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7 Sure-Fire Ways to Build Large Affiliate Checks
Everyone wants a huge affiliate check. All the advertisements promise them, but if you just buy into the affiliate program and expect large affiliate checks to come, you will be sorely disappointed. Even if you have built downline in your affiliate ...

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10 great ways to fail at affiliate 'selling'
 


Title: 10 Great ways to fail as affiliate 'seller'
Copyright Eric Koshinsky, 2003

Only by knowing how to fail are you able to succeed.

10) mlm Pyramid schemes:

If you don't know it already, multi-level marketing and other
pyramid schemes really only work for the very few who get in
early. There is also a general mistrust of mlm in the public
which makes them harder to work with. Don't confuse mlm with a
two tiered (leveled) affiliate program that pays you a bonus on
referral comissions as well. Unlike MLM, your earnings are NOT
dependant on recruiting in decent affiliate programs.

9) Awful programs with terrible payouts

Be very careful in choosing what you promote. Go over promo
material first, and get yourself a freebie copy (or some sample
chapters etc.) to preview before you join the program. Watch out
for programs that pay a 2% comission on a $4.00 product and only
send a check once you have reached $200 in total earnings!

Ok that was a bit exagerated, but you get the point. Look for a
good balance of comission rate, product cost, and payout level
before you go gangbusters promoting a dud that will never produce
any income. Also, do a little research on the company before
hand. Contact the people giving 'testimonials', visit alexa.com
to see where they are positioned, and keep an eye out for others
promoting the same programme.

8) Trying to beat the system

This is normally a result of a "I'm gonna get rich quick"
mentality. Trying to beat the system will always result in
failure. It may not be immediate, and you may even make a little
money at it for a while, but you will get caught. Many affiliate
programs are now starting to make use of black-list data. This
is information about individuals that have tried to scam
affiliate programs, used inappropriate marketing techniques such
as spam, or in some way broken an affiliate Agreement. Once you
are placed into such a list, you will quickly find it hard to
join quality affiliate programs. The simple way to avoid this
is: find quality programs that you are genuinely interested in,
buy, subscribe or use them, and then promote them with integrity.

7) You have no stake/interest in the product you are representing.

There can be any number of reasons for this. You don't like it,
you don't know anything about it, it is your brother's product,
you only took it on becuase it pays $25 per lead. Any one of
these reasons will seriously cut down your profits. Basically,
if you're not into it, skip it. The less interest you have in
what you are doing, the more difficult it is to succeed. More on
this a little later.

6) Unrelated to your website

This is one of the biggest and most common mistakes. Usually it
is caused by a strange illness called Big-Payout-itis. You can
normally tell a victim of this disease because they are normally
found in a daze with $$ in their eyes. Keep the products you
represent simple, relevant, and related to the content and
purpose of your site. Big payouts are not the direct ticket to
big profits. If you give your visitors a meaningful and
compelling reason to click the link, you will get profits. Never
forget that 20 sales at $5.00 each and 5 sales at $20 each are
the same as 1 sale at $100. Think of yourself, how much are you
willing to comfortably spend? How does that compare with your
visitors?

5) No context (like a banner ad - sitting there looking bad)

Bare - "click me pleaz so I can make sum $$" links and banners
will ALWAYS underperform a contextualized text link. Normally
such links don't perform at all. Unless there is some reason for
your visitors to click your links, they aren't much different
from the guy on the street walking up to you saying "psst, hey
buddy...wanna buy a watch?". Not likely. Surround your links
with information that is relevant to the link and where it will
take the visitor. To do this, you need to know the products or
services you are recommending. Most often you know the products
or services becuase you own or use them, or have seen first hand
how they produce benefits. You simply can't get this kind of
knowledge by reading the ad copy on a site - if that's all you
do, most likely you've been hyped!

4) Too many different programs/Too diverse programs

This is a very common problem. Promoting 100 different programs
on 100 different subject areas - will kill your chances of
success! Of course it is ok to represent several products at the
same time - often you need to do this to make a solid income.
Just be sure that they are related to your site's content, and
don't compete with each other too much (if at all). Often it is
very good to be an affiliate of several programs that complement
each other.

I'm sure you can see the advantages of promoting "Fast and easy
birdhouse kits" alongside "Home delivery birdseed" and "Jake's
guide to the birds". Compare that with a site that promotes
"Ma's cookie dough", beside "Uncle Jeb's axle grease remover"
and "Guido's kneecap replacement service". Which do you think
will be more successful? The point is STAY FOCUSED. Know what
you promote, and promote what you know.

