Karmora

Karmora

Find High Intent Posts on Reddit + Write Replies That Convert

Marketing

About

Helps early stage founders validate their product on reddit where people are already asking for your product solution.

LaunchedMar 19, 2026

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Joined Mar 20261 launch

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FounderPlaybooks.

What other founders did to grow.

2722 dispatches from hundreds of founders, pulled from the week's best podcasts.

Shipping
you need to develop experimental confidence so just just post but with intention so I have a big problem with when people are like just start like just get started... if you post with intention then post whatever you want but pay attention to how does it feel how do I feel after I posted that is anybody responding what questions am I getting like have people asked me something that is making me realize I need to clarify something more

Develop "experimental confidence" — post with intention, then refine

"Just ship" with no intention produces noise. "Don't ship until perfect" produces nothing. The middle is experimental confidence: every post has an explicit hypothesis (audience, angle, expected response), and after publishing you observe — what landed, what didn't, what follow-up questions surfaced. Post → observe → refine, on the same artifact. That feedback loop replaces perfectionism with iteration.

Retention
most people's knowledge bases do not have the depth to create anything close to like a good generative AI experience and I think that's what people that's the expectation because they're used to chat GPT but the reality is is most people do not have enough information

AI on top of shallow docs is worse than no AI

Customers ask for AI search and generative answers, but most knowledge bases lack the depth to feed a useful LLM. The retention play is corpus density and currency, not bolting a chatbot on top. Audit doc depth and freshness before adding AI — without it, the AI just hallucinates and erodes trust.

There's a play for whatever you're stuck on.

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