
#1170 Subreddits Rule | Flynn Zaiger
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I might have been a little late getting started today because I fell down a rabbit hole on Reddit — and let me tell you, it was worth it.
If you’ve never explored Reddit, think of it as a sprawling collection of dinner parties happening all at once. Each “subreddit” is its own table — one might be deep in marketing trends, another swapping cat photos, and a third arguing about the best way to brew coffee. You can learn a lot about human behavior (and marketing) by paying attention to what people are talking about at each table.
To explore what Reddit can teach marketers, I sat down with Flynn Zaiger, CEO of Online Optimism — a marketing agency that knows a thing or two about digital communities, employee culture, and, yes, the occasional office cat.
Conversation Highlights-
Reddit as a Listening Tool: Forget the focus group. Subreddits are where your customers speak freely — unfiltered, passionate, and brutally honest. If you want to know what real people think about your industry or brand, start lurking.
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Authenticity Wins Every Time: Redditors have a built-in radar for fake marketing speak. If your post sounds like an ad, they’ll downvote it into oblivion. The brands that thrive on Reddit are the ones that genuinely engage — answering questions, sharing insights, and adding value to the conversation.
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Community Before Conversion: Flynn reminds us that on Reddit, connection comes before conversion. You build trust by showing up consistently and contributing meaningfully — not by dropping links and vanishing.
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Cats Still Rule the Internet: Yes, we took a short detour to talk about pets in the workplace. Turns out, happy office cats (or dogs) can improve morale and your Reddit karma.
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Listen before you speak. Spend a week just reading Reddit threads related to your industry. Notice what people are actually complaining about or celebrating.
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Be human, not a headline. When you do engage, drop the corporate voice. Talk like a real person — the way you’d comment on a friend’s post.
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Find your people. There’s a subreddit for nearly every niche. From r/marketing to r/smallbusiness and r/entrepreneur, hang out where your target audience already gathers.
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Share useful insights. Don’t pitch — teach. Share lessons learned, data, or stories. The value you give away becomes the credibility you earn.
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Bring that community mindset home. Whether it’s your internal Slack, your LinkedIn presence, or your podcast audience, think like a community manager — not a broadcaster.
You can find Flynn and his team at OnlineOptimism.com — and if you want to see their agency’s blend of creativity, culture, and data-driven optimism in action, check out their blog or find them on LinkedIn.