Clearly, the people benefiting the most from affiliate
programs are the
companies running them. My goal here is to help
you - the affiliate - earn
more money. If you've gotten past the idea
that you can simply slap a
banner up on your site and start earning money, but
you're not sure what to
do next, this article is for you.
Allow me to cut right to the chase. Here is
a plan of action. This may seem
like a lot of work, but don't worry! At the very
end, I'll show you how to
automate all of these steps. For now, just read
through to get a general
idea of how you need to proceed:
Day 1
Step 1- Vow to organize your affiliate efforts.
Begin with organizing all contact information, payment
information, and
vital statistics about your affiliate programs in
one central location.
This may seem like a silly step, but believe me; you
don't want to spend
your time digging through emails for contact
information and codes. You
should also know, with just a few mouse clicks, how
much is owed you by
the various affiliate programs in which you are participating.
Step 2 - Select one affiliate program on which
to focus your efforts for the
next 3 weeks. In order to apply some of the various
principles I will show
you in a few moments, you need to select one area
of focus. It's best to
select an affiliate program that has several products,
instant online tracking
of sales, instant notification of sales, and the ability
to segment your
promotions. Internet Marketing ProShop has all of
this and more.
Step 3 - Select three promotion methods and two
products to promote.
This is crucial. This will make sense in a few
moments. If you can't think
of three promotion methods, here are a few ideas:
An ad in someone else's eZine
A mailing to your own subscription list
A text link on your site with some ad copy
banner on your site
A product review on your site
An FFA submission
Now, some of these methods are more effective than
others. But you
don't need me to tell you that. I'll
show you how to find out for yourself.
Step 4 - For each promotion method and each product,
develop two ads.
So, since you have three promotion methods, two products,
and two ads
for each - you will have to write 12 ads total.
So, for each ad, let's give it a code.
If it's method one, product one, ad one, you can
call it:
M1P1A1
For method one, product one, ad two, you can call
it:
M1P1A2
For example, if you plan to promote my marketing course
1,001 Killer
Internet Marketing Tactics using ads in someone else's
eZine, you will
need two ads. One would be M1P1A1, and the other
would be M1P1A2.
If you also plan to promote it using a review on your
site, the first review
would be M2P1A1 (method 2, product 1, ad 1) and the
second would be
M2P1A2 (method 2, product 1, ad 2).
This is just one way to code your ads. You can
do this any way you like as
long as you can distinguish precisely which campaign
these codes refer to.
This sounds like a lot of writing. Don't
bedaunted by this! Just crank it out.
Don't think too much about each ad. We'll
find out in a while which one is
good and which one is bad. You won't decide this
- your customers will!
Don't be afraid to try something wild.
Now, when you promote each product, you'll need
to tie each promotion
to the code you created. With the Internet Marketing
ProShop Partner
program, you can segment your campaigns by adding
an _code to the end
of the URL you use to promote each product.
For example, if you are promoting 1,001 Killer Internet
Marketing Tactics,
you would use this URL:
..../kt.cgi?sponsorID
To segment your campaigns, you would add your campaign
code on the end
of that URL for each campaign:
..../kt.cgi?sponsorID_M1P1A1 (for campaign one)
..../kt.cgi?sponsorID_M1P1A2 (for campaign two)
Note: The above method is only valid for our affiliate
program, so don't try
this with any other affiliate program. We don't
know of any other affiliate
programs that allow you to segment your campaigns,
this way, so please use caution here.
Step 5 - Before you finish for the day, promote the
product using your
"ad 1" for each product.
You'll need to record:
Impressions. If you're advertising on a
web page, this will be the number
of times your ad appeared on the page - or the number
of times the page
was viewed if your ad comes up each time the page
is viewed. If you're
advertising using some form of email, impressions
= number of emails sent.
Clicks. You should be able to get this from the affiliate
program you are
promoting.
Amount Earned. Again, your affiliate program
should provide this
information to you in real time.
Now, in order to do a valid test, you'll need
to promote to a fairly significant number of people.
I would recommend that at least 300 people see each
ad. Otherwise, you
won't have enough information to make a valid
judgment. Ideally, you
should hit about 2,000 with each ad, but your resources
may not allow for
this.
*Learning point: If you're going to send
an ad via a newsletter, see if
you can run a "split". That is, get one
ad sent to 1/2 of the list and another
sent to the other 1/2. That is the most accurate way
to compare the
effectiveness of any pair of ads.
Day 2
Step 6 - Run your "B" ads. Now that
you have run your "A" ads and have
given them a bit of time to take effect, run your
B ads. Do this first thing
this morning!
By the end of the day, you should have some good results
from both
campaigns to compare and see where you stand.
By comparing and analyzing all of the information
you have just compiled,
you will be able to start to have a good idea about:
Which product seems to sell more. Which type
of campaign is most
effective? Which type of ad for each campaign
is most effective?
This short bit of testing won't allow you to make
clear conclusions, but it will put you on the right
track. Immediately, you should start using the
ads that sell as much as you can. If ad A is
making you 5 cents per impression and ad B is making
you 5 dollars per impression - using ad B just increased
your affiliate commissions by 9900%! OK,
that's a dramatic example, but you get the point,
right? If you aren't tracking these things,
you'll never know.
If you track and continue to refine, before you know
it, you'll have an
arsenal of ads that you know pull well to use over
and over again. Once you do the leg work, it's
easy!
As you see, though, this can get quite complex.
How does one actually analyze these campaigns?
What if you have scores of affiliate programs and
quite a few campaigns
for each?
Don't worry. As I told you at the beginning,
there is an easy, cost effective
way to keep track of all of these things with just
a few mouse clicks. It's
called Affiliate Assistant.
I highly recommend checking this out as it
will, among other things, allow
you to quickly and easily implement the above plan
in one central location.
With just a few mouse clicks you can compare and analyze
all of your
various affiliate ad campaigns so you'll know
which are making you money
and which are wasting you time.
You could do all of the same things yourself with
a good database program
and multiple spreadsheets, but
Affiliate Assistant will
save you quite a bit
of time and money without having to go through all
that.
Either way, you should implement some type of organizational
and tracking
plan like this for your affiliate advertising efforts
immediately. The amount
of time you put into this will pay off exponentially
in terms of higher
commissions.
Article by Mark Joyner, CEO of Aesop Marketing
Corporation and creator of 1001 Killer Internet
Marketing Tactics - a *must have* tool for anyone
serious about doing business on the Internet.
Do yourself a favor and check this one out today:
Click
Here to Start earning
Maximum Commissions