Acceptable ROI on a new campaign?

What ROI would you need to continue running the campaign?


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I don't know why anyone would've voted for 10%... If that's the max ROI you can get out of it, you'll be losing money. Taxes people.

If it's a new campaign then of course 10% is good but the op is talking about a campaign that's gotten the best ROI it can.

If what you say is true a 50% ROI campaign would only be ~20% ROI campaign.
 


I don't know why anyone would've voted for 10%... If that's the max ROI you can get out of it, you'll be losing money. Taxes people.

If it's a new campaign then of course 10% is good but the op is talking about a campaign that's gotten the best ROI it can.

How is it on the short bus anyway? I've always wondered. I mean I guess you always end up getting there faster.
 
I think it's pretty foolish to ditch a positive ROI campaign, unless of course you don't have the means to keep it running. The reason for this is the ROI may unexpectedly rise. I personally don't stop a campaign unless it's been making negative ROI.
 
It depends on my overall ROI and funds, so I often end up kicking anything below 20%, but in general, anything positive is fine as long as there aren't better options where to spend the money.
 
Depends on my cash flow. If i don't need the cash for something more promising, i have no prob doing 1% or even breaking even as long as i'm getting points with my network and CC.

But if my cash flow is strapped, i'll promote whatever i can get the best ROI or NET (depends on the volume i of traffic i can do with the niche)
 
I'll stay with anything making money, as long as the cash flow works. Anything beats the market these days.

If I have a only making $100/month, I'll stick with it (and of course try to expand). If I have a few of those and don't have to spend much time to maintain them, the money starts to add up.
 
Happily making 300% ROI with facebook at the moment, but as has been said - it depends on your initial campaign investment.
 
A lot depends on the campaign and your budget. If you can afford to run a $100,000 campaign with a 10% return, then that's bringing in more profit than the $2000 campaign running a 100% return.

$10,000 vs. $2000 profit. Kind of a no brainer.

However, if your wallet is stretched pretty thin, you really have to put a calculator to it to determine if the campaign is right for you.
 
I aim for 100%, usually am at 80%. The way I look at it: 80% is better than the 0.5% that the self-satisfied douche traders work their ass off on Wall Street every day to get.
 
Well, profit is profit. Doesn't matter if it's $2.00 for $200. I would have to say anything over 10% would be good.

If it takes $100 to make $10, sure it's low but if you do that 1,000 times within a month, your good.
 
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