Affiliate Guide - How to Succeed with Affiliate Programs
Introduction
If you have chosen merchant
programs that reward you by paying a commission on sales
or leads, then you must be real pro-active
in marketing your merchants. You cannot assume that just
because someone comes to your site, they will click on
one of banners, and then buy something from
that
merchant. There are a number of obstacles to making a purchase
on the internet, and you will often have to break them
down for your visitors before they will complete a sale.
The Obstacles
One of the greatest problems facing affiliates
is that many merchant sites are not conducive to making
sales. They are
often difficult to navigate, or make the purchasing process
too complicated. There is little that an affiliate can
do about this, other than to be careful to select merchants
whose sites are professional and easy to use.
Another problem
is that people using the internet are becoming less responsive
to advertising banners. This is perhaps a
natural response to the many misleading banners on the
internet. For this reason, text links have become more effective
than
banners.
Pre-Sell to the Customer
Since many merchant
sites do not make it easy for a visitor to make a purchase,
it is important that affiliates do not
place a lot of reliance on merchants to complete a sale.
The affiliate must try to send the visitor to the merchant's
site in a purchasing frame of mind. In other words, the
chances of a visitor making a purchase from a merchant are
greatly
increased if you actively promote the product or merchant
on your site.
Your promotion could involve providing
a text link, supported by an explanation or personal recommendation
of the merchant
or product, especially if you have previously used that
merchant
or product.
Relationship Marketing
One of the important
factors in making a purchasing decision is trust. Is the
merchant and/or its product reliable and
capable of delivering good value? Trust, however, is not
something that is easily earned, so you need to establish
a relationship with your visitors before they are likely
to become customers.
Stay in Contact With Your Site Visitors
In
order to establish such a relationship, you need to be
able to contact your visitors. The natural way to do this
on the internet is via email, and the best way to find
a
visitor's email address is to ask him/her for it. Invite
your visitors to subscribe to the mailing list for your
newsletter, promotional offers or site updates. Your mailing
list is
perhaps the most valuable asset in your online business,
because every person on the list is a potential lead acquired
in an ethical manner.
Find Out About Your Visitors
Even better
than inviting your visitors to subscribe to your mailing
list is to ask them to complete a survey form
on your site. In this way you can get more detailed information
about your visitors in order to select appropriate merchants
and products. The survey form could be a condition for
entering a competition, or for using a free service on your
site.
Deal With Information Ethically
You must
never pass your visitors' email address or other information
to any third party without their specific permission,
otherwise you have breached the ethics of internet marketing,
as well as the law in certain countries. If you would like
to sell or rent information to third parties, place a "check
box" in your mailing list or survey form. The statement
next to the checkbox could be something like: "I would
like to receive promotional emails from other companies offering
products or services compatible with my interests".
Using Your Visitor's Information
Many sites invite their visitors
to use a free service (such as search engine submission)
which can only be used after
the visitor has given his/her email address. As soon as
the service is completed, the service-provider will often
send
the visitor an email thanking that person for using the
service, and inviting them to pay for a higher level service.
The
service-provider has given the visitor a useful demonstration
which the visitor will hopefully appreciate enough to pay
for the upgraded service.
This is a good example, firstly,
of finding out about your visitors. The service-provider
knows that someone must have
a strong interest in that type of service if they are prepared
to give their their email address in order to obtain it.
Secondly, having obtained the email address, the service-provider
has used it to promote a higher level service.
The same
principle applies to all information provided by your visitors.
The more you know about your visitors and
their interests, the more you can target your products,
services and (importantly for affiliate marketers) site sponsors.
Relationship
marketing involves both the marketer and potential customer
learning about each other, so that ultimately the
customer wants what the marketer provides and the marketer
provides what the customer wants.
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