name: reddit-engagement
description: When the user wants to promote on Reddit, engage developer subreddits, or understand Reddit self-promotion rules. Trigger phrases include "Reddit," "subreddit," "r/programming," "r/webdev," "self-promotion," "Reddit marketing," or "getting upvotes on Reddit."
metadata:
version: 1.0.0
Reddit Engagement
Reddit can drive massive developer traffic — or get you banned for self-promotion. This skill covers authentic engagement across developer subreddits, understanding each community's rules, and the comment-first strategy that actually works.
Before You Start
- Read
.agents/developer-audience-context.md if it exists
- Identify which subreddits your developers actually use
- Create a dedicated Reddit account (using your real identity is fine, but don't use your company name as username)
- Understand: Reddit requires months of genuine participation before self-promotion
Developer Subreddit Landscape
High-Traffic Developer Subreddits
| Subreddit |
Members |
Culture |
Self-promo tolerance |
| r/programming |
6M+ |
Technical depth, skeptical |
Very low |
| r/webdev |
2M+ |
Practical, career-focused |
Low |
| r/javascript |
2M+ |
Framework debates, news |
Low |
| r/Python |
1.5M+ |
Helpful, educational |
Moderate |
| r/devops |
500K+ |
War stories, tools |
Moderate |
| r/selfhosted |
400K+ |
DIY, open source love |
Moderate for OSS |
| r/sysadmin |
800K+ |
Cynical, enterprise-focused |
Very low |
| r/learnprogramming |
4M+ |
Beginners, supportive |
Low |
| r/ExperiencedDevs |
200K+ |
Senior discussions, no beginners |
Very low |
| r/cscareerquestions |
1M+ |
Career advice, compensation |
None |
Niche Technical Subreddits
| Category |
Subreddits |
Notes |
| Languages |
r/rust, r/golang, r/typescript, r/cpp, r/java |
Often more welcoming to relevant tools |
| Frameworks |
r/reactjs, r/vuejs, r/angular, r/nextjs, r/django |
Very specific content requirements |
| Infrastructure |
r/kubernetes, r/docker, r/aws, r/terraform |
Practical problems welcome |
| Specialties |
r/netsec, r/machinelearning, r/datascience |
Deep expertise expected |
Understanding Subreddit Rules
Check Before Posting
Every subreddit has different rules. Before engaging:
- Read the sidebar — Rules, posting guidelines, allowed content
- Check the wiki — Many have self-promotion policies
- Look at top posts — What format/content succeeds
- Search for your competitors — How did their posts do?
- Check moderator activity — How strict is enforcement?
Common Rule Patterns
| Rule type |
What it means |
| "No self-promotion" |
Your own stuff is banned entirely |
| "10:1 rule" |
10 helpful comments/posts for every self-promo |
| "No affiliate links" |
Even indirect monetization banned |
| "Project showcase Sunday" |
Self-promo limited to specific threads |
| "No beginners" |
r/ExperiencedDevs, r/cscareerquestionsEU |
| "Text posts only" |
No link posts, must add context |
Self-Promotion Limits by Subreddit
| Tolerance |
Subreddits |
Strategy |
| Zero |
r/programming, r/sysadmin, r/cscareerquestions |
Don't post your stuff. Comment only. |
| Showcase threads only |
r/webdev (Showoff Saturday) |
Wait for weekly threads |
| 10:1 rule |
Most technical subreddits |
Heavy comment investment first |
| Open source friendly |
r/selfhosted, r/opensource, r/commandline |
OSS gets more leeway |
| More welcoming |
Niche language subs, small communities |
Still need participation first |
The Comment-First Strategy
Why Comments Beat Posts
| Comments |
Posts |
| Build karma and history |
Require karma to post in many subs |
| Establish expertise |
Subject to self-promo scrutiny |
| No self-promo restrictions |
Often removed if promotional |
| Reach engaged audiences |
Compete with all other posts |
| Can mention your work naturally |
Direct promo usually fails |
High-Value Comment Opportunities
| Opportunity |
How to find |
What to comment |
| Questions in your area |
Search by flair or keywords |
Detailed, helpful answers |
| Discussions of problems you solve |
Monitor relevant keywords |
Share approach without pitching |
| Competitor mentions |
Search competitor names |
Fair comparison, not attack |
| "What tools do you use?" threads |
Common in most dev subs |
Honest mention among other tools |
| Frustrated users |
Posts about problems |
Empathize, help, maybe mention if very relevant |
Comment Templates
Answering a technical question:
Good question. Here's what's worked for me:
[Specific technical answer with code/steps]
One thing to watch out for: [edge case or caveat]
I've been using [approach/tool] for this, and [specific benefit].
