Affiliate marketing can be an exciting and often frustrating experience. For those of you who are wanting to make a living from promoting other companies products and services, unless you are very fortunate, the road will be long and hard - fraught with traps for the unsuspecting.
How do I know this? I've been there. This article is not about how to generate massive revenue in a short space of time. It's about working through problems with honest merchants and also strategies for catching out dishonest ones. You'd be surprised at the number of affiliates who generate sales, yet never see a dime for their efforts. At the end of this article is a number of links to other strategies and tutorials I've published on affiliate marketing that may be of value to you.
So you've signed up with what appears to be a great affiliate program that really suits your target audience. You've developed strategies, selected banners and other marketing materials and published them up on your site. Perhaps you've gone that one step further and published reviews, articles and tutorials on subjects related to your merchants to lead people to examine their services.
You know that the pages and ads are generating views and clickthroughs. Yet for all this effort, and after a couple of months, you are still yet to see a return for your investment of time in developing marketing strategies and the use of your valuable web site space. What could be wrong?
The following are some of the most common issues affecting leads and sales commissions.
Many merchants use cookies to track your referrals. As most people don't purchase on the first visit to a site, a cookie allows for potential referrals to be "tagged" with your affiliate ID so if they should purchase on a future visit, you will be still credited for the lead or sale.
Cookie durations vary from merchant to merchant, some last as little as a single session, others last for years. Of course, the longer the cookie duration, the better.
Where cookie tracking methods are employed, several things can go wrong:
The person your refer flushes out their cookies on a regular basis - nothing much you can do there.
The person you refer has cookie blocking software operating - again, there's not much you can do in this situation.
The killer - the affiliate program software used by the merchant is not functioning correctly and isn't setting cookies at all!
The last scenario happens more regularly than you may think. Bear in mind that it's usually not an intentional "problem". Many merchants don't have the technical skills to spot this kind of thing. They employ programmers or buy out-of-the-box solutions for their affiliate programs and trust that they function correctly.
It's very important that before you invest any serious time and energy into promoting a merchant program that you test to see if the cookie setting function is working correctly and that the "expire" date is correct.
This is a simple task. Click on one of the affiliate links supplied to you and then check your browser cache folder. Look for this:
Cookie:yourcomputername@merchantsite.com/
or
Cookie:yourcomputername@www.merchantsite.com/
Be sure to examine the expire date as well. If you can't find the cookie, it would be a good idea to contact the merchant and ask for assistance. When approaching merchants, be polite and respectful - take an "innocent until proven guilty" approach as they may not be aware of the situation. By you notifying them, you'll not only be saving your own sales commissions, but also those of many other affiliates.
If you have joined an affiliate program through a network that also processes payments of products on behalf of merchants, it is not uncommon for merchants to offer customers multiple payment methods. It's great for customers, but not for affiliates. Here's an example:
Merchant X uses software distribution company Y as one of their distributors. You join company Y as an affiliate as they have a wide range of products/services from various merchants to choose from. You aren't aware that Merchant X also uses software distribution companies A,B,C for the same product - each processing payments for the merchant. The person you refer via the company Y affiliate network purchase a product from Merchant X but uses the company B payment method. The end result is no commission for you! Worse still, I have seen some merchants advertise their products on some affiliate networks, but don't even offer payment options for that network!
Before you begin advertising any products or services as an affiliate of a network that also processes orders, check the merchant site carefully. If in doubt, contact the merchant before expending any further energy, no matter how good the commission rate is. 50% of $0.00 is still zero.
Another point to be aware of is that many merchants offer telephone sales as well - how will your commission be tracked if the transaction occurs over the phone?
Affiliate links can be very easy to spot, especially if they link directly to the merchant, e.g:
http://www.xyz12345.com/affiliate.htm?aid=65544w
A link target can be viewed by moving your mouse over a link and viewing your browser status bar. Some of your site visitors will refuse to click on affiliate links, or they'll just type the merchant site address directly into their browser address bar. Affiliate links should be cloaked with JavaScript to remove the affiliate ID from view. Any merchant who really cares about his affiliates will happily introduce this function to his program - it's a relatively simple task depending on the software they are using to control their program.
If they aren't able to do so, you can do it yourself, learn more about affiliate link methods in this tutorial that also contains some free scripts:
http://www.tamingthebeast.net/ articles3/affiliate-revenue.htm
Just another quick point on affiliate links - make sure that they always open in a new window - that way your visitors won't be totally lost from your site.
This strategy used by some merchants really stinks. Some affiliate programs are offered only on particular items which act as decoys. When your referred visitor arrives on the site, they are immediately distracted by other offerings. This is not always apparent on your first visit to the merchants site.
As the years go by, I find myself spending increasing time monitoring the merchants I work with - it's very necessary. I would like to believe that the vast majority of merchants are honest, but there are some sharp operators who just don't give a damn and I try to weed these companies out as soon as possible. They view affiliates as annoyances rather than important business partners. You'll identify these people very quickly, slow to respond and usually quite rude.
Even the most honest merchant has problems with their affiliate software from time to time, so it's important to be vigilant and regularly check cookies and merchant sites for changes that may affect your commissions. If ever in doubt, ask - but ask nicely. Never make accusations until you have all the information.
Yes, you can make a decent living as an affiliate, you may even generate substantial income very quickly - but the reality is that in the start-up stages it can be very hard work. I hope these strategies and the following resources assist you in achieving your online goals!
Successful Affiliate Marketing
Generating revenue from Popunder Advertising
Run an affiliate program? Need more affiliates?
Protecting commissions with improved linking methods
Michael Bloch
Taming the Beast
http://www.tamingthebeast.net
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