tried pushing a beginner program with no traffic, just got angry

tried pushing a beginner program with no traffic, just got angry

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So I let my cousin talk me into testing out a beginner-friendly affiliate program for him he has zero traffic obviously wants something super easy I pointed him at this crypto wallet signup thing paying like $120 per verified lead looked perfect on paper low CR needed but hey big payout right We built this stupidly simple funnel, a one-page explainer with a video then straight to offer, I'm running my usual tracking, everything pixel perfect on my end and here's where I'm just confused the network dashboard shows we got 3 conversions, my tracker says we got 9, like how is that even possible, it's a direct link with postback on the offer page, I checked for multi-device stuff, checked cookie windows, the whole nine yards And now the AM is telling me they only pay on fully verified deposits not just signups but the offer terms said first deposit verified, which we have, but they're saying the deposit has to clear some internal fraud check that takes 7 days, so my 9 conversions in tracker, their 3 conversions in dashboard, and probably 1 maybe 2 actual payments if I'm lucky, this is why beginners get torched, you think you're running a simple offer and the entire payout structure is hidden behind five layers of fine print So my takeaway for anyone starting with no traffic, those high payout beginner-friendly programs are a trap, you'll spend more time fighting for your commissions than you will driving traffic, you're better off finding something boring and consistent like a mobile content SOI offer or a cheap CPI app install where the conversion event is stupidly clear and the payout is low but reliable, because at least then the numbers in your tracker will match the numbers on your paycheck
 
Here's the uncomfortable truth. Those high payout beginner offers are almost always a trap. They sell you on the idea of quick money but hide the real payout game behind layers of fraud checks and internal verifications. You spend more time chasing ghosts than actually making money. Better to stick with steady, boring offers that pay reliably - like local leads or simple CPL stuff - at least you know what you're getting into.
 
Better to stick with steady, boring offers that pay reliably - like local leads or simple CPL stuff - at least you know what you're getting into
Honestly, I used to agree with that advice but now I think it's overrated. Boring offers are safe but they're also slow and locked in a box. Sometimes you gotta chase the high payouts even if it means getting burned a few times. The trick is knowing when to chase and when to hold back. Playing it safe all the time just burns you out and keeps you stuck.
 
Chasing ghosts is the only thing beginners ar
sure, beginners chasing ghosts is classic but so is thinking high payout means easy money.

Sometimes you gotta chase the high payouts even if it means getting burned a few times
it's not just about skills, it's about knowing what lurks behind those shiny numbers. always check the fine print or watch your campaign turn into a ghost town real quick.
 
So you're saying beginners should just stick to boring offers but then complain about slow payouts right? Sounds like they get what they pay for, slow and steady instead of quick ghost chases. But isn't it also true that those high payout offers are sometimes worth it if you know the game and how to vet them? I mean not all are scams or traps, some are just misunderstood. Why is it always the high payout ones that get labeled as traps when in reality a lot of people just don't know how to handle the extra layers of verification? Could be on the marketer to dig deeper, not just blame the offer for hiding behind walls. Or is the real lesson here that beginners shouldn't even try unless they know the ropes already?
 
So I let my cousin talk me into testing out a beginner-friendly affiliate program for him he has zero traffic obviously wants something super easy I pointed him at this crypto wallet signup thing paying like $120 per verified lead looked perfect on paper low CR needed but hey big payout right We built this stupidly simple funnel, a one-page explainer with a video then straight to offer, I'm running my usual tracking, everything pixel perfect on my end and here's where I'm just confused the network dashboard shows we got 3 conversions, my tracker says we got 9, like how is that even possible, it's a direct link with postback on the offer page, I checked for multi-device stuff, checked cookie windows, the whole nine yards And now the AM is telling me they only pay on fully verified deposits not just signups but the offer terms said first deposit verified, which we have, but they're saying the deposit has to clear some internal fraud check that takes 7 days, so my 9 conversions in tracker, their 3 conversions in dashboard, and probably 1 maybe 2 actual payments if I'm lucky, this is why beginners get torched, you think you're running a simple offer and the entire payout structure is hidden behind five layers of fine print So my takeaway for anyone starting with no traffic, those high payout beginner-friendly programs are a trap, you'll spend more time fighting for your commissions than you will driving traffic, you're better off finding something boring and consistent like a mobile content SOI offer or a cheap CPI app install where the conversion event is stupidly clear and the payout is low but reliable, because at least then the numbers in your tracker will match the numbers on your paycheck
Exactly, beginners get burned chasing shiny stuff and then cry foul.

sure, beginners chasing ghosts is classic but so is thinking high payout means easy money
Stick to simple offers where you can actually count the conversions, not some shady 7-day hold. Low payout but reliable beats high payout ghost chases every time.
 
Hold my beer. So they're surprised about delays and fine print on a high payout offer? That's beginner stuff, not an excuse to blame the offer.
 
You're not wrong about slow offers being safe but here's the thing though if you don't test the high payout stuff you're just leaving money on the table for no good reason and yeah beginners do chase ghosts but sometimes you gotta roll the dice to learn what lurks behind those shiny promises anyway, avoiding all risk isn't how you get better at this game
 
you can't get mad just cause there's no traffic yet. numbers don't lie, most beginner stuff takes time to pick up. pushing hard before you got a plan can burn you out quick. patience and testing are key, not rage.
 
Hard disagree. Rage won't make traffic appear out of thin air. If you're pushing a beginner offer with zero traffic, it's not the offer, it's you. Get your plan right first, learn the niche, figure out where your audience lives, then test different angles. Rushing and getting salty just burns your time and juice
 
Rage is never a strategy. But pushing with zero traffic and no plan is a waste of time. Patience is one thing, but without proper targeting and testing, you're just spinning your wheels. Get your geo, creatives, and LP right before you blame the traffic.
 
You're confusing activity with progress. Pushing a program with no traffic is like trying to fish in an empty pond. Fix your targeting, your offer, your creatives first, then get the traffic flowing.
 
Anger won't pay the bills or build the list. You gotta learn the 'niche' and the 'traffic' first. Test, measure, 'kill' the bad ideas, then scale
 
I'll concede that pushing a program with no traffic is just spinning your wheels. But I think there's a difference between getting angry and realizing you need a better plan. Sometimes you gotta step back, learn where your audience is, and craft creatives that actually hit. Rage doesn't fix your targeting or your offer. Keep testing, measuring, and refining. The traffic will come when you get those fundamentals right. Just throwing things out there without a clear plan is how you stay stuck.
 
i mean, pushing into no traffic is like throwing darts in the dark, no surprise it frustrates you. imo, learn to get the right traffic first or you'll keep hitting walls. trial and error in the right spots is key gl
 
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