Your always-on, culturally intelligent Reddit co-founder.
Every morning: a queue of Reddit posts, written in your voice, against each subreddit's playbook. Five minutes to approve. Your presence compounds.
The attention goldmine most founders ignore.
Your customers are searching Reddit for answers right now.
That's intent, not engagement.
Your post reaches Redditors AND millions of AI searches.
The catch: Reddit punishes generic content and inconsistency harder than any platform. Most founders post twice and give up.
Every subreddit has its own culture. You don't have time to learn five of them.
r/SaaS wants founder stories with metrics. r/ycombinator wants candid post-mortems. r/learnprogramming wants educational scaffolding. Post the same thing to three subreddits: one gets removed, one gets buried, one gets upvoted.
You need daily consistency + cultural fluency. Most founders have neither.
We've built 100+ playbooks.Each one encodes a subreddit's culture, rules, and winning patterns.
When Slowpost drafts a post for r/SaaS, it's written against r/SaaS's playbook. What rules it follows. What archetypes it rewards. What title patterns spread.
Result: your posts don't get removed. They don't read as AI. They read as peer.
See exactly what cultural intelligence means.
Click any subreddit to explore the rules, archetypes, title patterns, and tone we've encoded. This is what makes your posts land.
›r/SaaS"A support group for aspiring founders disguised as a business community."
- — Anti-hype / anti-bullshit — exaggerated MRR gets punished
- — Sales over engineering — 'distribution is everything'
- — Anti-AI-wrapper skepticism — no-code clones get ignored
- — Failure post-mortem with dollar amounts
- — Satirical mockery of SaaS culture
- — Bootstrapping pride — solo, no ads
- — Number-first hook + specific dollar amount
- — "Spent $40k building X. Here's what I learned."
Thinly-veiled marketing. LinkedIn-style 'I built this in 7 days, $100k MRR' posts.
Confessional, anti-corporate, honest about money.
›r/ycombinator"The YC-aware, money-aware founders' lounge — where mentioning a $24M raise doesn't read as bragging."
- — Specific numbers over narrative gloss — every top post has revenue, runway, or batch dollars
- — Cofounder pain is the single most reliable engagement multiplier in the sub
- — Skepticism of YC itself is welcome — affectionate critique outperforms loyalty posts
- — YC founder AMA / milestone drop (batch + revenue + timeline)
- — Cofounder betrayal or matching-disaster narrative
- — "I studied how [Company] (YC W17) went from zero to $Yb" company breakdown
- — Anti-hype reality check from someone with a track record
- — Batch + numbers + AMA: "We went from YC W24 to 500+ customers and $32M Series A in 9 months — AMA"
- — Three short sentences: "Got funding. Met on YC cofounder matching. Worst experience."
Vanity metrics in titles (impressions, signups, follows). Generic 'should I…' questions. Naked product pitches.
Calm, slightly weary, founder-to-founder. Earned voice, not performed expertise.
›r/startups"Where you go to talk ABOUT startups without ever pointing at yours."
- — Rule 3 auto-removes posts that mention a product name or URL
- — Mandatory flair — 'I will not promote' dominates 83% of posts as the default
- — Feedback requests go in the weekly pinned thread only
- — Long-form post-mortem with specific numbers
- — Step-by-step playbook from a practitioner
- — Meta-complaint about the sub itself
- — First-person narrative + specific outcome
- — "How I lost $X doing Y. What I'd do different."
Anything that even smells promotional. Thinly-disguised idea pitches.
Practitioner voice, no product names, narrative depth.
›r/indiehackers"A confessional support group disguised as a startup subreddit."
- — Self-promotion limited to 1 post with SHOW IH flair
- — MRR claims require proof — no proof, no post
- — 'What are you building' karma-bait not tolerated (bannable)
- — Emotional journey retrospective
- — Self-deprecating parody of indie hacker clichés
- — Vibe coder narrative (Cursor, Lovable, Bolt, Claude Code)
- — Emotional honesty + specific timeframe
- — "7 months. 3 launches. 0 customers. Here's what I learned."
AI-generated slop. Generic success flex. Bot upvoting is an 'instant ticket to Azkaban.'
Emotionally honest, self-deprecating, concrete.
›r/buildinpublic"An emotional support group for solo founders disguised as a product showcase."
- — Rule 3: No self-promotion without context
- — Share progress, lessons, or ask for feedback — not just a link
- — Revenue screenshots without story fall flat
- — Small-win celebration (first sale, $3.60 in ads)
- — Quit-my-9-5 vulnerability narrative
- — Free-resource share (directories, playbooks)
- — Underdog specific number + emotional hook
- — "My first paying customer used the product for 11 seconds."
Serial self-promoters (ratios drop from 0.98 to 0.77 over time).
Underdog, vulnerable, celebrate the small.
›r/ClaudeAI"A campfire where you bring a story. Not a marketplace where you bring a product."
- — Humor and praise outperform 'Built with Claude' flair posts
- — Usage-limits grievance is the community's shared pain point
- — Skepticism of AI hype is rewarded, not punished
- — Raw 'Built with Claude' narrative
- — Humor / meme about Claude's personality
- — Anthropic-loyalty celebration (vs OpenAI)
- — Narrative hook + admission of cost / failure / specific number
- — "Burned $280 of Claude Code to build a thing I could have solved with a cron job."
Corporate tone. Polished, inauthentic 'AI will replace everything' posts.
Raw, self-deprecating, specific about cost and failure.
Your morning, simplified.
Set up once.
Tell Slowpost about your product, your voice, and the subreddits where your users live. Takes 10 minutes. You never do it again.
