profile

Company Profile: From Italy With Love

The adult affiliate program RIVCash has been a phenomenal success in Europe, owing mainly to its webcam site, RIVcams.com. The Italybased firm, RIV — initials for an Italian phrase meaning “girls for sale” — decided to stretch its muscles and enter the U.S. market last year.

Although the launch into a market across the ocean has been slow and careful, sources in the company are very confident that the new market will be a spectacular success.

“We still haven’t launched the site full force, or the affiliate program, for the simple reason that we’re still kind of gathering more local [American] girls,” says a company spokesman. “RIVcams always has been known for its amateur performers, so when we go to a new country, we work hard to get local girls to sign up instead of working with studios, which is something we really never liked. But right now in the U.S., we have a mix. We were forced to get a few studios involved, but we are in an aggressive campaign to find amateur girls through classified websites like Craigslist and many others. We have a person who does that for us every day.

‘Finding amateur girls is the biggest, most difficult task for any community or webcam site. You can’t start a website like those without girls, and girls won’t sign up if they don’t see traffic or they don’t see other girls on the site. It’s the chicken and the egg thing. But the website is launched and we did some promotion for the affiliate program. We definitely need more girls aboard, so I am talking with several American studios that have a lot of girls that might want to sign up. Although I hate to use studios, we definitely need to use them to jump-start the site.

“And the classified ads are starting to pay off, because we are seeing more sign-ups.”

RIV has opened an office in Atlanta to facilitate the new venture and very soon the firm will add an affiliate manager to deal strictly with American webmasters. Also, designers have created a new look and feel to the site with a splashy design and a new logo. So far, American webmasters have been pleasantly surprised.

“I would say they’re very pleased with the conversions they’re getting,” the source says. “Our U.S. webmasters are helping to shape the affiliate program to reflect an American webmaster’s way of doing business. We had to make some adjustments in developing our affiliate program to fit the American market, including a different kind of payment, bigger payment turnaround, and reinforcing our support personnel.

“I know how the U.S. market works. You have only one chance and you’d better be ready. So we’re not yet promoting the affiliate program in America the way we would like. I know American webmasters want to see English-speaking girls, and we don’t have a sufficient number of them yet. We do have Italian girls who speak English, and I think that will be a different spin for American webmasters.”

Because RIVcams has been so incredibly successful in Europe, it is just a matter of time before the company repeats that performance in the U.S. RIV receives a ton of interest from the European print and broadcast media, stemming from the fact that one of its girls wrote a book about being a webcam performer.

“She wrote about going from working in a grocery store to making several thousand dollars a month,” the company source explains. “That caught on in the press, and the rebound brought a lot of attention to the website, and it really exploded. There are Italians all over Europe, so we received a lot of word-ofmouth advertising. It was great, because suddenly we got visitors from Germany, Turkey, Spain and even North African countries.”

RIV has marketed heavily in these countries by placing ads on local satellite channels, and aside from Italy and Atlanta, also has an office in the U.K. and soon will open a new one in the firm’s next target for launching its webcam site, Russia. The company officers expect the Russian move to match the success RIVcams has enjoyed everywhere else in Europe, mainly due to the different flavor its girls bring to the webcam sites.

“The girls really can make good money,” says the company source. “It depends on how much they want to work. They can tell erotic stories and even sell their lingerie. They also sell their photosets and amateur videos. They even sell their ICQs in some cases. The girls set up email accounts and instant messenger accounts, to customers can reach them easily for private conferences.

“We urge the girls to buy pre-paid phone cards, so they’re giving out a phone number that’s not really their personal phone. There are a lot of girls doing that in Europe, and in the U.S. there are plenty of smaller cell phone companies that allow people to get cell phone accounts without releasing too much information.”

What has worked best so far for RIV and its performers has been the casual ambience of its webcam sites.

“The message we try to deliver is that RIVcams.com is more than just a webcam site,” the source explains. “It’s more like a community site. We tried this in the other countries and it worked.

‘People have a tendency to join and stick to it because they can talk to the girls in private chats. In many cases, the customers don’t even ask the girls to get naked. They just want to talk to someone. But it starts a relationship between the users and the performers to the point where they can request custom pictures or custom photos. There’s a lot of interaction, because they’re talking to real girls who are just having fun while making some extra money on the side.”

