Reddit has grown into a popular platform for anonymous discussion, becoming the chatroom of the 21st century. Topics range from reality TV to Javascript and everything in between, but a group of six reddit users were fed up with the quality of the subreddit devoted to entrepreneurship.

They were fed up with the quality of discussion on the general entrepreneurship subreddit, claiming that it was poorly moderated and full of inexperienced users who were cluttering the subreddit with self-promotions or nonspecific, directionless questions.

According to Chris Tweten, one of those six reddit users, r/entrepreneur was taken over by users who were just looking to make some quick money.

"It's more so just people who see the endgame," he said. "They don't really want to be an entrepreneur, they just want some money."

The group last of six last Thursday decided to launch a new subreddit called r/advancedentrepreneur, and in just over a week, the subreddit has attracted about 300 subscribers, all eager to take part in discussions about entrepreneurship.

The new subreddit for advanced entrepreneurs is intended to create a more serious space for higher-level discussions about topics like angel investment and hiring decisions.

"With Advance Entrepreneur we're trying to just get people who are experienced together to solve problems and collaborate," Tweten said.

Now Tweten admits that he's not the most experienced entrepreneur out there, but he brings his public relations experience from working at Rampup Manitoba, a shared workspace for startups in the area. Tweten will be furthering his entrepreneurship resume with his upcoming move to Shanghai to join a 3D printing startup called Clawz.

Most of the other users behind r/advancedentrepreneurs haven't shared with Tweten their personal experience -- although one says he's a technology consultant that has worked with Fortune 1000 companies. But they all agree to spend time monitoring the subreddit to ensure quality conversation.

They've already had to remove some posts that were deemed irrelevant. For instance, one student posted about a t-shirt drive, but the moderators removed the post and messaged the student saying it was better suited for the r/entrepreneurship subreddit.

Now Tweten and the team behind r/advancedentrepreneurship don't plan on excluding students and young entrepreneurs from the subreddit (reddit doesn't allow moderators to control who subscribes to the subreddit), they simply plan on moderating the posts to make sure there is quality content in the subreddit. That content will be helpful for entrepreneurs at all levels.