10-minute setup

Getting started

From signup to your first sent DM in three steps.

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.

Full Projects guide →

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.

Full Leads & Requests guide →

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.

Install & setup guide → · Auto-send guide →

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 →

What's next?