If you’re going to go the CPA route, then $50 is waaaaay too low anyway. I know that the Professor is just using the amount as an example, but thought I mention that for the newbies.
From my experience, the average life revenue from all players is at least $500. In some cases it’s even over $1000. Keeping that in mind, I don’t think it’s good business to accept CPA campaigns that are less than $150 per player.
Like the Professor mentioned…make sure you check to see what the minimum deposit requirements are, and the other terms of the CPA agreement. I wouldn’t accept a CPA offer if there are too many terms and minimums attached, because the whole point is to get a fixed amount of money regardless of whether the player wins or loses.
If you accept a CPA campaign at $50 with a minimum “first” deposit, then you’re really giving away your players at an extremely cheap rate to the casinos, because their average revenue from “all” players (winners and losers, cheap players and high rollers) is waaaay over $500 per player.