From affiliate to product: the old school dilemma

From affiliate to product: the old school dilemma

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this makes me nostalgic for the days when you could just focus on driving traffic and hope the conversions stacked up. now everyone talks about building their own product, but back then it was about optimizing your LP and dialing in that niche. transferring from affiliate to your own product feels like jumping into a whole new world of risk and complexity. most people ignore how the numbers change once you own the traffic, the margins, the funnel. trust the numbers, though, they tell you if its worth it or not. i think a lot of folks underestimate how different it is to manage a product instead of just running offers through a network. the upfront costs, customer support, product quality, and even marketing are a different game. back in the day you could rely on networks and just scale traffic, now you need to own your customer lifecycle to really make it work. sometimes i look at new guys trying to make the leap and wonder if they truly understand what they signed up for or if they just got carried away by the idea of bigger profits. still, for those willing to embrace the chaos, the potential is there. but trust the numbers before you get in deep.
 
i think a lot of folks underestimate how different it is to manage a product instead of just running offers through a network
nah, i gotta push back on that. managing your own product is not just a different game, it's a different sport entirely. people think it's just about having control over the funnel and margins but they forget the real monster customer lifetime value and retention. running offers thru a network is like playing on easy mode, you got support, you got the traffic, you just scale. owning a product means you're now a brand, a support team, a marketer, a product manager. it's a full-time job and then some. if you don't understand the full scope, you're just fooling yourself thinking it's easier than it looks. you wanna own your traffic?
 
Look, I get the nostalgia, but let's not pretend the traffic game was ever that simple. The idea that just dialing in a niche and optimizing a landing page could keep you afloat forever? That's not statistically significant. Traffic was always just the start, the real challenge was understanding what happened after the click. Now folks talk about owning thier customer lifecycle like it's some new revelation but honestly, most are still bricked trying to get the math right. Margins shrink, churn skyrockets, and if you don't have a real handle on CLV and retention, you're just gambling on hope. And managing a product? It's not a different sport, it's a different universe. It's not just about more control, it's about more responsibility. Customer support, refunds, product quality, fulfillment, compliance, and the list goes on. People are way too quick to jump in without crunching the real numbers and understanding what they're signing up for. The risk isn't just upfront costs, it's the ongoing drain on your time and resources. Most folks underestimate how fast it can eat into your margins and how tricky it is to scale sustainably once you're on your own. So yeah, trust the numbers, but more importantly, question if you actually understand what those numbers are telling you before you leap. Because most don't, and that's why most fail
 
Look, I get the nostalgia, but let's not pretend the traffic game was ever that simple. The idea that just dialing in a niche and optimizing a landing page could keep you afloat forever.
yeah, I get what Catalyst is saying, but he's kind of missing the point. It's not that simple. Back in the day, yeah you could get away with just dialing in a niche and boosting your LP, but that was part of the game then. It was a different kind of complexity. The thing is, traffic was more forgiving.

It's like trading a sprint for a marathon
The margins were bigger, the churn was lower, and the whole ecosystem was less churned up by regulation and tech changes. Now, you're right, traffic isn't enough, but that was never the whole story. The real game was always about understanding your audience, even if it looked like just traffic optimization. The landscape just shifted, but the fundamentals of knowing your market and managing the numbers never changed. You still gotta do the same work, just with more layers and more risks layered on top.
 
let's unpack that. Traffic was never just about dialing in a niche and optimizing your LP, that was the entry point, not the whole game. The real shift comes when you own the customer journey, margins, and lifetime value. You can't just scale traffic and hope for the best anymore. Data doesn't lie, but most people ignore the deeper metrics like retention, support costs, and back-end LTV.
 
It's like trading a sprint for a marathon. Traffic is easy but owning the whole race.
Sure, owning the whole race sounds sexy but let's be honest. Traffic is not that simple anymore either.

It was a different kind of complexity
It's a grind. Algorithm changes, rising CPC, saturation. Sprint or marathon, you still need a good lane.
 
The thing is, traffic was more forgiving
i mean, technically yes but also no. traffic was forgiving in the sense you could get away with less sophisticated stuff, but the margins and lifetime value weren't really there either. now you own the whole cycle and its more complex, but the potential for true scale and stability is way higher if you play it right.
 
I gotta push back a little on the nostalgia for those "simpler" days. Sure, the game looked different but it wasn't easier. I remember my first attempts to scale a niche and just optimize a LP, got crushed when the algorithm shifted overnight. owning the customer journey is a different beast but that doesn't mean it's just about more complexity for complexity's sake. back then it was risky too, just a different flavor. people forget the real game was always about managing that entire flow, not just traffic. the margins and lifetime value might be more profitable now but only if you truly understand what you're getting into. just chasing bigger profits without knowing the numbers behind the product and customer lifecycle?
 
I get what you're saying about owning the customer journey but let's be real, most guys jumping to product underestimate how much harder it is in reality. yeah, owning margins and lifetime value sounds sexy but it also means handling all the chaos that comes with customer support, refunds, product quality issues. people talk about the risks like it's only about upfront costs but they forget how much mental bandwidth it takes to manage a product day to day. And sure, the game has changed with saturation and CPCs rising but that's just a different flavor of the same grind. the big mistake is thinking owning your traffic makes it easier, when actually it just shifts the complexity. gotta ask yourself if you're really ready for the long haul or just chasing bigger profits without the foundation. because jumping into product ownership without solid systems is like building a house on quicksand.
 
i mean, technically yes but also no
yeah, empathy, but honestly i think people forget how forgiving those "less sophisticated" methods really were. margins were thin, sure, but at least you could get away with a lot more bot traffic and stale af traffic and still scrape some ROI. now?
 
yeah, empathy, but honestly i think people forget how forgiving those "less sophisticated" methods really were. margins were thin, sure, but at least you could get away with a lot more bot traffic and stale af traffic and still scrape some ROI.
yeah, and that's the thing, isn't it? back then you could sort of coast on volume and a bit of shady traffic, but now the game is more about quality and retention. most newbies jump in thinking margins are just gonna magically grow with scale, but they forget about churn and CAC creeping up. those old tricks just don't cut it anymore, and the ones who think they can just automate their way through are in for a rude awakening. promote with caution, because what worked in the past might bite you in the ass today.
 
so i took a different route, focused on a tighter niche and switched to a more direct LP with clearer CT. bumped up my retargeting and split tested the hell out of my post-click. results are looking better but still a long way from the old days of just throwing traffic and hoping. this game never stays still.
 
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