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Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Reddit reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
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Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Reddit users through our website.
- Website Down (57%)
- Errors (22%)
- Sign in (20%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
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Sign in | 4 days ago |
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Website Down | 5 days ago |
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Sign in | 8 days ago |
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Sign in | 9 days ago |
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Website Down | 14 days ago |
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Website Down | 14 days ago |
Community Discussion
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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✨Fire Sign ✨♌️ (@_la_bella_mafia) reportedFell down a Reddit hole there & I do appreciate tv series being different from books sometimes, gosh man they really did nick an injustice this last season 😔
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Bonks (@bonks03) reported@JKimg59907 @GetQuakedOn Dive shits on hitscan 95% of the time (except if its a cass) if both players have similar mechanical skill. It is near impossible to take an off angle against dive in metal ranks because every dive character does absurd amounts of damage, has 5 “get out of jail free cards”, and can chase you down before ur healers notice. Dive is so much more oppressive and boring but these reddit nerds will never admit that.
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daedalus (@aiofmgod) reportedA girl is making $70k/mo selling relationship advice she stole from divorced people on Quora & she has zero qualifications in anything She screenshotted 50 answers about "couple money problems" from real therapists & financial advisors who wrote 2,000-word essays for free, reorganized them into modules, recorded herself talking over slides, & called it a course No one knows it's stolen because nobody reads Quora that deep. Free information doesn't get valued the same way paid information does. A therapist giving $10,000 worth of framework away for anonymous internet points will never cross paths with the 22-year-old girl selling it back to a different audience for $297 This works because of one specific gap in human psychology: People pay for PACKAGING. The raw answer is free. The clean version with a face, a name, & a price tag converts at 4-6% The raw answer on Quora is buried under 400 other answers, written in clinical language by a therapist trying to sound smart instead of trying to sell. The buyer doesn't trust it because it was free & because the person who wrote it clearly doesn't care about them specifically Same information repackaged into a clean Notion workspace with a face attached, broken into "modules," given a name like "The Relationship Rescue Method," sold for $297 with 14 testimonials underneath it... now the buyer's brain goes "free = suspect, $297 = must be real" Quora has 200+ million answers. Real professionals giving away their entire life's work for likes from strangers: - Financial advisors writing retirement planning frameworks - Therapists dropping cognitive behavioral scripts worth thousands in billable hours - Business owners explaining their entire operational system like they have zero competition - Doctors outlining supplement stacks they charge $500/consult for in private practice All of it sitting there. Indexed by topic. Searchable by pain point. Updated by experts who will never monetize it themselves The girl found a room full of geniuses giving away gold to each other, walked out with a bag, & sold it to people who'd never walk into that room Every profitable niche on the internet is just the gap between "where experts dump knowledge for free" & "where buyers search for solutions they'll pay for" Reddit, Quora, niche forums, academic papers, YouTube comments, open-source GitHub repos The experts create. The packagers profit If you have any ability to take information & make it look like a product, you're sitting on a method most people are too proud to use because it feels like cheating The expert had the knowledge & no audience. You have the audience & no knowledge. The math solves itself Someone's made millions doing this already. They just won't admit where the answers came from Join my Telegram where I share how to run the most profitable AI business online right now. Link in bio
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Teal the Capybara 🇲🇦🇵🇸🏴 (@Perrincapybara) reported@whimsy_heretic see your problem is that you use reddit
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GUL (@gulVasikova) reportedReddit ($RDDT) heads into its second-quarter earnings with expectations running high, as Jefferies believes the company is on track to beat Wall Street’s forecasts on both revenue and profitability. The firm expects revenue to come in above consensus by the mid-single digits, while EBITDA could exceed expectations by low-double-digit percentages, supported by healthy advertising demand and improving user engagement. Jefferies also believes Reddit is likely to issue another strong outlook for the third quarter, continuing a trend from last quarter when management guided above Wall Street’s estimates. The biggest question remains user growth. After adding 200,000 logged-in daily active users in the U.S. during the first quarter, Reddit’s traffic appeared to improve throughout Q2. Jefferies found that U.S. web and app activity rebounded after slowing early in the year, with total web traffic growing 16% year over year, slightly faster than the previous quarter. This report is particularly important because Reddit plans to stop reporting logged-in daily active users starting in the third quarter. A strong Q2 user number would help reassure investors before the company shifts the market’s attention toward monetization rather than user metrics. Investors will also be looking for updates on: Growth of Reddit’s AI-powered advertising platform, including Reddit Max. Expansion among small and mid-sized advertisers. Average revenue per user (ARPU). AI-driven personalization and onboarding improvements. Progress on data licensing partnerships, including future discussions with Google ($GOOGL) and OpenAI. The outlook adds to the recent wave of optimism from Wall Street. Earlier this week, Wedbush initiated coverage with a Buy rating and a $250 price target, citing Reddit’s long-term advertising and AI monetization potential. Stocks to watch: $RDDT, $META, $GOOGL, $PINS, $SNAP, $TTD, $APP, $AMZN, $MSFT Bottom line: Reddit enters earnings with strong momentum. If the company delivers another advertising beat, healthy user growth, and upbeat guidance, it could reinforce the view that Reddit is evolving from a fast-growing social platform into a scalable AI-powered digital advertising business. Investors will be watching not just the quarter itself, but whether management can sustain growth after it stops reporting logged-in user metrics.
