Step 1 — Set up a Project
A Project is your knowledge base. It's how Linkeddit knows what to say on your behalf. You only need to do this once per product or audience.
Fill in:
- Product overview — one paragraph explaining what you do.
- Goal — what you're trying to get out of outreach.
- Brand voice — friendly founder? technical peer? plainspoken?
- Value props — the two or three things you're actually better at.
- Don't mention — anything off-limits (pricing, claims, competitors).
- Signature — how you sign off, if at all.
Think of it as the brief you'd give a new sales rep on day one. The more specific you are, the less editing you'll do later.
Step 2 — Run your first Request
A Request is a campaign — one audience, one set of conversations you want to reach. Tell Linkeddit:
- Which subreddits to scan.
- Keywords or natural-language targeting (e.g. "founders asking how to do customer support without hiring").
- Which Project to attach.
Linkeddit goes and scans Reddit, scores each candidate, and queues up the matches. Open the Request to see them ranked.
Step 3 — Install the extension and send
The Linkeddit Chrome extension is how you actually reach out. It opens in a side panel, shows you one lead at a time with the AI-drafted DM, and sends from your own Reddit account.
Two paths from here:
- Manual — review and send one DM at a time. Best for the first 10 or so while you're still tuning the draft style.
- Auto-send — once you trust the drafts, hit Start on the dashboard and walk away. It paces the sends, respects daily caps, and keeps your Reddit account healthy.
Want to find replies under posts instead of DMs?
That's Monitors. Same idea — saved watches that surface conversations, with AI-drafted comments you can post with one click. Monitors guide →