Why does every Reddit marketing guide skip the part where your post gets removed?
Seriously asking. I've read probably 40 articles about using Reddit for organic reach and they all say the same things. Find where your audience hangs out. Post value, not ads. Be authentic. Great. None of them mention that most subreddits have automod rules that will silently nuke your post before a single person sees it, and you won't even get a notification.
I spent about four months figuring this out the hard way. Posted what I genuinely thought was useful content across maybe 20 subreddits. Half of them disappeared within minutes. Some got caught by karma thresholds, some by domain filters, some by rules I couldn't find written anywhere. The analytics looked fine because the posts technically existed for a few seconds. Zero engagement, and I had no idea why for weeks.
The part that actually matters, and nobody writes about, is that subreddit moderation behavior is wildly inconsistent and mostly undocumented. Two communities covering the exact same topic will have completely different tolerance for outside links, account age requirements, or even post formatting. You can write something genuinely helpful and watch it vanish because your account is 47 days old instead of 50. That's not a content quality problem.
This is the whole reason I built Reoogle, because I needed something that understood which communities would actually accept a post before wasting time writing it. Not just audience fit, but whether the post would survive long enough to be read. The community targeting problem and the moderation survival problem are two different things and almost nobody treats them separately.
Curious if others have hit this wall. Is there a resource out there that actually covers the moderation side of Reddit distribution, or has everyone just been quietly learning it through failure?