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abbie (@tastywaffle) reportedupdate #2: there is a decent chance it was my ethernet driver...? google and reddit said realtek family controller bad so i changed driver versions and havent had issues yet... i dont wanna jinx anything but so far i havent had any drops..
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ᛝ evron ⊹ rudy (@paradxxa) reportedscrolling on reddit and so many ppl have issues with the new twt update... will they ever fix these things
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tomas (@tomNYC19) reported@notthehoneybees Just saw a Reddit thread claiming there’s electrical problems at the Broadhurst and they’re trying to get the show to pay for it… absolutely insane
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Al Maulini, CFP®, CPM®, CEPA® (@AlMauliniPWMCG) reportedThe AM Brief, Thursday July 16, 2026 Part 2 Good morning, It’s 8am in Miami and here is a recap of events that caught my eye. Part 2 TSMC’s June 2026 consolidated revenue surged 67.9% YoY to NT$442.68 billion ($13.8 billion). Driven by continued AI infrastructure investment, this massive growth reinforces strong momentum ahead of its July 16 earnings report. The revenue surge coincides with TSMC beginning high volume production of its next generation 2-nanometer (N2) process technology, alongside a recent $20 billion capital injection into its Arizona subsidiary to expand US chip manufacturing facilities. Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis proposed establishing a FINRA style U.S. standards body to vet advanced, frontier AI models 30 days prior to their public release. The independent, industry funded group would screen models for deception, bioweapon assistance, and cyberattack risks. Warning that open source models could develop highly dangerous capabilities within 18 months, Hassabis wants the voluntary framework operational by the end of this year. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is a self regulatory organization that polices Wall Street under federal oversight. Hassabis envisions this AI equivalent having the power to "pull the handbrake" by coordinating an industry wide development slowdown among frontier labs if existential risks escalate. COO Jen Wong positions "people talking to people" as Reddit's radical competitive advantage in an increasingly AI-automated world. With 126.8 million daily active users (DAUs), the platform is doubling down on human authenticity to attract a wider audience. The strategy frames Reddit’s community driven conversations as the ultimate "trust check" for AI-generated search results, positioning its messy, human verified data as a high-value anchor against generic AI content. Announced at Cannes Lions 2026, Reddit is leveraging "Community Intelligence", an engine powered by over 25 billion posts to help advertisers convert these human verified conversations into shopping and advertising solutions. Research cited by the company indicates that nearly half of shoppers verify AI-generated product recommendations on Reddit, establishing the platform as a critical waypoint in the modern consumer decision journey. Sources : CNBC, Bloomberg, Opening Bell, Epoch, Yardeni, Forbes, Rundown AI, Mario Nawfal, X Thank you for reading Live your best life, AL Maulini
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${noname} (@95lkr003jgr) reported@Fight_Archives_ Sir, Reddit Military Experts are down the hall and to the left.
