scottpeterson1
Member
I’ve been thinking about this for a while because not all traffic feels the same, especially in adult website advertising. You can get a lot of clicks pretty easily, but getting users who actually spend money or stay engaged is a totally different story. It made me wonder if I was just targeting the wrong kind of audience from the start.
One problem I kept running into was that cheap traffic usually brought low engagement. People would click, maybe browse for a few seconds, and then disappear. No subscriptions, no real interaction. It felt like I was wasting budget chasing volume instead of quality. I also noticed that some placements looked good on paper but didn’t really attract premium users who are willing to pay.
So I started experimenting a bit. Instead of going broad, I focused more on narrowing things down. I tried targeting specific geos where spending habits are higher, and that alone made a noticeable difference. I also paid more attention to ad creatives. Cleaner, less aggressive creatives seemed to attract a more serious audience compared to flashy or clickbait-style ones.
Another thing I learned was that platform choice matters more than I expected. Some ad networks are just better when it comes to quality traffic. I spent time comparing different sources, testing small budgets first, and then scaling only what showed promise. Frequency capping also helped since premium users don’t respond well to being spammed repeatedly.
At some point, I came across this guide on adult website advertising. It didn’t magically solve everything, but it gave me a clearer idea of which networks are known for better-quality traffic. That helped me filter out a lot of trial and error.
Overall, I’d say the biggest shift for me was thinking less about “more traffic” and more about “right traffic.” It’s slower in the beginning, but the results feel more stable. Still figuring things out, but this approach seems way more sustainable than just chasing numbers.
One problem I kept running into was that cheap traffic usually brought low engagement. People would click, maybe browse for a few seconds, and then disappear. No subscriptions, no real interaction. It felt like I was wasting budget chasing volume instead of quality. I also noticed that some placements looked good on paper but didn’t really attract premium users who are willing to pay.
So I started experimenting a bit. Instead of going broad, I focused more on narrowing things down. I tried targeting specific geos where spending habits are higher, and that alone made a noticeable difference. I also paid more attention to ad creatives. Cleaner, less aggressive creatives seemed to attract a more serious audience compared to flashy or clickbait-style ones.
Another thing I learned was that platform choice matters more than I expected. Some ad networks are just better when it comes to quality traffic. I spent time comparing different sources, testing small budgets first, and then scaling only what showed promise. Frequency capping also helped since premium users don’t respond well to being spammed repeatedly.
At some point, I came across this guide on adult website advertising. It didn’t magically solve everything, but it gave me a clearer idea of which networks are known for better-quality traffic. That helped me filter out a lot of trial and error.
Overall, I’d say the biggest shift for me was thinking less about “more traffic” and more about “right traffic.” It’s slower in the beginning, but the results feel more stable. Still figuring things out, but this approach seems way more sustainable than just chasing numbers.