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Posts Tagged ‘list’

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.

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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! ;)

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.

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May 1st, 2009

Affiliate Tip #2: Interview Or Add Your Own Bonuses

Affiliate Tip #2: Interview Or Add Your Own Bonuses

istock 000000931568xsmall 150x150 Affiliate Tip #2: Interview Or Add Your Own BonusesEditor’s Note: This is the second 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

As someone who runs affi­liate pro­grams for over 50 of my own pro­ducts, I can tell you 99% of affi­lia­tes are worthless.

They’ll sig­nup and send no traf­fic, or send traf­fic and only bring in a cou­ple of sales. What’s the com­mon thread behind all these affi­liate fai­lu­res I see again and again? It comes in two parts: not making an effort, and not brid­ging their mai­ling list to your offer.

I would be thri­lled if an affi­liate came to me and said:

“I want to inter­view you for 20 minu­tes about (a topic directly rela­ted to both our pro­ducts and skills). My list con­tains (size of list) subsc­ri­bers, and the last offer I pro­mo­ted con­ver­ted at (this per­cen­tage) and brought in (this amount of sales). I’ll record the inter­view, con­vert it into down­loa­da­ble form and get it out to my subsc­ri­bers within 24 hours, with a link back to your offer with me as the affi­liate, at the end of the inter­view. What’s a good time for me to call you up?”

Do you see all the points this e-​​mail hit?

Most impor­tant: this affi­liate already brings in results. He has a decent sized list, already had a pre­vious suc­cess pro­mo­ting affi­liate offers in this niche. He’s doing most of the work: he chose the topic, he will be inter­vie­wing you, calling you, and recor­ding the call.

He’s also going to take imme­diate action once the inter­view is finished, and pro­mote this offer to his subsc­ri­bers within 24 hours.

When you inter­view the pro­duct ori­gi­na­tor with you as the affi­liate, it shows that you care about giving your subsc­ri­bers a good offer, and not just cut­ting and pas­ting the e-​​mail he gave you.

It shows you have an “in” with the ori­gi­na­tor so if your buyers aren’t get­ting sup­port or need a refund, they can get to that per­son through you… they trust the pro­duct ori­gi­na­tor because they trust you.

Finally, it simply injects your per­so­na­lity into the offer. This offer isn’t being made by some outside source, it’s from you and the ori­gi­na­tor at the same time.

If the ori­gi­na­tor isn’t avai­la­ble or you just don’t want to go the inter­view route, offer one of your pro­ducts as a bonus to that affi­liate offer, that way it’s a blen­ded offer.

If your subsc­ri­bers trust you but don’t trust the pro­duct ori­gi­na­tor, they can still order from the ori­gi­na­tor with con­fi­dence… because if that pro­duct doesn’t deli­ver in value, your bonus will.

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April 24th, 2009

Affiliate Tip #1: Add Your Own Unique Slant

Affiliate Tip #1: Add Your Own Unique Slant

istock 000006789711xsmall 150x150 Affiliate Tip #1: Add Your Own Unique SlantEditor’s Note: This is the first 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

Stop being so lazy with affi­liate marketing!

An affi­liate pro­gram is where you can link to someone else’s offer with your spe­cial ID and get paid com­mis­sion every sale you make. This pro­cess “seems” really hands-​​off and easy because there’s no pro­duct crea­tion or cus­to­mer sup­port invol­ved… just send traf­fic to a pro­ven offer!

Here’s the problem.

Most mar­ke­ters are lazy and don’t rea­lize that affi­liate mar­ke­ting has its own disad­van­ta­ges. It’s tougher to build a list using affi­liate mar­ke­ting, tough to con­vert and split test, and you have to devote most of your effort to pre-​​selling and mar­ke­ting that affi­liate product.

What the heck do you need to know about affi­liate mar­ke­ting in order to pull in decent results?

If you’re serious about affi­liate mar­ke­ting, setup a squeeze page that gets peo­ple on a mai­ling list first and redi­rects to the affi­liate offer. Send traf­fic to that page using forum posts and articles.

Even if they don’t buy right away, you can keep broad­cas­ting to that list every day with remin­ders about bene­fits for that offer… things they might have mis­sed or even things you thought about the ven­dor didn’t.

For exam­ple, once I pro­mo­ted an affi­liate offer about how to create iPhone apps and I wrote a quick follow-​​up asking peo­ple… what if you thought of eBay or AdWords before anyone else? What if you regis­te­red even one or two English-​​word domain names like Busi​ness​.com or About​.com before anyone else? What would those be worth today?

What’s great about this is the pro­duct ori­gi­na­tor prac­ti­cally wrote your e-​​mails for you. You can copy huge chunks of the sales let­ters and add them as e-​​mail follow-​​ups… then add a call-​​to-​​action at the end of the e-​​mail so peo­ple can click your affi­liate link to get back to the page.

Even if they don’t buy that offer, you can even­tually hit them with a dif­fe­rent but rela­ted affi­liate offer as well.

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