Scott Peterson
Member
I’ve been wondering about this for a while now. Everyone keeps talking about how important Tier 1 traffic is, especially if you’re trying to grow something like OnlyFans. But honestly, figuring out how to actually reach people in places like the US, UK, or Canada feels way harder than it sounds.
At first, I thought it would be simple. Just run ads or post content and people will come, right? But that didn’t really happen. Most of the traffic I was getting wasn’t converting well, and I started realizing it probably wasn’t even the right audience. Either they weren’t from Tier 1 countries or they just weren’t interested enough to subscribe.
One thing I noticed is that platform choice matters a lot. Some social platforms give reach, but not necessarily the kind of users you want. I tried experimenting with different ad networks and content styles. Organic posts helped a bit, but they were slow. Paid traffic felt faster, but also risky if you don’t target properly.
What seemed to work better for me was focusing more on audience targeting instead of just pushing content everywhere. I started looking into ad platforms where geo-targeting is more refined. Also, using creatives that match the expectations of Tier 1 users made a difference. The tone, quality, even captions matter more than I expected.
I also came across this guide while digging deeper into strategies for better targeting. It gave me a clearer idea of how others approach this, especially when trying to promote onlyfans for Tier 1 audience traffic without wasting budget. Nothing too complicated, just practical stuff that made me rethink how I was approaching things.
Another thing I learned is that consistency matters more than trying random tricks. Instead of jumping between strategies, sticking to one method, testing it properly, and then optimizing seems to work better. Also, tracking where your traffic comes from is something I ignored early on, and that was a mistake.
I’m still figuring things out, but overall, it feels like targeting Tier 1 users is less about doing “more” and more about doing things “right.” Better targeting, better content, and a bit of patience seem to go a long way.
Curious if anyone else here has tried something similar or found a different approach that worked better?
At first, I thought it would be simple. Just run ads or post content and people will come, right? But that didn’t really happen. Most of the traffic I was getting wasn’t converting well, and I started realizing it probably wasn’t even the right audience. Either they weren’t from Tier 1 countries or they just weren’t interested enough to subscribe.
One thing I noticed is that platform choice matters a lot. Some social platforms give reach, but not necessarily the kind of users you want. I tried experimenting with different ad networks and content styles. Organic posts helped a bit, but they were slow. Paid traffic felt faster, but also risky if you don’t target properly.
What seemed to work better for me was focusing more on audience targeting instead of just pushing content everywhere. I started looking into ad platforms where geo-targeting is more refined. Also, using creatives that match the expectations of Tier 1 users made a difference. The tone, quality, even captions matter more than I expected.
I also came across this guide while digging deeper into strategies for better targeting. It gave me a clearer idea of how others approach this, especially when trying to promote onlyfans for Tier 1 audience traffic without wasting budget. Nothing too complicated, just practical stuff that made me rethink how I was approaching things.
Another thing I learned is that consistency matters more than trying random tricks. Instead of jumping between strategies, sticking to one method, testing it properly, and then optimizing seems to work better. Also, tracking where your traffic comes from is something I ignored early on, and that was a mistake.
I’m still figuring things out, but overall, it feels like targeting Tier 1 users is less about doing “more” and more about doing things “right.” Better targeting, better content, and a bit of patience seem to go a long way.
Curious if anyone else here has tried something similar or found a different approach that worked better?