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Salman Saifi • Dusken.io (@codesharpdev) reportedFounders, where do your startup ideas come from? - Solving your own problems - Scrolling Reddit - Cloning what's already working - Random shower thoughts
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Oleg G. || Reddit Marketing 🤖🟠 (@oleggca) reportedAlmost nobody in SEO/AEO is talking about this. Local subreddits are quietly outranking business websites in Google for competitive keywords. Dentists, realtors, lawyers. And LLMs are training on this data. The opportunity is wide open right now because most people think Reddit is only useful for niche communities or brand awareness. Local is a completely different game. A well crafted post in a city subreddit can rank for queries like "best dentist in Los Angeles" or "best injury lawyer in Las Vegas" faster than any local business website. Reddit's domain authority does the heavy lifting. You just need to know how to start the right conversation. And that last part is where most people get it wrong. The post cannot look promotional. The whole thing lives or dies on whether real locals engage with it genuinely. I have threads sitting in Google right now for very competitive local keywords in real cities. Both got there without a single paid promotion. And local businesses are paying monthly to stay visible inside them. I broke down the full formula with my live ranking examples. The emotional angle, the post structure, the monetization model, all of it. Want the full breakdown? Like this post, follow with me, comment "LOCAL" and I'll DM you.
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Chantal’s Abandoned Scooter 🛵 (@BeysPinkyFinger) reportedI feel like it's becoming more and more obvious that Remmy is a submissive. Rosie found a 20 something year old college kid with a lot of issues (see his Reddit post history) with two kinks that very often overlap, fat fetishism and submission. Her giggly demeanor in this clip is
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Adeyinka Prime™ (@adefilaadeyinka) reported@chaosengineerr None of those matter as much as finding where people already describe the problem you solve. Post in the wrong Reddit thread and it's just noise. What's actually landed you replies?
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Vishvar (@Vishvar2005) reported@smasithick This happened to me as well on my Redmi note 11 4g global version when I had updated it from MIUI to HyperOS, they didn't even mention that it will be updated to Android 13. I have seen this similar issues in reddit note 14 4g global version as well.
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Amir Khoshbakht (@amir3_9) reportedYour competitors are sitting on a goldmine they never use. Their customers are telling them exactly why they’d leave. Go collect it. Read their Instagram comments. Read their website reviews. Read Reddit threads. Read Trustpilot. Read app store reviews. Anywhere customers are talking. Paste everything into an AI model and ask: “What are the most common complaints?” Every repeated complaint is a group of customers looking for a reason to switch. If everyone complains about slow support, make fast support your positioning. If they complain about confusing pricing, make simple pricing your positioning. If they complain about poor onboarding, own onboarding. You don’t need to beat your competitors at everything. You only need to be the best where they’re failing.
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CK Capital (@CKCapitalxx) reported@aleabitoreddit I’m down pretty bad this last month, but people on reddit are a different breed.
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orca 🌿🔞 (@orcaMardita) reported@Synso21 Ngl doxxing is extreme in his case but I can't really feel bad for him since he bringed all his drama and problems on himself, if he wasn't a l*licon gooner with ****** reddit stolen takes maybe he'd be a better content creator and better person
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Traumatized Ghoul (@GhoulStuffs) reportedAs a man and adult failure, I currently have: 1. Expired passport 2. Expired driver's license 3. A 0 balance bank account (not maintaining minimum quota, i give my mom money) 4. A smartphone (with screen that glitches/buttdials by accident), and a laptop with battery and BIOS issues (slightly). 5. No baby, still virgin. But I goon online a bit to make up for it. 6. One boss, she is my source of stable income. WFH self-employed/freelance-ish word-of-mouth work arrangement. These are my stats in 2026, plus I just started taking SEO/AEO/AIO and GEO classes a month ago to level up and upskill. What have I achieved so far? Got 800k impressions on Reddit in 2024 when my dad went missing and recovered him in 5 days thanks to r/India. Got hacked on Instagram once by a German who got jealous of me having 80 followers and he spammed Mr. Beast reels on my feed (thus, my IG getting flagged and connected accounts all deleted). Grew a gooning page to 5k followers on insta before that and got taken down. Got perma banned on both Instagram and Reddit (+VPN blocked by network security and device fingerprinted) after that. Dropped out of school after 10th grade and landed a job. Used it to support my ailing parents for years (they couldn't work when I was a kid, health issues) until I started working for my boss. Also ran a YouTube gaming channel from 6th to 8th grade (HDUltimateGamingHD) which is now dead since I lost access and forgot both email and password.
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ohio_orangutan_enthusiast (@ACarl8610) reported@Polymarket Maybe start with shutting down some of the sources. First up should be Reddit.
