Find your next customers in r/marketing
r/marketing covers strategy, channels, and tools used by marketers at companies of all sizes.
Who buys here and why
In-house marketers, agency owners, and freelance consultants ranging from junior to CMO level. They purchase tools for automation, analytics, content, and paid media, often with dedicated software budgets.
Marketers openly discuss what is working and what is not in their current stack. Threads asking for tool alternatives or comparisons signal an active evaluation cycle.
Buyer-intent signals to watch
See buyer-intent posts in r/marketing right now
Enter a keyword and we score every post 0-100 for purchase intent. Free, no signup.
How to participate in r/marketing without spamming
r/marketing requires posts to have real discussion value and flags self-promotion quickly. Share genuine insights about a marketing challenge and mention your tool only when it is clearly relevant.
Related subreddits
Frequently asked questions
Are marketers in r/marketing actual buyers?
Many are. Mid-level marketers often own tool budgets up to $1,000 per month and influence larger purchases. Senior marketers and agency owners control significantly more.
How do I find tool comparison threads in r/marketing?
Search for 'alternatives to' or 'vs' combined with a competitor's name. These threads show people who are already decided on switching and just picking where to land.
What kind of promotion is allowed in r/marketing?
No direct promotion, but sharing original research, case studies, or genuine opinions is allowed. Disclose your role when recommending your own product.
Turn r/marketing posts into a lead pipeline
PluckLead monitors r/marketing around the clock and delivers purchase-intent posts straight to your inbox.