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I copy-pasted ChatGPT prompts into Reddit 200 times before I built this

A 90-day field log on why ChatGPT-then-paste is the slowest possible way to do founder-led outreach, and what to do instead.

It's 11:14pm on a Tuesday. I'm 47 tabs deep in Reddit. I have ChatGPT open in another window. I'm doing the same loop I've been doing for three months:

  1. Find a thread where someone has the exact problem my product solves.
  2. Copy the OP into ChatGPT with a paragraph of context about who I am and what I'm building.
  3. Wait six seconds.
  4. Get a reply that sounds like a LinkedIn post wrote a Reddit comment.
  5. Rewrite it so it sounds like me.
  6. Paste, post, copy the link, log it in a spreadsheet.
  7. Forget what I just said by the time I get to the next thread.

I did this about 200 times before I admitted it wasn't working. Not the outreach — the outreach worked. The process was the thing that was broken. I was the bottleneck, and the bottleneck wasn't writing the replies. It was the 30 seconds between every reply where I had to reload my own brain.

This post is the field log. If you're doing founder-led GTM on Reddit, X, LinkedIn, or anywhere founders hang out, you've probably done some version of this loop too. Here's what I learned about why ChatGPT-then-paste is the slowest possible way to do it, and what I built instead.

The thing nobody tells you about ChatGPT for sales

ChatGPT is a brilliant generalist. It is not a brilliant founder. It does not know what your product does. It does not know what you sound like. It does not know what you said to the last 12 people in this exact subreddit. Every single reply, you are giving it those three things again, and every single reply, it forgets them the second you close the tab.

The cost of that forgetting compounds in three places:

Voice drift. I sound a certain way when I write. Casual but specific. Short sentences. I don't say "leverage." I say "use." I don't say "synergy" ever. ChatGPT, left to its own defaults, writes like a Medium post from 2019. Every reply takes me four minutes to rewrite into something a human would say out loud.

Context blindness. If you replied in r/SaaS yesterday, you probably want to know that before you reply there again today. ChatGPT does not know. ChatGPT has never met you. Every conversation starts from zero. Every reply re-derives your positioning from scratch and gets it slightly wrong.

No memory of what worked. I have a sense — vague, unverified — of which replies got upvoted, which got DMs, which got ignored. ChatGPT has zero sense of it. Which means I am never learning from my own data. I am running the same play 200 times and hoping the average gets better.

The combined effect is that ChatGPT is doing about 15% of the work and creating about 60% of the friction. It's a calculator pretending to be a co-pilot.

What I actually need (and what I built)

The thing I wanted, sitting there at 11pm, was simple to describe and apparently hard to find:

A single tab where I can see every interesting conversation happening about my product's space, where every reply comes back already grounded in what my product does, what I sound like, and what I've already said to this person.

That's it. That's the whole brief. I'm not trying to replace myself. I'm trying to delete the 30 seconds of context-loading between every message. Multiply 30 seconds by 200 replies and you've got 100 minutes a day of me being a human RAM stick.

So I built Thread Otter. It's a Chrome extension plus a web app. Here's what it actually does, in the order it does it:

1. It watches Reddit, X, LinkedIn, and the channels you already work. It pulls in threads where someone is actively asking about the problem you solve, using keyword and signal rules you set once. You don't go hunt for conversations. They land in an inbox.

2. It already knows what your product does. You drop a website URL the first time, it crawls and embeds it. From then on, every draft retrieves the relevant chunks. If someone asks "does it work with Webflow," the draft already knows whether it does, because it read your docs.

3. It already knows what you sound like. You give it five to ten examples of your own writing — old replies, tweets, blog posts. It builds a voice profile and uses it for every draft. No more "leverage." No more LinkedIn cadence. The drafts come out quiet. They sound like you wrote them at 11pm, because the model was given a sample of you writing at 11pm.

4. It remembers the conversation. If you replied to this person on Tuesday, the Wednesday draft knows that. Every message in the thread is part of the context, not just the OP.

5. The Chrome extension closes the loop in-place. You don't have to leave Reddit to draft a reply. You open the side panel, the draft is already there, you edit, you paste, you post. Same flow on X, LinkedIn, Bluesky.

That's the product. I'm not going to tell you it's magic. It is not magic. It is the same writing you would have done, with 30 seconds shaved off every reply, and the boring stuff cached.

What this is not

I have to be careful here, because the failure mode of every AI tool in 2026 is overselling.

It is not a fire-and-forget posting bot. I will not build that. Spam is what kills good outbound and it's how good subreddits die. Every draft is reviewed by you before it posts. If you wanted a bot, there are plenty. This is not it.

It does not find product-market fit for you. If you point it at a market that doesn't want what you sell, it will help you write very pleasant replies to a market that does not want what you sell. Garbage in, polite garbage out.

It does not replace the judgment call. Should I reply to this thread? Should I push harder? Should I back off? You still decide. The tool just makes the mechanics cheaper.

What it gives you back is the most valuable thing a solo founder has and the easiest thing to lose: an evening. If you do 200 reps a month and each rep cost you four minutes of fiddly editing, that's 13 hours a month. That's a weekend. That's the difference between burning out on outreach and actually getting to write the next feature.

How I'm using it right now

In the interest of not making this an ad, here is exactly what my week looks like now.

Sunday night I open the inbox. There are roughly 30 to 50 fresh threads from the week, sorted by how well they match my saved rules. I skim. I trash maybe half — wrong fit, wrong tone, off-topic. The rest sit as drafts.

Monday morning, coffee in hand, I work the queue. I'm probably averaging 90 seconds per reply now: read the thread, read the draft, edit two sentences, send. The draft is not always right. Sometimes it gets the angle wrong and I rewrite the opener. But the bones of the reply — what my product does, what I sound like, what I already said — are correct. That's the part that used to take all my attention.

Tuesday through Friday, the extension does most of the catching. Threads I want to reply to surface in-place. I draft in the side panel, post, move on.

The result, ten weeks in: I'm sending roughly 4x the replies I was sending in the ChatGPT-and-spreadsheet era. The quality is better, not worse, because the drafts are grounded in stuff a generalist model never had. I haven't been to bed at 1am in a month.

If you've been doing this loop too

If any of the 11pm Tuesday scene at the top of this post felt familiar, I'd like to make this easy.

I'm running a Founding 100 cohort right now. The first 100 founders to sign up on the Solo plan pay $19/month, locked in for life. No tier games, no annual contract, no expiry. The plan after that is $29.

The reason for the discount is that I want the first 100 customers to be people who'd give me real feedback. I will read every email. I will fix things you point at. If something is broken for the way you work, tell me and I'll move it to the top of the list.

There are real spots left and the counter is live on the pricing page. When it hits 100, the lifetime price closes.

If you want to try it without committing, every plan has a 14-day trial, no card required. Go in, drop your product URL, paste five of your own replies into the voice profile, point it at one subreddit you care about, and watch what shows up by tomorrow morning.

And if you want to skip the trial and just take the founding deal: threadotter.com/pricing.

The thing I wish someone had told me at 11pm three months ago was: this loop you're in is solvable. You don't have to keep being the bottleneck. The work is yours. The 30 seconds of reloading isn't.

-- Otto