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Charles Waters (@RelaxedPop) reportedSlashdot, YCombinator, various non-toxic Reddit subs, various Github and Hugging Face groups. Many of them are better than X. X's message feels like a staccato, somewhat random collection of posts while the others are better curated. Please note: I'm terrible at curating my X feed. It's all garbage and I'm fairly certain that there are things I can do to fix that.
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Anthony Kolodziej (@anthonyvending) reported"Sold my profitable 19 vending machines for $205k and everyone thinks I'm an idiot." Saw this on Reddit and had to respond. You're not an idiot. I run 85 vending machines across 47 locations on about 10 hours a week now, and I hit the exact wall you're describing a couple years ago. My "profitable" route had quietly become a job I was doing myself. I was the bottleneck in my own business, driving the route and restocking every machine. My mentor finally asked me, "how are you going to scale doing $25/hour tasks?" It stung, because he was right. Here's what fixed it for me, and what could have saved your route without selling it: 1. Hire someone to run the restocks. $20-25/hour, a couple times a week. The machines never needed me, just someone reliable with a vehicle. That one hire was the biggest unlock in my whole business. 2. Set up remote monitoring. Once I could see my sales from my phone, I stopped driving out just to check what was low. 3. Spend a little to buy back your time. The van and the first hire felt like a stretch when I did it, but that's the money that turns a route you're chained to into one that runs without you. The real problem was never vending. It was being the operator. You solved that by selling. I solved it by hiring it out and stepping back. Both are valid. Either way, respect for betting on yourself instead of white-knuckling something you'd grown to resent.
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koba (@becomemycrown_) reported@Hyacinth7z Do you even know how many things use data centers? Do you think data centers are some Ai thing? Ai is not some unique problem in that regard 😭 there are SO many other unnecessary things using up water, like, Reddit
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Trin + Mela + Manon Attorney (@imuwamo1) reported@tmans1767 @prxxna It definitely is lol it’s just that the us version has more fans. Everything they’re trying to paint as a us fanbase issue I was on Reddit complaining about for the uk version like 3/4 years ago. They literally invented and continue to perpetuate the exact same behavior.
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Brad (@BradFromFlorida) reported@WomanDefiner Yeah, they just search for some sort of belonging and tribalism. They find it in the woke forums of the trans community these days. We need to shut down and scrub Reddit from the internet completely. That would make AI a lot less gay too
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SlyFoxSan (@SlyFoxSan1) reportedSometimes, I always think about what comes next in my VTuber career, whether it's the same old callouts people bring up about me to distress me or people in the VTuber community, observing my reactions and actions all together. I talked to someone on Reddit because of the past they brought up to the r/VTuber community. They quoted in my dms, "Doubt it. Once a **** always a ****." Reason? They think I should serve time in prison or in jail, though my police department wouldn't want to be involved with online bs, if I'm not mistaken. I changed from the battles i faced online and irl because of my mental recovery, though. Does that excuse me for the things I did 2 years ago? No, and I know not to do those things again. I'm in communities with people under 18 and over 18, and some people who stalks my socials will say, "See, he's doing it again." Nope, those who are under 18 that's been following me? I don't interfere with them because of my past, however. Those who see me happy and changing for the better? All I can say is that I'm doing better, tracking down medicine I'm taking, and finally getting to heal the bond of both me and my mom. I do want to thank the #Vtuber for coming back from my awareness tweets regarding me, though. Seeing something I love since I was younger has been nothing but absolute fun. I'm gonna vtube with my model, though I'm still debating where to stream for my health. I use my voice than modded voices since it's a pain to do. I hope you're doing ok, rival. Maybe check up on me when you're done with the hate you give me? #nsfwtwt
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Greg Greg (@EmbiidAmputee) reported@enidfindabair Had to activate the light bridge and could not find the pathway that leads to the switch I looked up if anyone else had had this problem after passing it and everyone made fun of the one guy who asked on reddit
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Diabetic of Enlightenment (@dee_of_e) reportedthe problem with the “Sally Rooney is romantasy” substack thing is not its anachronicity but its WRITING. WHYYY is so much prose like this now??? (don’t answer this). smug, smol bean, reddit-style with zero close readings or attention to formal specificity. Really bleak!
