Asha bought ₹1,000 of clicks to a simple “results” page on her site and earned only ₹860 back. Loss. After fixing speed, intent, and targeting, she bought traffic at ₹0.80–₹1.20 per visit and earned ₹1.40–₹1.90. Margins stayed thin, but steady—and compliant.
What it is (plain talk)
You buy cheap clicks, send users to a page that helps them search better (filters, local options, comparisons), and you earn more per visit from search-style ads or sponsored results than you paid. Profit = Revenue per Visit (RPV) − Cost per Visit (CPV). If CPV > RPV, stop.
Why it works now
- More people land on generic ads, then need a clearer, intent-refining page.
- Faster sites + smarter layouts lift ad viewability and click quality.
- But rules are strict: thin “made-for-ads” pages get penalized. The page must genuinely help.
The simple math
- Track CPV from your traffic source.
- Track RPV (RPM/EPMV) from your ad stack.
- Scale only when RPV − CPV stays positive after fees.
Tiny example: CPV ₹1.00, RPV ₹1.55 → spread ₹0.55. Good—if it holds for weeks.
A compliant mini-workflow
- Pick 5 messy queries (e.g., “best eSIM for Europe from India,” “budget laptops under ₹50k”).
- Build fast results pages: short answer on top, filters (price/brand/city), then ads.
- Test 500–1,000 clicks per page (one search source, one native). Cap daily.
- Fix speed, layout, and query match if bounce in 3 seconds >60%.
- Scale winners, kill laggards, review invalid traffic and policies weekly.
What to avoid
- Cloaking, deceptive layouts, ad walls, recycled/thin content.
- Buying junk traffic for fake volume. You’ll lose accounts—and money.
Quick FAQ
Is it legal? Yes, if you follow platform and ad-network policies and provide real value.
Typical margins? Small—paisa/rupee-level spreads per visit. Scale and steadiness matter more than spikes.
Best traffic? Warm intent (search) is easiest. Native/social can work if the landing page truly helps.
Editor’s take
In 2026, the only durable arbitrage is experience arbitrage: earn the spread because your page actually solves the user’s next step. Think like an editor—faster page, cleaner query match, helpful options—and the margins will take care of themselves.