The Seven Keys to Success for Affiliates
An Excerpt from Winning the Affiliate Game
-- By Declan Dunn
Affiliate programs may seem an easy way to sell. The
problem is, most people focus on a one shot sale. They
spend all their time chasing new customers, trying to sell
them, and then forgetting about them. Without a good sales
process and target marketing, sales will not be high.
Without generating traffic to your site, you will not sell
at all. If you do not follow up with your loyal customers
who have bought (talk about a sign of trust), you are
wasting your time and money.
The statistics prove this out; first time sales will
generate, at best, a 30 purchase rate. That would be an
excellent result; most often it is between 1-2%. That's
one sale per hundred visitors!
Repeat sales to a loyal, buying customer base is much
better; statistics show that customers who have bought
once will respond much better to your offer, more like
20-30% purchasing. That's 20 customers per hundred
compared to one per hundred. Remember this statistic as
you market.
Someone who buys from you once is more likely to buy from
you again and again. Make sure you treat your customers
with respect and build up your list of customers. This is
the most crucial part of your business. Affiliate programs
give you multiple products to offer your customers, but
make sure you take the same common sense steps you would in
the real world.
Becoming an affiliate for other Web sites' products and
service is a great idea if you take the right steps. The
following are things to look for, and ways to plan out what
you are about to do.
Sell One Thing and Sell it Well
Web flea markets don't work for the most part. The Web is a
virtually free publishing medium that allows people to
offer anything quickly and easily.
This is also the weakness of this "free" distribution
system called the Internet. It is free in terms of printing
costs, but not in terms of time. A Web Site with tons of
products and services is a tricky venture to succeed with.
For example, most people have 3-4 books in mind when
shopping. Why would you approach them with 3 million
titles? The same logic applies to what you are offering.
Focus on a few good products and sell them well.
So many Web Sites try to offer everything under the sun;
this approach is confusing and has never proven to be a
good basis to sell. Focus on a few products and sell them
very well; then follow up to offer other products and
services.
Think of it this way; if you have ever been in a
restaurant with children, you will notice that waiters
often approach them differently. Instead of showing them a
whole slew of choices on a menu, they point the children to
one or two choices. The parents are happy, and the child
can make a simple choice. Apply this same approach to your
Web Site; focus your visitors on just one or two products,
and sell them very well. Do not confuse the issue by
trying to sell them everything on one visit. People simply
do not buy things that way.
Get Good Profit Margins
Amazon.com is the leader in affiliate programs, which is
surprising. They pay 5-130 per book. Books are often sold
for less than $20.
At best, you are working for tips like a waiter, at $3.50 a
pop. Unfortunately, if you do not have a busy restaurant,
this deal will yield little or nothing.
Let's say you want to make $1,000 a month; you would have
to sell 286 books to reach your goal. That is a huge
volume.
Now compare that to a $50 book; your best case scenario
becomes $7.50 a book. You now have to sell 133 books to
reach your $1,000 goal.
Believe it or not, it takes the same effort to market the
cheaper book as the more expensive one. Do your math and
see which products sell the best, and remember to lead with
an entry product that is not too expensive, and follow up
with the more expensive products later, after you have
built up the trust and name recognition needed for a more
expensive purchase.
Don't just Display a Banner Ad and hope for the Best
Many affiliate programs put up banner ads; the visitor
simply clicks on the banner ad and goes to the company's
Web Site to make the buying decision. The problem with
banner ads is that 1-2% of people will actually click on
them; so if you generated 1,000 visitors in a month, only
10-20 will even click on the banner ad. If you even convert
30 of those to sales, you will make only one or two sales a
month.
It is all a game of numbers; if you have a site with great
traffic, this can change. But volume businesses are
difficult to profit from; the bottom line is, do more than
just put a banner up at your site.
The same logic applies to posting at newsgroups; because
it is so easy to post to many newsgroups, people believe
that volume will generate results. The results have proven
to be awful; mass newsgroups postings, like bulk email,
are dangerous and rarely yield the returns. They are more
a headache than a benefit in most cases.
Use Content, Updates, and Keep your Site Consistent
Remember that you are selling a product or service; you are
not just posting an advertisement at your Web Site. Use
content to enhance what you are doing. Amazon.com
encourages this in their reseller's program; you are urged
to review and recommend specific books for your target
market. If you just send people to Amazon's Web Site, you
get a smaller percentage of the sale.
Amazon.com had the right idea; a product recommended to a
customer is more effective than a million titles at your
Web Site. A consumer likely has 3-4 titles in their head
when they shop; point them to the right ones.
Give them a zillion choices and you confuse them. So keep
updating your site, keep it consistent, and try to emulate
the page that you will be linking to. If it changes, it
tells the customer they are in a different retail space.
