`I do consulting. Like most people who sell a service, I know I should be active on Reddit and LinkedIn — finding people with the problem I solve and being genuinely helpful. I never do it consistently, because the manual loop is miserable: search, scroll, judge relevance, figure out what to even say, repeat.
So I tried to automate the boring parts with a Claude Code skill. And the first version taught me something that reframed the whole thing.
The bug that wasn't a bug
My first runs surfaced ~10 posts that all matched my topic — and were almost entirely other consultants posting sales content. Competitors. Not a single actual buyer.
It took me a minute to see why, and it's obvious in hindsight: keyword search returns whatever is published about a topic, and what's published is supply-side. Search "leadership consulting" and you get people selling leadership consulting. The people who actually need it never type that phrase — they type the pain:
- ❌ supply: "5 ways emotional intelligence transforms teams 🧵 — DM me to work together"
- ✅ demand: "my team keeps having the same conflict and I don't know how to get through to them"
Completely different words. So the fix wasn't better ranking — it was searching the pain your buyer voices, not the category you sell.
What I ended up with: delta-engage
delta-engage is an open-source Claude Code skill. Twice a week it:
- Searches Reddit + LinkedIn for the pain language of your ICP (not your service category)
- Classifies every post —
buyer/peer_competitor/kol/noise— so a competitor's sales post never shows up as a lead - Routes peers to a separate "partnerships" list instead of dropping them (they're worth a relationship, not a pitch)
- Drafts a ready-to-edit comment for each, in your voice
- Hands you a digest you can action in ~15 minutes
The one rule it never breaks: you write the final comment and post it manually from your own account. It prepares; you act.
What a run looks like
`plaintext
🎯 Engagement digest — Thu 18 Jun 2026 · 2 to engage · 1 partnership
ENGAGE (your ICP)
- [REDDIT] r/ExperiencedDevs · fit 9/10 · buyer · 4h ago Our oncall is burning people out — how do you actually fix alert fatigue? https://www.reddit.com/r/ExperiencedDevs/comments/1abc234/oncall_burnout/ ↑142 · 38 comments Why it cleared the bar: Squarely your ICP, voicing the exact pain you solve. Angle (question-led): Get them to the one noisy alert source before any tooling.
Comment (edit before posting):
The fix that worked for us wasn't a new tool — it was deleting the ~40% of
alerts that never led to action, then routing the rest by severity. What's
your noisiest alert source right now, and does anyone own tuning it?
⚠️ Safety: r/ExperiencedDevs — no tools/links; keep it experience-led, personalize before posting.
🤝 PEERS & PARTNERSHIPS (relationship plays — engage, don't pitch)
- [LINKEDIN] @devtools-dan (Acme Observability) · fit 4/10 · peer · 1d ago
"Why we rebuilt our alerting from scratch — lessons for SRE teams."
Comment: Genuinely good breakdown — the severity-routing part matches what we see.
Would love to compare notes sometime.
`
A few design decisions worth stealing
Logistics in scripts, judgment in prompts. The deterministic, fragile stuff — scraping, dedup, the ranking math, recurrence tallying — lives in Python that runs without loading into the model's context. The judgment — refining the ICP, classifying intent, drafting the comment — is left to Claude. Keeping those separate made the whole thing both cheaper and more reliable.
Cookieless by rule. LinkedIn discovery uses only logged-out/public actors — it never touches your session, so there's zero account-ban risk. The adapter literally refuses any input carrying a session cookie. (You engage manually anyway, so the skill never needs your login.)
Reddit-safe drafting. Reddit's spam filters punish link-dropping, copy-paste comments, and — increasingly — AI-sounding text. So the skill bakes in the current anti-shadowban practices (the 9:1 rule, per-subreddit norms, new-account ramps) and treats "personalize the draft before posting" as a safety requirement, not just etiquette.
BYOK. It runs on your own Apify token. No shared keys, no lock-in, no licensing chokepoint — a lesson the whole "Proxycurl shut down and stranded everyone" saga taught the space.
Install
One paste into Claude Code — it clones the skill and runs setup:
bash
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/newan2001/delta-engage.git ~/.claude/skills/delta-engage && cd ~/.claude/skills/delta-engage && ./setup
Then run /delta-engage. The first run reads your site/docs to draft your ICP (you confirm it), does a live digest so you see it work, and offers to set a Mon/Thu routine that delivers to Slack, Notion, or just in-app.
What it's not (the honest part)
- The scheduled routine fires while Claude Code is open (it catches up on next launch) — it's not a 24/7 cloud server.
- Reddit carries far stronger buyer signal than LinkedIn, which skews toward broadcasting/selling. LinkedIn is better for KOL proximity and partnerships than for raw demand.
- The intent-classification and comment quality are instruction-driven — they're as good as the model following the guidance, and they reward a sharply-defined ICP.
Try it / tear it apart
It's MIT-licensed and on GitHub: github.com/newan2001/delta-engage
If you try it, I'd genuinely love feedback — especially on the intent classification, since that's where the "customers not competitors" magic either works or doesn't. Issues and PRs welcome.`












