Buyer Click System — Traffic Miracle or Total Con?
On the face of it, 1000 clicks for less than $20 looks amazing value, and you're told that these clicks are all from buyers. They've bought once, they're liable to buy again, right?
In the 14 days since launch (at the time of writing), over 2000 (but less than 5000) people (including me), have bought into the system and we're eager to see the traffic coming in, and a lot of experienced marketers are wondering — where is the traffic coming from, and how is it so cheap?
Both are very valid questions, especially for affiliate marketers. Vendors hate cheap traffic directly to their offers as it kills the visitor-to-buyer ratio — cheap traffic seldom buys. But Buyer Click System or BCS (as it's known) is buyer traffic, so surely it should be better?
From the word go on 9th April 2025, we were told that things were still being set up and traffic would start on the 14th.
Here's why
The buyer traffic is people who bought BCS. They needed enough buyers to provide enough clickers.
There is a button in each email from BCS that goes to a rotator which feeds to a different link each time it is clicked. It is incentivised by the promise of gifts and prizes (including, initially $500 cash - then upped to $1000), so I'm guessing that some of the links on the rotator will go to prize pages to claim or download the gift. We may find out more when the prize section goes live on or after the 24th April.
This is advertised by BCS in their emails as ‘see how other people are promoting'. No mention that this is the source of your traffic. This is where it gets obvious that this is rotator traffic.
If you're unsure what a rotator link is, here is a brief explanation. It is a single link that rotates among a number of preset web links (anything from 2 to several thousand). It's a way of showing many websites using only one link.
Marketers with 3 or 4 products can show each of them equally to see which converts best, or used as a method of split-testing squeeze or sales pages. The process is usually invisible to the link-clicker.
The person who set up the rotator can see the click-through stats to see which link performs best. Advanced use includes giving priority (or weighting) to some links within the rotator so that they appear more frequently than others or limiting the number of times a particular link is shown.
Now, not every one of the buyers (somewhere between 2000 to 5000 of us) will want to spend that much time clicking a button in the vague hope of getting something extra that we may, or may not need (or be useful to us — more digital clutter). If we wanted to do this, we'd have joined a traffic exchange, since this is precisely what this is (you look at my link, I'll look at yours).
BCS is (at current membership levels) looking to supply around 2 to 5 million clicks this way and even at 100% participation from the members, (not gonna happen) that's gonna take a while. I'm happy to press the button 10 times a day, but I ain't doing it every day and certainly not for. 100 days to cover my own clicks. I thought that I paid to avoid doing that.
Now the ‘space on a rotator‘ model works ok. Click Engine is a good example, but they don't expect Click Engine buyers themselves to click the rotator link. They put rotator links in other places.
Several affiliate systems use rotators — MAP is a recent example, where they put all the Platinum-level members' links onto the rotator so there's a chance of bonus sales for them.
Both of these are transparent about the use of a rotator. They tell you up front. Not so BCS.
Does this make it a con, or even slightly dishonest? — Not really in my humble opinion. Just not fully transparent.
Buyer clicks are looking at my page — True.
The source of the clicks was not revealed at the time of sale — But I didn't ask. Cheap clicks always have to be viewed with suspicion and caution, but that doesn't make them bad.
Will I get the 1000 clicks that I paid for? — possibly over time. It'll be more like a month of Sundays, than a few days or even weeks. Again, duration not specified in the sales pitch, but I do feel sorry for the people who bought the upsells for 2000 or 5000 clicks. They could be waiting for ages to get the full allocation.
All of the above is based on my own observations and knowledge of how other systems are run.
I may be partially wrong and that rotator links are being put in other places (Download pages for other paid products for instance — still buyer traffic), but traditionally, these do not put down the huge numbers required to service this number of clicks.
There is an outside chance that I'm totally wrong and the BCS creators will come at me with various cajoling or threats to withdraw my opinion article — but I don't think so. Unless they have other explanations as to how they plan to pass on the required buyer clicks and are willing to explain them.
On the face of it, Buyer Click System (you've got to have it there in full a couple of times at least, for SEO reasons) looks a good deal and I would say it is. Just don't raise your expectations for quick delivery of clicks too high. A bit more transparency at sale time probably wouldn't have hurt either.
For the rest of you — Click Engine ($5 per month for 2 or 3 clicks per day) is realistic and more honest up-front and you can change your link or even stop if you require.
Visit
Buyerclicksystem.com
I've tested my fair share of traffic sources—some were goldmines, others were just digital tumbleweeds. Then I found Scaleable, and let's just say... It's kind of like discovering a secret vending machine that spits out real clicks for pocket change.
What makes Scaleable different? Users get paid to watch your ad, not to click. So when someone does click, it's not because they're chasing coins—it's because they're curious. And in a world full of bots, click farms, and grandma accidentally clicking your ad five times, that's a breath of fresh traffic.
How I Use It (Hint: Not for Watching Ads)
While some people grind to earn credits by watching ads or referring friends, I skip the games and go straight to buying traffic. I pick a package, set up my ad (usually a biz opp or affiliate landing page), target by country, and launch. Boom—traffic starts rolling in within hours.
On average, I pay between $0.03–$0.10 per click, depending on the ad quality and package size. And if you spring for a bigger package, your CPC drops significantly—like, almost sliced in half. Bulk savings, baby!
Yes, you do get 1,000 coins per referral, and ongoing commissions if they spend. That's nice, but I wouldn't quit my day job over it.
What I've Noticed
The traffic is surprisingly solid. These aren't just bored users smashing buttons for rewards—they're watching your ad, and only clicking if it grabs them. That means better quality clicks and, in my case, actual leads and even a few sales. (Cue happy marketer dance. )
But fair warning: if you run the same ad for too long, it gets stale. Performance drops faster than a meme coin on a Monday. I recommend changing creatives weekly to keep results strong.
What I Like
What I Don't Like
Final Thoughts
If you've got more hustle than budget, Scaleable is a traffic source worth testing. It's affordable, reliable, and especially great for affiliate marketers, solo entrepreneurs, and anyone in the biz opp space. Sure, it's not the fanciest tool in the shed—but it works, and that's what matters.
For me, it's become a sneaky-good part of my traffic mix. Just keep your ads fresh, pick a solid package, and watch real humans click through to your offers—no wizardry required.
Visit Scalelup.com