How to Post on r/marketing: A Founder's Guide
r/marketing has 600K+ members focused on marketing strategy, tools, and career advice. Here is how to share your product there without getting removed.
5 min readIn This Article
What Makes r/marketing Unique
r/marketing is a community of 600K+ members focused on marketing strategy, tools, and career advice. It is one of the most important subreddits for founders because it attracts the exact audience that buys marketing tools, analytics platforms, and campaign management software.
The community culture values substance over flash. Posts that share genuine insights, detailed experiences, and honest assessments consistently outperform polished marketing content. Members can detect promotional intent quickly and will call it out.
Understanding the specific culture and rules of r/marketing before posting is essential. What works on other subreddits may not work here, and the consequences of getting it wrong range from post removal to permanent bans.
The community culture values substance over flash. Posts that share genuine insights, detailed experiences, and honest assessments consistently outperform polished marketing content. Members can detect promotional intent quickly and will call it out.
Understanding the specific culture and rules of r/marketing before posting is essential. What works on other subreddits may not work here, and the consequences of getting it wrong range from post removal to permanent bans.
Rules You Must Know
r/marketing has specific rules that every poster needs to understand: no self-promotion outside designated threads, value-first approach required. Violating any of these will result in immediate post removal at minimum.
Beyond the stated rules, there are unwritten norms. Spend at least a week reading posts and comments to understand the tone, depth, and style that gets rewarded. Sort by "Top — This Month" to see what the community currently values most.
When in doubt about whether your post will be accepted, message the moderators before posting. A quick message explaining what you want to share and asking if it is appropriate will save you from wasted effort and potential bans.
Beyond the stated rules, there are unwritten norms. Spend at least a week reading posts and comments to understand the tone, depth, and style that gets rewarded. Sort by "Top — This Month" to see what the community currently values most.
When in doubt about whether your post will be accepted, message the moderators before posting. A quick message explaining what you want to share and asking if it is appropriate will save you from wasted effort and potential bans.
Pro tip: Read the top 10 posts of all time on r/marketing. These reveal exactly what the community values and give you a template for structuring your own posts.
What Gets Upvoted
The highest-performing posts on r/marketing consistently share these traits: they provide genuine, actionable value. They include specific details, numbers, or examples rather than vague advice. They are written in a conversational, honest tone rather than marketing speak.
This subreddit is best for marketing tools, analytics platforms, and campaign management software. If your product fits this category, frame your post around the unique insights, challenges, or results from building and launching it.
Posts that include behind-the-scenes details, honest metrics, and lessons learned tend to dramatically outperform simple product announcements. The community rewards transparency and penalizes anything that feels like it was written by a marketing team.
This subreddit is best for marketing tools, analytics platforms, and campaign management software. If your product fits this category, frame your post around the unique insights, challenges, or results from building and launching it.
Posts that include behind-the-scenes details, honest metrics, and lessons learned tend to dramatically outperform simple product announcements. The community rewards transparency and penalizes anything that feels like it was written by a marketing team.
The most upvoted posts on r/marketing read like honest conversations between peers, not press releases from companies.
Promoting Your Product
Self-promotion on r/marketing requires careful execution. The rules state: no self-promotion outside designated threads, value-first approach required. Within these constraints, the most effective approach is to lead with your story and insights rather than your product.
A post structured as "Here is what I learned building X" will always outperform "Check out X." Share your journey, the problems you encountered, the decisions you made, and the results you achieved. Your product is part of the story, not the entire story.
Timing matters too. Post during the subreddit's peak hours (usually weekday mornings US Eastern Time) and be ready to engage in comments for at least two hours after posting. Your responsiveness in comments often determines whether a post gains traction or dies.
A post structured as "Here is what I learned building X" will always outperform "Check out X." Share your journey, the problems you encountered, the decisions you made, and the results you achieved. Your product is part of the story, not the entire story.
Timing matters too. Post during the subreddit's peak hours (usually weekday mornings US Eastern Time) and be ready to engage in comments for at least two hours after posting. Your responsiveness in comments often determines whether a post gains traction or dies.
A Template That Works
Here is a proven post structure for r/marketing:
Title: A specific, interesting statement about what you built or learned. Include a concrete detail or number.
Opening paragraph: The problem you experienced and why it matters.
Middle section: Your journey — what you tried, what failed, what worked. Include specific details that readers can learn from.
Product mention: A brief, transparent introduction of your product as the solution you built. One or two sentences with a single link.
Closing: A specific question that invites discussion. Not "what do you think?" but "how do you currently handle X?" or "what features would make this useful for you?"
This structure consistently generates both upvotes and genuine engagement on r/marketing.
Title: A specific, interesting statement about what you built or learned. Include a concrete detail or number.
Opening paragraph: The problem you experienced and why it matters.
Middle section: Your journey — what you tried, what failed, what worked. Include specific details that readers can learn from.
Product mention: A brief, transparent introduction of your product as the solution you built. One or two sentences with a single link.
Closing: A specific question that invites discussion. Not "what do you think?" but "how do you currently handle X?" or "what features would make this useful for you?"
This structure consistently generates both upvotes and genuine engagement on r/marketing.