BottingSubsForMoney420
Registered Member
- Oct 31, 2024
- 54
- 25
First off, I gotta say, the people I've met here on BHW have been straight-up awesome. No bullsh*t.
But here's the thing, when I'm at all these IM conferences talking about my favorite way to drive traffic, "Reddit," no one seems to get it. These IM guys just don't understand the potential. And I get it, this method ain't for everybody.
Now, before you get the wrong idea, I don't have a course to sell you, I don’t need the cash or the clout. Truth is, not everyone can pull off what I do, it takes a certain mindset. But if anyone's got the chops for it, it's the people on BHW.
So what exactly do I do? And how much traffic is really on Reddit?
Let me break it down. Last night, I had a post sitting pretty at the top of a niche-relevant sub. Prime real estate.
Here's how it goes down: When my company’s in position for a top comment, I drop a comment there myself. Just something engaging, on-point, and naturally fitting the topic. Then I give it 5-10 upvotes, let it sit, and wait. Once I start getting those organic responses rolling in, I boost the hell out of it, sometimes thousands of upvotes, to secure the top spot.
Imagine 100k, 200k, even 1M people seeing your comment about your brand. Imagine slipping in a link there, or even just building some brand recognition. You can’t buy that kind of traffic through regular means without dropping serious coin.
How much do I upvote the post? Easy. I boost it to about 20 more upvotes than the current top comment in the sub. But here's the deal, you gotta be smart about this. The post has to be worthy. Your post about cars running on bacon grease isn’t going to fly to the top just because you want it to. Mods know what's up, and they will ban you if it looks sus. So have a bit of common sense, play the game right, and create posts that seem genuine.
It doesn't stop there, you need to create stories using comments, and comments on those comments. It's like weaving a narrative that makes people engage, reply, and drive your sh*t higher. Just don't go overboard. No one likes obvious shilling, and Redditors are some of the sharpest out there.
Oh, and a pro tip, grab some aged accounts and warm them up by actually participating in convos a day or two before you start going hard.
I've cleared 8-figs in a year online, and Reddit's been a massive part of my brand-building strategy. Happy to share more insights if the interest is there.
But here's the thing, when I'm at all these IM conferences talking about my favorite way to drive traffic, "Reddit," no one seems to get it. These IM guys just don't understand the potential. And I get it, this method ain't for everybody.
Now, before you get the wrong idea, I don't have a course to sell you, I don’t need the cash or the clout. Truth is, not everyone can pull off what I do, it takes a certain mindset. But if anyone's got the chops for it, it's the people on BHW.
So what exactly do I do? And how much traffic is really on Reddit?
Let me break it down. Last night, I had a post sitting pretty at the top of a niche-relevant sub. Prime real estate.
Here's how it goes down: When my company’s in position for a top comment, I drop a comment there myself. Just something engaging, on-point, and naturally fitting the topic. Then I give it 5-10 upvotes, let it sit, and wait. Once I start getting those organic responses rolling in, I boost the hell out of it, sometimes thousands of upvotes, to secure the top spot.
Imagine 100k, 200k, even 1M people seeing your comment about your brand. Imagine slipping in a link there, or even just building some brand recognition. You can’t buy that kind of traffic through regular means without dropping serious coin.
How much do I upvote the post? Easy. I boost it to about 20 more upvotes than the current top comment in the sub. But here's the deal, you gotta be smart about this. The post has to be worthy. Your post about cars running on bacon grease isn’t going to fly to the top just because you want it to. Mods know what's up, and they will ban you if it looks sus. So have a bit of common sense, play the game right, and create posts that seem genuine.
It doesn't stop there, you need to create stories using comments, and comments on those comments. It's like weaving a narrative that makes people engage, reply, and drive your sh*t higher. Just don't go overboard. No one likes obvious shilling, and Redditors are some of the sharpest out there.
Oh, and a pro tip, grab some aged accounts and warm them up by actually participating in convos a day or two before you start going hard.
I've cleared 8-figs in a year online, and Reddit's been a massive part of my brand-building strategy. Happy to share more insights if the interest is there.
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