Eight Vital Elements of Affiliate Acceptance Emails

February 15th, 2012 by

Why do website owners apply for your affiliate program, but never end up referring even a single sale? Could it be that you haven’t provided your affiliates with necessary tools and information?

Contrary to popular belief, recruiting a new affiliate is relatively easy. Getting them to produce sales is a far more difficult task. Your acceptance email is the first step to what should be a long and prosperous relationship, and it should enable your affiliates to start promoting your products immediately. Think of this email as a quick reference guide for affiliates to start marketing your product.

This list of eight vital elements for affiliate acceptance emails will motivate your affiliates to drop everything and start advertising your product on their website right away. Read the rest of this entry »

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Affiliate Summit – Build Your Network With Industry Trade Shows

September 21st, 2011 by

There is an old saying, “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know.” As a vendor of digital content, are you fully engaged with the affiliate community and the opportunities it offers?

With an ever-growing menu of industry trade shows and conferences to choose from, it is difficult for vendors of digital content to choose the industry events that will add the most value to their business. From the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas to the ad:tech convention in London, the options available to digital vendors seem endless.

One outstanding event that we recommend is the Affiliate Summit conference.

Affiliate Summit bills itself as “the premier affiliate marketing conference”, and with almost 4,000 attendees and 300+ exhibitors, it is hard to disagree. There is a winter event held in Las Vegas in January and a summer event held in New York City in August, so this conference offers people interested in affiliate marketing a great opportunity to discuss popular topics and exchange new ideas and strategies.

The summit agenda for Affiliate Summit East last month included 3 full days of educational sessions, exhibit halls, and evening events. Don’t discount the evening events. ShareASale sponsored an “Under the Stars Party Barn Dance” and there was also an “Affiliate Kareoke” event where people were able to let loose, be themselves and strengthen relationships in an informal setting.

As evidenced by the chart below, vendors, merchants, networks, and agencies are all in attendance, so nearly any business that sells products online can find value at this show.

Affiliate Summit

Source: Affiliate Summit

Mark Nykoliuk is an Affiliate and Partner Manager at ZeoBIT, a company that develops professional software for Windows and Mac operating systems. Read the rest of this entry »

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Strategically Mine Your Applicant Pool To Find The Best Affiliates

January 5th, 2011 by

E-commerce affiliate programsIn the digital product space, successful affiliate programs can generate between 15 and 20 percent of all sales. So how do you mine your affiliate pool to find the best, most successful affiliates?

In order to strategically evaluate each applicant, you need to create a set of specific and consistent evaluation guidelines. Doing so will increase the likelihood of affiliate success and is pivotal to the growth of your affiliate program.

So, before you accept another affiliate into your program, follow these six guidelines to see if the partnership will be a success:

1. The Domain Game
Who is the owner of the website domain? Many times affiliates apply for your program using a “free domain,” which is a common practice with bloggers (i.e. googleblog.blogspot.com). If the website domain is not owned by the applicant, it’s difficult to determine whether the domain can legally promote your products. There are tools, such as netsol.com or whois.com, that check the owner of a domain name and let you verify the information submitted on an affiliate’s application.

The age of the domain also provides insight into how long an affiliate has been doing business. The length of time a domain is pre-paid can be an indicator of stability. Spam sites are often registered for short periods of time.

2. Is Traffic What It’s All About?
How much potential traffic does the affiliate have? Ideally, potential affiliates will have a substantial amount of traffic or a low Alexa score. For example, YouTube has an Alexa score of 3, which means it’s the third most popular website ranked by Alexa. In comparison, Majorgeeks.com has an Alexa score of 4,700.

Alexa is a Web information company that evaluates websites based on the number of unique visitors reported by users of their toolbar. The lower the Alexa ranking, the higher amount of incoming traffic to an affiliate’s website. However, don’t rule out smaller niche sites based strictly on high Alexa rankings. When it comes to conversion, the quality of the traffic can be just as important as quantity.

Evaluating potential traffic can help to determine an appropriate commission structure, but Alexa rankings also help estimate an affiliate’s potential sales volume.

Alexa Rankings To Help Rate Affiliates

Comparative Alexa traffic rankings of Majorgeeks.com, Download.com, TopTenReviews.com and Facebook.com

3. What’s E-mail Got To Do With It?
What e-mail address does the applicant use? A generic or free e-mail domain, such as Gmail, Hotmail and Yahoo, is a potential red flag in an affiliate application.  Ideally, an affiliate’s e-mail domain should match the website domain, which is a strong indicator of validity.

Free or generic e-mail domain applicants often sign up as an affiliate only to obtain a quick discount. In cases where an e-mail domain does not match the applied website domain, you should always verify ownership of the domain.

4. Content Is King
What content is on the affiliate’s website? Ask yourself if the content is valuable to your customers. Does the website have offensive or adult-oriented content, or does the website use gambling or pornographic websites as traffic sources? These are some of the questions to consider before approving a potential affiliate.

Here are the three main types of affiliate website content and easy ways to evaluate each.

  1. Generic – A website that promotes personal interest topics. The affiliate has had success using the product and is now interested in reviewing it for other consumers.  When evaluating the website, the Alexa ranking can indicate potential sales volume. If the website has a large amount of traffic, there is a strong potential for success.
  2. Relevant – A website is completely focused on a topic or category that perfectly matches your products. This affiliate is considered an “industry expert” on this topic, and many consumers visit the website for knowledge regarding the category. InfoSpyware.com is a good example of  “relevant”.  The content on this website is directed towards malware and virus safety. Thus, this website is a great fit for an anti-virus or anti-malware product. When an affiliate has “relevant” content, the Alexa ranking plays a smaller role in affiliate approval.
  3. Under Construction -  An incomplete or dead website. In this case, don’t approve affiliates until the content is fully updated.  Also, the affiliate’s application should remain in review for about a month to ensure the affiliate does not change the content or style of the website to something inappropriate for your products. However, the content may also develop into relevant or generic over time, so don’t completely rule it out.

5. Products And Cookies
What other products is the affiliate advertising? When looking through the content of an affiliate’s website, pay attention to advertised products and how cookies are dropped throughout the site. As a vendor, envision the potential for product banner placements on the website and where the affiliate could promote your product. Positioning your product where it is most likely to convert is most important and no one knows your product better than you!

Cookie awareness is important because there are affiliates who drop hidden pixels. Certain affiliate programs consider it affiliate fraud when an affiliate drops a cookie without the user showing interest in a product. The affiliate is not qualifying the traffic coming to the vendor’s website and is only interested in monetizing on the volume of traffic the website produces.  Preferable affiliates point qualified customers to the correct products. Make sure you let your affiliates know that pixel dropping is not an acceptable element of your program.

6. A Reseller Dressed In Affiliate’s Clothing?
Could this affiliate application actually be a reseller application? What’s the big difference anyway? Resellers buy products at a discount and sell to consumers at full price, sometimes through a brick-and-mortar store. Affiliates sell products at full price through their website and receive a commission from the vendor for every sale. Also affiliates generate sales through their website, while resellers actually have direct contact with the consumer.

It’s up to you to decide if your affiliate marketing channel is a good fit for each applicant. Many times small PC repair companies apply as affiliates when they should be applying as resellers, but they don’t understand the difference.

Keystone: By evaluating the above affiliate attributes you can discover the affiliate’s potential to be a significant contributor to your program.

What other tricks of the trade do you use to mine your affiliate applicant pool?

K.C. Motamedy contributed to this blog post.

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