Why Reddit is a Goldmine For Human-Led Campaign Thinking
One of the biggest challenges we face in PR is creating stories people actually care about.
Random campaigns created with the hopes that something sticks no longer cut it.
We’ve never had more data, tools, and ways to generate insight. And yet, many campaigns still feel disconnected, over-engineered, and built on what people think should resonate rather than what actually does.
The bar has changed, and it seems that attention is harder to earn. Audiences are far more skilled at filtering out content that doesn’t feel relevant, which makes capturing journalists’ attention and securing media coverage even more difficult. If an idea doesn’t immediately connect, or isn’t familiar, useful, or emotionally recognisable, it will likely be ignored.
The campaigns that truly cut through are rooted in topics people genuinely care about: A real frustration, a shared experience, an opinion people already hold but haven’t seen articulated properly.
The most effective ideas do not force relevance, they tap into it through human-led thinking, and that is exactly why Reddit is a goldmine for the PR industry.
As of early 2026, Reddit has 116 million daily active users and over 1 billion monthly active users, with rapid growth year over year. That is a huge audience actively searching, sharing, and debating the topics that matter to them, offering a direct window into real human conversations, frustrations, and interests.
How PR teams can use Reddit to generate ideas people actually care about
Human-led campaigns start with what people already care about. Reddit is one of the best places to find it. The platform captures what people are thinking, asking, and feeling in real time, a true goldmine.
Searching and using Reddit effectively
One of my favourite ways to use Reddit is to inspire campaign ideas. I start with specific subreddits relevant to my client’s audience or topic. These micro-communities are where conversations happen in context, for example, r/PersonalFinance for financial campaigns, r/Fitness for health, or r/UKJobs for career-focused storytelling. Exploring multiple related subreddits surfaces recurring trends, frustrations, and questions.
The posts themselves are only the starting point. The threads underneath reveal deeper human perspectives, with comments full of follow-up questions, clarifications, and personal experiences that highlight pain points and interests we might otherwise miss.
Reddit’s filtering tools, such as hot, rising, and top posts, help surface the most relevant discussions in real time, while upvotes show what truly resonates with the community. Observing these signals lets you focus on the conversations that matter most.
Reddit Answers takes this even further. This AI-assisted feature aggregates questions across subreddits and shows responses from active community members. It highlights the questions people are asking and the language they use to describe challenges and needs. When combined with keyword searches and filters for recency, upvotes, or controversy, it becomes a powerful tool for understanding what genuinely matters to an audience.
Turning conversations into stories
Once I’ve identified recurring themes, frustrations, and questions, the next step is turning them into campaigns people actually care about. For example, a thread on r/UKJobs discussing wages and pay negotiation can inspire campaigns that provide practical support:
An index of UK cities and industries showing where Brits earn the most and highlighting salary trends.
Expert tips and guides on negotiating pay, common mistakes to avoid, and how to advocate for yourself effectively.
A calculator tool where users can input an offered wage and see what they could reasonably aim to renegotiate.
By grounding ideas in real Reddit conversations, campaigns feel more relevant, increase engagement, and build credibility because the audience sees their own concerns reflected in the content.
Using conversations as real data
Beyond sparking campaign ideas, Reddit can also serve as a direct source of research. For example, at Kaizen, we worked on a campaign to explore the internet’s preferred choice for the next James Bond. To find out who was generating the most hype, we analysed Reddit mentions across multiple threads to quantify online sentiment.
How we did it:
We created a seedlist of potential Bond actors.
We scanned relevant Reddit threads, loading all comments and counting how many times each actor was mentioned.
Rankings were determined by mention volume, giving us a clear measure of internet buzz.
Example threads included:
r/JamesBond: Who’s everyone’s favourite to be the next Bond?
r/JamesBond: If it was up to you, who would you like to play?
By turning Reddit threads and conversations into structured data, we could objectively measure online sentiment and hype. The campaign identified Henry Cavill as the favourite and landed coverage in publications such as The Express.
This approach can work across multiple industries and topics. Rather than only using broader communities or subreddits, you can search niche topics directly to see what people are talking about.
For example, if I wanted to create a campaign around the next Bridgerton season, which is trending following season four’s release, I could explore threads such as:
Similarly, around Christmas, when chocolate gift boxes are especially popular, I could uncover favourite seasonal chocolates and treats from threads like:
Don’t miss out on the conversations already happening
If you’re not on Reddit, you’re missing the conversations your audience is already having without you. It may look like a simple forum, but it is a goldmine, a live pulse check on what people think, feel, and want. PR teams that tap into it stop guessing at relevance and start creating campaigns that are rooted in real human concerns and tell stories people actually want to engage with.
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Material worth reading
https://www.techtarget.com/searchcio/definition/Reddit - What is Reddit? How it works, history and pros and cons
https://www.searchenginejournal.com/social-media/reddit-guide/ - A Beginner’s Guide to Reddit: How to Get Started & Be Successful
How to Win Friends and Influence People - Dale Carnegie - Carnegie teaches that to influence others, you must appeal to their wants and interests.This can be applied by anyone, especially PR’s and marketers. On Reddit, you can see exactly what people care about, their frustrations, questions, and passions. Campaigns grounded in these insights automatically tap into audience motivations rather than forcing relevance.









