Quote:
Originally Posted by incredibleworkethic
Thanks so much. The sites I run usually require lots of content and are not promoted by buying traffic, so I have to allow myself a "leeway" period for sure. Sometimes it's not motivating. But if you don't build it, you'll never know what it could have been. But I suppose you have to have a line where you cut off projects that don't work.
I guess the MVP approach is best, throw something out and if it works, invest more into it.
Let's take cams for example. I can get free signups easily, but they generally don't buy tokens. That's not motivating. Do I keep building sites around cams if I can't convert? Maybe it's the sponsor, maybe it's the traffic. Maybe it's not enough traffic?
Anyways, this post wasn't very organized in thought, just rambling, confirming my own thoughts lol.
|
It can be very frustrating because as I always say, it takes the same amount of effort in the beginning to launch a successful site or a disaster of a site. You simply do not know until you launch something how well it will do, if it can grow, etc. So give yourself a reasonable time limit before you move on to another project.
For cams you would need to ask a cam expert or whale affiliate what the deal is there. I woud like to know, too.