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Lead generation on X (Twitter)

Catch the "looking for a…" tweets before five other vendors do

X is where people ask for help out loud — "can anyone recommend a web designer," "need a copywriter ASAP." ClientRadar watches your keywords in your own logged-in session, scores who's actually ready to hire 0-100, and drafts a reply in your voice. You read it, you tap send. Nothing auto-posts — so your account doesn't get flagged like the auto-reply bots do.

  • Real-time intent posts, not a feed of brand mentions to wade through
  • Each lead scored 0-100 with the reason — skip the tyre-kickers
  • Draft in your voice; you approve and post every reply yourself
  • Leads and CRM stay on your device — only the post text goes to AI
In short

ClientRadar is a Chrome extension that helps freelancers, consultants and small agencies find clients on X (Twitter) by monitoring the platform for buying-intent posts — tweets like "looking for a photographer" or "need a Webflow dev" — instead of generic brand mentions. It uses AI to score each post's buying intent from 0 to 100 with a short reason, then drafts a reply in your own writing style ("Brand DNA") that you review and post yourself. Unlike auto-reply tools such as ReplyGuy, ClientRadar never posts on its own: a human approves every send, keyword monitoring runs inside your existing X session at human pace, and your leads and CRM stay local on your device — only the post text and your Brand DNA are sent to AI to score and draft.

Why finding clients on X is harder than it looks

The intent is genuinely there — people tweet "need help with my website" every day. The problem is that X gives you raw search and nothing else: no alerts, infinite noise, and a crackdown on automation that punishes the tools promising to do it for you.

Advanced search has no alerts

X's advanced search is powerful but passive — there's no notification when a new tweet matches "looking for a designer." You have to remember to re-run the same queries by hand, several times a day, or the lead scrolls past. Miss the first hour and the thread is already full of replies.

It's a firehose of noise

Search "need a copywriter" and you get retweets, vague venting, people who are themselves copywriters, and posts from three years ago. Without filtering out replies, retweets and low-signal chatter, you spend more time triaging tweets than talking to buyers.

You're racing other vendors to the same tweet

"Looking for" posts are the highest-intent signal on X — which means every freelancer and agency in your niche is watching the same keywords. Speed decides who gets the reply seen and the DM opened. Checking search manually means you're almost always late.

Auto-reply tools get accounts flagged

The obvious fix — a bot that replies for you — is exactly what X's authenticity rules target. Fully automated replies get detected as spam, deleted, and can suspend the account, so the "effortless" tools quietly torch the very profile you're trying to win clients from.

How ClientRadar finds X leads (without risking your account)

It runs inside the browser you already use for X — no passwords stored, no separate login, no bot posting on your behalf.

Tell it what a client sounds like

Add the phrases your buyers actually tweet — "looking for a photographer," "recommend a Webflow dev," "need a fractional CMO." ClientRadar watches X for matches in your own logged-in session, so it sees what you'd see scrolling, just continuously.

AI scores intent 0-100, with the reason

Every matching post is scored for real buying intent and labelled — "82: actively asking for a referral, has budget signals" vs. "24: just musing." The post text and your Brand DNA go to AI for this; your lead list and notes never leave your device.

Get a reply drafted in your voice

For the leads worth answering, ClientRadar drafts a warm, on-topic reply in your own style — not a template, not a product plug. You edit a word if you like, then you tap send. Nothing posts until you do.

Track and follow up locally

Saved leads land in a simple on-device CRM with follow-up reminders, so a "maybe next month" tweet doesn't vanish. No spreadsheet, no cloud database of strangers' tweets you have to manage.

Why ClientRadar fits X specifically

X rewards speed and punishes automation — a combination most lead tools get exactly backwards. ClientRadar is built around how X actually works in 2026: surface the few real buyers fast, let a human reply, and never give the platform a reason to flag you.

