Find your next customers in r/agency
r/agency is a tight community of agency owners and operators discussing growth, pricing, client management, and the software that holds everything together.
Who buys here and why
Founders and directors running digital marketing, design, development, or consulting agencies, typically between 2 and 50 people. They buy software at the team level, often stacking multiple tools, and care about white-label options, client reporting, and anything that reduces admin overhead.
Threads here regularly surface specific tool swap discussions, white-label software searches, and operational bottlenecks. The audience is smaller than general entrepreneur communities, but purchase decisions affect entire teams, making each lead higher in value.
Buyer-intent signals to watch
See buyer-intent posts in r/agency right now
Enter a keyword and we score every post 0-100 for purchase intent. Free, no signup.
How to participate in r/agency without spamming
r/agency has a small, active moderator team that removes blatant promotional posts. The best approach is to contribute to ongoing discussions and mention your product only when someone explicitly asks for something it does.
Related subreddits
Frequently asked questions
Is r/agency big enough to be worth monitoring?
It is small, but agency owners make team-level purchases. A single conversion can be worth far more than an individual freelancer or solo founder.
What problems do agency owners post about most?
Client reporting, scope creep, pricing strategy, and retainer management come up constantly. Tools that solve any of these in a repeatable way tend to get strong community interest.
How do I find threads where agencies are switching tools?
Search for posts mentioning a specific incumbent tool followed by words like 'moving away from' or 'better option'. Those posts indicate an active buying decision.
Turn r/agency posts into a lead pipeline
PluckLead monitors r/agency around the clock and delivers purchase-intent posts straight to your inbox.