I had 2 failed projects without a single sale.
I tried marketing them on Reddit… and got banned 6 times for doing it wrong.
No traffic, no sales - just frustration.
That’s how MediaFa.st was born.
I mastered Reddit tactics, learning posting styles, understanding each subreddit’s culture, and knowing exactly how to blend in while still driving traffic. I went from getting banned to getting thousands of visitors from a single post.
MediaFast is a tool that helps founders grow on Reddit with a clear roadmap telling you WHEN to post/comment, WHERE to post, HOW to engage, and WHAT to say.
Plus: post scheduling, karma tracking, badges, multi-platform support (LinkedIn), and content strategy tools, think Buffer, but Reddit-native.
The core feature? MediaFa.st figures out the best growth strategy for your product, whether that’s aggressive marketing with direct linking or a storytelling-first approach that builds curiosity and gets people asking for your link.
What worked for me:
Niching down hard to Reddit & LinkedIn instead of chasing every platform and going deep into one channel until I could get consistent results.
Solving my own problem first, which made the product instantly useful and easier to explain.
Starting with a low price to remove friction, then raising it as demand grew.
Listening to early users and building only what they actually asked for - fast.
Letting the product sell itself by showing results in my own Reddit posts (yep, self-referential).
Investing in SEO early so I wasn’t only dependent on social traffic.
Building in public to attract an audience before I had a marketing budget.
Repurposing content across all possible socials to squeeze the most reach out of every post.
📈 Now I’m at $1.5k+ MRR and $8.950k ARR, still solo, fully bootstrapped, and growing.
Ask me anything - growth strategies, Reddit tactics, or product lessons.
P.S. Every roadmap is based on my own knowledge & experience - no AI fluff.
Really cool story — it’s proof that mastering one channel deeply can make a bigger difference than spreading yourself too thin. Most founders give up after getting banned or ignored, but you turned it into a product, which is impressive.
I’ve had similar experiences working with startups at Saturncube, where the real growth came from focusing on just one platform and refining the strategy instead of trying to be everywhere. Your point about building in public and repurposing content also resonates a lot — it’s underrated but super effective.