Adarsh Kumar

CommunityTracker - See where your brand appears across Reddit, LinkedIn & Slack

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CommunityTracker.ai is the Community Intelligence Platform that helps teams monitor Reddit, Twitter, Slack, LinkedIn and more — finding high-intent conversations and turning community signals into actions.

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Adarsh Kumar
Maker
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Hey PH community - I'm Adarsh, founder of CommunityTracker. Here's the problem I kept running into while talking to B2B SaaS founders: They had a content calendar. A LinkedIn strategy. An SEO plan. A cold email sequence. And still, their pipeline was quiet. Not because the product was bad. Not because the content was poor. Because the buyers were having conversations somewhere else entirely. On Reddit, asking which tools their peers actually use. In Slack communities, comparing alternatives. On LinkedIn, commenting on threads the founder never saw. And the brand? Completely absent from all of it. While competitors were getting mentioned, recommended, and shortlisted, in conversations that never showed up in anyone's analytics. That's the gap we built CommunityTracker to close. It gives tracks buying signals across Reddit, LinkedIn, Slack, Twitter, Discord Hacker News, Indie Hackers and more communities and tells you exactly where you're invisible, where competitors are winning, and what to do about it this week. We just launched the Intelligence Hub, its like ChatGPT, but it only answers from your own community data. Ask it: — "What topics are my competitors winning on that I haven't covered?" — "Which community should I post in this week?" — "What are buyers in my category complaining about right now?" Every answer is backed by real mentions. Not generic internet knowledge. Your actual market. PH deal: 30% off Pro for 3 months with code PRODUCTHUNT30 — valid this week only. If you've ever published content consistently and still wondered whether anyone in your market actually sees you — this was built for that feeling. Would love your honest feedback. — Adarsh
Nika

How can the tool help with monitoring to grow the community?

Priyanshu Singh

Hi @busmark_w_nika ,

For me, the value of monitoring is not just seeing more; it's understanding what helps a community grow stronger over time. A healthy community usually grows when people feel heard, when useful conversation keeps happening, and when friction gets noticed early instead of being ignored.

The real role of a tool like this is to help you recognize patterns that would otherwise be easy to miss. For example, it can help you notice:

  • What people are consistently excited about

  • What topics create the most meaningful engagement where people are getting confused

  • What kind of questions or frustrations keep coming up

Those signals can help you make better decisions about where to engage more, what to clarify, what to improve, and what kind of conversations are worth encouraging.

The outcome is that community growth becomes more intentional. Instead of guessing what members care about, you get a clear sense of what is resonating, what is creating drop-off, and where there is momentum you can build on.

So I'd suggest the biggest benefit is not monitoring for the sake of tracking activity. It's usually community signals to create a better experience that actually drive trust, retention, and growth.

Nika

@priyanshu_singh23 Does it also show who engage with me the most? :)

Kunal Goyal

Quick maker note:

CommunityTracker.ai is most useful when your team already knows buyers are talking online, but those conversations are scattered across too many places to track manually.

We built it to help teams catch those discussions earlier, filter noise, and act on the ones that actually matter.

Curious to hear from people here:
Which community creates the best buying signals for you today?

Priyanshu Singh

Hey everyone — really excited to share CommunityTracker.ai with you today.

I built this because I kept seeing the same problem over and over: communities generate an incredible amount of valuable feedback, but most teams struggle to actually use it well.

A founder might have users chatting in a Slack group, posting feature requests in a forum, sharing frustrations in comments, and asking questions across different channels. The signal is there — but it’s scattered, noisy, and easy to miss.

So the result is usually one of two things:

  1. someone manually reads everything and spends hours trying to summarize it, or

  2. important patterns never get surfaced at all.

CommunityTracker.ai is built to solve that gap.

A simple example: let’s say a product team has hundreds of community conversations happening every week. Instead of digging through them one by one, they can use CommunityTracker.ai to spot repeated pain points, common feature requests, sentiment trends, and the topics that keep coming up.

That makes it useful for a few different teams:

  • Founders, who want a fast pulse on what users actually care about

  • Product teams, who want recurring feedback and roadmap signals

  • Community managers, who want to understand what members are discussing at scale

  • Support and ops teams, who want to catch common issues earlier

The big idea is simple: communities shouldn’t just be places where conversations happen — they should also be a source of structured insight.

Would love to hear how you’d use something like this, and what kinds of community insights would be most valuable for your team.

Saran Adhith

We’re excited to introduce CommunityTracker.ai to you all.

While building this, we kept running into the same problem—teams were putting in effort across content, outreach, and campaigns, but still missing where real customer conversations were happening.

CommunityTracker is built to solve that by surfacing high-intent discussions across communities and turning them into actionable insights.

Instead of guessing what your audience wants, you can actually see what they’re already talking about.

Would love to hear your thoughts and feedback!

Sankalp

That action item things got my interest. I remember doing Slack social listening during my time at Content Beta. For most mentions I used to share short&simple response. But some very direct post like asking for recommendations, that's where I used to get confused. Should I shamelessly promote CB or what.

I like what you're doing with this feature, I guess this gives a direction on what to respond with.

Congrats on the launch.

Priyanshu Singh

Hi @sankalp3 , Yeah, that makes total sense. That's actually a very real Slack problem. When it's just a normal mention, replying is easy. But when someone directly asked for a recommendation, that's when you start wondering whether to jump in or whether it will feel too promotional. There's a big part of what I wanted this to help with, giving it a more clarity on what kind of response makes sense in that moment.

Really appreciate you sharing that.

Natalia Żak

that looks cool!
i think one thing would be interesting - can you resubmit the same situation later to see if the verdict changes as your channel grows?

Priyanshu Singh

@natalia_zak  Not yet, but that's really an interesting idea. I agree the same situation could deserve a different verdict later as the channel grows and context changes. That kind of re-evaluation over time would be a very useful direction.