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Advertiser launch brief template

Run campaigns with a single advertiser launch brief that aligns offer routing, payout controls, S2S tracking, and quality gates before scale.

KiwiWall ยท Jul 03, 2026 ยท 12 min read
Advertiser launch brief template

Advertiser launch brief template in brief

An advertiser launch brief is a pre-flight control document for performance campaigns. It defines what is allowed, how outcomes are measured, and when to pause, hold, or scale.

Teams that use this approach spend faster and avoid the no-ROI trap where spend rises while trust in postback data declines.

Use this template whenever you need to launch or relaunch a campaign with KiwiWall under real constraints: objective clarity, quality control, and payout integrity.

Who this is for

Built for advertisers and growth teams that need commercial scale with operational predictability:

  • Advertiser growth teams managing CPA, CPL, or CPI campaigns.
  • Affiliate/media operators managing publisher mix, caps, and campaign control.
  • Campaign ops and revenue accounting teams owning reconciliation and fraud/risk policy.
  • Growth engineers configuring S2S postback and event-level identifiers.

If you are a publisher team, use only the sections on traffic quality, postback naming, and reconciliation.

When this applies

Use this template when:

  • You are launching across 2+ publishers or rotating geo/publisher combinations.
  • You need to scale from discovery to paid volume in controlled gates.
  • You require clear postback accountability before budget increases.
  • You need a shared source of truth between media, ops, and finance.

When this does not apply

Use another framework when:

  • You are testing only brand awareness or non-actionable traffic.
  • You do not control click/conversion identifiers end to end.
  • You only need a one-off landing page review and no postback reconciliation.

Definition

Treat the brief as a decision contract with five linked controls:

  1. Outcome definition: which event is optimized, with one primary and one secondary KPI.
  2. Allowed traffic policy: geos, devices, publishers, and exclusions.
  3. Offer control: offer type, cap, payout sensitivity, and forbidden variants.
  4. Tracking contract: identifiers, postback retry policy, and reconciliation cadence.
  5. Operational governance: owners, escalation path, and phase gates.

When these five controls are explicit, teams move from โ€œcampaign opinionsโ€ to โ€œcampaign decisions.โ€

Decision table

Use this table at kickoff and then update it each week before scaling.

Decision point Launch with this brief if Do not use if Owner Key KPI
Objective lock Primary outcome is clearly defined and measured daily Mixed goals without hierarchy Advertiser Growth Lead Event-level primary conversion
Source mix 2+ publishers with clear replacement criteria Single-source vanity test Affiliate Operations Source quality score + payout stability
Offer controls Routing and exclusion rules are written in the brief Offer rules are implicit or assumed Campaign Manager Offer-level margin and rejection spread
Tracking health click_id, transaction_id, and at least one stable sub field are mandatory Missing identifier coverage on one week of launches Integration Lead Postback acceptance and latency
Risk posture Anti-fraud and pause thresholds are explicitly set Risk only flagged reactively Ops Lead Fraud/reject trend + invalid ratio
Scale gate Scaling gates require no KPI regression across two windows Automatic scale with no validation Media Planner + Ops Pacing vs quality trend

How it works

1) Set the control frame before spend

Capture six launch inputs:

  • Primary outcome: one KPI and one hard constraint (payback, margin floor, or quality floor).
  • Geo policy: allowed geos and temporary exclusions.
  • Device/placement policy: where conversion quality is strongest.
  • Offer control: eligible offer classes and disallowed categories by objective.
  • Payout floor: minimum acceptable payout by segment.
  • Escalation path: owners and authority for pause, hold, and scale decisions.

2) Lock the postback contract

KiwiWall traffic control depends on identifier consistency. At minimum, the contract should include:

  • click_id on every click.
  • transaction_id on every conversion event.
  • sub1/sub2/sub3 for source, geo, and variant tagging.
  • Retry behavior with idempotency to prevent payout duplication.
  • Rejection reason taxonomy: invalid / duplicate / timeout / policy disqualified / expired / outside policy.

Define tolerance:

  • If postback latency degrades for 3 consecutive intervals, pause scale and investigate before adding budget.
  • If acceptance rate drops below control threshold, hold any expansion decisions for that segment.

