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Scott Peterson

Scott Peterson

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  • Profile Type: Regular Member
  • Profile Views: 113 views
  • Friends: 0 friends
  • Last Update: Fri at 12:50 AM
  • Last Login: Thu at 2:37 AM
  • Joined: Mar 27
  • Member Level: Default Level
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  • Forum Posts(21)

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Personal Information

  • First Name Scott
  • Last Name Peterson
  • Gender Male
  • Birthday January 17, 1970

Contact Information

  • Website https://www.7searchppc.com/adult-advertising

Personal Details

  • About Me We’re a finance-focused advertising network built to connect advertisers with the right audiences across loans, insurance, fintech, forex, and investment offers. Our goal is simple: help finance brands reach people who are already interested, without wasting budget on low-quality traffic.

Forum Posts

    • Scott Peterson
    • 21 posts
    Posted in the topic Why are my OnlyFans ads getting clicks but no subscribers? in the forum News and Announcements
    April 24, 2026 12:50 AM PDT

    I’ve been stuck on this for a while and wanted to see if anyone else has gone through the same thing. My ads were actually getting a decent number of clicks, which felt like a win at first. But then I checked my subscriber count… and yeah, almost nothing. It honestly felt confusing because I thought clicks meant people were interested.

    The biggest frustration for me was figuring out where things were going wrong. I kept thinking maybe my ad creatives weren’t good enough, so I changed images, captions, even tried different angles. The clicks stayed pretty consistent, but conversions didn’t really move. That’s when I started wondering if the issue wasn’t the ads themselves, but what happens after the click.

    From what I noticed, people clicking on ads aren’t always ready to subscribe right away. Some are just curious. If your page doesn’t instantly connect with what they expected from the ad, they just leave. I realized my landing experience (basically my profile and content preview) didn’t match the vibe I was promising in the ads. It wasn’t bad, just not aligned.

    Another thing I learned the hard way is targeting. I was basically going too broad. Sure, it brought traffic, but not the right kind. When I narrowed things down and focused more on people who were actually likely to subscribe, the clicks dropped a bit, but the quality improved. That mattered more than raw numbers.

    I also spent some time reading different approaches, and this helped me rethink how I structure things promote onlyfans. It gave me a better idea of how others approach audience targeting and funnel flow without making it feel too technical.

    One small tweak that surprisingly helped was adding a bit more personality and clarity to my page. Instead of just posting content, I made it clearer what people would get if they subscribed. It sounds obvious, but I wasn’t really doing that before.

    So yeah, if you’re getting clicks but no subscribers, it’s probably not just one issue. It’s more like a mix of targeting, expectations, and what people see after they click. I’m still figuring things out myself, but focusing less on clicks and more on the full journey has made a difference.

    • Scott Peterson
    • 21 posts
    Posted in the topic Can I run multiple niches on one adult ad network account? in the forum News and Announcements
    April 23, 2026 2:39 AM PDT

    I’ve been wondering about this for a while, especially after trying to juggle a few different offers at once. Has anyone here actually tried running multiple niches on a single adult ad network account? It sounds convenient, but I wasn’t sure if it would mess things up or not.

    At first, I thought keeping everything under one account would save time. No switching dashboards, no managing multiple logins, just one place to track everything. But then I started thinking about targeting, budgets, and whether mixing niches would confuse the algorithm or lower performance.

    When I gave it a try, I started small. I had two completely different niches running side by side. One was more mainstream adult content, and the other was a bit more specific. What I noticed pretty quickly was that things didn’t always balance well. One niche would start eating up most of the budget, while the other barely got impressions. It felt like the system was favoring whichever campaign performed better early on.

    Another thing I ran into was tracking. Keeping everything in one account made reporting a bit messy. I had to be extra careful with naming campaigns and setting up tracking properly, otherwise it all blended together. Not impossible to manage, just more effort than I expected.

    That said, it’s not all bad. If your niches are somewhat related, it can actually work fine. I found that when the audiences overlapped a bit, performance stayed stable and optimization was easier. But when niches were completely different, splitting them into separate accounts or at least very clearly structured campaigns seemed to work better.

    One thing that helped me understand this better was reading through some comparisons and setups others have tried. I came across this list of options for an adult ad network that gave me a clearer idea of how different platforms handle multiple niches.

    After experimenting a bit, my takeaway is pretty simple. Yes, you can run multiple niches in one account, but it really depends on how organized you are and how different those niches are. If they’re too far apart, things can get messy fast. If they’re somewhat related, it’s manageable.

    Curious to hear how others are handling this. Are you keeping everything in one place or splitting it up?

    • Scott Peterson
    • 21 posts
    Posted in the topic Why does traffic quality vary when you buy adult traffic? in the forum News and Announcements
    April 22, 2026 1:05 AM PDT

    I’ve been wondering about this for a while. Every time I try to buy adult traffic, the results feel completely unpredictable. Some days I get decent engagement, and other times it feels like I’m just burning money with nothing to show for it. It made me question whether I was doing something wrong or if this is just how it works.

