How I Figured Out My Network Was Shaving Leads (With Numbers)

How I Figured Out My Network Was Shaving Leads (With Numbers)

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Alright so I just dove headfirst into this affiliate scene a few months ago and I thought I was doing good till I started digging into the numbers. Ran some CPA offers, got paid on average 30 bucks per lead, seemed decent. But then I got curious about the leads quality, right? Started tracking backend conversions and man it was a nightmare. Turns out my network was shaving a chunk of leads before hitting my tracker. I was paying for 1000 leads a day but only seeing like 600 on my backend data. So I took a sample, 100 leads from one day, looked at their conversion rate. Out of those 100, only 50 actually signed up on the LP. Out of those 50, only 20 completed the offer. But my tracker was showing me that all 100 signed up. That means a 50 percent shaving rate. I calculated the real EPC too. My tracker EPC was like 6 bucks but when I removed the shaved leads, it was closer to 12. Big difference. Shows me that if I didn't start analyzing my data, I would've been thinking this network was golden. Now I got my eyes open for network shenanigans. Anyone else seen this kind of lead shaving? Show me the receipts.
 
Alright so I just dove headfirst into this affiliate scene a few months ago and I thought I was doing good till I started digging into the numbers. Ran some CPA offers, got paid on average 30 bucks per lead, seemed decent.
Been there. Back in the day, I thought I had a solid niche till I started tracking everything. Numbers don't lie, man
 
Back in the day, I thought I had a solid nich
yeah same here, got burned thinking my niche was solid till I looked at the numbers and saw it was all smoke and mirrors sometimes, gotta keep that microscope on everything and not trust just surface metrics
 
Alright so I just dove headfirst into this affiliate scene a few months ago and I thought I was doing good till I started digging into the numbers
dove headfirst? that's where most people go wrong. thinking just because you're getting clicks and some initial payouts means you got a real winner. based on my experience, that's a false sense of security. numbers don't lie but most beginners don't even know what to look for.
 
Alright so I just dove headfirst into this affilia
dove headfirst huh? that's the only way to learn sometimes but man, gotta be careful with those first steps or you end up swimming in the deep end without a life raft keep grinding and always keep that data close, it's the only way to see the real story behind the numbers
 
Back in the day, I thought I had a solid niche till I started tracking everything
Terrain, honestly, that's the classic beginner trap. You think you got a solid niche because initial clicks look promising. But the second you start dissecting the actual conversions, it's like peeling an onion, layers of nonsense. Thinking your niche is solid just because you got some traffic is the kind of naive optimism that kills your ROI later. Numbers don't lie but most folks don't want to face the truth. They see a handful of signups and assume it's gold but it's usually a mirage. You gotta dig deeper. That's the difference between a real pro and someone who's just throwing spaghetti at the wall hoping it sticks. If you're not analyzing every segment, every drop off point, you're just wasting time. Niche quality is nothing if the leads are mostly bot traffic or shadily shaved. Come on, get real. If you're not doing the dirty work of tracking and verifying, you're just chasing shadows
 
numbers don't lie but most beginners don't ev
Honestly I gotta disagree with that line. Numbers do lie if you don't understand the context. A lot of newbies see good CTR and think it's all good but they don't dig deeper into what those clicks are actually doing. CTR can be high, but if the traffic is junk or fake, then it doesn't mean squat. Same with conversions - I've seen offers look amazing on paper but in reality, it's dead end traffic or shilled traffic. You gotta look at the quality of the leads, not just the numbers on the surface. So yeah, numbers don't lie but they definitely can mislead if you don't analyze the full picture.
 
Alright so I just dove headfirst into this affiliate scene a few months ago and I thought I was doing good till I started digging into the numbers. Ran some CPA offers, got paid on average 30 bucks per lead, seemed decent. But then I got curious about the leads quality, right.
Bruh, you gotta stop thinking like that. diving headfirst is fine but u gotta be smarter about it. u don't just run offers and hope for the best, u need to understand the entire funnel and the traffic quality from the start. curiosity about leads is good but u gotta go deeper before u think u did good. numbers don't lie but most newbies just see the easy money and get cocky.
 
Honestly I gotta disagree with that line. Numbers do lie if you don't understand the context.
Yeah, exactly, Hub. Numbers are just part of the story. Without context they're useless. CTR looks good till you realize most of those clicks are bot traffic or just garbage. You gotta dig into what's actually converting and why. Without that, you're just throwing darts in the dark. So many noobs chase shiny metrics instead of real data. Ended up burning budgets because they don't get the difference between surface stats and actual funnel quality.
 
CTR can be high, but if the traffic is junk o
lol CTR is only a part of the puzzle if u not looking at the quality behind those clicks. high CTR with junk traffic is like a shiny car with no engine, looks good but runs like crap. been there, got burned. better to focus on sources that actually convert not just click volume. don't get blinded by vanity metrics.
 
So I took a sample, 100 leads from one day, looked
taking a sample from one day is a start but man that can be misleading if you don't keep testing across different days and times and GEOs because traffic can vary sooo much, what looks legit on one sample could be garbage on another. You gotta keep that data flowing and see the patterns not just jump to conclusions based on a snapshot. Lead shaving is sneaky and if you only check a single day you might miss the bigger picture, so always test longer and diversify your samples or you'll just be chasing shadows thinking you caught the network red-handed.
 
Alright so I just dove headfirst into this affiliate scene a few months ago and I thought I was doing good till I started digging into the numbers. Ran some CPA offers, got paid on average 30 bucks per lead, seemed decent.
Diving in fast is fine but don't forget garbage in garbage out. That 30 bucks per lead sounds decent till you see the real conversion numbers and leads getting shaved. Always check the backend, or you'll be chasing phantom payouts. Easy to get fooled by early wins.
 
l2p on the lead shaving, bro. most networks are straight up shadowbanning your backend if they think you catching on. that's why you gotta keep testing and sampling different days and GEOs. push traffic is 90 percent bot garbage anyway, so always assume you got shadey shenanigans until proven otherwise. EPCs can be real misleading if you're not watching the backend close.
 
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