Frequently Asked Questions

Who should I include from my team?

We recommend bringing 2-4 people (max!) from your team, ideally those who deeply understand your long-term brand goals and those who understand your short-term performance marketing goals.

We also ask that anyone who attends commits to being present for all the workshops.

Who should I include from my team?

We recommend bringing 2-4 people (max!) from your team, ideally those who deeply understand your long-term brand goals and those who understand your short-term performance marketing goals.

We also ask that anyone who attends commits to being present for all the workshops.

Who should I include from my team?

We recommend bringing 2-4 people (max!) from your team, ideally those who deeply understand your long-term brand goals and those who understand your short-term performance marketing goals.

We also ask that anyone who attends commits to being present for all the workshops.

Who should I include from my team?

We recommend bringing 2-4 people (max!) from your team, ideally those who deeply understand your long-term brand goals and those who understand your short-term performance marketing goals.

We also ask that anyone who attends commits to being present for all the workshops.

What does it cost?

Pricing is flexible based on your company stage. See pricing here.

What does it cost?

Pricing is flexible based on your company stage. See pricing here.

What does it cost?

Pricing is flexible based on your company stage. See pricing here.

What does it cost?

Pricing is flexible based on your company stage. See pricing here.

What do I actually get with a Sprint?

By the end of our process, you'll get a deck containing:

  1. Recordings of our consultation meetings

  1. A completed Reddit Strategy Canvas

  1. A completed Reddit Playbook, totally unique to you

  1. Lifetime access to our "Reddit 101" Notion database, filled with up-to-date Reddit best practices

What do I actually get with a Sprint?

By the end of our process, you'll get a deck containing:

  1. Recordings of our consultation meetings

  1. A completed Reddit Strategy Canvas

  1. A completed Reddit Playbook, totally unique to you

  1. Lifetime access to our "Reddit 101" Notion database, filled with up-to-date Reddit best practices

What do I actually get with a Sprint?

By the end of our process, you'll get a deck containing:

  1. Recordings of our consultation meetings

  1. A completed Reddit Strategy Canvas

  1. A completed Reddit Playbook, totally unique to you

  1. Lifetime access to our "Reddit 101" Notion database, filled with up-to-date Reddit best practices

What do I actually get with a Sprint?

By the end of our process, you'll get a deck containing:

  1. Recordings of our consultation meetings

  1. A completed Reddit Strategy Canvas

  1. A completed Reddit Playbook, totally unique to you

  1. Lifetime access to our "Reddit 101" Notion database, filled with up-to-date Reddit best practices

How long does the process take?

End-to-end, the process takes two to three weeks to get you the final deck and assets.

However, this timeline is highly dependent on how quick your team can provide feedback on our initial ideas & assumptions.

Be prepared to sync with your team in a timely manner in order to keep the final stage of the process moving forward.

How long does the process take?

End-to-end, the process takes two to three weeks to get you the final deck and assets.

However, this timeline is highly dependent on how quick your team can provide feedback on our initial ideas & assumptions.

Be prepared to sync with your team in a timely manner in order to keep the final stage of the process moving forward.

How long does the process take?

End-to-end, the process takes two to three weeks to get you the final deck and assets.

However, this timeline is highly dependent on how quick your team can provide feedback on our initial ideas & assumptions.

Be prepared to sync with your team in a timely manner in order to keep the final stage of the process moving forward.

How long does the process take?

End-to-end, the process takes two to three weeks to get you the final deck and assets.

However, this timeline is highly dependent on how quick your team can provide feedback on our initial ideas & assumptions.

Be prepared to sync with your team in a timely manner in order to keep the final stage of the process moving forward.

Can you also help us execute?

This offer is designed to build your Strategy & Playbook only. From there, you have two options:

  • Take our strategy and execute internally

  • Tap us to execute on some or all of our suggested scope

Using us to execute will require a custom pricing process to arrive at an appropriate retainer arrangement.

Can you also help us execute?

This offer is designed to build your Strategy & Playbook only. From there, you have two options:

  • Take our strategy and execute internally

  • Tap us to execute on some or all of our suggested scope

Using us to execute will require a custom pricing process to arrive at an appropriate retainer arrangement.