When your tool is directly relevant (use sparingly):
I work on [tool] and we built it specifically for this use case.
The way we handle [problem] is:
[Technical explanation]
Happy to answer questions if you want to try it. [No link unless asked]
Sharing your experience (no self-promo):
We ran into this exact issue at [scale/context].
What worked for us:
1. [Step one]
2. [Step two]
3. [Step three]
The key insight was [specific learning].
What Gets Downvoted
Content That Fails
| Type |
Why it fails |
| Obvious self-promotion |
Reddit hates marketers |
| Link-only posts |
No context, feels spammy |
| Beginner content in advanced subs |
Wrong audience |
| Rehashed content |
"5 tips for..." articles |
| Clickbait titles |
Community downvotes on principle |
| Corporate announcements |
Not interesting to community |
| Poorly formatted posts |
Walls of text, no structure |
Behaviors That Get You Banned
| Behavior |
Consequence |
| Posting only your own links |
Shadowban site-wide |
| Vote manipulation |
Permanent ban, IP flagged |
| Multiple accounts for upvoting |
All accounts banned |
| Spamming across subreddits |
Banned from multiple subs |
| Arguing with moderators |
Permanent ban |
| Circumventing bans |
IP ban |
Signs You're Doing It Wrong
- Posts consistently at 0 upvotes
- Comments getting buried
- Removed posts (check your profile in incognito)
- No engagement on your contributions
- Moderator warnings
Building Reputation
The Investment Required
| Timeframe |
What to do |
| Month 1 |
Comment only. No posts. Build karma. Learn culture. |
| Month 2 |
More comments. Maybe post helpful content (not yours). |
| Month 3 |
Continue commenting. Occasional showcase thread participation. |
| Month 4+ |
Earned enough goodwill to occasionally share your work. |
Karma-Building Strategy
| Action |
Karma potential |
Notes |
| Answer questions in /new |
Medium |
Less competition, help beginners |
| Add context to trending posts |
High |
Ride momentum |
| Share interesting links (not yours) |
Medium |
Curate good content |
| Post in showcase threads |
Low |
But builds history |
| Deep technical explanations |
High |
Demonstrates expertise |
Profile Optimization
Your Reddit profile tells your story:
- Username: Professional but not corporate
- Comment history: Should show genuine participation
- Karma ratio: Comments should far exceed posts
- Subreddit diversity: Active in multiple relevant communities
- Account age: Older accounts get more trust
Platform-Specific Do's and Don'ts
Do's
- Do read subreddit rules before every post
- Do contribute to discussions genuinely
- Do answer questions in your area of expertise
- Do wait weeks/months before any self-promotion
- Do use weekly showcase threads when available
- Do disclose your affiliation when mentioning your work
- Do accept criticism gracefully
- Do format posts well (headers, bullets, code blocks)
Don'ts
- Don't post your own links more than 10% of activity
- Don't ask for upvotes (ever, anywhere)
- Don't use multiple accounts
- Don't post the same thing to multiple subreddits
- Don't argue with moderators
- Don't ignore subreddit-specific rules
- Don't pitch in others' threads
- Don't delete and repost (looks spammy)
Crossposting Strategy
When to Crosspost
| Crosspost when |
Don't crosspost when |
| Content genuinely fits multiple communities |
Just trying to get more views |
| Each sub has different audience |
Same core audience |
| You tailor the title/context |
Copy-paste across subs |
| Posts are spaced out |
Posting everywhere at once |
Crosspost Best Practices
- Customize the title for each subreddit's culture
- Add a comment explaining why it's relevant to that sub
- Space out posts by hours or days
- Prioritize — post to most relevant sub first
- Don't crosspost to more than 2-3 subreddits
Reddit Advertising Alternative
If organic doesn't work, Reddit Ads exist:
| Ad type |
Use case |
Notes |
| Promoted posts |
Brand awareness |
Can target by subreddit |
| Conversation placements |
In-feed native |
Looks like regular posts |
When to use ads instead of organic:
- You need immediate reach
- Organic would violate self-promo rules
- You're promoting an event with a deadline
- You've been warned about self-promotion
Tools
| Tool |
Use case |
| Octolens |
Monitor Reddit for mentions of your product, competitors, and problem-space keywords. Get alerts for threads where your expertise is relevant. |
| Reddit Search (old.reddit.com) |
Better search than new Reddit |
| Keyword alerts |
Track when topics come up |
| Removeddit/Reveddit |
See if your posts are being removed |
Subreddit Launch Checklist
Before posting your project:
Related Skills
developer-audience-context — Know which subreddits your devs use
hacker-news-strategy — Similar dynamics, different platform
dev-to-hashnode — Create content to link from Reddit
github-presence — What Redditors check when evaluating your project