    One big frustration I had was inconsistency. I’d run similar campaigns with almost the same setup, but the traffic quality would be totally different. Sometimes the clicks looked good on the surface, but when I checked deeper, the bounce rate was high and conversions were almost zero. It’s confusing because you expect at least some level of stability when you pay for traffic.

    After testing a bit more, I started noticing a few patterns. Not all traffic sources are equal, even if they promise similar results. Some platforms send more real users, while others feel like low-intent visitors who just click and leave. I also realized that targeting plays a bigger role than I initially thought. When I kept things too broad, the quality dropped. When I narrowed it down, things improved slightly, even if the volume was lower.

    Another thing I learned is that timing and creatives matter more than expected. I used to reuse the same ads for too long, and I think people just stopped engaging with them. Once I started changing creatives more often and tweaking the messaging, the engagement improved a bit. Not perfect, but definitely better than before.

    I also came across some useful insights while reading about how others approach this. This helped me understand that traffic quality can depend on multiple factors like source quality, targeting settings, and even how your landing page matches user intent. If you're curious, I found this helpful breakdown on how to buy adult traffic without running into the same issues.

    At this point, I don’t think there’s a perfect solution, but more of a process. Testing different sources, adjusting targeting, and keeping expectations realistic seems to be the way to go. It’s not as simple as just buying traffic and expecting results right away.

    Curious if others have noticed the same thing or if you’ve found a way to make traffic quality more consistent?

    • Scott Peterson
    • 21 posts
    Posted in the topic Why do erotic site advertisement ads get disapproved? in the forum News and Announcements
    April 21, 2026 12:54 AM PDT

    I’ve been wondering about this for a while because no matter how carefully I set things up, my erotic site advertisement ads kept getting disapproved. At first, I thought maybe it was just bad luck or some random moderation issue, but after a few tries, it started to feel like there was something I was clearly missing.

    One of the biggest frustrations for me was that I wasn’t even running anything extreme. The creatives were pretty mild compared to what you usually see online, and I still got flagged. It made me question whether the problem was the visuals, the wording, or just the niche itself. If you’ve been in this space, you probably know how confusing it gets when platforms don’t really explain why your ad got rejected.

    From what I noticed after testing different versions, a lot of it comes down to platform rules being stricter than we assume. Even slightly suggestive images or certain keywords can trigger automatic disapproval. I also realized that some ad networks just don’t support adult-oriented promotions at all, no matter how “safe” the content looks. So even if your ad feels compliant, it might still go against their internal policies.

    Another thing that tripped me up was landing pages. I focused so much on the ad itself that I didn’t think about how the destination page is reviewed too. If the page has explicit visuals or aggressive popups, that alone can cause rejection. Once I cleaned that up and made things look more neutral upfront, I started seeing fewer issues.

    What actually helped me was switching my approach instead of forcing ads into platforms that clearly weren’t built for this niche. I started looking into networks that are more open about adult traffic and have clearer guidelines. While researching, I came across this resource on erotic site advertisement. It gave me a better idea of where these ads are more acceptable and how to structure them properly.

    I’m still experimenting, but the biggest takeaway so far is that it’s not just about making a “better” ad. It’s about matching the ad style, content, and platform rules together. If one of those is off, rejection is almost guaranteed.

    Curious if others here had the same issue or found a workaround that worked consistently?

    • Scott Peterson
    • 21 posts
    Posted in the topic What paid channels help grow X niche business fastest? in the forum News and Announcements
    April 20, 2026 1:15 AM PDT

    I’ve been wondering this for a while because every time someone talks about scaling, they just say “use paid traffic” but never really explain what actually works. If you’re trying to grow X niche business, it’s not like you can just throw money anywhere and expect results. At least, that’s what I realized the hard way.

    In the beginning, I tried a mix of platforms without much planning. I ran some basic search ads, experimented with social media ads, and even tested a few banner placements. Honestly, most of it felt like guessing. Either the traffic was too broad, or the leads just didn’t convert well. It got frustrating because I was spending money but not really seeing consistent growth.

    What I started noticing over time is that intent matters more than volume. Search-based ads gave me fewer clicks, but those clicks were way more targeted. Social ads, on the other hand, worked better when I narrowed the audience a lot instead of going wide. I also tested some native ad networks, and surprisingly, those did better than I expected for engagement, especially when the content didn’t feel too pushy.

    One thing that helped me a lot was understanding where my audience actually hangs out and what kind of content they respond to. Instead of trying everything at once, I focused on 1–2 channels and optimized them properly. That made a bigger difference than spreading my budget thin across multiple platforms.

    I also came across this guide on how to grow X niche business and it kind of confirmed a few things I had already noticed, especially about targeting and choosing the right paid channels. It didn’t feel like some magic formula, but more like a structured way to think about what’s already working.

    If I had to sum it up from my experience, I’d say search ads for intent, social ads for testing creatives, and native ads for scaling content worked best for me. But it really depends on how well you match the channel with your audience.

    Curious if others had a similar experience or found something completely different that worked better?

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