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Affiliate Managers: Your
Top Five Biggest
Affiliate Program
Mistakes
In this article I will
show affiliate managers
the mistakes they should
avoid if they want to
build a successful
affiliate program.
I felt compelled to
write this article after
seeing the same mistakes
made by most of the
hundreds of affiliate
programs I have joined
since I started
promoting them in 1997.
I have made a nice
living from affiliate
programs over the years,
so I know a thing or two
about them. I would
dearly love to make more
money with affiliate
programs, but affiliate
managers don't make it
easy for us affiliates.
So hopefully this
article will do a bit
for the cause.
Here are my top five
biggest affiliate
program mistakes that I
find today:
1. Competing With
Your Affiliates.
This is by far the worst
mistake made by
companies that offer
affiliate programs. I
often see companies for
products I am trying to
promote compete with me
in the search engine
rankings and pay per
click advertising
programs.
Why companies invest
money and resources in
competing with their
affiliates is beyond me.
By competing with me,
you're trying to put me
out of business. Have
marketing directors ever
thought of it in that
way? Because if you
succeed, you will no
longer have an affiliate
network to speak of.
The money would be
better spent on
supporting your
affiliate network by
creating a better
product, providing more
referral statistics,
higher commission
payouts, faster support,
and more, fresh
promotional creatives.
So if you're an
affiliate manager
reading this article,
tell your affiliate
director at your next
meeting to STOP
competing with your
affiliates, and support
them instead!
2. Not Providing Your
Affiliates With Useful,
Real-Time Statistics.
All marketers rely on
statistics to measure
the effectiveness of any
marketing campaign. Yet
most affiliate programs
only provide their
affiliates with basic
statistics such as
number of visitors sent,
number of sales, and
commission earned. These
statistics aren't much
help to affiliates who
want to measure the
effectiveness of a
particular pay per click
campaign.
Affiliate managers -
please consider
providing these useful
statistics so that I can
market your products
effectively:
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Archive of
daily,
weekly,
monthly,
quarterly,
and yearly
statistics
and by date
range.
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Commission
earned,
broken down
by product
or service,
and how the
customer was
referred to
the site. |
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Daily email
update of
all
affiliate
statistics.
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Instant
email
notification
of a new
affiliate. |
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Instant
email
notification
of a new
free trial
sign up. |
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Instant
email
notification
of a new
sale and all
relevant
statistics.
I love
getting new
sales
notification
emails!
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Number of
free trial
downloads or
subscriptions. |
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Number of
returns and
all relevant
statistics. |
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Affiliate
links with
trackable
IDs, so that
affiliates
can tell
exactly
which site,
or ad
campaign is
sending the
referrals
and sales. |
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Unique
clicks -
which refers
to the
unique
number of
visitors
referred -
in addition
to raw
clicks -
which refers
to the total
number of
click
throughs.
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A list of
top
performing
affiliate
statistics,
so that
affiliates
can compare
how they're
doing and
which areas
they can
improve on.
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Include the
most
important
statistics
at the top
of the email
and subject
line.
There's
nothing
worse than
having to
scroll down
to see what
the referral
purchased or
how much
commission I
have made. |
The following only
apply if the affiliate
program offers more than
one level of
commissions.
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Commission
earned as a
result of
referrals
sent by
2nd-tier
affiliates.
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Commission
earned,
broken down
by
commission
level.
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Number of
2nd-tier
affiliates
referred.
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I've been promoting
products and services
via affiliate programs
since 1997 and I have
yet to come across an
affiliate program that
provides anything close
to these statistics.
3. Not Compensating
Your Affiliates Fairly
For Their Hard Work.
The #1 incentive for any
affiliate is cold hard
cash. Money sells! So
tell your marketing
director to fire the
search engine
optimization firm and
advertising department,
and redirect the
resources to paying your
affiliates a higher
commission rate.
Another thing I hate is
seeing my commissions go
down the drain because
someone I had referred
signs up to the
affiliate program and
purchases the product
via their affiliate
link. It almost feels
like I'm being robbed
blind! I highly
recommend affiliate
managers deter this
practice by making it
harder for affiliates to
pocket the commission
from their own
purchases, at least the
initial one.
4. Not Providing
Enough Fresh Promotional
Creatives.
Most affiliate managers
seem to give their
promotional creatives
little thought. All they
offer is a handful of
468x60 banners, buttons
and text links. What
happens is that
affiliates end up using
the same ads on
hundreds, even thousands
of web sites.
Affiliate managers -
what about these
promotional creatives?
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Articles and
tips with
embedded
affiliate
links
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Classified
ads |
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Customer
testimonials |
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Direct email
ads |
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Email
signatures |
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Newsletter
ads |
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pay per
click ads |
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Pop-up/under
ads |
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Product
photographs |
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Product
reviews |
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Product
screenshots
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Rich-media
ads |
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Skyscrapers
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Staff
interviews |
Listen up! Different ads
perform better on
different sites. And ads
generally have a life
span of a carton of
milk. So offer your
affiliates a greater
variety of ads, more
often.
5. Not Providing
Fast, Quality Support
For Your Affiliates.
This is the 21st
century. Don't make your
affiliates wait longer
for an email reply than
it takes to send a
letter by snail-mail
post.
Don't outsource your
affiliate support work.
If you have to, then at
least train your support
staff so that they
understand the ins and
outs of your products
and affiliate program.
I'm often dumbfounded by
affiliate support staff
who can't give me
answers to simple
questions.
Well there you have it -
my five biggest
complaints about
affiliate programs
today. I hope affiliate
managers take note and
take strides to better
support their
affiliates, because if
you don't, affiliates
will find other ways to
make money on their
site.
Affiliate marketers - if
you agree with what I've
said, send this article
to your affiliate
program managers!
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