native ad dashboards are feeding us different numbers, why?

native ad dashboards are feeding us different numbers, why?

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Okay, so from my experience running offers with Taboola and MGID, I'm hitting a consistent wall that's making my attribution model useless. My own tracker says one thing, the network dashboard says another for conversions, and then the actual affiliate network report is a completely third, usually lower number. The delta isn't like 10%, it's sometimes 40-50% difference on spend. How do you even begin to optimize or calculate ROAS when you're dealing with three separate versions of the truth? It's like each platform is gaslighting me into thinking the others are wrong. I know a bit of discrepancy is normal, but this feels broken. I'm running a simple CPS offer, so it's not like it's some crazy post-click event. Landing page views, button clicks, and thank you page fires all align on my end. The only common thread seems to be the traffic source metrics. It just breeds total confusion on scaling. Are you supposed to pick one source of truth and just roll with it, even if you know it's inaccurate? This level of data noise makes me nostalgic for the days of basic affiliate links and simple click counts. It all comes down to the human connection, but right now I'm just connecting with a spreadsheet of lies. Anyone else feel this way?
 
I know a bit of discrepancy is normal, but this feels broken
You're not wrong, but calling it 'broken' might be giving the platforms too much credit. Discrepancies are baked in, part of the game. It's not about finding one perfect number, it's about understanding which source is more trustworthy for what you're trying to optimize. Honestly, if you rely on one, pick the one that aligns best with your bottom line, not the one that's loudest in the dashboard. It's always a balancing act between the 'truth' and the noise.
 
Disagree a bit. Sure discrepancies are common, but when they hit 50 percent that's not normal, that's a red flag. Most of those numbers are just estimates or delays, not the actual data.
 
Sure discrepancies are common, but when they hit 50 percent that's not normal, that's a red flag. Most of those numbers are just estimates or delays, not the actual data.
50 percent discrepancy? Rook, I think you just cursed the entire industry. If you're trusting a platform's numbers that are off by that much, you might as well toss your spreadsheet in the trash and start flipping coins. Sure, delays and estimates are part of the game, but when it hits that level, it's more like a dumpster fire than data. Nobody should be scaling on that
 
Honestly I think people are way too quick to label discrepancies as broken. The platform dashboards are just rough sketches not the exact canvas. The real art is in understanding which numbers are the pre-lander signals and which are post click conversions.
 
The platform dashboards are just rough sketch
nah, this is the way. dashboards are never "rough sketches" they're just lying to you. if you rely on those to optimize you are just coping with bad data. the truth is only in your own tracking, and even then you gotta take it with a grain of salt. platforms want you to trust their numbers so you'll keep spending but that data is always delayed, estimated or flat out wrong. if you want real ROAS you gotta build your own attribution and ignore their fluff. it's all noise designed to keep you hooked on metrics that don't matter. just like influencer scores they're made up numbers.
 
Haha, yeah, sounds like you're stuck between a rock and a hard place with those numbers. I've been there, trust me. It's like trying to read a map that keeps changing every time you blink. The platform dashboards are more like sketchy sketches than accurate paintings. And Rook's right, 50 percent difference? That's a red flag, not a normal day in the sandbox. Those numbers are estimates, delays, a lot of noise, not gospel. The real truth is in your own tracking, but even then, you gotta play the grain of salt game. cuz no matter how tight your setup is, there's always some hidden wiggle room. Honestly, it's like trying to shave with a dull blade, you just gotta pick your poison. If I had to roll with one, I'd look at my own tracker and trust that more than the dashboards, which are just rough sketches anyway., you gotta focus on what's consistent. The lander, the flows, the click-to-conversion timing that's your real yardstick. The numbers from the networks? They're just part of the noise. Don't let the dashboard BS shake you out of scaling.
 
Nah, I gotta disagree with the "platform dashboards are just rough sketches" take. They're not perfect but not outright lying either. The real issue is most people trust those numbers too much, then get surprised when the reality hits
 
Disagree with the idea that dashboards are just rough sketches. They're a necessary evil, not a conspiracy. The real problem is most people treat them like gospel instead of data points.
 
nah, this is the way. dashboards are never "rough sketches" they're just lying to you.
i mean, i get where revenant is coming from but idk if i fully agree that dashboards are just outright lying. imo, they are more like... messy reflections, like shadows of the real data. sometimes they show what they want you to see, other times they just lag behind reality. the key is understanding their limitations and not trusting them blindly. yeah, they're necessary but also dangerous if you let them be your gospel., you gotta trust your own tracking but also recognize dashboards are just tools, not truths. can't be the only thing you base your decisions on, especially when they keep changing. gl trying to keep sane in that chaos tho.
 
The real issue is most people trust those numbers too much, then get surprised when the reality hits
classic move, trust the data way too much then get slapped when reality hits. those dashboards are like that friend who promises a lot but delivers nothing solid. gotta cross-check manually and not get caught up in the numbers hype.
 
The real issue is most people trust those num
trust is a double edged sword. yeah dashboards can be off but blaming that solely on trust is missing the bigger picture. it's about knowing their limitations and not getting lazy with data. you gotta cross-check but also realize those numbers are just signals not gospel. relying blindly on any source is where the problems start.
 
Oh, sweet summer child. You think dashboards are supposed to be accurate? They're a glorified sketchpad, not the gospel. If you're still treating them like holy writ, no wonder you're losing sleep over delta percentages. The real trick is to stop chasing perfect numbers and start understanding the patterns behind them.
 
I gotta disagree with Expedite, if you trust those numbers blindly at 50 percent off, you might as well throw darts at a board. It's not just industry stuff, it's bad data management. If your dashboard is that far off, you're flying blind and wasting money. Better to trust your own tracker and keep the platforms aligned than chase ghost numbers.
 
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