r/recruitment — Subscribers & Stats
r/recruitment has approximately 49 subscribers, making it the #18 largest of the 125 subreddits Linkeddit tracks. It is a smaller, focused community.
Subscribers
49
Size rank
#18
Exact count
49
About r/recruitment
r/recruitment ranks #18 by subscriber count in Linkeddit's directory of 125 tracked subreddits. Subscriber count is a rough proxy for reach, not for buying intent — the right subreddit for finding customers is the one where your buyers describe problems your product solves, regardless of size.
Find buyers in r/recruitment automatically
Linkeddit monitors r/recruitment for buying-intent posts — recommendation requests, competitor complaints, and "looking for a tool" threads — and scores them by intent so you can reply while the conversation is live.
Monitor r/recruitmentSubreddits of similar size
| Subreddit | Subscribers | Rank |
|---|---|---|
| r/networking | 49 | #14 |
| r/publicspeaking | 49 | #15 |
| r/offgrid | 49 | #16 |
| r/workfromhome | 49 | #17 |
| r/teammanagement | 49 | #19 |
| r/roofing | 49 | #20 |
| r/uxdesign | 49 | #21 |
| r/venturecapital | 49 | #22 |
FAQ
How many subscribers does r/recruitment have?
r/recruitment has approximately 49 subscribers, ranking #18 among the 125 subreddits tracked by Linkeddit. Subscriber counts change daily; this figure reflects Linkeddit's most recent snapshot.
Is r/recruitment a good subreddit for marketing or lead generation?
r/recruitment is a smaller, focused community. Larger subreddits offer reach but stricter promotion rules; smaller ones often convert better because the audience is more focused. The most reliable approach in any subreddit is value-first engagement: answer questions, reference real experience, and mention a product only when it directly solves the poster's problem. Linkeddit can monitor r/recruitment for buying-intent posts automatically.
How do I find customers in r/recruitment?
Watch r/recruitment for recommendation requests, "looking for a tool" posts, complaints about competitors, and questions in your category. Linkeddit scores these posts by buying intent and surfaces them as they happen, so you can reply while the thread is active.