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Posts Tagged ‘traffic’

July 13th, 2009

Affiliate Tip #5: Write Emails And Posts In One Sitting

Affiliate Tip #5: Write Emails And Posts In One Sitting

iStock 000004792809XSmall 150x150 Affiliate Tip #5: Write Emails And Posts In One SittingEditor’s Note: This is the fifth in a series of five quick affiliate tips by guest blogger Robert Plank. Videos of each are also posted at the end of this article. Enjoy!
– Michel Fortin

The best favor you can do for yourself and your business is to always focus on one task at a time, and always finish what you start.

How the heck do you do that on the internet, when there are distractions everywhere you look, and in affiliate marketing… when there are new offers every day ripe for you to promote?

The answer is: if you’re going to promote a new affiliate offer, write all your emails and blog posts in one sitting, before you get bored or distracted with another offer.

Sounds intimidating? It doesn’t have to be.

Remember that when you promote someone else’s offer, they tend to give you at least one cut-and-paste email. Schedule it as a future broadcast and paste it in as-is, because time is limited!

If the email they provide is more than a page long, I’ll split it up into two parts and schedule the second email to go out a week later.

Once you have those first couple of emails, look at the sales letter and see if there are any huge chunks of sales copy you can paste into an email to further promote the offer.

Any decent sales letter usually has an interesting story, a benefit list and a feature list… so there’s three more emails right there.

After checking out the sales letter, I’ll tend to think of one or two things the sales letter hadn’t thought of, and I’ll write two quick emails explaining each one. Emails don’t have to be long, just a couple of paragraphs will do, with a call-to-action at the end to get people to click on your affiliate link.

And finally, I’ll type up a couple of reminder emails for people who might have missed the offer and need to see it again.

Now you have 7 or 8 emails to promote the affiliate product. Don’t save them in a text file for later… schedule them in your autoresponder right now to send out a month apart.

Using this technique, you can schedule over six months of email promotion for just one product, in 10 to 30 minutes.

If you were really motivated, you could find the hottest converting products in your niche (I prefer to look at the Clickbank marketplace since those sort by the best pulling offers first) and in one day, fill up your autoresponder with affiliate email promotions.

Or simply make it a point to add one new offer to your autoresponder every Monday morning, before you do anything else.

If you have a blog of your own, you only need to write posts and schedule them on the same dates the emails get sent out… don’t overthink it.

That’s the key to finishing what you start: work in sprints so you can schedule it on a timer and not have to work on that promo, or even think about that promo ever again!

I hope you enjoyed this series on affiliate marketing. Please leave your comments below so I know people like it and I can write more of these. If you want back-issues, here they are!

1. Add Your Own Unique Slant to the Offer.
2. Interview the Originator or Add Your Own Bonuses.
3. Bring Something to the Table: List and Traffic.
4. Invest in Your Business: Don’t Ask for Review Copies.
5. Write Affiliate email and Blog Posts in One Sitting.

Confessions Of A Website Copywriter

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June 17th, 2009

Lazy Launch Days Are Numbered

Lazy Launch Days Are Numbered

iStock 000000772236XSmall 150x150 Lazy Launch Days Are NumberedI know your time is valuable so I’ll get right to the point.

Product owners and affiliates for the last couple years have lived a happy co-dependent existence. In the beginning, affiliates had limited choices. Today, it’s an ocean of opportunity.

The reason I’m writing you today is because I feel the industry needs a wake up call.

Here are the problems…

  1. Affiliate marketers are becoming less dependent on product owners
  2. Affiliates have more choices then ever before
  3. Affiliates have evolved with the times but product owners have not
  4. Product owners are relying too heavily on affiliates

Affiliates Don’t Need You Anymore

In the old days, an affiliate could simply link to a product owner and that was enough.

Then over time, more and more affiliate marketers were created by the product owners — so many new affiliates that, in order to start making sales, you had to offer some sort of bonus or incentive that no one else was offering.

Now in 2009, you need to go even further than just bonuses, because almost everyone’s doing bonuses at this point.

To compete with the massive amounts of affiliates, you now have to capture leads from your traffic, offer a bonus, and then point the prospect to the product owner.

Don’t forget that more and more people everyday are learning that they can sign up as an affiliate themselves and buy through their own links.

Affiliates are now generating their own leads, creating their own offers, and then sending the customer to someone else. How long before the affiliate thinks: “If I’m generating the lead and creating the offer, then why am I sending the customer to someone else?”

Basically, to compete in today’s world of affiliate marketing, an affiliate has to do all the same things a product owner normally does.

Most affiliates become affiliates to avoid the responsibilities of a product owner. You must alleviate some of the work your affiliates are having to do or risk losing them or worse gaining them as a competitor!

There’s a Network On Every Corner

Back in the day, Amazon, Clickbank, Linkshare, and a handful of others were the only affiliate networks on the scene. Now you’ve got over 32 “major” affiliate networks, not to mention all the small or start-up networks.

It gets worse, too, because new networks are constantly springing up and these networks are offering much more then the typical product owner.

Inside any one of the 10+ affiliate networks that I’m a part of, I’ve got all kinds of affiliate tools and a dedicated affiliate manager.

The average product launcher just scrapes by with a basic affiliate promotion kit. Banners, emails, keywords, and some links are not enough anymore.

Today, affiliates need brandable videos, landing pages, reports, e-courses, interviews, and articles… The Internet in 2009 is a content beast — your affiliates need content!

If your eyes are opening and you’re seeing the problems, then you should check out what the adult industry is doing for their affiliates.

