u/Low_Pea_951

Last Chance: Free Webinar in 30 Minutes on Using AI in Marketing & Lead Generation

Hey guys, I’m a GTM specialist and I’m hosting a free live webinar in around 30 minutes on how AI can actually be used in marketing and lead generation beyond just content generation.

We’ll cover:

• How to use AI to identify high intent prospects
• Using social listening for lead discovery
• Finding users and buyers through Reddit, LinkedIn, and online communities
• How to prioritize and enrich leads with AI
• Practical workflows and real examples
• How startups and SaaS teams are using these strategies for growth

If you work in marketing, sales, GTM, or you’re building a startup/side project, this might be useful.

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 18 hours ago

Why Signal Based Prospecting Is Outperforming Traditional Cold Outreach in 2026

Lately I’ve been noticing that a lot of outbound still feels very volume driven.

Most workflows are built around static lead lists, enrichment tools, and sending as many emails as possible, but very little attention goes into timing or whether the prospect is actually showing intent right now.

What’s been interesting to me is how many buying signals people leave publicly every day through:

• Reddit discussions
• LinkedIn posts/comments
• Hiring activity
• Tool comparison questions
• Complaints about existing solutions
• Community conversations

I’ve been experimenting recently with tracking some of these signals before outreach instead of starting from random lead lists, and honestly the quality difference has been pretty noticeable.

Not even necessarily from “better personalization”, mostly from reaching people while they are already thinking about the problem.

A few things I noticed while testing this:

• Smaller targeted lists tend to perform better
• Timing matters more than message length
• Reddit is surprisingly strong for intent signals
• AI is way more useful for filtering/prioritizing than writing copy

Curious if anyone else here has been experimenting with more signal based prospecting lately.

Also putting together a short session where I’ll share some of the workflows and examples I’ve been testing if anyone’s interested.

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 3 days ago

Free Live Session: How Micro SaaS Founders Are Finding Users Without Cold Outreach

Hey guys, I’m a GTM specialist and one thing I keep noticing with micro SaaS founders is that building products is becoming easier than distribution.

A lot of people can now build and launch apps pretty fast with AI and no code tools, but getting the first real users is still the hardest part.

Most founders end up relying on random posting, cold DMs, or waiting months for SEO, even though potential users are already talking about their problems online every day.

Lately I’ve been experimenting a lot with AI + social listening to identify high intent users across Reddit, LinkedIn, niche communities, hiring posts, and other real time discussions.

Honestly, for smaller SaaS products this seems to work much better than broad outreach because you are reaching people already looking for a solution.

So I’m hosting a short free webinar where I’ll break down some of the workflows and strategies behind this:

• Finding high intent users online
• Using AI to prioritize discussions and leads
• Turning conversations into early users
• Practical workflows and examples
• Why timing matters more than volume now

Thought it could be useful for solo founders and micro SaaS builders here.

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 3 days ago

Free Live Session: How Startups Are Finding High Intent Users Without Cold Outreach

Hey guys, I’m a GTM specialist and lately I’ve been noticing something interesting with a lot of startup founders and indie builders.

Building products is getting easier and faster especially with AI and vibe coding tools, but distribution is still the hardest part for most people.

A lot of founders launch with no real way to identify who actually needs their product right now, so growth becomes random posting, cold outreach, or hoping something goes viral.

I’ve been experimenting a lot with using social listening + intent signals from places like Reddit, LinkedIn, hiring posts, and niche communities to find people already talking about the exact problems a startup solves.

Honestly feels like this is becoming a completely different way of doing GTM for early stage products.

So I’m hosting a short free webinar where I’ll break down some of the workflows and strategies behind this:

• Finding high intent users online
• Using AI to prioritize leads and discussions
• Turning online conversations into actual users
• Real examples and workflows I’ve been testing
• Why timing matters more than volume now

If anyone here is building something and struggling more with distribution than development, this might be useful.

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 6 days ago

Been noticing that a lot of solo founders and micro SaaS builders are spending huge amounts of time building products, but distribution is still the hardest part.

Most people still rely on posting everywhere, cold DMs, paid ads, or waiting for SEO to kick in.

Lately I’ve been experimenting more with AI + social listening to identify people already talking about the exact problems a product solves across Reddit, LinkedIn, niche communities, hiring posts, and other real time discussions.

What’s interesting is that for smaller SaaS products, timing and intent seem to matter way more than volume.

A few things I noticed while testing this:

• Reddit is honestly one of the strongest intent signal sources
• Small niche discussions convert better than broad audiences
• AI is more useful for filtering and prioritization than pure automation
• A lot of users openly describe the tools they wish existed

Curious how other solo founders here are approaching early user acquisition right now.

I’m also hosting a short free session where I’ll break down some of the workflows and strategies I’ve been testing around this if anyone’s interested.

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 6 days ago

Been noticing that a lot of outbound systems are still built around static data like job titles, firmographics, scraped lists, and generic enrichment.

The problem is that none of those actually tell you when someone is actively looking for a solution.

Lately I’ve been experimenting more with combining AI + social listening + intent signals from places like Reddit, LinkedIn, hiring activity, communities, and product discussions to build more dynamic lead workflows.