Speed without a bot

On X, the first credible reply usually wins the conversation. ClientRadar shortens the gap between "someone tweeted intent" and "you replied" — by scoring and drafting for you — while keeping the actual send human, which is the only mode X's rules don't penalise.

Signal over mentions

It's tuned to find people asking to hire, not every mention of your keyword. That's the difference between a handful of warm leads a day and a notifications tab full of noise you'll never action.

Honest about what it doesn't do

ClientRadar can't read DMs, can't scrape behind logins, and won't mass-reply. If you want volume spray-and-pray, an auto-poster will out-post us — right up until the suspension. We optimise for the account staying alive and a few replies that actually convert.

What people use it for on X

Freelancers catching "recommend a…" tweets

Designers, copywriters and developers monitor the exact phrases prospects use when crowdsourcing referrals, and get to the thread while it's still empty enough to be noticed.

Agencies covering a niche

A small agency watches a tight keyword set across X for its service — "need a Shopify agency," "looking for paid-ads help" — and routes the high-intent ones to whoever's free to reply that hour.

Consultants who hate self-promotion

Instead of tweeting into the void hoping clients find them, consultants reply only when someone has explicitly asked for what they do — a softer, higher-converting entry than cold outreach.

Anyone burned by an auto-reply ban

Operators who lost reach or an account to a ReplyGuy-style bot use ClientRadar to keep the lead-finding upside while putting a human back on every send.

Questions, answered

How is this different from ReplyGuy?

ReplyGuy is designed to mention your product across conversations and offers fully automated replies on X — which is convenient but is exactly the inauthentic-automation pattern X's rules flag, and auto-replies often get deleted or get the account suspended. ClientRadar never auto-posts: it finds people asking to hire a service, scores their intent, and drafts a reply you approve and send yourself. If you sell a product and want maximum volume, ReplyGuy may suit you; if you sell a service and want your account to survive, ClientRadar is the safer fit.

Can't I just use X's advanced search for free?

Yes, and you should — it's genuinely good for finding intent posts. The catch is that advanced search has no alerts (you must re-run queries by hand), no intent scoring (you triage the noise yourself), and no follow-up tracking. ClientRadar automates the watching and the triage so you act in minutes instead of missing the window. For a low volume of keywords, manual search plus a free tool like F5Bot can be enough — we're honest about that.

Will using ClientRadar get my X account banned?

It's built to avoid that. ClientRadar doesn't auto-post, doesn't mass-reply, and doesn't run a separate bot account — it watches your keywords inside your own browser session at human pace and only ever drafts. You make every reply yourself, so to X it looks like a person using the site, because it is one. The risk that gets accounts suspended comes from automated posting, which ClientRadar deliberately doesn't do.

Does my data or my leads go to a server?

Your leads, notes and CRM stay local on your device. The only thing sent to AI is the text of a post (to score intent) and your Brand DNA (to draft a reply) — routed to DeepSeek or Anthropic for that step. We don't store your password, and we don't build a cloud database of the people you're tracking.

What does it cost, and is it worth it for X alone?

Plans start at €59/mo (€29 billed annually) for Facebook and Reddit; the Max plan at €99/mo (€59 annual) adds X and LinkedIn — all four platforms. There's a free tier that teases blurred leads, a 7-day trial, and 50% off your first payment. On X, one signed client from a single well-timed reply typically covers the year, but if you only ever check X occasionally, the free tier plus manual search may be all you need.

Does it work for B2B and high-ticket services on X?

That's where it tends to fit best. High-ticket and B2B buyers often crowdsource recommendations publicly on X ("who do you use for X?"), and those are precisely the posts the intent score is built to surface. Because you reply personally and in your own voice, it reads as a peer recommendation rather than a vendor pitch — which matters more the bigger the deal.

Stop refreshing X search. Let the buyers come to you.

Watch your keywords, score the real intent, and reply in your voice — by hand, on your terms. Start the 7-day trial, 50% off your first payment, cancel anytime.

Runs in your browser · nothing posts without your tap