Can you also help us execute?

This offer is designed to build your Strategy & Playbook only. From there, you have two options:

  • Take our strategy and execute internally

  • Tap us to execute on some or all of our suggested scope

Using us to execute will require a custom pricing process to arrive at an appropriate retainer arrangement.

Can you also help us execute?

This offer is designed to build your Strategy & Playbook only. From there, you have two options:

  • Take our strategy and execute internally

  • Tap us to execute on some or all of our suggested scope

Using us to execute will require a custom pricing process to arrive at an appropriate retainer arrangement.

What do you mean by "Reddit Strategy"?

To us, a Reddit Strategy makes use of every tool in the Reddit ecosystem that can help a brand achieve its marketing goals.

That can include the use of Reddit's Ad Platform, and leveraging a Reddit's organic power.

However, some brand's may find their opportunity leans much more heavily on one these tools after careful analysis.

That's why we do the Reddit Strategy Sprint before suggesting longer-term scopes of work.

What do you mean by "Reddit Strategy"?

To us, a Reddit Strategy makes use of every tool in the Reddit ecosystem that can help a brand achieve its marketing goals.

That can include the use of Reddit's Ad Platform, and leveraging a Reddit's organic power.

However, some brand's may find their opportunity leans much more heavily on one these tools after careful analysis.

That's why we do the Reddit Strategy Sprint before suggesting longer-term scopes of work.

What do you mean by "Reddit Strategy"?

To us, a Reddit Strategy makes use of every tool in the Reddit ecosystem that can help a brand achieve its marketing goals.

That can include the use of Reddit's Ad Platform, and leveraging a Reddit's organic power.

However, some brand's may find their opportunity leans much more heavily on one these tools after careful analysis.

That's why we do the Reddit Strategy Sprint before suggesting longer-term scopes of work.

What do you mean by "Reddit Strategy"?

To us, a Reddit Strategy makes use of every tool in the Reddit ecosystem that can help a brand achieve its marketing goals.

That can include the use of Reddit's Ad Platform, and leveraging a Reddit's organic power.

However, some brand's may find their opportunity leans much more heavily on one these tools after careful analysis.

That's why we do the Reddit Strategy Sprint before suggesting longer-term scopes of work.

I hear Reddit Ads don't work

This is a fairly common sentiment - however, we believe it’s outdated and mistaken.

Reddit used to be much less compelling for marketing teams due to it’s small size, and undeveloped ad tools.

These issues have all been alleviated over the past 18 months. Reddit is now massive thanks to its partnership with Google, its ad platform has (mostly) caught up with industry standard.

You may also see chatter online about Reddit Ads producing outsized amounts of bot traffic. In our experience, this is mostly false for a few reasons.

For starters, Reddit traffic is generally lower intent than other channels, but the cost to run ads to Redditors is also lower. This tends to even out the scales a bit. Many media buyers don’t understand that Reddit is almost definitionally a higher-funnel channel than Meta and Google. Behaviour is usually much more exploratory here, and discovery is just that. Pushing for high-friction conversions doesn’t work very well on Reddit - media buyers must build that into their go-to-market plans.

We also see huge differences in user behaviour based on the kind of content we put in front of them, suggesting humans reacting differently to various messages. A central pillar of most Reddit strategy is to produce net-new branded search - people looking you up by name.

We’ve countless examples of our Reddit Ads campaigns producing this, which is not consistent with any bot behaviour that we’ve ever come into contact with.

I hear Reddit Ads don't work

This is a fairly common sentiment - however, we believe it’s outdated and mistaken.

Reddit used to be much less compelling for marketing teams due to it’s small size, and undeveloped ad tools.

These issues have all been alleviated over the past 18 months. Reddit is now massive thanks to its partnership with Google, its ad platform has (mostly) caught up with industry standard.

You may also see chatter online about Reddit Ads producing outsized amounts of bot traffic. In our experience, this is mostly false for a few reasons.

