My FB lead gen numbers this month. It's not about scaling.

My FB lead gen numbers this month. It's not about scaling.

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Alright, I need to vent for a second. I'm tired of seeing posts where someone brags about a $5k day but the only data point they share is their bank balance. That's not media buying, that's gambling with extra steps. Let me give you something real. I ran a test this month for a home services SOI offer on Facebook. My total spend was $873. I generated 47 leads. That's a CPL of about $18.57. Sounds okay, right? The network payout was $22 per lead, so my raw profit was $164. But here's where everyone goes wrong - they'd call that a win and try to scale it. My actual profit after subtracting my time, creatives, and the three audiences that bled $200 with zero conversions? I'm basically at zero. Back in the day, you could just throw a broad audience at a dating SOI and print money. Now you need to track the quality. 11 of those 47 leads were bogus phone numbers. The network counted them, but the advertiser clawed back the payout later. That's the data you never see in the hype threads. The basics aren't about which platform to use. It's about building your own proof ladder, from click to payout confirmation. My rule now is never trust a network's conversion pixel until you've tracked a lead all the way to a confirmed sale or a non-reversed payout. This month's proof? A 3.7% conversion rate on paper, but a real payout rate of 76%. That's the only number that matters.
 
Interesting post... I see where you coming from with the data honesty. But honestly I think there's a bit of a middle ground here. Yeah, fake leads are a pain and tracking all the waaay to confirmed sales is, but sometimes you gotta accept that not all the leads are perfect, especially in niches like home services. If you rely too much on the network's numbers without your own tracking, you might miss the bigger picture. I've found that building a good proof ladder is but also knowing when to cut your losses on poor quality traffic. It's a balancing act between filtering leads and not throwing out the baby with the bathwater. In my humble experience, having solid tracking and honest data helps you scale smarter, not just chase vanity metrics.
 
Look, Quanta, accepting fake leads is just setting yourself up for disaster. You can't build a real biz trusting a network pixel that shows a 3.7% CR but a payout rate of 76%. That's cherry-picking data. When I run my funnels, I want to see leads confirmed with a sale or actual payout, no fluff. You say sometimes you gotta accept the middle ground but that's how you get burned quick. Fake numbers can turn a profit into a nightmare overnight. Native ads are the only sustainable traffic long-term because they weed out the BS. Trust but verify is the only rule that matters in health.
 
Interesting post
to answer your comment about Quanta, based on my experience, sometimes you gotta listen to what works for you, even if it looks off on paper. sure, fake leads are a problem but not every network is shady. the key is building your own proof ladder like i mentioned.

When I run my funnels, I want to see leads confirmed with a sale or actual payout, no fluff
if you see a high payout rate but low real conversions, you gotta dig deeper. tracking to confirmed sales is the only way to keep your sanity. if the numbers look good on paper but the real payout is tiny, it's just a matter of time before it crashes. in the end, it's about controlling your data, not trusting networks blindly.
 
Yeah, fake leads are a pain and tracking all the waaay to confirmed sales is, but sometimes you gotta accept that not all the leads are perfect, especially in niches like home services
Accepting fake leads just means you're playing in someone else's sandbox. If the network's throwing in garbage and you're okay with that, how are you ever gonna really optimize? What's the point of tracking all the way if the leads are trash from the start? That's just building on quicksand.
 
cool story, show the stats. what kind of cr you running at, and how's the lp hold up? because honestly, facebook's algo rewards consistency and decent creatives more than any secret hack.
 
My FB lead gen numbers this month. It's not about scaling.
okay but where's the actual data or it didn't happen. talking about lead gen numbers without showing ctr or cpm is about as useful as a screen door on a submarine. you messing with my head here or just flexing?
 
It's not about scaling
Not to be that guy but if it's not about scaling then what is it about? Just sitting there hoping your numbers stay the same?

cool story, show the stats
(been there, done that, ended up losing more than I wanna admit). Sometimes you gotta push or at least figure out why you hitting a wall.
 
Haste, I think you're missing the point here. It's not about showing stats just for the sake of it, sometimes a guy just wants to share that he's got a steady run without blowing his load on big numbers. Not everything is about cr or cpm or ctr. Sometimes it's about knowing the flow stays the same, the leads keep coming in and you can build from there. If he's not scaling that means he's probably trying to stay under the radar, keep his costs low, and optimize his margins. It's a different game than just ramping up and hoping for the best. People get caught up in the numbers and forget there's a lot of grey zone between burn and build. Sometimes just holding the line is a win.
 
not sure why everyone's fixated on stats like ctr or cpm all the time. sometimes you just gotta trust your nose and keep it tight. if the numbers stay steady and your cpa ain't creeping up, then who cares if you show the world the exact details. it's about confidence and knowing your campaign's health without overcomplicating. overthinking it can kill good momentum. i've seen plenty of guys stress over tiny fluctuations that don't really matter in the end. keep your eyes on the prize, not every little detail that makes your head spin.
 
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