Reddit: The Importance of Titling and Responding to Comments

PositivelyBrainwashed

I Love YTtalk
I'm always around here praising how amazing Reddit can be. It can be intimidating at first, and I've had my rough moments in it, but it can easily become your best friend. Here's 5 Lessons to cut the learning curve for anyone daring to use it.

Lesson #1: Reddit can be unpredictable at times. You can be King in a subreddit one day and a nobody another day. I created a video with the expectation that it would do well in /rsocialskills and r/socialengineering as I got great results there in the past. It saddened me that it didn't do as well.

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Lesson #2: Sometimes your video has to survive the wave of downvotes. I can swear that there's people with multiple accounts on Reddit that will just mass downvote your videos. In the r/everymanshouldknow subrredit for example, my video stayed at 0 getting mass downvoted for a good 4 hours, averaging a rating of 50%. Then it sky rocketed upwards now with a 90% upvote. This makes no sense unless someone just finally ran out of accounts. So if your video is good enough, it can overcome even the dark side of Reddit.

Lesson #3: Good Titles are soooo important. r/lifehacks was not even in my mind while making my video, as it's simply a book summary and nothing like the other contents in that subreddit. But I cleverly titled my post "Communication Life Hacks" and boom it was a big hit, and now Reddit is driving my channel with over 11,000+ views according to my realtime analytics. Not bad as it takes less than 20 seconds to post in each Subreddit! Also, I'm confident I would have gotten better results in the Social subreddits if I titled it, "How to Talk to Anyone to improve your Social Skills" rather than simply using the default title I chose for Youtube .

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Lesson #4: Reply back to every single comment. Majority of my comments are nice, informative, or neutral. But I reply to every single one of them, including the negative ones. Posts with a lot of comments tend to do really well, and you replying increases that number.

Lesson #5: Keep a list of Subreddits for your niche, and write down how many subscribers is in it, and any unique notes or rules about it. If I didn't have r/lifehacks in my list, I probably would have never thought of posting there. Also if you find a new subreddit that you wished you posted your past videos on there, then why not do so now? There's nothing wrong promoting past videos.

At the moment my video has received 276 likes and only 12 dislikes. If Reddit was truly toxic I should be getting more dislikes. I have another video that was controversial in the past, and looking back I can now admit there was a lot room for improvement and it got 96 likes but 51 dislikes. So overall, I think Reddit is like a magnifying glass. If your content is truly worthy, it will be loved, shared and it can be a very rewarding experience. I could literally spend 100 hours promoting on other social media platforms, but spending 1-2 hours planning my strategy on Reddit produces much better results. Hope you guys got something out of this post :)


EDIT: My luck ran out on r/Lifehacks and they took my post down due to my submission ratio of personal content being more than 10%

So I guess there's a lesson #6: Get in a habit of promoting other people's contents. If I do the math, it's still worth my time doing this.
 
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Thanks for taking the time to post about Reddit. I've had the same hit or miss experiences with Reddit. Since its been mostly miss lately, I've backed off so much because it is discouraging.

What is your experience with the general rule of having only 10% of your posts be your own material? I find it difficult to find new material to put on Reddit that hasn't already been on Reddit. I post lots of comments and occasionally post imgur photos.[DOUBLEPOST=1471266849,1471266667][/DOUBLEPOST]Have you checked out https://www.redditlater.com? You can see what is the best day and time to post in specific subreddits. You can also schedule Reddit posts. You get one free schedule per week, but can pay to have more each week.
 
Thanks for taking the time to post about Reddit. I've had the same hit or miss experiences with Reddit. Since its been mostly miss lately, I've backed off so much because it is discouraging.

What is your experience with the general rule of having only 10% of your posts be your own material? I find it difficult to find new material to put on Reddit that hasn't already been on Reddit. I post lots of comments and occasionally post imgur photos.[DOUBLEPOST=1471266849,1471266667][/DOUBLEPOST]Have you checked out https://www.redditlater.com? You can see what is the best day and time to post in specific subreddits. You can also schedule Reddit posts. You get one free schedule per week, but can pay to have more each week.

I knew I forgot to mention something. What's my opinion of the whole 10% thing? Lol it's mostly a myth in my opinion. I'd say 95% of what I post is my own material. But perhaps maybe that's why I suffer mass down votes sometimes???

And no I have never heard of that. That sounds like a very useful site! Thanks for the share
 
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How do you know how many upvotes/downvotes your posts got? There's only % of upvotes indicator on reddit site, and up/downvotes summed up of course.
 
Thanks for taking the time to post about Reddit. I've had the same hit or miss experiences with Reddit. Since its been mostly miss lately, I've backed off so much because it is discouraging.

What is your experience with the general rule of having only 10% of your posts be your own material? I find it difficult to find new material to put on Reddit that hasn't already been on Reddit. I post lots of comments and occasionally post imgur photos.[DOUBLEPOST=1471266849,1471266667][/DOUBLEPOST]Have you checked out https://www.redditlater.com? You can see what is the best day and time to post in specific subreddits. You can also schedule Reddit posts. You get one free schedule per week, but can pay to have more each week.

I may have spoken too soon. It seems my luck has run out violating this 10% rule. LifeHacks took down my video saying I need to raise my submission ratio, and that I can repost there in 30 days if I prove that. So let that be a lesson for the rest. I got 14k views according to my analytics and about 250 subs from that run, but damn that could have probably reached 30k at least.[DOUBLEPOST=1471275301][/DOUBLEPOST]
How do you know how many upvotes/downvotes your posts got? There's only % of upvotes indicator on reddit site, and up/downvotes summed up of course.

I don't think it's possible to really know how many upvotes you got, unless it was truly the only place you got views for your video and you do some math.
 
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