Direct deal vs network breakdown: show me your raw numbers and what you'd do different

Direct deal vs network breakdown: show me your raw numbers and what you'd do different

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Has anyone run the same campaign, or a similar one, both thru a direct advertiser deal and through a CPA network like MaxBounty or CrakRevenue? I'm trying to isolate the true value of a network beyond just payment processing. From my side, I have some numbers from last quarter on a health supplement offer that are making me question the whole model. Context: I ran it direct with the brand owner for 30 days. Agreed on $45 per sale CPS, net-30 terms. My tracked revenue was $13,500 on 300 sales. Then I ran what I thought was the same creative to a very similar audience list through a major network for another 30 days. Their payout was $37 per sale, so my tracked rev was $11,100 on those same 300 sales. That's an obvious $2,400 haircut just from the lower payout. But here's where it gets messy. The direct campaign had zero support when my landing page got flagged by an ad platform - I was on my own. The network AM got me a fresh pre-lander in 48 hours and kept me running. So that $2,400 might be the cost of that insurance policy and saved downtime. What's harder to quantify is fraud protection and their bulk relationships with traffic sources that might get me better rates long-term. My gut says networks win for testing new verticals where you need agility and offers swapped fast. Direct seems better once you have a proven funnel and can handle your own client relations and legal compliance. But I'm missing concrete data points from other people's experiences outside of just payout percentages. If you've done both sides, what did your actual ROAS comparison look like after factoring in operational headaches saved? Not looking for theory - hit me with what your tracker actually said.
 
Has anyone run the same campaign, or a similar one, both thru a direct advertiser deal and through a CPA network like MaxBounty or CrakRevenue. I'm trying to isolate the true value of a network beyond just payment processing. From my side, I have some numbers from last quarter on a health supplement offer that are making me question the whole model.
Yeah, I get where you're coming from but here's the thing. Payouts are just the tip of the iceberg. Support, risk management, quick pivots - those are the real hidden value in networks.
 
this is why I stopped trusting POs for anything more than quick tests. Payouts are just the start. Support is nice but if your LP sucks or traffic's garbage, no network can save you.
 
yEAH, support and risk management matter, but I've seen too many guys get bent over crap offers or bad data long-term. Payouts are just a band-aid if your traffic is junk or your funnel is fragile. I'd say if you want real data, break down the EPC and CTR on each source and compare the quality of the leads. Support helps, but if your conversion metrics are garbage, no network is gonna fix that. Still, agree networks give you quick pivots and more agility, but don't forget the foundation email list hygiene and conversion rate optimization those are what keep the cash register ringing no matter what deal you're in
 
so you're showing raw numbers but I gotta ask - do those numbers include the backend costs and the churn? Because a lot of folks get caught up on initial CPA and forget the lifetime value or the retention drop after the first few weeks. Sometimes what looks like a better deal upfront isn't if you factor in all the attrition. Are you really comparing apples to apples or just the raw upfront numbers?
 
alright, gotta ask, what kind of numbers are you throwing around? i mean raw, like before any overhead or backend costs? cuz anyone can show a shiny CPA but the real deal is what happens after the initial push. churn, retention, backend expenses, all that good stuff. i've seen folks get cooked trying to chase just the top line and forget about the actual margins. personally, i'd want to see a full picture, not just the upfront CPA. also, what's your take on diversifying traffic sources? because pinning all hopes on one route is a quick way to get cooked if that lane dries up.
 
you're overcomplicating this. Raw numbers are just the starting point. You need to know your true margins after backend costs, churn, and lifetime value. Otherwise, you're just chasing shiny CPA figures that mean nothing in the long run. If you're not factoring those in, you're flying blind.
 
you're overcomplicating this. Raw numbers are just the starting point.
i agree with haze to some extent but I think there's value in starting with raw numbers. They give you a baseline, a quick snapshot before diving into all the backend stuff. Once you see the initial CPA and volume, then you can start peeling back the layers and optimizing. But if you only focus on margins after backend costs, you might miss the opportunity to find early wins or test creatives faster. It's a balancing act, knowing when to drill down deeper and when to keep it simple.
 
Direct deal vs network breakdown: show me your raw
raw numbers are just the appetizer. The real feast is after you dig into backend costs, churn, and lifetime value. Otherwise you're just chasing shiny CPA figures and getting burned when the backend costs eat your margin.
 
Direct deal vs network breakdown: show me your raw
But what if your "raw" numbers are just the tip of the iceberg? How do you really know if a direct deal is worth more than a network w/o peeling back all the backend costs and lifetime value?
 
i agree with haze to some extent but I think there's value in starting with raw numbers
haze, I get what you're saying but I think starting with raw numbers is like looking at a snapshot without context. It's useful for quick comparisons but if you don't dig into the backend and lifetime value later, you're flying blind. Raw data only gets you so far it's the baseline, not the whole story
 
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