Weekly update on transitioning from affiliate to product

Weekly update on transitioning from affiliate to product

Haze

New member
So I decided to cut out the middleman and launch my own thing. Thought it'd be easy, just a matter of flipping a switch. Turns out, it's more like trying to steer a runaway truck. This week's numbers - no surprises they're a mess. CPA drops 15 percent, but the revs aren't moving in tandem. Seems my organic traffic's been throttled by some new whitelisting rules I didn't see coming. Paid media? Same story, CTR's okay but conversions are tanking. Looks like I'm stuck with a kind of hybrid model where some channels still drip revenue, but others just drain my budget faster than I can say 'scaling.' Week over week, a mixed bag, but objectively speaking, the data says I'm still figuring out the right message and offers. No real surprises, just a reminder that launching a product is a marathon, not a sprint. Or in my case, a slow death by a thousand data cuts.
 
Turns out, it's more like trying to steer a runaway truck
Yeah, that runaway truck analogy hits home. You gotta keep a tight grip, or you'll end up crashing into something costly. Been there, done that, and trust me, rushing in without a plan is just pouring gasoline on a fire.
 
Look, I get it, launching your own thing is a beast. But honestly, just flipping a switch? That's rookie thinking. When I did my first product, I wasted months on bad messaging and zero prep. It's all about testing small, tweaking, and not throwing your whole budget at a dead-end.
 
why do you think flipping a switch should be easy? seems like you're assuming the traffic and conversions will just sync up once you make the change. maybe focus on what you can control - like your messaging or offer tweaks rather than hoping everything magically aligns. if organic traffic got throttled, what's your backup plan to get new eyeballs?
 
So I decided to cut out the middleman and launch my own thing. Thought it'd be easy, just a matter of flipping a switch.
flipping a switch is a fantasy, buddy. you really think you can just zap a button and everything works?

That's rookie thinking
nah, it's all about testing, tweaking, and grinding. thinking it's easy just shows you haven't done enough real work or understand how quick everything can go sideways when you go direct. this ain't a light switch, it's a marathon and most newbies just wanna sprint.
 
let me tell you a story. I once watched a creator try to launch her own product and honestly, she thought flipping a switch was the secret. She had this idea it'd be a quick win, just like her sponsored posts. Weeks later, she was stuck in the same place, throwing budget at channels that just didn't convert. Turns out, what she missed was the deep work messaging, offers, audience alignment. It's always about the grind, the tweaks, the real work. Thinking it's easy because you got some initial traffic is a setup for disappointment. You gotta look at the data, test different angles and accept that what works for one channel might tank in another.
 
flipping a switch is a fantasy, buddy
Tried adjusting whitelists, tightened some creatives, and cut back on the bids. numbers still wonky but at least I know where the leaks are now. next step gonna be deep diving into the pixel setup and maybe stripping back some of the more complicated flows. patience, right?
 
So you're saying you're moving from just promoting other peoples stuff to actually creating your own products? That's a bold move. Do you have a plan for building that first-party list or are you still scraping for traffic? Building that owned audience is non-negotiable if you wanna survive long term. w/o it, you're just chasing the next big affiliate offer and that's a dead end.
 
Weekly update on transitioning from affiliate to p
so you're actually taking the plunge into creating your own p and not just riding the affiliate wave anymore, huh? curious if you're seeing some early signals or just testing the waters with a small project first to gauge the interest and get some data on the actual conversions or maybe just building that first-party list w/o the usual affiliate noise? my stats on similar verticals show that owning the audience really upped the EPC and ROI long term but it's a tough grind getting there without p of your own. show me the numbers though because my binom dashboard on a similar vertical shows the exact opposite trend that might just be noise in your dataset or a bad day for the traffic source
 
Oh wow, a weekly update on this epic journey. So, you're really switching gears from just promoting stuff to making your own? That's like going from riding a bike to flying a jet, no? Curious if you're just testing the waters or diving in full speed ahead. Either way, hope your landing page doesn't turn into a sloth on sleeping pills - CR is king.
 
SO, you're making the leap into creating your own product. NICE. That move from just promoting to owning the front end is where the real cash gets made if you do it right. Curious if you're running small tests on the list side or just trying to scale up a pilot offer first. SHOW ME THE DATA when you get some initial traction. I've seen so many folks spin wheels trying to build a list without a proper offer. The key is always the offer, not just traffic. Keep me posted.
 
Weekly update on transitioning from affiliate to product.
RIP to the idea that weekly updates mean progress. Honestly, I've seen plenty of folks talk about transitioning for months, still doing the same thing a year later. Making a switch like that takes way more than just posting a weekly update or whatever. I'm skeptical until I see real results coming through.

Do you have a plan for building that first-party list or are you still scraping for traffic
Jumping from affiliate to product is a game of squeezing juice from a different angle, not a quick hop. If you're just talking about plans and updates, it's probably a long road ahead. That said, I get it, gotta keep the motivation high or it's easy to fall back into the comfort zone. But yeah, real progress means showing actual numbers not just weekly "updates".
 
Honestly, I think people overhype this "transition" thing. A weekly update on shifting from affiliate to product? Sounds more like flexing than real progress. Making your own product isn't just about posting updates, it's about building something that actually works, not just talking about it. People get caught up in the hype and forget the real grind.
 
Transitioning from affiliate to product is like going from quick wins to slow burns, gotta love the grind. Most guys talk about it for months and never really do it. If you're testing, keep the tests simple, don't overcomplicate. Building a real lander series is smart but don't forget, a solid offer and traffic quality matter more than weekly updates. Keep it lean and make it work, that's the real game.
 
Weekly update on transitioning from affiliate to product
Honestly, I think the weekly update part is kinda irrelevant. The real progress is in the actions not in the post count. Flexing about a transition doesn't mean you're actually moving the needle. Building a product takes time, and no amount of updates will make that happen faster. If you're still just talking about it, you're probably not doing enough.
 
Color me skeptical on that. A weekly update on transitioning sounds more like a diary than progress. If you really moving the needle, I wanna see some solid traffic, sales, or at least a real move in rankings.
 
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