How to Actually Win on Reddit (And Get Cited by AI Search While You're At It)

Kaavya PrasadKaavya Prasadยท
A step-by-step Reddit playbook for creators showing how to build karma, navigate subreddits, and write content that gets cited by AI search engines
9 min read


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Most creators spend months building audiences on X and Instagram, then wonder why nobody finds them when they search for answers. They're building on sand. Reddit is concrete.

If you've had a post removed silently, earned zero upvotes despite a genuinely useful comment, or watched a link get you flagged as spam, this playbook is for you. By the end, you'll know exactly how Reddit's immune system works, how to earn a real presence in communities that matter, and why a tutorial you write today will still be cited by ChatGPT and Perplexity six months from now. That last part is why we built Reddit into the Scribble creator workflow, but more on that later.


Why Reddit Is the Only Platform Where Being Unknown Works in Your Favour

X and Instagram are open networks. You can post anything, the algorithm decides who sees it, and volume tends to win. Reddit is the opposite architecture entirely.

Reddit is a collection of thousands of forums, called subreddits, each with its own culture, its own moderators, and its own rules. r/Bitcoin and r/CryptoCurrency look nearly identical from the outside. Post about an altcoin in r/Bitcoin and you're removed in minutes. Think of every subreddit as a different country with different laws, and your job is to pass customs every single time.

Here's the counterintuitive part: being unknown actually helps you early on. Nobody has expectations of you. You can lurk, learn the room, and start contributing without anyone scrutinising your motives. That patience window is exactly what most brand-first creators refuse to use, and it's why Reddit's immune system ejects them.


Karma: The Gate You Have to Pass

Karma is the number next to your username. It goes up when people upvote your posts and comments, down when they downvote. Two types: post karma and comment karma. Both count.

Many subreddits require a karma floor before you can post at all, some require 500 or more. That can represent months of genuine contribution. There is no shortcut that doesn't eventually get you banned.

The fastest legitimate path: Find subreddits you actually care about, your city, your hobby, a product you genuinely use, and contribute to them for real. One genuinely useful comment can earn 100+ upvotes. A single paragraph, 100 karma points.

A reliable starting point: r/explainlikeimfive. If you've been using a DeFi protocol, a crypto bridge, or even a niche concept like MEV, explain it as if you're talking to a curious 10-year-old. The community upvotes clarity, and it trains you to write the way Reddit rewards: specific, human, and useful.


Six Rules That Keep Your Account Alive

These aren't suggestions. They're the difference between a Reddit presence that compounds and an account that gets banned and starts from zero.

Read every subreddit's sidebar rules before posting. Not once, not in general, every subreddit, every time. What's a normal post in r/entrepreneur is a bannable offence in r/smallbusiness. Five minutes of reading saves your account.

Never drop links in posts. This is the biggest adjustment coming from X. Links are an instant red flag in most subreddits. Mention that something exists. Share a link only if someone explicitly asks for it in a comment reply. Never in the original post.

Follow the 9:1 rule. Comment genuinely nine times before posting anything that mentions your work. Reddit tracks contribution ratios and AutoMod often acts on them.

Don't cross-post the same content across subreddits. Rewrite for each community. Same post, same account, multiple subs in a short window is a spam signal the system catches quickly.

Match your flair. Every subreddit uses post categories called flairs. If you skip the flair, AutoMod removes your post silently. It still appears on your profile. You just get no views and no upvotes and no idea why.

No AI-generated content. Redditors identify AI writing instantly and the reaction is swift. Write like you're reviewing a restaurant you genuinely visited: what specifically worked, what didn't, your exact experience. That specificity is what Reddit rewards and, critically, what AI search engines cite.


The Post Formats That Compound

Reddit rewards length, but only if the length earns itself. Here are the six formats that consistently work:

Format

Why it works

Example

Questions

Give the community a job to do. Even simple questions outperform most product posts.

"Best crypto wallet for someone who doesn't want to think about it?"

Comparisons

Specificity signals real work. High-traffic in DeFi and tech subreddits.

"I used five cross-chain bridges over three months. Here's what I actually found."

Personal stories

Reddit rewards the specific and the weird. Generic takes get ignored.

The exact moment you lost a wallet to a phishing attack, with timestamps and lessons.

Tutorials

People save these. Earn upvotes and they become AI search citations.

"I've been running a creator community for three years. Here's how it actually works."

Hot takes with receipts

Reddit rewards the argument, not the one-liner. You need to defend it across five comments.

A strong claim about a protocol with on-chain data backing it up.

AMAs

Inviting scrutiny signals confidence. Reddit reads it that way.

"I've been a Shih Tzu parent for 10 years. Ask me anything."

Authoritative, structured prose on high-trust platforms is what gets cited by Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, and ChatGPT. The tutorial and comparison formats earn citations most reliably because they answer a specific question in quotable, self-contained prose.


Reddit and AI Search: Why This Is a Long Game Worth Playing

Here's the mechanic most creators miss: Reddit posts don't expire.

