my revshare vs cpa tracking from a six month test showing numbers

my revshare vs cpa tracking from a six month test showing numbers

Bounty

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okay so i need to talk about this revshare vs cpa thing again. i posted before about testing a respectable betting program, right? well ran it for six months under both models side by side on two similar traffic sources, same geo, roughly same spend. data is making me scratch my head. the revshare offer showed a steady $2k per month net profit after all costs by month four which is fine, reliable. but the cpa version, where i was getting paid per first deposit hit, spiked hard early then died off. made $5k in month two then dropped to maybe $500 by month five. thought it was burnout so i swapped the landing page creative, no change. so which is actually better long term? these numbers show revshare boring but stable, cpa exciting but maybe a flash in the pan depending on vertical? feels like im missing something obvious here, maybe the lifetime value math is wrong. show me your numbers if you've done similar splits, lmao im stuck in analysis paralysis.
 
made $5k in month two then dropped to maybe $500 b
so you're saying cpa spiked early and then tanked, but revshare stayed steady. are you sure the lifetime value math is right on the cpa? maybe the offer or funnel is only hot for a short burst, and then it's done. have you checked if the traffic quality shifted or if the user behavior changed mid-campaign? sometimes it's not just about the payout model but what's happening on the ground with the audience.
 
You're overthinking it. Cpa is like that girl at the club, fun but unpredictable. Revshare is that stable old friend. Both have their place but if you're chasing long term peace of mind, revshare is the safe bet. Your cpa spike shows a quick thrill but the decline is just how these things go, especially in betting.
 
Yeah I get it, the cpa spike looks like a one hit wonder, then it disappears. maybe the offer was only hot for a quick push, or traffic quality dropped off without you noticing. check the fine print on those offers, some are just short-lived promos. revshare might be boring but it does seem more predictable unless your churn rate is climbing. question is, are you factoring in the lifetime value correctly for cpa or just looking at the initial spike?
 
You're overthinking it. Cpa is like that girl at the club, fun but unpredictable.
That girl at the club analogy is trash. You chase some quick rush, then get burned when she dips. Cpa isn't about fun, it's about understanding the vertical and offer lifespan. You think it's unpredictable? No, it's just a poorly managed campaign. That quick spike screams offer burnout or traffic drop off. If you don't have a plan to sustain it, you're just gambling with no edge. Long term is about steady, reliable revshare, not some fleeting thrill chasing short-term wins.
 
LOL, this is spicy meatball! I think ur right about the offer being a flash in the pan, but maybe the key is testing longer-term offers, not just quick hits. Also, maybe check the traffic source quality again, cuz if it drops off, everything drops too.
 
the revshare offer showed a steady $2k per month net profit after all costs by month four which is fine, reliable
Look, just because it's steady doesn't mean it's good. Steady is boring, predictable is safe but alsooo dead in this game. If your revshare is netting $2k a month after costs, sure, that's reliable but it also might mean your offer or traffic source hit its ceiling. Sometimes the most stable numbers are just the calm before the storm. Don't get complacent thinking steady equals good long term. You should be pushing for scalable, high-ROAS campaigns, not just settling for a slow grind. If you want real growth, you gotta challenge that stability and test new angles, new offers, new traffic. Because trust me, the moment you think "reliable" is enough, you get blindsided by market shifts or vertical fatigue.
 
Honestly, this whole "steady is boring, quick hits are king" mentality kills me. You think a $2k net month with revshare is boring? That's ROI I can count on, not some fleeting CPA spike.
 
look, this is classic analysis paralysis. The CPA spike early is expected, it's the honeymoon phase, then the vertical starts to fade. That steady $2k with revshare is boring but predictable, that's the real gold in long term. You gotta ask yourself if the lifetime value of the player justifies the CPA bounce back. Sometimes the data shows the real winner is the one that keeps you stable and scaling, not chasing quick hits.
 
Honestly I think everyone's overthinking it a bit. The steady revshare might seem boring but it's the reliable cash flow you want in this game. CPA spikes are the PITA that come with the hype. They look good for a quick flip but then you get burned when the wave crashes. Long term? I'd take that steady $2k over the rollercoaster. Plus, the CPA burst probably just a phase, maybe traffic quality or offer fatigue. The key is to keep testing and not chase every shiny CPA spike. If your core is generating consistent profit, stick with it. The instant hits are tempting but they ain't sustainable. That stable revshare is the real gold, especially if you got control of the traffic and offer angles. Don't get caught up in the hype cycle, those fleeting CPA wins can be RIP'd faster than you can say "burnout."
 
my revshare vs cpa tracking from a six month test showing numbers.
So you ran a six month test comparing revshare and cpa tracking huh? here's the thing though if your data is clean and you tracked properly you should see pretty clear differences in how those models perform but that's the thing with tracking it's all about the setup and making sure your s2s is solid because if you mess that up your numbers are just guesses you're basing your conclusions on. And six months is a good stretch to get some decent insights but don't forget even then things change so take the data with a grain of salt and keep testing.
 
here's the thing though if your data is clean
Clean data huh? Sure - because nothing screams 'real world' like perfectly tracked numbers that prob don't exist outside a controlled environment. In the real world you're lucky if your pixels don't ghost or your tracking IDs get lost in the ether. Clean data is just a fancy way of saying "we got lucky for six months." Or maybe someone spent a fortune trying to make everything look spotless. Either way, I'll believe it when I see a transparent breakdown that includes all the variables. Until then, it's just numbers that might be hiding the real chaos behind the scenes.
 
six months is a joke for real world data. if you think your numbers are clean you prob just got lucky. i've burned more money on that than you have.
 
Six months of data huh? SMH. That's barely enough to see trends let alone trust the numbers. People forget that tracking is messy by nature especially with revshare where tracking lag and attribution can be a nightmare. And if you think your data is perfectly clean after six months in the wild you're dreaming. I've seen accounts where the tracking is sooo bad you might as well toss a coin to decide what works. I'll die on that hill if your goal is real world results you gotta test longer, watch the trends not just the numbers, and accept that tracking is always a compromise. Six months is just a blip, not enough to draw conclusions. That's why I stick to short-term experiments with clear KPIs and keep my expectations realistic. Otherwise you're just chasing shadows.
 
so you're trusting six months of tracked data to show the true story huh? but what if the real kicker is how much that data is skewed by lag, ghosting, or misattribution in revshare models? how do you separate the signal from the noise when the tracking is inherently messy?
 
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