3) No backend sales/support (ezine etc.)

You MUST have backend sales and support. If you don't know what
backend is, get your mind out of the gutter, its not what you're
thinking! Backend simply means systems that kick into play AFTER
the initial contact/sale. The absolute best of these is running
your own ezine. If you don't have an ezine and a system for
collecting email addresses and information from your visitors,
you need to get on it NOW! Don't know why? Its simple.

If a visitor comes to your site and then clicks on a link to one
of your affiliate programs, you will get a commission (assuming
you presold your link well). At that point, they're GONE. You've
lost them FOREVER! Now imagine that you have an ezine signup box
on your site and they join your ezine. Now you have them for as
long as they remain a member - possibly years! How many links
will you be able to present to them? How many more will they
click? It really is a no-brainer. Setting it up isn't realy all
that hard either.

2) No effort on your part

You need to work as an affiliate marketer. Anyone who tells you
that you can do it on 2 hours a day while sitting on a beach is
basically a LIAR! There is no question that ONCE you get
established and things automated, the workload will be lower, but
you ALWAYS need to work at it. If you don't, a $4000/month
affiliate income can change to $50/month very fast! Look at it
this way, when you build a house, do you simply leave it and
move to the next town and do it again? No, you live in the house,
enjoy its benefits and comforts, and continually maintain and

upgrade it. Building the house was the hard part, but upkeep and
enjoying the house are just as important.

1) Trying to sell

Your job as an affiliate is NOT to sell the product. Let me
repeat that, because I'm sure you missed it as you fell to the
floor. Your job as an affiliate is NOT to sell the product.
Selling the product is the job of the main site.

Your job is to get the person visiting your site to click your
affiliate link with an open mindset, and an interest in buying.
You are to Pre-Sell, or Promote if you prefer - the site and get
the person to do what you most want them to do: Be a Curious
George and CLICK THE LINK! However, you need them to do more
than simply click the link. You need to make sure that they are
clicking the link with an interest in what lies behind it. If
they are simply clicking a banner because it is flashy, you won't
have much success. However if you create an interest, a desire
to know more, about the benefits, the value of clicking the link,
then you will have an instant winner. The more you know about how
to do this effectively, the more you will succeed and profit.

---------------------------
Eric Koshinsky: webmaster and guide at Newbie-guides.com
We aim to provide useful tips and guidance for those who
are new to personal online marketing. Learn more about
programs, techniques, and software that can help you
reach your goals. I look forward to getting to know you.
http://www.newbie-guides.com/?aa
Join our newsletter: news@newbie-guides.com

About the Author
---------------------------
Eric Koshinsky: webmaster and guide at Newbie-guides.com
We aim to provide useful tips and guidance for those who
are new to personal online marketing. Learn more about
programs, techniques, and software that can help you
reach your goals. I look forward to getting to know you.
http://www.newbie-guides.com/?aa
Join our newsletter: news@newbie-guides.com


-----------------

Types of affiliate websites Affiliate websites are often categorized by merchants (i.e., advertisers) and affiliate networks. There are currently no industry-wide accepted standards for the categorization. The following types of websites are generic, yet are commonly understood and used by affiliate marketers.
  • Search affiliates that utilize pay per click search engines to promote the advertisers' offers (i.e., search arbitrage)
  • Comparison shopping websites and directories
  • Loyalty websites, typically characterized by providing a reward system for purchases via points back, cash back
  • CRM sites that offer charitable donations
  • Coupon and rebate websites that focus on sales promotions
  • Content and niche market websites, including product review sites
  • Personal websites (This type of website was the reason for the birth of affiliate marketing; however, such websites are almost reduced to complete irrelevance compared to the other types of affiliate websites.)
  • Weblogs and website syndication feeds
  • E-mail list affiliates (i.e., owners of large opt-in -mail lists that typically employ e-mail drip marketing) and newsletter list affiliates, which are typically more content-heavy
  • Registration path or co-registration affiliates who include offers from other merchants during the registration process on their own website
  • Shopping directories that list merchants by categories without providing coupons, price comparisons, or other features based on information that changes frequently, thus requiring continual updates
  • Cost per action networks (i.e., top-tier affiliates) that expose offers from the advertiser with which they are affiliated to their own network of affiliates
  • Websites using adbars (e.g. Adsense) to display context-sensitive, highly-relevant ads for products on the site

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