This may affect their purchase decision; anything that
makes them notice a difference can interrupt their impulse
to buy. Keep your customers comfortable and within the same
purchase decision.
Target your Market
If you try to sell to everyone, you will sell to no one. It
is that simple.
It is amazing how people do not target their market. They
try to sell everything under the sun. Once again, it is the
illusion of a volume business. If you think this will
succeed, go down to your local retail store. Look at the
small profit margins they have to deal with. Retail is a
brutal game. My friend Jonathan Mizel has a great saying;
sell expensive products to rich people. More importantly,
target your market and make sure they can afford what you
have to offer.
And make sure you can afford to live on what you will be
earning.
Market Your Site
The bottom line is that you will have to market the site
and the offer. If you just put up a number of affiliate
programs, hoping one will pull, you are taking the magic
dust approach. It is like the lottery; you may win, but the
odds are against you. Take the responsibility to market and
promote your offers; find out where the customers are and
drive them to the site.
By many estimates, you will have to generate 500 visitors a
day to make decent money; that's over 15,000 visitors a
month. Your minimum amount of visitors should be 5,000 for
a successful program; it is simple a case of math.
One percent of 5,000 is 50; can you make enough money on
50 sales? Not if you are making $2 a book at Amazon.com.
But if you are making $25 a sale, you could make $1,250 per
month. Keep your expectations realistic; realize that
marketing and sales are a numbers game. Know the numbers
you hope to generate and focus on those affiliate programs
that give you the best bang for your time and effort.
Take Precautions to Make Sure you Get Your Share
Like any business, check out what is going on. Affiliate
programs are simply your chance to resell other's products
and services. Make sure you believe in what you are
selling.
Take the same precautions you would in the real world; what
will be your investment in time, and money? Have you
actually tried the product or service? A personal
recommendation and belief is much more powerful than
selling something simply because it has a good profit
margin.
Are you just generating leads for someone else? I have seen
affiliate programs that have no intention of paying you for
what they are selling. One client had to wait six months
after making tremendous sales for a company to simply get
paid his commission.
Make sure you get paid for what you sell. Often this means
waiting 30 days for a monthly check. Sometimes it means
quarterly payments, like Amazon.com does.
Article By; Declan Dunn
6960 Ridgeway, Magalia, CA. 95954 Phone: (800)
280-9807 or (530) 873-3637 Fax: (530) 873-0192
Declan Dunn offers consultations, seminars, and training to
Web businesses, developers, ISP's, and consultants.
An Excerpt from Winning the Affiliate Game
-- By Declan Dunn
Affiliate programs may seem an easy way to sell. The
problem is, most people focus on a one shot sale. They
spend all their time chasing new customers, trying to sell
them, and then forgetting about them. Without a good sales
process and target marketing, sales will not be high.
Without generating traffic to your site, you will not sell
at all. If you do not follow up with your loyal customers
who have bought (talk about a sign of trust), you are
wasting your time and money.
The statistics prove this out; first time sales will
generate, at best, a 30 purchase rate. That would be an
excellent result; most often it is between 1-2%. That's
one sale per hundred visitors!
Repeat sales to a loyal, buying customer base is much
better; statistics show that customers who have bought
once will respond much better to your offer, more like
20-30% purchasing. That's 20 customers per hundred
compared to one per hundred. Remember this statistic as
you market.
Someone who buys from you once is more likely to buy from
you again and again. Make sure you treat your customers
with respect and build up your list of customers. This is
the most crucial part of your business. Affiliate programs
give you multiple products to offer your customers, but
make sure you take the same common sense steps you would in
the real world.
Becoming an affiliate for other Web sites' products and
service is a great idea if you take the right steps. The
following are things to look for, and ways to plan out what
you are about to do.
Sell One Thing and Sell it Well
Web flea markets don't work for the most part. The Web is a
virtually free publishing medium that allows people to
offer anything quickly and easily.
This is also the weakness of this "free" distribution
system called the Internet. It is free in terms of printing
costs, but not in terms of time. A Web Site with tons of
products and services is a tricky venture to succeed with.
For example, most people have 3-4 books in mind when
shopping. Why would you approach them with 3 million
titles? The same logic applies to what you are offering.
Focus on a few good products and sell them well.
So many Web Sites try to offer everything under the sun;
this approach is confusing and has never proven to be a
good basis to sell. Focus on a few products and sell them
very well; then follow up to offer other products and
services.
Think of it this way; if you have ever been in a
restaurant with children, you will notice that waiters
often approach them differently. Instead of showing them a
whole slew of choices on a menu, they point the children to
one or two choices. The parents are happy, and the child
can make a simple choice. Apply this same approach to your
Web Site; focus your visitors on just one or two products,
and sell them very well. Do not confuse the issue by
trying to sell them everything on one visit. People simply
do not buy things that way.