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Chris M. Walker (@cmwalker) reportedHow To Start With No Audience And No Connections Think Big Minute #81 No audience. No connections. No warm market. That's the starting line for almost everybody who ever built anything, and most people treat it like a disqualification. It's day one. That's all it is. The excuse version sounds like this: "I don't have a following. I don't know anybody. It's easier for people who are already connected." True, and useless. Every audience on earth started at zero followers. Every connection you envy was a stranger once. Both get built the same way... one rep at a time, by people who started before they felt ready. One thing comes before any of this. Something worth selling. Not perfect. Proven. Perfect is a stall tactic people hide behind for years. Proven means you've done the thing enough times that when someone pays you, they get what they paid for. Your education is your bill, not your customer's. Practice on your own website, your own lawn, your own books, your own projects. Get the reps somewhere that doesn't cost a stranger their money, because charging people while you figure out whether you can deliver is how names get burned early. The good news: the same channels that bring your first customers are where you finish getting good. You're not faking anything. You're proving it, free, until putting a price on it is the obvious next step. The moves run on two clocks. Some pay this month with zero followers. Some compound for years. You want both running at the same time, because the fast ones feed you and the slow ones make sure you never start from zero again. Five moves that work right now, with the real 2026 numbers. Show up in rooms where your buyers already gather. You don't need an audience. Other people already built one, and the door is open. Facebook groups alone have 1.8 billion people in them every month, and 74% of all online communities live there. Add over 100,000 active Reddit communities and the niche forums in every industry, and there's a room full of your exact customers talking about their exact problems right now, for free. The move is simple and almost nobody does it. Join five rooms where your buyers hang out. Answer questions every day. Give your best thinking with no pitch attached. Group content drives 50% more engagement than brand pages because people trust rooms, and the person who keeps solving problems in a room becomes the name that room recommends. Every answer is also a rep. And the rooms pay you again on top of that... the questions people ask, in their own words, are a list of exactly what to sell and how to describe it. The niche move: pick rooms by buyer density, not size. Two thousand plumbing company owners beats two hundred thousand random marketers. And read the group rules. Getting banned for pitching on day two ends the channel. Publish something every day on one platform. The compounding clock. Slow, then unstoppable. Only about 1% of LinkedIn's 1.3 billion members post content weekly. That 1% collects around 9 billion impressions a week. Posting three to four times a week puts you in the top 10% of the platform. The stage is close to empty, and everyone scrolling assumes it's crowded. And small is an advantage here. Accounts under 1,000 followers average 4 to 8% engagement while the big accounts sit at 1 to 3%, because small accounts talk to people instead of at them. You don't need expertise nobody else has. You need to write down what you're practicing, what worked, what didn't, and what the numbers were. Content built on a real story gets 38% more engagement than promotional content. Your first weeks of posts will get ignored. Post anyway. The audience that matters shows up in month four and scrolls back through everything, and what they find is a public record of you getting good. The niche move: one platform, one topic, same time every day. The person who posts about one thing for six months owns that thing in their corner of the internet. Cold outreach. The channel built for people who know nobody, because it requires knowing nobody. Run it once you can deliver, not before. The 2026 numbers: the average cold email gets a 3.43% reply rate. Sounds brutal until you see the spread. Generic blasts get under 1%. Personalized messages to a tight list hit 15 to 18%. Same channel, 15x difference, and the difference is effort. The mechanics are mapped. Lists under 50 people get 5.8% replies while lists of 500 plus get 2.1%, so go smaller and deeper. Keep the first message under 80 words. Reference one specific thing about their business, because inboxes are drowning in lazy Ai written templates and one human sentence stands out like a flare. And follow up, because 44% of all replies come from follow ups and 48% of people never send a single one. The first follow up alone lifts replies by 65.8%. Run it properly and the math is honest work: the best campaigns book 2 to 3 real conversations per 100 messages. Fifty good messages a week is 8 to 12 conversations a month with people who had never heard of you. The niche move: pick 30 dream customers and study them instead of blasting 3,000 strangers. Good news for someone with more time than money. Borrow audiences other people already built. Podcasts, newsletters, YouTube channels, and communities all run on the same fuel: they need things to say. You can be the thing. There are