New Google Adwords Policy Benefits Affiliates
Until recently, if you did a search on the term 'satellite
dish' at Google, and then surveyed the URL's in the Adwords
listings, you were bound to see that most of the ads linked
to just one company. You'd also note that most listings ended
with the 'aff' (affiliate site) designation.
Eight ads all linking to the same site. How useless and
frustrating was that?
Well, Google has just introduced a new affiliates Adwords
policy that finally addresses that problem.
However, the new policy has been met with much whining on
various affiliate and Internet marketing forums.
Why?
'Cause affiliates who link directly from Adwords to their
merchant partners' sites will have to get to work or go
home.
Well, maybe.
There seems to be a loophole in the new policy's wording.
Here's how the new affiliate policy reads:
"With this new affiliate policy, we'll only display one ad
per search query for affiliates and parent companies sharing
the same URL. This way, users will have a more diverse
sampling of advertisements to choose from."
"Affiliates or advertisers using unique URLs in their ads
will not be affected by this change. Please note that your
Display URL must match the URL of your landing page, and you
may not simply frame another site."
Did they mean to say 'domain', not 'URL'?
If Google did indeed intend 'URL', then there is no problem
for those who engage in the 'Google Cash' method of
affiliate marketing, as each affiliate URL is unique.
Here's an example.
These are URL's for 3 affiliate marketers promoting the
'FriendFinder' dating service.
http://friendfinder.com/go/p1234
http://friendfinder.com/go/p5869
http://friendfinder.com/go/p3468
Each URL is unique, ergo it should be no problem to for
affiliates to link directly to Friendfinder's site with
their affiliate links.
However, if in fact Google meant 'domain', that's quite a
different kettle of fish.
Because each URL above points to the 'friendfinder.com'
domain, only one listing will be displayed, and chosen on
the basis of Ad Rank.
Here's the official wording from within the policy.
"For instance, if a user searches for books on Google.com or
anywhere on the Google search and content networks, Google
will take an inventory of ads running for the keyword books.
If we find that two or more ads compete under the same URL,
we'll display the ad with the highest Ad Rank."
Ad Rank is determined by a combination of an ad's maximum
cost-per-click and clickthrough rate.
Less competition is great news for affiliates who have always
linked back to their own sites... as Super Affiliates always
do.
One more benefit to affiliate marketers in Google's new
Adwords policy is that you no longer need to identify
yourself as an affiliate in your ad text. That means no more
'aff' at the end of the ad... and 4 more spaces to add
content to your listing.
I figure consumers had no idea what 'aff' meant anyway, so
Google just wanted to get rid of what looked like garble in
the listings.
However, your current ad text will continue to display your
affiliate status until you change it.
Assuming Google DID mean 'domain', this new policy is good
news for affiliates... genuine affiliate marketers.
I've always taught that affiliates with content sites enjoy
much higher conversion rates.
It's simple. Spend an hour writing an endorsement, upload it
to your web site, then advertise that link on Google
Adwords.
Why waste advertising dollars on a .5 percent conversion,
when it only takes an hour to double or even quadruple that
rate?
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
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