Instead of just enriching leads after finding them, the idea is to identify intent first, then enrich and prioritize based on actual buying signals happening in real time.

A few interesting things from testing this:

• Lead quality improves a lot compared to static outbound lists
• Timing becomes way more important than volume
• Reddit discussions are honestly an underrated GTM signal source
• AI helps more with filtering/prioritization than just generation

Curious if others here are building similar workflows around intent detection or signal based prospecting.

I’m also hosting a short free session where I’ll break down some of the workflows and tooling behind this if anyone’s interested.

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 6 days ago

I’ve been noticing a shift in how marketing teams are starting to use AI, not just for content generation, but for actual lead discovery and intent detection.

Most marketing workflows still rely heavily on static targeting like job titles, company size, and basic ad segmentation. The issue is that these signals don’t always reflect real buying intent.

Lately, I’ve been exploring how AI combined with social listening can pick up stronger signals from places like Reddit discussions, LinkedIn activity, niche communities, and even hiring patterns to understand who is actually in a buying cycle.

What’s interesting is that this starts to blur the line between marketing and outbound. Instead of pushing content, you are identifying and reacting to real demand signals.

Curious how others here are approaching this:

• Are you using AI in your marketing workflows beyond content generation
• Have you experimented with intent based targeting or social listening
• Do you think traditional segmentation is still enough in 2026

I am also putting together a short live session where I break down some of the workflows I’ve been testing around this, especially on turning intent signals into actual leads.

If anyone is interested, I can share it here.

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 7 days ago

If you work in B2B sales, marketing, or are trying to grow a pipeline, this session breaks down how teams are using AI and social listening to find people who are already interested instead of chasing cold prospects.

The session is hosted by professionals working in B2B sales and AI, sharing practical methods they use to generate leads and build pipeline.

Date: May 13, 2026
Time: 11:00 AM EST
Duration: 45 minutes

What will be covered:

- How to identify buying intent on platforms like LinkedIn and Reddit
- A practical playbook to turn signals into booked demos within 48 hours
- How AI helps prioritize and enrich leads so you focus on the right prospects
- A live walkthrough from first signal to first reply
- Q&A where you can bring your own use case

It is free to attend and a replay will be shared after the session

If you are looking for a more efficient way to generate leads, this might be useful

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 8 days ago

If you work in B2B sales, marketing, or are trying to grow a pipeline, this session breaks down how teams are using AI and social listening to find people who are already interested instead of chasing cold prospects.

The session is hosted by professionals working in B2B sales and AI, sharing practical methods they use to generate leads and build pipeline.

Date: May 13, 2026
Time: 11:00 AM EST
Duration: 45 minutes

What will be covered:

- How to identify buying intent on platforms like LinkedIn and Reddit
- A practical playbook to turn signals into booked demos within 48 hours
- How AI helps prioritize and enrich leads so you focus on the right prospects
- A live walkthrough from first signal to first reply
- Q&A where you can bring your own use case

It is free to attend and a replay will be shared after the session

If you are looking for a more efficient way to generate leads, this might be useful

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 9 days ago

If you work in B2B sales, marketing, or are trying to grow a pipeline, this session breaks down how teams are using AI and social listening to find people who are already interested instead of chasing cold prospects.
Date: May 13, 2026
Time: 11:00 AM EST
Duration: 45 minutes
What will be covered:
How to identify buying intent on platforms like LinkedIn and Reddit

A practical playbook to turn signals into booked demos within 48 hours

How AI helps prioritize and enrich leads so you focus on the right prospects

A live walkthrough from first signal to first reply

Q&A where you can bring your own use case

It is free to attend and a replay will be shared after the session
If you are looking for a more efficient way to generate leads, this might be useful

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 9 days ago
▲ 2 r/LeadGenMarketplace+1 crossposts

Most lead gen services sell scraped databases and cold contacts.

Verbatune works differently.

We track real buying intent across Reddit, LinkedIn, X, Facebook Groups, Quora, forums, and more.

Examples:

“Need a personal trainer near me”

“Best accountant for small business?”

“Looking for a web designer”

“Any good marketing agency recommendations?”

Instead of guessing who might buy, we help you reach people already asking.

Best for:

• Agencies

• Coaches

• SaaS

• Local businesses

• B2B services

• Recruiters

What you get:

• Real-time intent leads

• Multi-platform monitoring

• Warm outreach opportunities

• Faster conversions than cold lists

If you’re tired of stale leads and low reply rates, book a demo or DM me.

u/Low_Pea_951 — 1 day ago

I keep noticing people post things like:

“Can anyone recommend a trainer for weight loss?”

“Looking for a good PT near me”

“Need someone for strength training”

“Any trainer good with beginners?”

“Trainer who can help after injury?”

Then people start recommending names they trust.

And when the same trainer gets mentioned a few times, that kind of word of mouth is powerful.

The problem is most trainers are busy coaching clients, programming workouts, and running sessions all day, so they never see these conversations happening across Reddit, Facebook Groups, LinkedIn, X, or local community pages.

Feels like a lot of potential clients are asking publicly while trainers don’t even know it.

Do any trainers here actively track this, or is most client growth still referrals + Instagram?

reddit.com
u/Low_Pea_951 — 16 days ago