"Where is all the help I'm supposed to get. I have been buying ezine
and classified ad builders and signing up for Echecks and Virtual credit
cards. In the meantime I have no business and no
ads set up. When does all this happen? Let's go here. I spent all day
on this. I'm running out of time.
I kid you not, this is the sum total of an actual
email that hit my inbox this week. Not only did I not know this person
from Adam, this was the first and only email I had ever received from
her and to this day, I have no idea what she's talking about.
Presumably, she signed up for one of the affiliate programs
I promote from my site and was asking, in her own inimitable style, for
my help. Although I am always ready and willing to help anyone I can,
this is most definitely NOT the way to go about asking for it. Needless
to say, I let her know what I thought of her approach in NO uncertain
terms.
The attitude displayed in this person's email to
me (and she is by no means an isolated example) exemplifies why so many
people fail to make a success of their online
businesses. Leaving aside the utter rudeness of the approach, notice
the impatience, the expectation to be up and running in a day, the
HURRY, the apparent belief that real world principles such as courtesy
and good manners don't apply online (they do).
Think this person is going to last the distance? What kinds of tactics
do you think she is capable of resorting to in pursuit of the almighty
dollar?
So, let's take a realistic look at affiliate
programs, what they can and can't do for your business
and how to maximize your chances of creating a successful, long-term business
with them.
WHAT IS AN AFFILIATE PROGRAM?
An affiliate program (also
known as a reseller, associate, referral or partnership program) is
essentially a revenue-sharing arrangement whereby you, the affiliate,
receive payment from the owner of a product or service that you promote
on their behalf.
Affiliate programs are an
excellent way for the new internet entrepreneur to start
an online business.
TYPES OF AFFILIATE PROGRAMS
There are various types of affiliate
programs.
The most simple involves you, the affiliate,
placing a banner ad, graphic or text link at your site which is linked
to the site of the business you are promoting. This
link is coded with your unique affiliate ID so that
the site visitor is recorded at the target site as having originated
from your site, thereby allowing you to be credited with the sale.
Payment is generally a fixed percentage of the
sale value (commission) or "pay per click", where the affiliate
is paid a certain amount for every time a site visitor clicks on the
link at the affiliate's site, whether or not a sale is made.
The more sophisticated affiliate
programs are multi-tier and allow the affiliate
to earn commissions not only on the traffic they directly refer to the
target site but also a proportion of sales generated by their
sub-affiliates.
BENEFITS OF AFFILIATE PROGRAMS
The greatest benefit of affiliate
programs is that when you are just
starting out in your own online business
you don't have to worry about creating your own product or service. You
just promote someone else's and get a share of the revenue pie for your
efforts.
You also don't have to concern yourself with
warehousing, transport or logistics headaches. All of this is handled
by the business whose products/services you are
promoting. All you need concentrate on is driving traffic to that
business's website. This means that a high proportion of your revenue
is profit.
The owner of the product/service is also
responsible for collecting payment, customer service and the myriad
other details that come up on a day to day basis in running the
business.
DISADVANTAGES OF AFFILIATE PROGRAMS
The main and obvious disadvantage of affiliate
programs is that it is the owner of the
product/service who earns the lion's share of the profit on the sale.
You're working on commission. You will NEVER earn
by way of affiliate program commissions as much as
you can earn by way of profits from producing and selling your own
product/service.
As a result, affiliate programs
represent a high opportunity cost when you consider what you could earn
if you instead channeled the time and energy you spend on promoting affiliate
programs into creating and promoting
your own product/service.
For this reason, it does not make sound business
sense to rely solely on affiliate program income
for the longer term growth of your business.
Instead, think of them as a way of dipping your
toe in the water when you're first getting started, and a nice little
sideline once you've created your own product/service. Do NOT build
your business around affiliate programs
with the intention this will always be the backbone of your business.
You'll be stunting your own growth if you do.
CHOOSING THE RIGHT AFFILIATE PROGRAMS FOR YOUR
BUSINESS
So, keeping in mind what affiliate
programs can and can't do for your
business, let's turn to what you should look for when choosing an affiliate
program or programs to promote in your business.
=> Synergistic Products/Services
First off, and this is a cardinal rule, only
promote those programs which will allow you to
create synergies with your site. This means selecting programs
that naturally complement the subject matter of your site and that will
therefore be of interest and relevance to your site visitors. This will
ensure your prospects (ie your site visitors) are pre-qualified which
will result in a relatively higher conversion ratio (the ratio of
visitors to purchases) than would be the case if your traffic is
untargeted (which will be the case if you promote unrelated products
and services from your site.)
=> Quality In All Things
Keeping the need for synergy uppermost in mind,
look for quality programs first and foremost. The
last thing you want to waste your time, money and reputation on is a
shoddy product or service. There are just too many quality programs
out there to settle for anything less.
=< Stability of Company
Look for a company that's been around for a while
and that's reputable and stable (both financially and in its
management). Any reputable company will have full contact details
readily available so do your research.
=> References
Look for testimonials and references from other
affiliates. If the company you're interested is not forthcoming when it
comes to putting you in touch with other affiliates, move on.
