At Native-Redditor, we specialize in authentic Reddit-native growth: blending organic engagement with paid strategy.
100K+ active communities covering every niche. Your audience is already there.
Reddit threads now outrank review sites in Google and power AI-generated answers.
90% of users trust Reddit for product research, higher than Google, Amazon, or Instagram.
Proactively shape your brand's reputation or let unchecked discussions define you.
"Shubhangi took the time to deeply understand our goals and translated them into a well-researched Reddit strategy. She identified the right subreddits, matched each community's tone perfectly, and timed posts for maximum visibility. The result was authentic engagement that never felt promotional — exactly what Reddit demands."
"Exceptionally detail-oriented, consistently delivered quality work, and always kept communication clear and proactive throughout the entire engagement."
"Posts were crafted to a high standard and delivered exactly what was expected. Excellent work from start to finish."
Trusted by brands in Travel • Wellness • E-commerce • SaaS
Total post & comment views across organic Reddit campaigns
Achieved up to 5% engagement vs 1% avg on Reddit, with 90% positive sentiment score
CTR on ad creatives (6× higher than Reddit's 0.3% avg)
Organic brand mentions with zero removals
Brand ranked on first page for "{brand} Reddit" searches
Website redirects from Reddit threads to brand websites
(For building credibility and organic visibility)
Hey, I'm Shubhangi, the person behind Native-Redditor. I've been a Redditor for over 6 years now: long enough that it's basically part of my personality. I've modded communities, built posts that hit the front page, and watched brands fail miserably because they didn't get the culture. So I turned that obsession into my career, helping brands earn trust, not just attention. Every campaign you see here is written, managed, and optimized by me, one Reddit post at a time.
Over the past year, I've managed Reddit campaigns for brands across health, jewelry, SaaS, and travel. Here's what happened when we ditched the "brand voice" playbook and started talking like actual Redditors.
Survey subreddits are among the most strictly moderated communities on Reddit. Direct links, app name-drops, and anything that smells promotional gets removed instantly — and moderators have seen every trick in the book. On top of that, years of scammy survey apps and fake earning claims have made these communities deeply skeptical of anything new.
The app needed real visibility in the US and EU, but there were zero existing Reddit discussions about it and no established trust. Traditional promotion would have meant instant bans. The only path forward was to earn credibility before ever asking for it.
Instead of promoting the app, we made ourselves genuinely useful. We created posts answering real questions: how survey apps actually work, what realistic earnings look like, and how to spot scams. We shared real data, honest stats, and personal insights — and we openly acknowledged competitor apps, which built instant credibility with an audience trained to distrust anything one-sided.
The strategy was credibility first, always. We participated in discussions, gave practical advice, and only introduced the app when the context made it feel natural. Mentions were subtle, backed by proof, and carefully aligned with each subreddit's rules. Over time, link drops and app references stopped feeling promotional — they felt like recommendations from a trusted community member.
Results from the Campaign
Getting Indians to trust supplements is already tough. The market's flooded with sketchy products and overpromising claims. Add Reddit's hatred of supplement brands, and you've got instant bans and angry moderators.
The brand needed to launch in India, but traditional supplement subreddits would remove promotional content within minutes. They had great products and legitimate certifications, but none of that mattered if we couldn't even start a conversation.
Instead of talking about the brand, we talked about health. We created posts asking genuine questions: "What's actually helped you with sleep?" "How do you know if a supplement is legit?" We participated in discussions, shared research, and admitted when we didn't know something.
The key was leading with value and asking for opinions rather than pushing ours. When people appreciated our input and started engaging, the community naturally became more receptive. Only after building that trust did product mentions feel welcome.
Results from the Campaign
Google "[Brand Name] Reddit" and the first page was a nightmare. Angry customers, unresolved complaints, accusations of scams. Every negative thread was costing them sales, and traditional PR wasn't fixing it because Reddit doesn't care about press releases.
They needed to fix their reputation where it was actively getting destroyed: on Reddit itself.
We walked directly into those negative threads and responded. No corporate speak, no deflecting. Just honest acknowledgment of what went wrong and how we'd fix it.
We set up Reddit as a direct customer support channel, resolving issues publicly so everyone could see the brand actually cared. We also started sharing insider jewelry industry knowledge: tips on spotting fake stones, understanding markup, caring for pieces. This positioned the brand as experts who happened to sell jewelry, not salespeople pretending to be experts.
When satisfied customers started sharing their experiences organically, those testimonials gradually replaced the negative content in search results.
Results from the Campaign
Black Friday is when this tool matters most. It tracks price drops and helps people score deals. But it's also when deal subreddits are flooded with spam and self-promotion. Moderators are on high alert, and anything that smells like marketing gets removed immediately.
The brand needed visibility during peak season without getting banned.
We became the person everyone wants in their group chat during Black Friday: the friend who actually knows where the deals are. We posted helpful shopping strategies, early deal alerts, and tips for avoiding fake discounts. Stuff that was genuinely useful whether you used our tool or not.
By positioning the account as a deals-savvy insider who naturally knew the best tools, product mentions felt like genuine recommendations from someone in the know. We also timed everything carefully, building authority before the Black Friday chaos, not during it.
Results from the Campaign
This brand was essentially invisible on Reddit. Their competitors were constantly being recommended across travel subreddits while this platform's name never came up. They had a solid product and happy customers, but none of that mattered if nobody on Reddit knew they existed.
We showed up where people were already planning trips. Searched for posts asking about European itineraries, budget travel tips, hidden gems. Anywhere our platform could genuinely help.
Instead of jumping in with "Use our platform!", we created founder-led content. Real travel stories, personal recommendations, insider tips from someone who actually lived this stuff. The platform mentions came later, naturally, after we'd already provided value.
We focused on becoming active participants in European travel subreddits, not just advertisers passing through.
Results from the Campaign
Every campaign had different goals and different challenges, but a few things stayed consistent: