Resources / Reddit Auto-Posting
10 subreddits per creator per day, persona-tuned for each sub, with karma building, DM outreach, scheduling, and content rotation. Built for premium creator agencies running rosters of 10 to 80+ creators. The traffic source that pays — automated to scale.
Reddit is the single highest-converting social traffic source for subscription creators. It allows adult content in dedicated subreddits, the audience self-selects by sub, and one well-timed post in the right place can deliver more paid subscribers than a week of effort on every other platform combined. Agencies know this. Solo creators know this. Most of them try to run Reddit manually for a while, and then they stop.
The reason is that Reddit is, by some distance, the most rule-bound social platform a creator works with. Every subreddit has its own posting rules: a specific flair format, a specific title style, a minimum karma threshold, a posting cooldown for that user, sometimes a verification requirement, sometimes a restriction on what kind of content (image, gallery, link, GIF, video) is allowed. Cross-posting wrong-format content gets you removed; submitting too often gets you shadow-banned; submitting from a fresh account with no karma gets your post auto-deleted before any human sees it.
Multiply that by 10 subreddits, multiply by 30 creators on a roster, multiply by the fact that the optimal posting time for r/sub_a is different from r/sub_b is different from r/sub_c, and you have a full-time job for a small team just to keep Reddit running. Most agencies either drop Reddit entirely, run a third of the volume they should, or hire a dedicated Reddit ops person whose entire role is logging in and out of subreddits all day. None of those are good outcomes.
BIGR's Reddit auto-posting layer is built for that gap. One dashboard, every creator on your roster, 10 subreddits per creator running every day with the right format, the right timing, the right karma-managed account, and the right persona tuned for that specific sub. Below is the live console — and below that, a deeper breakdown of every component.
10 subreddits per creator, status per sub (Posted, Live, Queued), karma earned tracked in real time, and the DM-outreach module ticking up sent count against an 18% reply rate. Cycle continues 24/7 across every creator on your roster.
Six capabilities that together make Reddit a hands-off channel rather than a full-time job. Every module is per-creator scoped, so personas, karma history, and content rotation are isolated per account.
Flair, title format, allowed content type (image / gallery / video / link), karma minimum, posting cooldown, and verification status — all configured per subreddit and enforced before any post is submitted. Wrong-format posts get blocked at submission, not after a mod-removes them.
Fresh accounts get seeded with commenting activity, low-stakes posts in lenient subs, and engagement on relevant threads — building reputation safely until they can post in the high-value NSFW subs. Karma per account is tracked in the dashboard, with auto-alerts when a sub starts rejecting posts due to karma threshold.
Outbound, opt-in Reddit DMs to fans who upvote, comment, or view the creator's profile. Persona-tuned copy per sub, rate-limited per account, and routed back into the unified DM inbox so chatters work one queue across every creator and every platform.
Optimal posting times per subreddit are learned over time from your roster's own conversion data. Posts are queued and submitted within the right time window per sub, with per-account cooldowns so Reddit's anti-spam systems never see a pattern.
A creator can be soft and flirty in r/sub_a, dominant in r/sub_b, and casual girl-next-door in r/sub_c. Each persona variant covers title style, caption tone, comment-reply voice, and DM-outreach opt-in language. Personas are versioned and A/B tested.
A library of images, galleries, and videos per creator, tagged by sub-appropriate content type. The scheduler rotates content automatically so the same image doesn't hit two subs in the same 48-hour window, and the freshest content always lands in the highest-converting subs first.
The headline numbers — 10 subreddits per creator per day, 18% DM reply rate, karma earned week-over-week — are real outputs, not marketing claims. Below is the architecture that produces them.
Every creator on the platform gets a curated list of 10 subreddits during onboarding. That list is built from three inputs: the creator's niche and content style, the agency's historical conversion data from other creators (we know which subs convert for which body types and styles), and a live database of subreddit rules and rejection rates updated weekly. Sub lists are not static — under-performers get cut every month, and freshly opened or fast-growing subs get tested in rotation.
Most high-value NSFW subreddits require minimum karma or account age before they'll accept a post. A brand-new account submitted into r/high-value-sub gets auto-removed by the AutoModerator within seconds. BIGR runs a karma-building workflow for every new account: low-stakes engagement (commenting on relevant threads, upvoting, contributing to image dumps in lenient subs), small-scale posting in karma-friendly subs, and a 7–14 day warm-up before the account is allowed into the high-conversion sub list. Karma per account is tracked live in the dashboard with red flags when a sub is rejecting due to threshold.
Before any post is submitted, BIGR validates it against that subreddit's ruleset: required flair, title format (some subs require specific tags or bracketed prefixes), allowed content type (image, gallery, link, GIF, video), maximum title length, verification status, posting cooldown for that user, and any sub-specific banned keywords. Posts that fail validation get rejected at the BIGR layer, not by Reddit's mod team. That keeps account histories clean and avoids the kind of repeated mod-removal pattern that triggers shadow bans.
Optimal posting time per subreddit is learned over months from real conversion data across the network. r/sub_a peaks at 8pm ET; r/sub_b peaks at 2am UK; r/sub_c is a Sunday-morning sub. The scheduler queues posts into the right windows per sub, with per-account cooldowns layered on top so a single Reddit account never submits faster than Reddit's implicit anti-spam thresholds. For agencies in multiple timezones, the scheduler runs on UTC under the hood and converts to per-creator timezones in the UI.
A creator's voice changes by sub. The same creator might be a soft, flirty energy in r/sub_a (a personalised request-driven sub), a dominant tone in r/sub_b (a kink-specific sub), and a casual, conversational, girl-next-door voice in r/sub_c (a broader-appeal sub). BIGR scopes a persona variant per (creator × subreddit) pair. The persona governs title style, caption tone, the wording of comment replies, and the opt-in language used in DM outreach. Personas are versioned, A/B tested at the title level, and rolled forward as conversion data accumulates.
Each creator has a library of images, galleries, and videos tagged by content type and sub-appropriateness. The scheduler rotates content automatically so the same asset doesn't hit two subs within a 48-hour window (which kills CTR — the audience overlaps more than people think). Fresh assets are routed to the highest-converting subs first; library assets cycle through lower-tier subs. The rotation logic also handles seasonal tags (themed content), and lets agency ops staff lock specific assets to specific subs when there's a strategic reason to.
Reddit DMs are one of the most direct conversion vectors a creator has. BIGR's outreach module identifies fans who have engaged with a post (upvotes, comments, profile clicks) and sends opt-in messages with persona-tuned copy. Rate limits per account, cooldowns per sub, and per-persona A/B testing on the opening line. Inbound replies are routed back into the unified multi-account DM inbox, where chatters work one queue across every creator and every platform — Reddit alongside X, Instagram, TikTok, and the rest.
Tell us how many creators you run and what your Reddit setup looks like today. We'll scope a sub list, walk through karma posture, and quote a plan.