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When it comes to media buying, one of the ongoing debates is whether it makes sense to rely on RTB, XML or JSON feeds instead of direct placements...

When we talk about traffic, it is not just about devices, it is about completely different user behaviors. Mobile and desktop traffic each have their own rules, values, and conversion patterns. Knowing the difference is crucial if you want your campaigns to hit the right audience at the right moment. 👇

You know your product. Maybe you’ve built it yourself or worked with it long enough to understand its strengths, features, and audience. But when it comes to advertising, especially in a new ad network, the question always remains: where do I start?

We’ve already shared several posts about compliance, covering what’s allowed and what’s not when you buy traffic through our advertising network.
Today we’re diving deeper into how to avoid alert activity and what steps you can take to minimize the risks, especially when working with popunder traffic. ⚠️

If you’ve been in the ad network game for a while, you’ve probably heard of Back Button Hijack. And if you’re running gambling offers, chances are you’ve considered using it.

We know how much you love reading the comment section under videos. Sometimes it's even better than the video itself.
Well, we’re the same. Just with Partnerkin 🧡

With users offline and on vacation, traffic shifts, demand drops, CPMs follow. Here’s how to stay ahead of summer traffic trends 👇

This is particularly common with popunder traffic, where campaign efficiency heavily depends on the relevance and freshness of your site selections. ⏰

Let’s not demonize the whole concept of resell traffic. Reselling isn’t inherently bad, if it’s done transparently.

Sometimes, everything on our end is working perfectly — GEO is correct, IP is valid, targeting is spot-on.
And yet the advertiser’s system still blocks the click as invalid.
Why❓