=> Affiliate Agreement
Look for a professional, considered and detailed affiliate
agreement (contract). This shows that the company is serious about its
business.
Watch out for exclusivity clauses and other
restraints. Some affiliate agreements will require
that you not promote competing businesses' products and services. This
is not to say you should avoid such agreements. As a general rule, it
is your interests not to promote competing programs
anyway. Just be aware of what the agreement says on the subject to
avoid getting yourself into hot water.
Look also for an agreement that treats spammers
harshly. This protects not only the company but other affiliates as
well. The last thing you or any other reputable affiliate
needs is to have your reputation and the reputation of the
product/service you are promoting besmirched by these sorts of tactics.
=> High Commissions
Promoting someone else's affiliate
program necessarily requires that you divert traffic away from your
site and towards someone else's. Make sure you're properly compensated
with a high commission structure. And be sure to set up your link so
that when the visitor clicks on it, a new browser window is opened for
the target site. This at least keeps your site in front of the visitor
so they can go back to your site once they've finished at the site your
link has taken them to.
=> Lifetime Commissions
Look for affiliate programs
that will credit you with not only THIS sale but
all other sales the customer may make in the future. Many programs
are set up so that the customer is identified as "yours" so that when
the customer returns to the target site in three months time, the sale
is recorded as having been generated by you.
=> Residual Commissions
Include programs that offer
residual commissions in your portfolio. Good examples are webhosting
services, autoresponder services and the like where customers sign up
for a continuous service that requires periodic, regular payments. You
receive periodic, regular commissions as a result.
=> Tracking of Commissions
Look for programs that allow
you real-time access to your stats so you can keep easy track of your
commissions.
=> Reliability of Payment
When checking with affiliate
references, find out what the business's record is on paying out
commissions. If they're slow or there appears to be a pattern of
problems, keep looking.
=> Frequency of Payment
Make a note of payment schedules too. Some programs
pay weekly, some monthly, some quarterly. Some only pay once you
accumulate commissions of a certain amount. None of these arrangements
are necessarily good or bad in and of themselves. Just be sure you know
what to expect.
=> Programs that Require Payment Up Front
Two words: MOVE ON!
=> Affiliate Support
Finally, take a look at what support the business
offers its affiliates to make sales. Do they provide resources such as
sample ads, banners, logos and the like? Do they provide useful advice
about maximizing your sales? A good affiliate
program provides affiliates with a LOT of support in these areas.
MAKING MONEY FROM AFFILIATE PROGRAMS
OK, now you know what to look for in an affiliate
program. Here's how to maximize your sales of those products and
services and, therefore, your commissions:
=> Get Your Own Website
No ifs, no buts. DON'T rely on the you-beaut
self-replicated job the company provides all its affiliates. Link to
that site from your main site.
=> Get Your Own Domain Name
This presents a much more professional image. Many
people won't give the time of day to a business
that thinks so little of its prospects that the owner won't shell out
70 bucks for a domain name. So mean business and
look like it.
=> Get Traffic To Your Site (Duh!)
As a rough guide, you will need at least 500
targeted unique visitors a day to your site to make reasonable money
from affiliate programs.
=> You Must Have A Site That Will Attract
Repeat Visitors
If your website is nothing more than a splash page
consisting of little else other than banners for umpteen different affiliate
programs, forget it. Your site must be worthy of your visitor's time
and interest before you can even begin to think about converting that
visitor into a paying customer. So create a real site with real content
that will keep them coming back for more.
=> Personal Testimonials
A personal testimonial will result in more sales
than a mere link or advertisement. So take the time and trouble to
write a personal endorsement of the product or service you are
promoting. And, of course, it goes without saying that in order to
write a personal endorsement, you must know that of which you speak.
NEVER promote a program you haven't first purchased yourself. If you
don't think enough of your program to invest in it, how do you expect
to persuade others to?
=> Promote With Your Sig File
Include a link to your site in the signature of
every email you send.
=> Promote In Your Own Ezine
Finally, if you're not already publishing your own
ezine or newsletter to stay in touch with your site visitors, start.
It's a great way to promote not only your site but also the affiliate
programs you promote from your site.
MAKING SERIOUS MONEY FROM AFFILIATE PROGRAMS
The only way of making SERIOUS money from affiliate
programs is by creating your own product
or service and recruiting affiliates to sell for YOU.
The affiliate program
phenomenon is one of the Internet's true success stories. It provides a
toe-hold for the would-be internet entrepreneur to begin a real, live business
of his or her very own. But the real beauty of affiliate
programs lies not in what they can do
for you, as an affiliate, but what they can do for you, as a recruiter
of affiliates for your own program. By all means jump on the bandwagon
and start promoting other people's products to get
your start. But don't wait too long to start
developing your own product line. There is a ready-made salesforce
numbering in the millions ready and waiting to sell it for you.
About The Author
Elena Fawkner is editor of the award-winning A
Home-Based Business Online ... practical home business
ideas, resources and strategies for the work-from-home entrepreneur.
http://www.fawkner.com/subscribe.html