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January 17, 2013 at 7:25 am #831615
LucretiaMemberIt is totally up to you to join them, but be warned Rewardsaffiliates will cross promote ALL your referred players without your affiliate ID. And they do this on a very regular basis. Result is a lot of your players end up playing at another of their 30+ casinos without having to pay you a cent.
just my 2 cents.
January 17, 2013 at 12:19 pm #831627Anonymous
Inactive@pjotter 249204 wrote:
Does anyone have an opinion about which model to choose:
a) True 35% Wager Model:
b) Tiered RevShare Model:I’m at a loss.
I suspect that the Tiered Rev-share probably returns better overall, as most players do not play to the “theoretical edge” of the wager model.
However, when we joined up the first option was the only option – and we are still on this method.
Over the years the Wager Model has produced a very good return for us. A bonus is that it can only go up each day of the month – as it is based on turnover – not profit/loss – and players can turnover quite a bit when they hit a big win.
It’s usually a constant smooth earnings climb each month – without the ups and downs of a normal casino rev-share account.
(although a player fraud or chargeback can and does negatively affect your monthly earnings)
January 18, 2013 at 8:47 am #831657
tonywangMemberI already had a Tiered account in the past when there was no other option.
When they came out with the new Wager option, they allowed a 2nd account so you could try both.
So now I have 2 accounts and I send exactly 50% of my traffic to each account, then over time I can test both revenue models.
I don’t know if they still allow you to open 2 accounts, but if so I think that’s the best option so you can test which is better for your traffic.
Right now the lifetime earnings from my wager model account has made 100 times more than my tier model account, but I haven’t sent them enough traffic to know for sure which one is best over time so I’m still splitting the traffic.
January 18, 2013 at 12:22 pm #831662Anonymous
InactiveIt depends on the players you bring.
Hobby players who play slots do very well on the wager system, and their wins don’t get deducted. Slots are usually played for a long time, up and down and up and down. You make money on the bonus, too.
A blackjack player who comes in and plays a few hands, wagering larger amounts, and just tries to see if he can win on the quick, these are not good on the wager system.
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