Get Good Profit Margins
Amazon.com is the leader in affiliate programs, which is
surprising. They pay 5-130 per book. Books are often sold
for less than $20.
At best, you are working for tips like a waiter, at $3.50 a
pop. Unfortunately, if you do not have a busy restaurant,
this deal will yield little or nothing.
Let's say you want to make $1,000 a month; you would have
to sell 286 books to reach your goal. That is a huge
volume.
Now compare that to a $50 book; your best case scenario
becomes $7.50 a book. You now have to sell 133 books to
reach your $1,000 goal.
Believe it or not, it takes the same effort to market the
cheaper book as the more expensive one. Do your math and
see which products sell the best, and remember to lead with
an entry product that is not too expensive, and follow up
with the more expensive products later, after you have
built up the trust and name recognition needed for a more
expensive purchase.
Don't just Display a Banner Ad and hope for the Best
Many affiliate programs put up banner ads; the visitor
simply clicks on the banner ad and goes to the company's
Web Site to make the buying decision. The problem with
banner ads is that 1-2% of people will actually click on
them; so if you generated 1,000 visitors in a month, only
10-20 will even click on the banner ad. If you even convert
30 of those to sales, you will make only one or two sales a
month.
It is all a game of numbers; if you have a site with great
traffic, this can change. But volume businesses are
difficult to profit from; the bottom line is, do more than
just put a banner up at your site.
The same logic applies to posting at newsgroups; because
it is so easy to post to many newsgroups, people believe
that volume will generate results. The results have proven
to be awful; mass newsgroups postings, like bulk email,
are dangerous and rarely yield the returns. They are more
a headache than a benefit in most cases.
Use Content, Updates, and Keep your Site Consistent
Remember that you are selling a product or service; you are
not just posting an advertisement at your Web Site. Use
content to enhance what you are doing. Amazon.com
encourages this in their reseller's program; you are urged
to review and recommend specific books for your target
market. If you just send people to Amazon's Web Site, you
get a smaller percentage of the sale.
Amazon.com had the right idea; a product recommended to a
customer is more effective than a million titles at your
Web Site. A consumer likely has 3-4 titles in their head
when they shop; point them to the right ones.
Give them a zillion choices and you confuse them. So keep
updating your site, keep it consistent, and try to emulate
the page that you will be linking to. If it changes, it
tells the customer they are in a different retail space.
This may affect their purchase decision; anything that
makes them notice a difference can interrupt their impulse
to buy. Keep your customers comfortable and within the same
purchase decision.
Target your Market
If you try to sell to everyone, you will sell to no one. It
is that simple.
It is amazing how people do not target their market. They
try to sell everything under the sun. Once again, it is the
illusion of a volume business. If you think this will
succeed, go down to your local retail store. Look at the
small profit margins they have to deal with. Retail is a
brutal game. My friend Jonathan Mizel has a great saying;
sell expensive products to rich people. More importantly,
target your market and make sure they can afford what you
have to offer.
And make sure you can afford to live on what you will be
earning.
Market Your Site
The bottom line is that you will have to market the site
and the offer. If you just put up a number of affiliate
programs, hoping one will pull, you are taking the magic
dust approach. It is like the lottery; you may win, but the
odds are against you. Take the responsibility to market and
promote your offers; find out where the customers are and
drive them to the site.
By many estimates, you will have to generate 500 visitors a
day to make decent money; that's over 15,000 visitors a
month. Your minimum amount of visitors should be 5,000 for
a successful program; it is simple a case of math.
One percent of 5,000 is 50; can you make enough money on
50 sales? Not if you are making $2 a book at Amazon.com.
But if you are making $25 a sale, you could make $1,250 per
month. Keep your expectations realistic; realize that
marketing and sales are a numbers game. Know the numbers
you hope to generate and focus on those affiliate programs
that give you the best bang for your time and effort.
Take Precautions to Make Sure you Get Your Share
Like any business, check out what is going on. Affiliate
programs are simply your chance to resell other's products
and services. Make sure you believe in what you are
selling.
Take the same precautions you would in the real world; what
will be your investment in time, and money? Have you
actually tried the product or service? A personal
recommendation and belief is much more powerful than
selling something simply because it has a good profit
margin.
Are you just generating leads for someone else? I have seen
affiliate programs that have no intention of paying you for
what they are selling. One client had to wait six months
after making tremendous sales for a company to simply get
paid his commission.
Make sure you get paid for what you sell. Often this means
waiting 30 days for a monthly check. Sometimes it means
quarterly payments, like Amazon.com does.
Article By; Declan Dunn
6960 Ridgeway, Magalia, CA. 95954 Phone: (800)
280-9807 or (530) 873-3637 Fax: (530) 873-0192
Declan Dunn offers consultations, seminars, and training to
Web businesses, developers, ISP's, and consultants.