If you have a website or you are indeed planning a website and you want to uncover an addition source of revenue look no further than an affiliate programs.
Why are affiliate programs proving so popular with webmasters?
Well they are relatively quick and easy to set up. There is no product development, stock holding, billing, shipping or customer support for you, the affiliate, to be bogged down with. The merchant does it all while you're free to concentrate on the marketing side...that means you're free to build traffic, which is the life blood to any successful website.
All you need is a website (sometimes you don't even need that as you can use newsletters or a merchant's sub domain), and a bit of time to get started. There are no additional start-up costs, beyond having your own website and you can earn multiple streams of income through combining affiliate programs.
Hey! Where are you going? Not so fast buddy. :-)
There is something you must know before you go and plaster affiliate links across that precious website of yours...not all affiliate programs are equal.
Some affiliate programs are geared to maximising your income and satisfaction. While unfortunately, some programs are no more than a time drain for very little. A potent fact is that just 10% of affiliates will account for 90% of revenues. Yes they have strong traffic, but they do the "right" thing with the "right" affiliate programs. The sad fact is you will spend just as much time promoting and working on a dud affiliate program as you will do on an income exploding affiliate program. How do you sort the wheat from the chaff...the boys from the men?
I am glad you asked. It is easy to find great affiliate programs that will earn you income and enhance your reputation...as they share certain characteristics. Let us consider what distinguishes those outstanding affiliate programs from the others.
High Quality Product/Service
It's your reputation on the line. If you promote a poor affiliate program your credibility will plummet. Will that visitor return to you, let alone follow another one of your tips? I don't think so. You work so hard to get traffic and then you blow it on merchants with low quality products/services.
Don't recommend products that are poor or overpriced. If I recommend a product...I buy it first. I mean if you don't buy and use it, how can you possibly recommend it? Only recommend products and services that you yourself would consider buying? Buy it and become an expert in it (this will really be great research when it comes to you writing a presell on your website about it). I only recommend products and services that I have been 110% impressed with.
Again, you should only promote affiliate links that complement the theme of your website...this is vital if you are to achieve and maintain an impressive click through rate. No point in promoting hairpieces if your content is aimed at children. No point in promoting US tax services if your audience is in the UK.
Is that where I am going wrong? Doh!
Does the affiliate program that you are promoting have a good range of offerings? Are they all of equally high quality? Are new products/services regularly released or are they stale and dating back to 1994?
Competitively Price
Have a look at the merchant's website. Do their prices seem reasonable? Do they seem in line with the competition? There is no point in promoting uncompetitive products/services. After all this is the web and here is the information age. Comparison pricing is only a mouse click away. Only promote honestly priced products.
Quality of Merchant's Website Does the merchant have an attractive, yet functional site? Would you be proud to represent their site? If you can't answer "yes", don't bother. If you think its appalling your visitors will think the same.
Do the pages load correctly? How long does it take to download a page? Give it the time test. If it takes more than 15 seconds on a 56-bit modem to download, will people wait? A slow website can kill all your hard work.
Do all the links work? Are the colours sane? Is the website easy to navigate. Is it intuitive to know how to buy? Is there a Privacy Statement? Is there a way to contact the merchant? Is there a telephone number? Does the merchant have Terms & Conditions? Is there a Terms of Use regarding the web site? Does this merchant look credible? Would you trust this site with your credit card details?
Read the merchant's website. Does the copy captivate and sell? You did your job..."the presell" now you need the merchant's web site to sell. Is the website set out logically from entry to sale? The last thing you want is to deliver potential customers only for them to be bombarded with 100 zillion different links...a confused visitor is often a short-lived visitor.
Value Added Links
Does the merchant offer you the ability to link straight to individual products, rather than just to the home page. If the visitor has to FIND the product that you recommend, your Conversion Rate plummets. Making it easy on the visitor will make earning a healthy affiliate income easier!
Ensure the merchant has a range of text links, product links, banners and graphics to put on your web page. Arguably, selling in context via text and product links have a higher click through rate vis-ΰ-vis banners and graphics.
Confirm how each link will work. Some require a click from a website only, while other links can be tracked via an email as well as from a web site.
Payment Model
On what basis do you earn your commission? Is the affiliate program based on Pay-Per-Sale, Pay-Per-Lead or Pay-Per-Click? Or indeed a combination of way? Obviously, Pay-Per-Click will generate a high number of transactions than Pay-Per-Sale, but the value of each is considerably lower. Some programs will require 250 clicks to earn the equivalent of what some other programs will pay in just one sale.
I would steer clear of the Pay-Per-Click programs. As well as having lower commission they just don't represent value. They are open to abuse on both sides. And quite frankly the Pay-Per-Click model is not a sustainable model.
Affiliate Support
This is not just how quickly and how fully the merchant replies to your queries; it goes much further than that basic matter. Yes, you do indeed want queries to be answered promptly (you should send a query and see), but you should expect much more.
Does the merchant give accurate, reliable real-time online statistics? Are these audited or presented by a third party? Are these stats sent to you a monthly report or can you view them in real-time using a URL?
Do they give detailed traffic and linking stats such as unique visitors, impressions? conversion rates? commission earned per