Built a SaaS, posted on Twitter once at launch, then went dark for three months. Anyone else live that cycle? The gap wasn't motivation. It was that the second post is harder than the first, and the third post is harder than the second. I ended up building a tool that decides for me: pastes my URL, picks an angle, writes the post. I wanted to share it here in case anyone else got stuck in the same gap. Happy to answer questions on what changed.
Reddit copy that reads like a founder, not a marketing pitch.
Most Reddit posts about SaaS products get removed, downvoted, or ignored because they sound like promo copy. Boostlane writes Reddit-native posts in first person, with no 'sign up' / 'check out our' tells, no taglines pretending to be conversation. Community-aware first, product-aware second.
What you get
Community-native by hard rule
The writer prompt blocks promo signals at generation time: no 'sign up', 'try it free', 'check out our'. Reddit copy reads as a real community member sharing what worked, not a founder running a campaign through a side door.
First-person, multi-paragraph default
Reddit posts get multiple short paragraphs separated by breath. First person. Question or confession opener. No CTAs at the end: the product mention is woven in as context, not as the close.
Subreddit-aware tone via live intel
Boostlane pulls live signals from Reddit in your niche, distills the format patterns that earn upvotes right now, and feeds those shapes to the writer. The result reads like it belongs in the subreddit it's headed to.
Example output
Founders who post consistently after launch, how did you actually do it? Not looking for 'just batch your content'. I tried that. I'm asking about the moment where you sit down to write the post and the blank field feels like a cliff. What I do now is run my URL through a generator and edit the draft instead of writing from zero. Lowered the activation energy enough that it actually happens. Curious what other founders do.
Tried writing a launch post every week for a month. Here's what I learned. 1. Writing from zero is the bottleneck, not 'having content to share'. There's always something to share. 2. The post that landed best wasn't the polished one: it was a 4-line note about a customer call that surprised me. 3. Saying the same thing on X and LinkedIn doesn't work. They want different shapes of the same truth. If anyone wants a tool that handles 2 and 3 for you, the one I ended up using is in my bio. Otherwise the takeaway is just: ship the rough one.
FAQ
Won't Reddit mods remove a generated post?
They remove posts that sound like ads, not posts that share useful context. Boostlane's writer is given a hard rule to read like a community member, not a marketer: no promo CTAs, no taglines, first person only. The output gets a quality score before it ships and posts with promo signals get flagged for rewrite.
Can I target a specific subreddit?
You can shape it via the user brief on each run. The writer also pulls live Reddit signals from your category, so the format patterns it uses are informed by what's actually working in your niche right now.
Will it mention my product?
Yes, but as context, not as a close. The product mention is woven in where it belongs in the narrative, never as a 'try it here' CTA at the end. The writer is told the Reddit channel has zero sales CTAs by hard rule.
How many Reddit posts can I generate?
One per run, per credit. Free and Starter plans get X and LinkedIn; Reddit unlocks on Pro and Scale.
Can I edit the draft before posting?
Yes. Boostlane's output is a draft, not an autopilot. You see the generated post in the dashboard, edit it inline, and copy or save it. The writer is good enough to ship as-is for most runs but the edit pass is yours.
Paste your URL. Get your launch posts.
Boostlane reads your site, picks a direction, and writes channel-native copy in your voice for X, LinkedIn, Reddit, and Product Hunt.
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