A solid tutorial or genuinely useful answer doesn't just get upvoted and forgotten. It keeps getting found in Reddit search, in Google, and increasingly in AI search responses. The numbers back this up: according to Statista's analysis of Semrush data, Reddit is the largest source of information cited by LLMs, accounting for 40.1% of total citations across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Google AI Mode, surpassing Wikipedia, YouTube, and Google itself. On Perplexity specifically, Reddit accounts for 46.7% of top citations, reflecting the platform's preference for authentic, conversational content. katadataSurfer

The Google side of the equation is just as significant. According to Ahrefs data, Reddit's organic search traffic surged from 175 million to 1.23 billion monthly visits between June 2023 and 2025, a 603% increase, making it the second-largest destination for Google search traffic in the United States, trailing only Wikipedia. Medium

Compare that to paid ads: the moment you stop paying, they stop working. Organic Reddit content is infrastructure. It builds while you sleep.

One important caveat: citation patterns shift. Conductor research found Reddit's citation share dropped 23% in a single month between October and November 2025, partly driven by platform-level disputes over scraping rights. The point isn't that Reddit is a guaranteed permanent channel. It's that high-quality, specific, well-structured content on Reddit has durability that X posts simply don't. The platforms that AI engines cite change; the content quality signals that earn citation stay consistent. CMSWire

The specific format matters for AI citation. AI search engines don't cite vague takes. They cite posts that answer a specific question, include a concrete claim, and are written in quotable self-contained prose. A how-to breakdown with numbered steps performs significantly better than an opinion thread. You can read the full breakdown of what makes content AI-retrievable in How to Write Content That Gets Cited by AI Search Engines.

One more thing: if something lands on Reddit, it tends to spread. Reddit is a reliable testing ground. Unsure about a take? Post it on Reddit first. If it earns upvotes and real comments, take it to LinkedIn, your Substack, your next long-form piece.


Your First 30 Days: A Walk-Through

Here's what this looks like in practice for a creator who's new to Reddit or starting fresh.

Week 1: Lurk. Find five to seven subreddits in your niche. For a DeFi creator, that might be r/CryptoCurrency, r/DeFi, r/ethfinance, r/investing, and one or two subreddits tied to the specific protocols you cover. Observe. What gets upvoted? What gets buried? What tone does each community use? Do not post anything yet.

Week 2: Comment only. Start replying to existing threads. Be genuinely useful. If someone asks "what's the difference between a CEX and a DEX?" and you know the answer cold, write it out properly. No links. No self-promotion. Just the answer. Do this ten to fifteen times across your target subreddits. Track which comment styles earn upvotes.

Week 3: Post one question. Not a tutorial, not a hot take, just a question. Something you're genuinely curious about that the community can answer. "I've been using [Protocol X] for six months. What am I probably doing wrong?" This gets you post karma, surfaces useful feedback, and starts building your presence as a participant rather than a broadcaster.

Week 4: Post one tutorial. Choose a topic where you have real experience. Write it longer than you'd write anything on X. Reddit rewards 600 to 1,500 words if they earn the length. Include your specific context: timeframe, platforms used, exact outcomes. No links unless they're directly referenced in the post and add real value. Submit it to one subreddit only. Watch what happens.

After 30 days, you should have a karma base, a small reputation in two or three communities, and a first piece of content that's indexed and working without you touching it.


FAQ

Can I post the same content across multiple subreddits?

No. Rewrite for each community. Same post, same account, multiple subs inside 48 hours is a spam signal. Same idea, genuinely rewritten for a different audience, is fine.

How do I know if I've been shadowbanned?

Log out and search your username on Reddit. If your posts don't appear in the results, you're shadowbanned. Contact Reddit support to appeal, but prevention (following the rules above) is far better than recovery.

How long before I can post promotional content?

Minimum three months of genuine contribution before anything that mentions your work. The 9:1 rule applies permanently, not just in the early period.

Does Reddit actually get cited by AI search engines?

Yes, frequently. It's the most-cited platform across major LLMs by volume. A tutorial that earns upvotes in an active subreddit has a meaningful chance of appearing in AI search responses for months afterward, though citation patterns do shift over time as platforms negotiate data access.

What's the difference between post karma and comment karma?

Post karma comes from upvotes on posts you create. Comment karma comes from upvotes on replies. Both contribute to your overall karma number, and some subreddits check one or both specifically in their minimum requirements.


Want to brief creators for this kind of Reddit content at scale? Run your free GEO audit at scribble.network, or see how Scribble bounties route creators to AI-citable platforms at scribble.network/creators.

Written by

Kaavya Prasad
Kaavya PrasadCofounder at Scribble Network

Kaavya has been building at the edge of the internet since 2016, starting in crypto, founding Lumos Labs, a web3 education platform and eventually co-founding Scribble, a creator marketing platform helping brands get discovered by AI search engines. At Scribble, she leads community and growth across a network of 50,000+ creators running GEO campaigns for 100+ brands. Her obsession: figuring out how content actually gets cited by LLMs, and building the infrastructure to make it happen at scale. When she's not deep in distribution strategy or vibe-coding tools, she's in Bangalore, probably being supervised by two Shih Tzus named Mushu and Milo.

How to Actually Win on Reddit (And Get Cited by AI Search While You're at It)