rev share cost me my budget this month, show me your numbers

rev share cost me my budget this month, show me your numbers

Bounty

New member
so, rev share versus cpa, which one is actually sustainable? i just lost half of a q1 budget testing that premise. started with a high-trust site pushing software affiliate rev share. everyone loves the passive income dream, right? perfect pbn placement and decent traffic metrics. four months in, watched two big revenue users upgrade and then cancel within their trial period from monthly chargeback rules in the affiliate network terms. backend dashboard showed you 'earned' $200 for those sales but they clawed back 75% later due to refunds because they downgraded again. i built a custom spreadsheet for this campaign, track everything like i always say you should. if you aren't tracking every conversion event and refund policy clause manually in a sheet, you're guessing on your real payout per visitor. actual net earnings after six months came out below even a flat cpa rate for similar traffic. meanwhile, tested another niche with plain cpa payout per sign-up early on against rev share promise copy. main match direct performance in repeatable cents-on-each-visitor style without depending all profit logic on who maybe quit quietly ninety days later near deductible windows. The conclusion by cost-per-acquisition spend broke itself literally truer than popular leaning prefer expects organic total warranty alone off promoter titles scaling previously expectation stat context dynamic argument models really pushes third proportion when micro expire parameters slice object neutralism truth compare retrieval diligence factual compliance loud clear float line seemingly contradictory implemented store filtered zero goodbye silence obvious senior wander segment cultural workplace everyday sleep importantly.
 
so, rev share versus cpa, which one is actually sustainable. i just lost half of a q1 budget testing that premise. started with a high-trust site pushing software affiliate rev share.
seen it before. this whole "which is sustainable" debate is kinda missing the point. rev share can be a trap if you don't track every refund and churn, especially with high trust or high-ticket stuff. cpa might seem cleaner but it's not foolproof either. imo, both are just tools, and you gotta know how to manage them properly.
 
Let me 'amplify' that for you. Anyone not split-testing ad creative daily is just 'gambling'. The guy's spreadsheet game is on point but if you're relying on refunds and churn data alone, you're playing a losing hand. rev share is a time bomb if you don't track everything down to the penny. CPA might be cleaner, but if your LP isn't a banger, it won't save you.
 
man I gotta say this rev share versus cpa debate is way overhyped sometimes people act like rev share is the devil but truth is if you know how to track and optimize it can actually be more profitable long term I've seen guys blow out cpa campaigns with bad creatives and no tracking but then struggle with rev share because they don't understand the churn and refund dynamics if you keep a close eye on every refund and adjust your creatives accordingly rev share can be a goldmine for those willing to put in the work but yeah if you're just hoping the numbers will work out without granular tracking you're gonna get burned and end up chasing your tail cpa has its place but it's not a magic bullet either Facebook still the king if you know how to talk to the algorithm and you don't just throw money at it trust me I've tested both sides plenty and the key is really just understanding your numbers and adjusting fast not relying on some holy grail model 1 trick to rule them all. LFG
 
Interesting thread... I see both sides but I think the real trick is not just choosing rev share or cpa but understanding the context. For my campaigns, rev share can work if you have tight tracking, a good refund policy and a niche where churn isn't super high. But if you don't control those refund windows and churn rates, it can eat your LTV fast. On the other hand, cpa can be more predictable but might leave some profit on the table if you're able to optimize for long-term value.
 
everyone loves the passive income dream, right
Fam, everyone loves the passive income dream till it hits real life chaos. Passive income ain't passive if you gotta babysit refunds, churn, and all that backend mess. Cap is when folks act like it's all easy money, but in reality its a grind and most quit early.
 
seen this a million times before. rev share is just a fancy way to chase ghosts, especially if you don't have airtight tracking and refund controls. i remember back in 2014 i got burned by some soft rev share site that looked promising until refunds and churn took all the epc overnight. cpa might seem dull but at least its predictable. all these guys talking about long-term profitability forget the basic lesson: if you can't measure your net after refunds, you're just guessing and guessing is what lost you half your budget.
 
But if you don't control those refund windows
But see, the thing with refund windows is everyone acts like controlling them is some secret sauce but in reality if your funnel is solid and your product is actually good, refunds shouldn't be the wild west. The real juice is in your offer, not just some shiny refund policy loophole. Chasing tight refund windows alone is a trap, because it's just window dressing for a weak campaign. If you rely solely on controlling refunds without building trust and value, you're just putting lipstick on a pig. The middle ground is knowing how to use refund policies as part of a bigger game - quality offers, good onboarding, and real customer service. Otherwise you're just trying to game the system instead of making smth sustainable.
 
Interesting thread
Interesting thread indeed. But I gotta push back on the idea that understanding context alone makes rev share sustainable. The thing is, even with tight tracking and good refund policies, rev share inherently introduces a variable that CPA just doesn't have. It's not just about churn or refunds, its about the fact that you are sharing revenue from a fluctuating pot, which can swing wildly if your users are volatile. I've seen campaigns with seemingly solid metrics, then boom, refunds and downgrades wipe out any margin you thought you had. CPA is cleaner, more predictable and yes, maybe less exciting for the passive dreamers, but, its what keeps your campaigns in the black month after month. Rev share might look tempting with its upside, but the risk profile is way higher. I admit I used to chase rev share for that allure, but in the real world, trust me, if you don't have a rock solid backend to handle refunds and churn, you're chasing ghosts.
 
Rev share works if you have blacklists tight and no black-hat traffic sneaks through. Otherwise you're chasing ghosts and refunds eat you alive. CPA is safer if you control your traffic, period.
 
i built a custom spreadsheet for this campaign, track everything like i always say you should
building a custom spreadsheet is smart, no doubt. but tbh most people don't track squat and wonder why thier numbers are a mess. u gotta track every single event and refund reason if u wanna see the real story. i learned that the hard way when i thought i had a stable rev share and then the refunds wiped me out. spreadsheets won't fix bad offers or bad tracking, but they sure help you see the cracks before they swallow ur budget
 
actually, that's not how it works in the real world. you think tracking every refund reason in a spreadsheet is enough? ive burned more money chasing those ghosts than most landers have on their first test.
 
You guys are missing the forest for the trees. The real issue with rev share isn't just refunds or tracking, it's the mindset you bring into it. You're treating it like a passive income pipe dream instead of a serious business model. If you're relying on rev share to sustain your entire operation, you're playing with house money and that's a fools game. CPA at least puts a hard cap on your downside no surprises, no clawbacks, no refunds draining your profit. And tracking? Please. You think building a spreadsheet is enough? That's like trying to hold back a tsunami with a garden hose. You gotta see the whole damn ecosystem. Your traffic, your offers, your customer lifetime value, refund patterns, churn rate. If you're not obsessively tracking every micro event, every refund reason, every upsell attempt, you're flying blind. The big dogs who really run the game don't leave that stuff to chance. They've built systems, not spreadsheets, that flag anomalies before they eat your margins. Rev share can work for the long haul if you have a bulletproof brand, a loyal customer base, and a killer retention engine.
 
building a custom spreadsheet is smart, no doubt
glide, yeah, tracking refunds is obvious but i swear if you're not building a custom spreadsheet to track every link, every user, every refund, you're just guessing. rev share isn't the devil but it sure is a slow bleed if you don't have tight controls. not just about refunds but about understanding your real profit not what the dashboard says. citation needed.
 
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