Affiliate programs are one of the web’s most
effective marketing techniques. They create a win-win situation by
which site A refers a visitor to site B, and site B pays site A a
commission if the visitor makes a purchase.
Affiliate programs are one of the web’s most
effective marketing
techniques. They create a win-win situation by which site A refers a
visitor to site B, and site B pays site A a commission if the visitor
makes a purchase. The referrer site (affiliate), can make money with no
overhead (no product, no warehouse, no collection risk). On the other
hand, the destination site (vendor) receives a steady stream of
qualified leads from hundreds, maybe thousands of affiliate sites, and
doesn’t have to spend a dime unless a visitor makes a purchase.
The way it works is like this: the vendor gives
the affiliate specific HTML code that it must use on its site to create
a link to the vendor’s site. This code contains an embedded ID number
that allows the vendor to know when an incoming visitor comes to them
by clicking the link on the affiliate site.
The vendor’s servers will then set a cookie (a
time sensitive electronic identification mechanism) in the visitor’s
computer so that every time he comes back to the vendor’s site, the
vendor’s servers will ‘remember’ that he was originally referred to
them by the affiliate, and will pay him a commission when the visitor
makes a purchase.
This makes it possible for the affiliate to make
a commission even if the visitor doesn’t purchase anything the first
time, but comes back and buys later. Also, it is not necessary that the
visitor enter the vendor’s site through the affiliate’s link other than
the first time, since the vendor’s servers will identify the cookie and
will know that the visitor was originally referred to them by the
affiliate.
At the vendor’s discretion, the cookies can be
set up to expire that same day, remain active indefinitely, or anything
in between (vendors usually call the duration of a cookie the “referral
period”). For this reason, it is better to choose vendor partners that
offer long referral periods (120 days is considered very good). This
increases the affiliate’s chances of success, since very few people
will buy on their first visit, although exceptions do occur with
vendors that enjoy superb brand recognition and feature user friendly
interfaces, like Amazon.com (the pioneer of affiliate programs) who, in
spite of keeping cookies alive for only 24 hours, is able to generate a
significant portion of its sales in the first few minutes after a
visitor has clicked into their site.
About the Author
Mario Sanchez publishes The Internet Digest ( http://www.theinternetdigest.net
), a website and newsletter that gives you free advice on Internet
Marketing, Web Design and Small Business. To subscribe go to: http://www.theinternetdigest.net/newsletter.html