For starters, Reddit traffic is generally lower intent than other channels, but the cost to run ads to Redditors is also lower. This tends to even out the scales a bit. Many media buyers don’t understand that Reddit is almost definitionally a higher-funnel channel than Meta and Google. Behaviour is usually much more exploratory here, and discovery is just that. Pushing for high-friction conversions doesn’t work very well on Reddit - media buyers must build that into their go-to-market plans.

We also see huge differences in user behaviour based on the kind of content we put in front of them, suggesting humans reacting differently to various messages. A central pillar of most Reddit strategy is to produce net-new branded search - people looking you up by name.

We’ve countless examples of our Reddit Ads campaigns producing this, which is not consistent with any bot behaviour that we’ve ever come into contact with.

I hear Reddit Ads don't work

This is a fairly common sentiment - however, we believe it’s outdated and mistaken.

Reddit used to be much less compelling for marketing teams due to it’s small size, and undeveloped ad tools.

These issues have all been alleviated over the past 18 months. Reddit is now massive thanks to its partnership with Google, its ad platform has (mostly) caught up with industry standard.

You may also see chatter online about Reddit Ads producing outsized amounts of bot traffic. In our experience, this is mostly false for a few reasons.

For starters, Reddit traffic is generally lower intent than other channels, but the cost to run ads to Redditors is also lower. This tends to even out the scales a bit. Many media buyers don’t understand that Reddit is almost definitionally a higher-funnel channel than Meta and Google. Behaviour is usually much more exploratory here, and discovery is just that. Pushing for high-friction conversions doesn’t work very well on Reddit - media buyers must build that into their go-to-market plans.

We also see huge differences in user behaviour based on the kind of content we put in front of them, suggesting humans reacting differently to various messages. A central pillar of most Reddit strategy is to produce net-new branded search - people looking you up by name.

We’ve countless examples of our Reddit Ads campaigns producing this, which is not consistent with any bot behaviour that we’ve ever come into contact with.

I hear Reddit Ads don't work

This is a fairly common sentiment - however, we believe it’s outdated and mistaken.

Reddit used to be much less compelling for marketing teams due to it’s small size, and undeveloped ad tools.

These issues have all been alleviated over the past 18 months. Reddit is now massive thanks to its partnership with Google, its ad platform has (mostly) caught up with industry standard.

You may also see chatter online about Reddit Ads producing outsized amounts of bot traffic. In our experience, this is mostly false for a few reasons.

For starters, Reddit traffic is generally lower intent than other channels, but the cost to run ads to Redditors is also lower. This tends to even out the scales a bit. Many media buyers don’t understand that Reddit is almost definitionally a higher-funnel channel than Meta and Google. Behaviour is usually much more exploratory here, and discovery is just that. Pushing for high-friction conversions doesn’t work very well on Reddit - media buyers must build that into their go-to-market plans.

We also see huge differences in user behaviour based on the kind of content we put in front of them, suggesting humans reacting differently to various messages. A central pillar of most Reddit strategy is to produce net-new branded search - people looking you up by name.

We’ve countless examples of our Reddit Ads campaigns producing this, which is not consistent with any bot behaviour that we’ve ever come into contact with.

Why not just hire a bot farm?

There are three reasons why not to do this:

  • It’s probably illegal

    • The FTC banned paid-for brand mentions that don’t disclose brand affiliation last year

  • It’s a bad investment

    • Because of this decision, Reddit has been investing in identifying bot accounts and AI-created content. When it finds some, it deletes all the content and bans the accounts and any account associated with it. Any investment here will be constantly at risk

  • It’s bad Karma

    • Reddit’s entire ethos is based on reciprocity - giving value to others before extracting value ourselves. Even if you don’t buy that, Reddit’s system is set up to promote good actors and punish bad ones. They’ll be playing whack-a-mole with you for as long as you’re using grey-hat strategies.

Why not just hire a bot farm?

