launched about a year ago. Here is the breakdown specific to us: Audience: Coming in we knew we were targeting a very specific audience. PoachMe.dev is a free platform for developers that provides tools to filter out recruiters that waste time and allow developers to get paid for the time they do spend engaging with interviewers (here a sample of what that looks like - https://bk.poachme.dev/Frank). In other words, developers who are confident and understand the value of their time. (A very small audience, and that's okay) Length of the Reddit Ads Camping: 3 weeks (Note: Not long enough to get valid results) Cost: Taking advantage of the $100 credit Reddit gives first time advertisers we spent around $200 overall (Note: Not enough to get valid results) User Acquisition: After the 3 weeks we had 4 users signed up as a result of the camping. None where developers. We ultimately did not try it again primarily because Reddit did not provide us the level of filtering we needed to reach our audience. We ended up getting better results (4x-8x) by posting directly on some of the subreddits and other boards.