Guide Section
Start with the workflow, not the proxy label
The fastest way to make a weak proxy decision is to ask which model is better in general. There is no universal winner. For account workflows, scraping, GEO checks, and market observation, a proxy only becomes good when it matches the job, the target site, and the way requests are distributed over time.
That is why Static residential proxies and Rotating residential proxies should be compared against operational constraints. If the workflow breaks because the site expects local consumer traffic, one answer is usually obvious. If the workflow breaks because the task needs throughput, concurrency, or stable private infrastructure, the other answer usually wins.
Guide Section
Measure GEO realism, session length, and request rhythm
Both models can provide residential-looking traffic, but the right answer depends on whether the workflow values persistent identity or broader public coverage. This is especially important when the target page changes by country, city, account state, or storefront view.
Static usually wins when long session continuity matters. Rotating usually wins when the work is distributed across many checks or requests. On top of that, request rhythm matters. Some workflows succeed with short bursts and frequent IP changes, while others need stable continuity for long sessions, repeated checks, or account trust.
Guide Section
Translate the answer into implementation rules
Once the right side of the comparison is clear, document it in routing rules, budget expectations, and internal linking. The guide should lead to a matching product page, pricing page, and related use-case pages so the team does not reopen the same decision every week.
A strong implementation also means defining what would force a change later. If the workflow grows, needs broader GEO coverage, or moves from testing into constant production traffic, the correct proxy choice can evolve without the original guide becoming wrong.