There are three reasons why not to do this:

  • It’s probably illegal

    • The FTC banned paid-for brand mentions that don’t disclose brand affiliation last year

  • It’s a bad investment

    • Because of this decision, Reddit has been investing in identifying bot accounts and AI-created content. When it finds some, it deletes all the content and bans the accounts and any account associated with it. Any investment here will be constantly at risk

  • It’s bad Karma

    • Reddit’s entire ethos is based on reciprocity - giving value to others before extracting value ourselves. Even if you don’t buy that, Reddit’s system is set up to promote good actors and punish bad ones. They’ll be playing whack-a-mole with you for as long as you’re using grey-hat strategies.

Why not just hire a bot farm?

There are three reasons why not to do this:

  • It’s probably illegal

    • The FTC banned paid-for brand mentions that don’t disclose brand affiliation last year

  • It’s a bad investment

    • Because of this decision, Reddit has been investing in identifying bot accounts and AI-created content. When it finds some, it deletes all the content and bans the accounts and any account associated with it. Any investment here will be constantly at risk

  • It’s bad Karma

    • Reddit’s entire ethos is based on reciprocity - giving value to others before extracting value ourselves. Even if you don’t buy that, Reddit’s system is set up to promote good actors and punish bad ones. They’ll be playing whack-a-mole with you for as long as you’re using grey-hat strategies.

Why not just hire a bot farm?

There are three reasons why not to do this:

  • It’s probably illegal

    • The FTC banned paid-for brand mentions that don’t disclose brand affiliation last year

  • It’s a bad investment

    • Because of this decision, Reddit has been investing in identifying bot accounts and AI-created content. When it finds some, it deletes all the content and bans the accounts and any account associated with it. Any investment here will be constantly at risk

  • It’s bad Karma

    • Reddit’s entire ethos is based on reciprocity - giving value to others before extracting value ourselves. Even if you don’t buy that, Reddit’s system is set up to promote good actors and punish bad ones. They’ll be playing whack-a-mole with you for as long as you’re using grey-hat strategies.

Is Reddit really worth it?

Here are some facts that convinced us. Maybe they’ll convince you, too.

Is Reddit really worth it?

Here are some facts that convinced us. Maybe they’ll convince you, too.

Is Reddit really worth it?

Here are some facts that convinced us. Maybe they’ll convince you, too.

Is Reddit really worth it?

Here are some facts that convinced us. Maybe they’ll convince you, too.

Who's behind Karmic?

Karmic is run by two lifelong friends in the Canadian Maritimes.

Colin James Belyea is a multi-time Head of Growth in venture-backed startups (Remote Year, Outsite, Bungalow) with over $20M in paid media spend under management.

Chris Jorgensen is a former school teacher turned content marketer (and he also happens to be our resident Reddit platform expert).

All work is completed by us and our tools (no outsourcing. We can be reached at colin @ withkarmic.com

Who's behind Karmic?

Karmic is run by two lifelong friends in the Canadian Maritimes.

Colin James Belyea is a multi-time Head of Growth in venture-backed startups (Remote Year, Outsite, Bungalow) with over $20M in paid media spend under management.

Chris Jorgensen is a former school teacher turned content marketer (and he also happens to be our resident Reddit platform expert).

All work is completed by us and our tools (no outsourcing. We can be reached at colin @ withkarmic.com

Who's behind Karmic?

Karmic is run by two lifelong friends in the Canadian Maritimes.

Colin James Belyea is a multi-time Head of Growth in venture-backed startups (Remote Year, Outsite, Bungalow) with over $20M in paid media spend under management.

Chris Jorgensen is a former school teacher turned content marketer (and he also happens to be our resident Reddit platform expert).

All work is completed by us and our tools (no outsourcing. We can be reached at colin @ withkarmic.com

Who's behind Karmic?

Karmic is run by two lifelong friends in the Canadian Maritimes.

Colin James Belyea is a multi-time Head of Growth in venture-backed startups (Remote Year, Outsite, Bungalow) with over $20M in paid media spend under management.

Chris Jorgensen is a former school teacher turned content marketer (and he also happens to be our resident Reddit platform expert).

All work is completed by us and our tools (no outsourcing. We can be reached at colin @ withkarmic.com

Start your Reddit Strategy Sprint today

Your customers are talking on Reddit. Whether or not you meet them there is up to you.