Affiliate Programs to Avoid
As an affiliate marketer of Internet dating
services, I'm always on the lookout for good
quality dating sites and products to offer my
single visitors. Merchants help me out when
they let me know about their new products
and affiliate programs.
I was therefore thrilled when one of my
friendly affiliate competitors got in touch
to tell me that he'd started his own Internet
dating service and affiliate program.
Having launched a community membership
site myself last year, I could fully
appreciate the huge amount of time and money my
friend had invested to develop this new
site. He was justifiably proud of his
accomplishment and I was excited by the prospect
of having a product to promote that would
benefit everyone - my customers, my friend
and myself.
Unfortunately, it didn't quite work out
that way.
The first stumbling block was the low
commission he offered. His top rate was 30%,
with no commissions on recurring sales.
This puzzled me. As an affiliate marketer
of dating programs, he should have been
aware that new sites offer at least 50% on
new and recurring sales to entice good
affiliates to sign up. If commissions on
recurring sales are not offered, then the rates
on new sales should be increased to between
70 and 100 percent.
In most cases, his affiliate program
would have struck out for me at that point.
However, as this was my friend's site, it
occurred to me that perhaps his product was
so unique that the potential for high volume
sales might offset the lower commission. Hoping
for the best, I continued my review.
When I got to the site, the first thing I
noticed was '6 registered members'
prominently displayed at the top of the
homepage. That normally wouldn't be a
problem, except for the fact that my
customers are looking for friends and soul
mates. If I send them to a site where there
are only six people to meet, they'll likely be
disappointed. Worse, by wasting their time,
they lose trust in my judgement and then I
will lose them as customers.
That's not good. My customers are
literally my bread and butter. Giving them
what they want and expect is how I stay in
business. Paying for traffic that I send to
a merchant site where there is nothing to
buy, will put me out of business.
(This is how a membership site should be
structured. When starting a dating service,
the merchant pays for advertising to bring
people to their site. To entice visitors to sign
up as members, he will initially offer his
services for fr*ee. When the database is
large enough to attract paying customers,
the affiliate program manager then invites
potential affiliates to join their program.)
Although my friend's program had already
struck out for my customers and me, I was
still curious, so I kept on looking.
Next I clicked on a link labeled 'Dating
Resources'. Expecting to find Internet
dating tips and advice, I found links and
banners pointing to Lavalife, FriendFinder
and other affiliated dating sites instead.
When I asked him about placing affiliate
programs on his site, my friend said he
simply wanted to supplement his income until the
dating service got *rolling*. I can
understand his motivation. However, what he
doesn't understand is the concept of customer
'hijacking'.
As an affiliate, you pay good money to
get visitors to your site. You presell your
merchants' products and expect the merchant to
honor their end of the bargain by making the
sale and sending your commission check. You
don't pay for the merchant to send YOUR
customers to THEIR affiliated merchants.
I didn't need to look any further. I told
my friend that I would hold off on signing
up and why. Fortunately, he understood and has
already alleviated some of the problems I
mentioned.
Knowing when NOT to sign up for an
affiliate program can sometimes be a tough
call. However, you can simplify the process
considerably. Put yourself inside your
customer's head. If the product won't work
for them, the program strikes out. Simple as
that.
Author's Resource: Article by Rosalind Gardner,
author of the best-selling "Super Affiliate Handbook: How I Made $436,797 in One Year Selling Other People's Stuff Online". To learn how you too can succeed in Internet and affiliate marketing, please visit
http://NetProfitsToday.com
(To use this article on your website please review Reprint Guidelines.)
© Copyright Rosalind Gardner, All
Rights Reserved.
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