about 4.7 million podcasts registered and only around 480,000 actively publishing, and the active interview shows need a constant supply of guests to survive. An analysis of 8,757 real guest pitches this year found bookings peak on shows with under 1,000 listeners, and shows in the 1,000 to 10,000 range are the sweet spot of reach and yes rates. Translation: the shows you can actually get on are the ones worth getting on. Nobody books a guest with nothing to say. This move comes after the reps, when you can pitch with receipts... real work, real results, real numbers. That pitch gets booked. The niche move: stack small. Ten shows with 800 true listeners in your niche beat one show with 50,000 randoms, and every episode is a permanent piece of proof strangers can find forever. Own the list. Every move above rents attention. This one buys it. Email returns $36 to $42 for every dollar spent, against about $2 for paid search and $2.80 for social ads. Email converts at 4.24% while social converts at 0.59%. And the structural reason matters more than the numbers: organic social shows your post to maybe 2 to 10% of your own followers, while email reaches everyone on the list every time, because no algorithm sits between you and them. So from day one, turn strangers into addresses. One simple page. One free thing worth trading an email for. One useful email a week. That's the entire machine. Platforms change their rules whenever they want. The list is yours. The niche move: make the free thing solve one narrow problem completely. A checklist that actually works beats an ebook nobody finishes. The sequence is the whole strategy. Get good on your own projects. Give real help away free in public. Charge when it's proven. Deliver when you charge. Free work in public does three jobs at once... every answer is a rep that makes you better, every answer sitting in a room is proof a stranger can verify, and the people watching become the audience. By the time you put a price on it, nobody is gambling on you. They watched you do the work. That's what separates this from fake it till you make it. Faking it puts the price on first and lets customers pay for your education. Two failure patterns, same funeral. One charges before they can deliver and burns their name in every room that could have fed them for years. The other polishes in a cave waiting to feel ready, launches to nobody, and makes nothing. The fix for both is identical: get good in public, for free, on a schedule. And every move on this list is a volume game. A hundred posts before you judge the platform. Fifty outreach messages a week. Twenty answered questions a room. Ten podcast pitches a month. Most people make five attempts at one of these, hear silence, and declare it doesn't work. The channel works. Five reps was never going to. Pick one fast move and one slow move. Rooms or outreach to eat now, publishing or the list to compound. Six months, daily, before you're allowed an opinion on whether it's working. Because the payoff isn't one customer. An audience is the asset that makes every business you ever start cheaper to launch than the last one. You build it once. It pays you for decades. If you can't deliver yet, spend the next 60 days practicing on your own projects and posting the results. If you can deliver and need revenue this month, start cold outreach tomorrow. If you'd rather earn trust than send messages, live in the rooms. If you're playing a long game, publish daily and start the list this week. If you've got 90 days of reps behind you, go pitch ten small shows. Nobody knows you yet. Everybody starts there. The only mistake is staying there. Post the first thing today. Send the first message tonight. Think Big
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Black Eyed Hat Man (@BlackEyedHatMan) reportedFollow-up on my OpenClaw agent search costs - it's solved and the numbers are wild (before agents were burning 🔥 tokens by the second). The problem was never the searching, it was the architecture: my research agent fetched pages into the LLM's context and every turn re-read everything already there. One job snowballed to $11 on a Raspberry Pi cluster (in a very short time). Paid search APIs were not the answer either (the "free tiers" mostly aren't either). The fix was two pieces: 1. SearXNG, self-hosted - a meta-search engine that queries ~70 sources. One small pod next to the OpenClaw gateways, zero API keys, zero per-query cost and no bot-challenge walls (which were what triggered the retry loops in the first place). OpenClaw supports it natively as a search provider via a plugin (this was my go to problem solver, to replace my origional DDG/Brave search). 2. The last30days skill (open source, MIT) - Is superb. A pure-Python engine that searches Reddit, Hacker News, GitHub, arXiv, Polymarket etc. in parallel, ranks by real engagement (up votes, stars), de-dupes across platforms and hands the model ONE compact brief. All the searching happens outside the model loop - the LLM only pays to read the conclusion. Installs straight into an OpenClaw workspace as a standard skill. Same agents, same Raspberry Pi'ss, same questions: jobs now cost pennies/cents. Slightly slower per job, but hourly cost metering + hard daily spend caps make a runaway structurally impossible. Lesson: don't buy a bigger context window - move the work out of the context. I'm so happy! Thanks @mvanhorn it works really well 👍