RIV soon will add new webcam sites in the transgender and gay niches, the latter to be called RIVBoys.com. The company also is improving its webcam technology to keep up with the constant demand for better picture and sound quality in that area. All of these things contribute to the RIV success story, but according to the company source, one thing makes the firm stand apart from all the competition.

“We offer a truly global platform,” he says, “and although the big webcam sites are in many countries, almost none of them have a real community feel. We have girls in many different countries and we have a complete community in each place, from users to girls. This means traffic, which is what webmasters want.”

Related:  

Copyright © 2026 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

opinion

A Creator's Guide to Starting the Year With Strong Financial Habits

Every January brings that familiar rush of new ideas and big goals. Creators feel ready to overhaul their content, commit to new posting schedules and jump on fresh opportunities.

Megan Stokes ·
profile

Jak Knife on Turning Collaboration and Consistency Into a Billion Views

What started as a private experiment between two curious lovers has grown into one of the most-watched creator catalogs on Pornhub. Today, with more than a billion views and counting, Jak Knife ranks among the top 20 performers on the site. It’s a milestone he reached not through overnight virality or manufactured hype, but through consistency, collaboration—and a willingness to make it weird.

Jackie Backman ·
opinion

Pornnhub's Jade Talks Trust and Community

If you’ve ever interacted with Jade at Pornhub, you already know one thing to be true: Whether you’re coordinating an event, confirming deliverables or simply trying to get an answer quickly, things move more smoothly when she’s involved. Emails get answered. Details are confirmed. Deadlines don’t drift. And through it all, her tone remains warm, friendly and grounded.

Women In Adult ·
opinion

Outlook 2026: Industry Execs Weigh In on Strategy, Monetization and Risk

The adult industry enters 2026 at a moment of concentrated change. Over the past year, the sector’s evolution has accelerated. Creators have become full-scale businesses, managing branding, compliance, distribution and community under intensifying competition. Studios and platforms are refining production and business models in response to pressures ranging from regulatory mandates to shifting consumer preferences.

Jackie Backman ·
opinion

How Platforms Can Tap AI to Moderate Content at Scale

Every day, billions of posts, images and videos are uploaded to platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and X. As social media has grown, so has the amount of content that must be reviewed — including hate speech, misinformation, deepfakes, violent material and coordinated manipulation campaigns.

Christoph Hermes ·
opinion

What DSA and GDPR Enforcement Means for Adult Platforms

Adult platforms have never been more visible to regulators than they are right now. For years, the industry operated in a gray zone: enormous traffic, massive data volume and minimal oversight. Those days are over.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

Making the Case for Network Tokens in Recurring Billing

A declined transaction isn’t just a technical error; it’s lost revenue you fought hard to earn. But here’s some good news for adult merchants: The same technology that helps the world’s largest subscription services smoothly process millions of monthly subscriptions is now available to you as well.

Jonathan Corona ·
opinion

Navigating Age Verification Laws Without Disrupting Revenue

With age verification laws now firmly in place across multiple markets, merchants are asking practical questions: How is this affecting traffic? What happens during onboarding? Which approaches are proving workable in real payment flows?

Cathy Beardsley ·
opinion

How Adult Businesses Can Navigate Global Compliance Demands

The internet has made the world feel small. Case in point: Adult websites based in the U.S. are now getting letters from regulators demanding compliance with foreign laws, even if they don’t operate in those countries. Meanwhile, some U.S. website operators dealing with the patchwork of state-level age verification laws have considered incorporating offshore in the hopes of avoiding these new obligations — but even operators with no physical presence in the U.S. have been sued or threatened with claims for not following state AV laws.

Larry Walters ·
opinion

Top Tips for Bulletproof Creator Management Contracts

The creator management business is booming. Every week, it seems, a new agency emerges, promising to turn creators into stars, automate their fan interactions or triple their revenue through “secret” social strategies. The reality? Many of these agencies are operating with contracts that wouldn’t survive a single serious dispute — if they even have contracts at all.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
Show More