Slowpost drafts the queue every morning.
It picks a thesis about your product, writes a 1,000-word essay in your voice, and adapts it across each subreddit's playbook — rules, archetypes, title patterns, all of it.
Approve in five minutes.
See the drafts, the subreddits, the playbook rules they follow. Approve, edit, or skip. Slowpost handles posting. You go back to building.
One essay. Three subreddits. Three voices.
Code is commodity. The product I shipped this quarter took 11 weeks. The hardest 11 weeks weren't the engineering — they were figuring out where my customers actually live and how they talk. Three subreddits. Three completely different cultures. Same idea, three voices.
›r/SaaS"Code is commodity. Distribution is the only edge I have left."
Spent $0 on ads, 11 weeks on the product, and the hardest part wasn't the engineering. It was figuring out that my customers don't live where I thought they did…
- ✓ Anti-hype tone per r/SaaS culture
- ✓ Number-first hook ($0 / 11 weeks)
- ✓ Distribution-over-engineering thesis
- ✓ No product name (Rule-clean)
›r/startups"I shipped my product in 11 weeks. The hardest part wasn't the code."
Three subreddits. Three completely different cultures. Same underlying idea, three voices. Here's what I learned about distribution that nobody told me up front…
- ✓ First-person narrative + outcome
- ✓ No product name per Rule 3
- ✓ 'I will not promote' compatible
- ✓ Practitioner voice
›r/buildinpublic"11 weeks shipping. Then I realized I'd been writing for the wrong people."
I assumed my customers would just find me. Three weeks of crickets later I sat down and actually read where they hang out. It wasn't where I'd been posting…
- ✓ Underdog vulnerability
- ✓ Specific timeframe (11 weeks, 3 weeks crickets)
- ✓ Lesson + emotional honesty
- ✓ No revenue brag
Because every post traces back to a real argument, not a prompt.
Every morning Slowpost picks a thesis about your product, writes a 1,000-word essay in your voice, and adapts it across each subreddit's playbook. The posts have a spine. Volume without substance reads as spam. Ours doesn't.
The thesis is the source. The essay is the spine. Reddit posts derive from it. Comments derive from it. The same source thinking can power LinkedIn, Substack, or HN later — Reddit is just where it starts.
This is why your Reddit presence compounds — it's built on a real argument about your product, not AI filler.
In today's competitive landscape, leveraging AI-driven solutions to scale your SaaS is essential. Our innovative platform empowers founders to unlock unprecedented growth by streamlining workflows and maximizing ROI.
Spent 40 hours last month writing posts nobody read. Then I sat down and actually mapped the three subreddits my users live in. Different cultures, different rules. Last week one post hit 112K views. Same product. Different voice.
The founder shipped with zero users. He ran this theory on his own products.
These are real posts on real subreddits, drafted against the playbooks before Slowpost existed. Same theory now powers the product.
- ✓ Post-mortem archetype matched ✓
- ✓ Candid cofounder tone ✓
- ✓ Long-form preferred ✓
- ✓ No self-promo ✓
- ✓ Raw 'Built with Claude' archetype ✓
- ✓ Self-deprecating tone ✓
- ✓ Specific numbers (7 apps, 3 months) ✓
- ✓ Journey, not announcement ✓
Not Jasper. Not a growth hire. Not Redreach.
100+ playbooks at launch — and a research pipeline that generates a fresh playbook for any subreddit on demand. The corpus grows with every customer. Outcome data from every approved post compounds.
Concrete proof points a skeptic can verify.
100+ playbooks at launch, plus real-time generation.
Each encodes a subreddit's rules, archetypes, and title patterns. The 100+ is the curated head — Slowpost generates a fresh playbook for any subreddit your users live in, on demand.
Voice engine preserves your voice.
Six-layer memory system (voice, theme, project, narrative, reference). Drafts don't sound like AI because they aren't generic.
Human-in-the-loop approval.
Nothing posts without your explicit yes. Default. Opt-in auto-post per channel. You're always in control.
Founder dogfoods the product.
Built by a solo founder who ran it on his own products. Every mismatch is felt and fixed by the customer it's built for.
Thesis as spine.
Every morning Slowpost picks a thesis about your product, writes a 1,000-word essay in your voice, and adapts it across subreddits. Volume with substance. Not spam.
What founders ask.
What if my niche subreddit isn't in the playbooks?
We have 100+ covering where founders' users live. Missing one? Slowpost generates a fresh playbook for any subreddit in real-time, before drafting a single post. The 100+ corpus is the curated head — the long tail comes from the same research pipeline, on demand.
What do I actually have to do every day?
Approve the morning queue. Five minutes. That's it. Slowpost handles thesis selection, essay drafting, per-subreddit adaptation, and posting in the background. The only setup is a one-time onboarding where you describe your product, voice, and target subreddits.
Can I auto-post instead of approving?
Yes. Approve once per subreddit, we auto-post. Still your account. Still your voice. You're in control.
How do I know these playbooks actually work?
The founder tested this theory on his own products. See the proof above — 172 upvotes on r/ycombinator and 341K views on r/ClaudeAI using the same playbook theory.
Why should I trust this over hiring a growth person?
A growth hire is $100–150K/year and 6 months to ramp. Plus, a growth hire doesn't have 100+ playbooks. Slowpost productive in 24 hours.
Ready to see Slowpost on your subreddits?
Book a 15-minute walkthrough. We'll show you the playbooks, walk through the morning queue, and generate a live thesis + essay for your product across the subreddits where your users actually live.
Book a 15-min walkthrough →
