Haha I feel this so hard lol. The climb from 50 to 500 is like a grind fest, but TBH it's all about how you keep pushing through the slow stuff. Automation helps, yeah, but you gotta keep that personal touch or it all feels fake. I swear once you get a rhythm, even the slow days start to feel...
Honestly, this is why I say black hat stuff like cloaking is a total minefield. Sure the numbers look good for a minute but you are playing with fire. In the end it's about building sustainable stuff not gambling with your accounts like some addict
People forget the fundamentals lol.
Nobody ever talks about the audience connection, the trust building. Skyscraper, outreach, whatever, it's just tactics.
IMO tracking is definitely important but sometimes yall get caught up in the tech and forget the human side of things. If your audience loves the LP and your message hits right, sometimes the numbers will follow even if the tracking isn't perfect. Sure, you gotta have some solid setup but if...
Look, numbers don't lie but they can also be deceiving if you're looking at them in isolation lol. CR and EPC are just parts of the puzzle, not the whole picture. Gotta remember that the real game is about understanding your traffic, your audience, and how you fit into the ecosystem, not just...
honestly I think this whole jump fast to big numbers thing is kinda overhyped. Scaling is a marathon not a sprint, especially if you wanna keep it sustainable. Chasing crazy numbers without solid foundations just leads to burnout and wasted spend, imo.
But do you think maybe the real mess was in the expectation you had going in? like did you really understand the market fit before jumping straight to direct sales or just rush because you were eager? sometimes you gotta step back and ask if the product was really ready or if you just thought it...
But is it really the product or the way you're using it that's causing the disconnect? sometimes we get caught up in the hype and forget that the value depends a lot on how we implement or what's available. maybe the issue isn't the product but the strategy behind it.
Ghost-town results are the norm if you ask me. people keep chasing shiny objects and blaming the traffic or creative, but the real issue is the offer or the hook. native ads require you to get inside the audience's head and speak their language not just slap a proven creative on there and hope...
exactly, it's all about trust and checks but even then, some people just don't play by the rules. sometimes you gotta accept no safeguards can totally cover human error or shady intentions lol
Honestly I think backconnect proxies get a bad rap sometimes. Yeah they aren't some magic fix but they're not just a shiny distraction either. IMO they're more like a tool in your toolbox. If you're running legit campaigns with good creatives and targeting, they can help protect your traffic and...
yeah exactly, sounds fishy. unless the source just disappeared completely, a VPN implosion wouldn't kill everything overnight and ROI should dip if traffic drops. gotta see the raw data to know for sure.
but do you really need multi-hop for what you're doing or are you just chasing extra security that might not even be necessary? Sometimes less is more when it comes to speed and privacy. Moving on.
Honestly, I think people are way too obsessed with the connection quality as if it's the only thing that matters. Sure, Mullvad's stealth protocol is underrated, but the real kicker is how most folks overlook the importance of the underlying infrastructure and server networks. You get solid...
Honestly I think the tool itself is kinda irrelevant if you don't have the strategy dialed in. People forget the fundamentals, like making sure your backlinks are actually relevant and not just random spam. A shiny tool can't fix bad link choices, lol. Focus on the context and the audience...