The adult industry offers their affiliates free hosting, dedicated managers, a plethora of brandable landing pages, even whole membership sites that the affiliate can promote the product owner with.

Independents can beat the big networks by offering more customization, unique tools, and personal touch. If they don’t, then they’ll lose their affiliates. Which actually leads me into the third problem I see happening…

Affiliates evolved and optimized their methods for their product-owning partners. However, the product owners are still offering the same resources they offered 4, 5, and 6 years ago. Not only that, but it seems product owners have gotten greedier and lazier.

Product Owners Should Be Responsible For Conversions

In this last part, I’m going to speak for myself, and if anyone is feeling the same thing they can let me know in the comments.

The other parts I’ve already spoken with many other affiliates so I was comfortable speaking for the majority. This next part could possibly just be a weird fluke I experienced and could be totally alone in it.

But I doubt it! icon wink Lazy Launch Days Are Numbered

Here goes…

Lately, I have been making some showings in the top 10s of different joint-venture leaderboards, which sounds great. However, for most of them my conversions have been almost totally dependent on my offering a bonus.

“Wait,” you’re saying, “you make more sales by offering a bonus to your subscribers who buy through you?” No!

What I’m saying is, if I don’t offer a bonus, then I don’t make sales. I know because I tried it on the last JV leaderboard I got on. I was in the top 10 for leads, and then when it came time for sales, I never offered a bonus.

Sure enough, I got an egg in my sales column as my reward for that test.

In the product launch right before that, I offered a great bonus and came in top five in sales, making several thousand in commissions plus winning a 52″ flat screen TV.

Here’s my problem though…

I could have just emailed my list, charged for my bonus, made the several grand myself, and not shared my customers with the product owner.

If the product owner’s sales funnel requires that the affiliate offers a bonus in order to make sales…

… Then what does the affiliate need the product owner for?

(Read that again.)

I understand there is a “game” to be played, but this is not the ideal situation for affiliates. And as a product owner you want to take care of your affiliates as best you can. For example, I’ll never promote for that guy again.

In my eyes, he charged too much money for his product and the price seemed largely based on knowing his affiliates would offer a much bigger bonus to compensate for it.

Meanwhile, the affiliate is only getting 50% of revenue. Yet the affiliate is motivating the crowd, generating the leads, creating the hot offer, and generating the sale…

… While the product own just created the product!

Creating the product is a big piece of the pie, but what I’m saying over and over again, here, is that, if I have to offer such a great bonus in order for your product to make sales, I might as well just sell my bonus!

More and more of the top affiliates are getting fed up with this.

Lazy launch days are numbered because affiliates are getting sick and tired of the product owners not evolving their methods to keep the affiliates hard work secure.

Here’s a quick solutions list so you can easily identify what you need to be doing to make sure your affiliates are happy.

What You Must Do To Keep Affiliates Happy

  1. You must offer something unique to your affiliates or risk losing them to the networks.
  2. You must provide every resource an affiliate would need to make the sale, including a variety of different bonuses.
  3. The more you update your affiliates tools (e.g., emails, videos, reports, landing pages, etc), then the more they will go out and promote those new tools.
  4. As your affiliates’ job requirements evolve, so should yours as the product owner to make sure the affiliate has what’s needed and is doing what’s required.
  5. Protect your affiliates’ commissions during launches, and make their job as easy as you can — you are the CREATOR, they are the PROMOTER.
  6. Never steal from your affiliates by denying commissions on backend sales, especially during the launch.

I’m not saying I’m the perfect product owner, either, since I’m missing a few of these elements in my affiliate program myself. Although, you can bet I won’t be letting much time go by before I start making sure I have them all.

Thanks for listening to my rant. And please post your comments and tell me what you think of this situation. I’d love to hear them!

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May 18th, 2009

Affiliate Tip #3: Bring Something to The Table!

Affiliate Tip #3: Bring Something to The Table!

istock 000000048122xsmall 150x150 Affiliate Tip #3: Bring Something to The Table!Editor’s Note: This is the third in a series of five quick affiliate tips by guest blogger Robert Plank. Videos of each are also posted at the end of this article. Enjoy!
– Michel Fortin

Affiliate marketing is not a “push button solution”… it’s just a different type of selling than product launch marketing or AdSense marketing.

You are not going to be able to just sign up as an affiliate to some program and expect to make money… you have to DO something with that link!

The big formula for internet marketing is:

List + Traffic = Offers.

When you sign up for something as an affiliate, that affiliate product or service is your offer. Once you have that offer, you need a list and you need traffic if you ever expect that offer to convert.

You’d be surprised at how many people forget this step!

For this reason, I don’t recommend promoting affiliate offers right out of the gate in internet marketing. Build up a list first, even if it’s built from a small $7 report or a free ethical bribe.

Join list building giveaways, place your signature link at the bottom of your forum posts, comment on blogs, leave testimonials for products you own, publish articles about your niche… do whatever you can to get as many eyeballs in your niche in front of that opt-in box. Add an e-mail subscription box to sites that need it, such as your blog.

Bottom line: build a list first, and then send offers to that list once you’ve built up 100 subscribers or more. Does that sound like a lot? Okay… then focus on 8 subscribers a day.

Do you think that with forum, article, blog, and giveaway marketing, that you could get a measly eight subscribers in a day? If you can, then keep it up for 12 days and you have yourself 100 subscribers primed and ready to receive your affiliate offers.

Secrets From Masters of Copywriting

Secrets From Masters of Copywriting

New! Advice from top moneymakers Yanik Silver, Joe Sugerman, Dan Kennedy, Clayton Makepeace, John Carlton, Joe Vitale, and 38 others! Click for more »