product owners claim its better, my bank account says otherwise

product owners claim its better, my bank account says otherwise

Bounty

New member
right, so everyone on here keeps telling me to ditch the affiliate offers and build my own product. 'recurring revenue', 'brand equity', 'control the funnel'... yeah, heard it all. just ran a 12-month side-by-side. my top affiliate nutra offer pulled in 23% margins after media buys. my own product, same niche, similar landing page, after dev costs, support, and payment processing headaches? 17%. and that's not counting the 80 hours a month i spent being a customer service rep. lmao. i used to run with maxbounty for the offers, now i'm staring at shopify invoices. the data isn't lying. the 'passive income' from your own product is a myth unless you automate everything into the ground, and even then the cogs will eat you alive. show me the spreadsheet where your own product beats a well-optimized affiliate offer on pure roi per hour. i'll wait.
 
Been there. Building your own product feels good but the data don't lie. Affiliate offers can be more profitable, more scalable, and way less headache.
 
Let me put my old man hat on, you are comparing apples to oranges. 23% margins on affiliate nutra are rare, but they are quick cash. Building your own product is a marathon, not a sprint.
 
Honestly, this whole ROI per hour argument is naive. Sure, affiliate nutra might look sexy with quick cash but it's all cookie stuffing and spammy traffic. Building a product is about LTV and controlling your funnel, not chasing quick margins.
 
I get where you all are coming from but the data tells a different story I think building your own product is a beast to tame unless you automate like crazy and even then it's a slog for marginal gains at best especially if you're doing support and dev work yourself like the guy in the post says you're basically running a small business not just a passive income stream the quick cash affiliate offers can be tempting but the ROI per hour isn't always as shiny as it seems when you factor in all the hidden cogs maybe it's just about what stage you're in but man this whole ROI debate is always a grind the truth is probably somewhere in the middle but one thing is clear the grass isn't always greener just because it's your product and not someone else's brand needs to be built on more than margins it's about control and long term stability but if you're running on fumes and quick wins that's a tough road to walk too.
 
I get it, I really do. Building your own product sounds like the holy grail but in reality it's a beast. Been there, blew my budget on dev and support, ended up with marginal gains and a pile of headaches. The thing is, everyone forgets the opportunity cost of your time. You think you're gonna automate your way out of customer service and support but let's be honest, most automation just shifts the problem. I've seen too many folks chase that LTV unicorn only to find out it's just a shiny bait. Affiliate offers might not be forever, but they sure are quick, predictable, and if you're smart about media buying, they pay the bills. Building a product is a long game, not a safety net for broke folks who want instant riches
 
thanks tap, appreciate the old man wisdom there. yeah, quick cash is tempting but the grind of building, maintaining, and supporting your own thing? lmao, it's like trying to tame a beast with a toothpick. update, just spent 3 hours automating link placements across 50 properties and still sweating bullets about footprints. the data might say one thing but man, the chaos behind the scenes is realer than ever.
 
How do you define better, though? Is it just the shiny features or the actual ROI that hits your bank account? Sometimes product owners hype up their stuff thinking it's a but forget that users care about cash flow, not pretty UI.
 
product owners claim its better, my bank account says otherwise
Interesting. Walk me through your thinking. Are you saying the product owners are overhyping features that don't actually convert? Or is it a matter of messaging mismatch? Sometimes what sounds good on paper or in demos doesn't translate to the real world and a healthy bank account. Curious how you're measuring the actual ROI versus their claims.
 
product owners claim its better, my bank account says otherwise
Ah yes, the classic case of the shiny lander promising the moon while the bank account whispers the truth. I've seen this movie before. Product owners love to sell you on the new, shiny, "better" thing but never mention the hidden costs or the ad fatigue you'll face. It's like upgrading to a Ferrari when your traffic is still riding the bus. Sometimes the best move is to stick with what actually puts cash in your pocket rather than what sounds good on paper. Just remember, in this game, actions speak louder than claims.
 
product owners claim its better, my bank account says otherwise.
But is it really the product or the way you're using it that's causing the disconnect? sometimes we get caught up in the hype and forget that the value depends a lot on how we implement or what's available. maybe the issue isn't the product but the strategy behind it.
 
Look, the data shows, product owners will always push the new shiny. But if your bank account ain't moving, then maybe the problem is how you're testing or the market fit not the product itself. It's usually a mix of poor targeting, high CPC, or just the wrong angle. If you think the product's better, show me proof it scales w/o blowing your CPA. Without real numbers, it's just noise
 
yeah, i get it. sometimes it's just the same old song. product owners selling the dream but your bank says nah. the thing is, it's always about how you use it, not just the tool itself. you can have the best product but if your targeting or strategy is off, it's still gonna flop. don't get blinded by the shiny new thing. look at the data, test, measure, then adjust. sometimes it's not the product, it's how you're playing the game.
 
Exactly, numbers don't lie. Better product or not, if your CTR, EPC, or conversions are weak your bank won't grow. Focus on your creatives and targeting not just the hype. It's a grind but results come from testing and discipline.
 
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