scottpeterson1
Member
I’ve been trying to understand how targeting really works in adult advertising, and honestly it feels like there’s no single perfect formula. From what I’ve seen and tested, it mostly comes down to how well you balance audience size, placement, and timing instead of relying on one fixed strategy.
When I first started experimenting, I assumed interest targeting alone would do most of the job. I picked a few broad categories and expected consistent results, but performance kept changing a lot from campaign to campaign. Some ads got good clicks but very low conversions, while others barely got traffic even though they looked similar on the surface. That’s when I realized targeting in this space is not just about picking interests, it’s also about how the traffic behaves.
One thing that stood out to me was how different device segments perform. Mobile traffic often behaves very differently from desktop. In my experience, mobile tends to bring higher volume but not always high-quality conversions, while desktop traffic is lower in volume but sometimes more stable. Because of that, separating devices into different campaigns helped me understand performance more clearly instead of mixing everything together.
Another thing I noticed is that time targeting matters more than I expected. Certain hours of the day bring better engagement depending on the audience type. Late-night traffic, for example, can perform differently compared to daytime traffic. Once I started tracking performance by time blocks, it became easier to adjust bids and budgets without guessing.
Placement also plays a big role. Not all traffic sources behave the same, even if they fall under similar categories. Some placements convert better for specific creatives, so testing them individually gave me better control over results. Instead of scaling everything at once, I slowly filtered out low-performing placements and focused on the ones that stayed consistent.
Overall, I feel like the key in adult advertising targeting is not finding one “best” strategy, but building small tests and learning from them. Breaking audiences into smaller groups and comparing results helped me avoid wasting budget on random guesses.
If someone is just starting out or trying to improve their results, it might help to explore structured platforms and resources that explain campaign setup and traffic behavior more clearly. This page has some useful context around how different approaches can be applied in real campaigns: adult advertising and it can give a better idea of how adult advertising targeting is usually handled in practice.
When I first started experimenting, I assumed interest targeting alone would do most of the job. I picked a few broad categories and expected consistent results, but performance kept changing a lot from campaign to campaign. Some ads got good clicks but very low conversions, while others barely got traffic even though they looked similar on the surface. That’s when I realized targeting in this space is not just about picking interests, it’s also about how the traffic behaves.
One thing that stood out to me was how different device segments perform. Mobile traffic often behaves very differently from desktop. In my experience, mobile tends to bring higher volume but not always high-quality conversions, while desktop traffic is lower in volume but sometimes more stable. Because of that, separating devices into different campaigns helped me understand performance more clearly instead of mixing everything together.
Another thing I noticed is that time targeting matters more than I expected. Certain hours of the day bring better engagement depending on the audience type. Late-night traffic, for example, can perform differently compared to daytime traffic. Once I started tracking performance by time blocks, it became easier to adjust bids and budgets without guessing.
Placement also plays a big role. Not all traffic sources behave the same, even if they fall under similar categories. Some placements convert better for specific creatives, so testing them individually gave me better control over results. Instead of scaling everything at once, I slowly filtered out low-performing placements and focused on the ones that stayed consistent.
Overall, I feel like the key in adult advertising targeting is not finding one “best” strategy, but building small tests and learning from them. Breaking audiences into smaller groups and comparing results helped me avoid wasting budget on random guesses.
If someone is just starting out or trying to improve their results, it might help to explore structured platforms and resources that explain campaign setup and traffic behavior more clearly. This page has some useful context around how different approaches can be applied in real campaigns: adult advertising and it can give a better idea of how adult advertising targeting is usually handled in practice.