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Selling PPV on OF AND Clipsites?

Hi guys! I’m just starting out and I was just about to upload a shorter clip of a PPV message I was sending in my OF messages on a clip site (Fan...

TLDR

Stop feeling guilty about pricing differences; you aren't selling the same product on both platforms. A subscription is a VIP pass, and your PPV bundles are premium experiences, not just files.

How Do I Price PPV on Both OnlyFans and Clip Sites?

Many new creators struggle with the "fairness" of pricing when they expand to multiple platforms. You might feel like you are overcharging your loyal subscribers if a shorter version of a clip is available for less on a site without a subscription fee. However, the key is realizing that you are selling two different products: a "bundle" and a "single asset."

Water flows down hill

Money flows to the value

Price for the effort

When you sell a PPV message on a subscription site, you aren't just selling a video. You are selling a curated package that often includes a full-length scene, bonus photos, and the intimacy of a direct message. On a clip site, the customer is buying a standalone file with no relationship or extra perks. Because the value provided to the subscriber is higher (more content, more intimacy), the price should reflect that.

If you lower your prices on your subscription platform to match a clip site, you are effectively penalizing your most loyal fans by giving them a "discounted" version of your work while removing the prestige of being a subscriber. Instead, focus on the "Deluxe" nature of your OFOnlyFans Resources and the "Lite" nature of your clip site offerings.

Should I Lower My PPV Fees to Match Clip Sites?

The short answer is no. Lowering your prices out of guilt creates a race to the bottom. Once you establish a low price point, it is incredibly difficult to raise it later without causing a backlash. Instead of lowering the price, change the product.

Keep your full-length videos and "extras" (like the screenshots and bonus clips you mentioned) exclusive to your subscribers. If you want to post on a clip site, upload a "teaser" or a heavily edited shorter version. This creates a natural funnel: a customer finds your shorter, cheaper clip on a clip site, realizes there is a much better, full-length version available via your subscription, and decides to join your inner circle to get the "real" experience.

This strategy protects your earnings and rewards your subscribers. They aren't being "screwed over" if they get 8 minutes of footage and bonus photos for $20, while a random stranger gets 2 minutes of footage for $10. In fact, the subscriber is getting a better deal per minute of content.

Concluding Questions

Navigating the financial side of content creation often feels like a balancing act between being a "friend" to your fans and running a profitable business. When you are just starting out, it is easy to let empathy cloud your pricing strategy, but remember that your time and energy are finite resources. Setting firm boundaries around your pricing now prevents burnout and resentment later.

For those diversifying their income, how does the discovery process differ when moving users from a public clip site to a private subscription? Furthermore, if you are exploring other live-streaming options, how does the pricing structure on xlovecam compare to the static PPV models found on subscription sites? Understanding these differences helps you decide where to put your primary effort.

It is also worth analyzing the psychological impact of "exclusivity." Does a subscriber feel more valued when they have access to content that is strictly forbidden on public platforms, or do they prefer a unified pricing model across the web? Most high-earning creators find that exclusivity is the primary driver of subscription retention. By keeping your best work behind a paywall and your "marketing" content on clip sites, you create a sustainable ecosystem that rewards loyalty without sacrificing your hourly rate.