3) Define offer-routing and quality rules before launch

Your brief should explicitly state:

  • Allowed offer categories by objective.
  • Geo and cap overrides for each segment.
  • Publisher segment priorities and promotion ladder.
  • Quality thresholds by rejection reason and by publisher cohort.

When these are written down up front, operations becomes faster and escalation windows shrink.

4) Run the weekly optimization cadence

  • Daily controls: postback health, quality signals, latency drift, rejection spikes.
  • Weekly controls: source-quality rerank, segment re-balance, and go/no-go decision for spend.

For each active segment choose one action:

  • Scale: quality and payout stability are within target.
  • Hold: mixed indicators or unstable validation.
  • Trim: repeated quality drift despite budget changes.

Example

Scenario: A fintech advertiser runs two geos with mixed source quality.

  1. Objective is deposit-ready CPA with CPI as secondary support metric.
  2. US and Canada are active; additional geos are in probation.
  3. Tracking contract uses sub1 for geo, sub2 for publisher, sub3 for creative variant.
  4. Offer-routing prioritizes low-risk offer classes with strict payout and quality floors.
  5. Week 1 and Week 2 checks show one segment with high install volume but weak deposit yield and rising duplicate events.
  6. The team holds that segment, applies stricter caps, and reallocates budget to stable quality segment.

The result is slower top-line growth than expectation, but higher payout confidence and cleaner reconciliation.

Checklist

Use this section as a copy-paste block in Notion, Airtable, or your internal playbook:

  • Campaign name:
  • Primary objective + constraint:
  • Allowed traffic mix:
  • Geo policy:
  • Offer stack + exclusions:
  • Publisher list + daily owner:
  • Postback endpoint + event taxonomy:
  • Pause/hold/scale triggers:
  • 2-week stabilization review date:
  • Weekly review owner:

Common mistakes

  1. Skipping naming standards

    • Impact: reconciliation becomes manual and slow.
    • Fix: require consistent IDs and event naming before the first spend.
  2. Assuming low cost equals quality

    • Impact: short-term volume gains with long-term margin pressure.
    • Fix: enforce quality thresholds and reject budgets before cap increases.
  3. Scaling off one signal

    • Impact: one metric improves while payout stability erodes.
    • Fix: use at least two independent KPI gates for scale decisions.
  4. Unclear postback policy

    • Impact: disputes, delayed reconciliation, and trust loss.
    • Fix: document retry and dedupe rules in the brief before launch.
  5. No pause ladder

    • Impact: late response to latency or fraud anomalies.
    • Fix: set explicit stop thresholds and owner contact path up front.

FAQ

Q: Can this replace a longer campaign brief? If your current document lacks KiwiWall-specific controls, yes. Otherwise, integrate these controls into your existing process.

Q: Should this ever be static? No. The brief should update weekly as postback quality and segment performance evolve.

Q: What is minimum tracking fidelity at launch? click_id, transaction_id, and one stable sub grouping are required for controlled optimization.

Q: Can publishers use this? Yes, for tracking and quality standards. Publishers should still prioritize placement and EPC-specific sections.

Q: When do we stop a segment? Stop when multiple quality signals fail together (rejection, latency, variance in payout).

Peer links

Evidence notes

  • Strategy source: docs/content-silo-plan.md (repo plan, 2026-06-18).
  • Obsidian strategy sync: /home/william/Codehub/ObsidianVaults/Kiwiwall/content-silo-strategy.md (2026-06-18).
  • Keyword and process context from the 2026-06-18 run:
    • EVID-KS-20260618-1: Bing autosuggest for affiliate offerwall
    • EVID-KS-20260618-2: Bing autosuggest for affiliate offers 360
    • EVID-KS-20260618-3: YouTube suggest search for offerwall tracking
    • EVID-KS-20260618-4: Trends source (blocked shell)
    • EVID-KS-20260618-5: Reddit results (403)
  • Search quality posture references in the plan: Google helpful content guidance, AI optimization guidance, and OpenAI crawler documentation.

Conversion link

Attach this brief to launch operations, then route to Advertisers with owners and a weekly review date.

Then cross-check against Advertiser performance scaling and the KPI plan before first budget increase.

Next up
What to prepare before contacting KiwiWall
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