The good old days of lead gen: when numbers mattered more than filters

The good old days of lead gen: when numbers mattered more than filters

Gaze

New member
I was reminiscing yesterday about the glory days of lead gen for insurance and solar, and honestly, it's like comparing dial-up internet to fiber optic. Back then, I remember hitting a solid 150 leads a day on some tired old push campaigns, and it was just enough to keep the lights on. Now? I see networks throwing out these shiny new CPA deals with fancy dashboards, but the numbers seem more like art than science. Like, I got an offer promising a $100 payout for a qualified insurance lead, but then I check the tracking, and the postback shows I got 10 leads, but the sales are still a ghost town. Who's actually closing these deals? Crickets.
 
Been there burned that ad budget. U gotta understand those shiny dashboards are just smoke and mirrors. Numbers look good till u see the actual LTV and CR. Those high payouts? Usually a trap or the deal is skimming or fake. It's like chasing mirages in the desert. When deals go dead, u gotta ask urself if the offer is legit or just hype. The real closers?
 
Been there burned that ad budget
Burned plenty of budgets chasing those shiny dashboards myself, shrugs. They always look way better in the reports than in real life. The sad part is some of these networks are pretty good at selling the fantasy, but when it comes down to closing actual deals, it's like crickets or ghosted leads. It's like trying to squeeze juice from a dry lemon sometimes. I dunno, maybe I'm just too skeptical now but I've seen enough fake numbers to make me question everything, especially when the payout looks good but the closing rate is dead low. I guess that's why I prefer real outreach, more transparency and actual ROI, not just some shiny metric on a dashboard.
 
But here's the thing
Let me be blunt Stoke, those dashboards are just bait. If the closing numbers are ghost towns and the postbacks are flaky, it means the traffic and tracking are probably garbage or the network is full of scams.

It's like trying to squeeze juice from a dry lemon sometimes
Don't chase shiny dashboards, chase real conversions and LTV. The only thing that matters is if those leads turn into actual sales, not the fake numbers they throw around. Until you see consistent, verified closings, it's all smoke and mirrors
 
You're not wrong about dashboards being smoke but calling them all scams is a bit harsh. Sure, some networks pump out fake numbers, but the thing is, a lot of legit offers have legit issues too - tracking gets creaky, or the closing just isn't happening because the traffic is bad or the landing page creak. I've seen offers with clean postbacks turn into ghost towns because the buyer's closing process is just broken or they're scraping the bottom of the barrel for leads. It's a dance, not just a scam. Sometimes the offer is solid, but the whole flow is janky.
 
smh this industry sometimes. got burned by shiny dashboards myself but i gotta ask, how are you guys actually verifying the closing? tracking just as flaky as the offers? i swear half the time i feel like i need a phd in code to figure out if the leads are real. and yeah, some legit offers have issues too but at least with fake numbers, you kinda know where you stand. maybe it's just the nature of the beast, but at this point i'm too tired for this game to be played by illusions
 
right, you say 150 leads a day on old school campaigns. that's a different beast. nowadays, if your cr on those new offers isn't solid, you're just gambling.
 
I was reminiscing yesterday about the glory days of lead gen for insurance and solar, and honestly, it's like comparing dial-up internet to fiber optic. Back then, I remember hitting a solid 150 leads a day on some tired old push campaigns, and it was just enough to keep the lights on. I see networks throwing out these shiny new CPA deals with fancy dashboards, but the numbers seem more like art than science.
Yeah, I get the nostalgia, but honestly the math doesn't math with those old days. Hitting 150 leads a day back then probably meant you were just throwing a lot of darts at the wall, hoping some stick. Now? The industry got more complex and tracking is the weakest link, never trust the dashboards. The shiny new deals might seem artful but the real science is in verifying if those leads actually convert and tracking properly.
 
and yeah, some legit offers have issues too but at least with fake numbers, you kinda know where you stand
Let me play devil's advocate for a sec I think Nudge is missing the point fake numbers are just a symptom of a bigger problem which is the industry losing sight of actual conversion and focus on vanity metrics like clicks and leads because they think that's the real juice but in reality if you not closing what does it matter if you hit 150 leads a day or a thousand fake or real the real deal is how many actually turn into cash flow and that's the part most are blind to now
 
yeah, back when you could just throw enough money and scale. Filters killed the grind. Now CVR and LP tweaks are all that's left.
 
The good old days of lead gen: when numbers mattered more than filters
Numbers still matter but now you gotta be smart about how you use filters and data. Throwing money at the problem just burns out fast. Ever notice how the LP and creative tweaks become your real levers? It's all about sharpening the CR and AOV now, not just flooding the pipeline.
 
yeah, back when you could just throw enough m
Bruh, back in the day u could blow through budgets faster than u can say "filter fatigue". Now it's all about finesse, not just throwing cash and hoping for the best. U gotta stay sharp or end up cooked.
 
The good old days of lead gen: when numbers mattered more than filters.
interesting. Walk me through your thinking on that. It feels like those days were more forgiving in some ways but maybe less precise. Do you think the focus on pure numbers made the game simpler or just more chaotic?
 
Honestly, I think the old days were more forgiving because there was less noise. Now with all these filters and data points, it's like trying to find a needle in a haystack while the haystack keeps moving. Numbers still matter but the game is way more complex, not simpler. You can't just dump and hope anymore, gotta be surgical.
 
yeah, those days were simpler but also kinda like shooting in the dark. at least back then you could just flood a campaign and see what sticks, now its all about micro-optimizations and hoping the filters don't kill your flow. still, gotta admit, the noise level is way higher now. feels like you're chasing ghosts half the time. just my 2 cents, but the real skill now is managing the chaos without losing your mind or your budget.
 
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