Scam_Models
New member
Short answer: It may or may not work. But whatever result the studio/model gets, it is hard to say it was due to good placement. It is a practice that exists in other industries.
Here is a story. It may not exactly answer your question about self-tipping on LiveJasmin, but it gives a perspective.Kickaz was in the top 20 on MyFreeCams 65 times between 2013 and 2018, which means she was in the top 20 every month for five years. Everyone knew her. She was seen as a highly successful top model, and her content was considered entertaining, genius, and unique. She was a huge name in the game. In part, her celebrity status was due to the fact that she was always in the top 20 and getting tips all the time. That status drove a lot of traffic to her room, and it was one of the busiest rooms on the site.In 2020, she was banned from MyFreeCams. I am going to skip the reason why. But after the ban, it came to light that she had been tipping herself for most of these years. Self-tipping is a common practice on MyFreeCams. She boosted her camscore to have a better placement on the site and ended up creating the reputation of being a great camgirl to watch.LiveJasmin does not have camscore, and I honestly don't know what they use to rank models for placement. But I think earnings may be a factor. However, LiveJasmin has deals with studios. I see on my feed that studio models appear on the top more often. But it is not strange since the site is saturated with studio models.I have a theory that LiveJasmin is selling placement to studios as "advertising packages." The studio pays a fee, and its models appear on top for a period. They hope that this better exposure will bring more traffic and that the investment will yield some return.A quick note about studios, camsites, and CPA networks: After being asked by many about advertising on MyCamgirl, I can say they are not very bright or innovative. They all come with the same approach: "shove my banners on your users' faces". If there are no results, then "put more banners."
Here is a story. It may not exactly answer your question about self-tipping on LiveJasmin, but it gives a perspective.Kickaz was in the top 20 on MyFreeCams 65 times between 2013 and 2018, which means she was in the top 20 every month for five years. Everyone knew her. She was seen as a highly successful top model, and her content was considered entertaining, genius, and unique. She was a huge name in the game. In part, her celebrity status was due to the fact that she was always in the top 20 and getting tips all the time. That status drove a lot of traffic to her room, and it was one of the busiest rooms on the site.In 2020, she was banned from MyFreeCams. I am going to skip the reason why. But after the ban, it came to light that she had been tipping herself for most of these years. Self-tipping is a common practice on MyFreeCams. She boosted her camscore to have a better placement on the site and ended up creating the reputation of being a great camgirl to watch.LiveJasmin does not have camscore, and I honestly don't know what they use to rank models for placement. But I think earnings may be a factor. However, LiveJasmin has deals with studios. I see on my feed that studio models appear on the top more often. But it is not strange since the site is saturated with studio models.I have a theory that LiveJasmin is selling placement to studios as "advertising packages." The studio pays a fee, and its models appear on top for a period. They hope that this better exposure will bring more traffic and that the investment will yield some return.A quick note about studios, camsites, and CPA networks: After being asked by many about advertising on MyCamgirl, I can say they are not very bright or innovative. They all come with the same approach: "shove my banners on your users' faces". If there are no results, then "put more banners."
Yes, I guess so. They are putting her face on the front page. More traffic means more chances to have privates and potentially more members becoming loyal.They do lose a lot of money. But if you see studios as businesses, paying for more traffic/better exposure can be considered an operational expense. They pay to put the girl's face everywhere so everyone notices her. It is not exactly marketing because they are not communicating an idea. Like the banners, they simply shove the girl's face everywhere.As a parallel comparison, playlist placement is a thing on Spotify (although the company deems it is against the rules). Marketers create playlists, get people to listen to those playlists, and then sell placements to artists. The artist pays a fee to get their song on the playlist, boosting their stream count, increasing exposure, and potentially gaining new fans. For reference, I paid for Spotify playlist placements so you don't have toYou may think losing between $6,000-$9,000 is a bad strategy. However, many variables can make this a smart move. But the same variables can make this a stupid move. Studios/models can't measure the return because they never know if a new member spending $500 daily was luck or the result of a better placement.Scam_Models said:All this to improve traffic?
It certainly would increase her chance of having loyal members. They would see her as a girl with a fair price who performs VIP shows no matter what. But all that would be pointless if there was nobody in her room.Paying for placement makes sense in this case. However, as she invests $6,000-$9,000, she tends to raise the price to pay for the investment.Scam_Models said:Is it just me or wouldn't it make more sense to lower your price per minute, be more willing to start VIP shows even if the goal isn't completely met or I don't know, anything but spending your own money?