Affiliate Marketing Frequently Asked Questions

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One of the things we pride ourselves on at BoduWeb is the ability to explain options and alternatives for your website in simple language. As part of this policy, we've grouped together common questions that crop up in the area of affiliate marketing with new clients, and provide answers here. Whether or not you choose to bring your business to Bodu Web, we hope the questions and answers provided below will help you develop a clear idea of what affiliate marketing, both from a publisher and advertiser's view point is, and whether it's a good idea for your web site.

If you have a question relating to affiliate marketing, send it to us using the online submission form on the right of this page, and we'll try to answer it as quickly and clearly as possible. If the question can be of help to others, we'll also publish it here on this page.

Helping to put your business/organisation on the web

  • What is affiliate Marketing?

    Let's try to put this simply. Affiliate marketing is when a company sells its services/products through a network of affiliates - who make a commission from sales or leads provided. It has become a powerful internet tool in recent years, and one o...

  • How much money can I make out of publishing affiliate links?

    How long is a piece of string, my friend? The first thing that should be stressed, over and over, is that there are no guarantees with affiliate advertising. Rather than traditional advertising, where you lease space based upon readership, with th...

  • Should I put ads on my site?

    Placing advertising on each and every square inch of website space is the latest craze, but it doesn't always make sense.

    When doesn't it make sense? Well, straight away if you're website is selling your business. Putting ads on your site ...

  • Can I use my blog for affiliate marketing?

    Sure. As long as you can post the tracker codes required by all affiliate programs into your entries, then there's no reason why you shouldn't use your blog for affiliate marketing.

    In fact, blogs tend to make better places to place affil...

  • How do I decide on which affiliate network to sign up with?

    The handy thing is that most Affiliate networks offer non-exclusive contracts, meaning you can sign up with various different ones and try them out simultaneously (always check the small print in the contract before signing up - if a network is as...

Affiliate Marketing News from around the Net

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Not only do we provide faqs on affiliate marketing, Bodu Web also brings you affiliate marketing headlines and links from arround the web. We think the best way for you to get to grips with the possibilities, and drawbacks of affiliate marketing, is to read up as much as you can. Headlines are taken from various sources, and displayed using xml parsing technology. All headlines are displayed in good faith - please let us know in cases of errors, complaints or ommissions

Wacky (or Wonky) Ad for "The Wackness"

wackness%20ad.jpgCan't figure out whether this is an ad serving problem, or an issue with Firefox 3.0. But every time I visit a page in the film section of The Village Voice, two ads for current film "The Wackness" display.

Well, make that 2 1/2 ads. An upside-down, partial ad also appears, spilling down into the lower frame of the browser.

If it's an ad serving issue, it's easy to straighten out. But if the new version of Firefox, which is setting download records, is messing with ad serving, the industry is going to have to sit up and take notice.

Anyone else out there getting wacky, wonky ads on their new Firefox browser?

Source: ClickZ News Blog | 4 Jul 2008, 2:15 pm

Getting 150% ROI From Your Article Marketing…

Happy 4th of July!

Before you throw stones at me for not talking about PPC, hear me out! Amit asked me to do a guest post today because he’s out enjoying his ridiculous lifestyle while leaving the rest of us to work :)

The concept I’m about to share today is something I taught Amit a few weeks back, he found it useful enough to implement the very next day. I thought it was a safe assumption that if he enjoyed it, so would his readers…

Most PPC affiliates I know really look down on article marketing. Mostly it’s not enough “bulk” traffic for them and it takes too long to bring results.

Yes, you’re absolutely right. There is no way you’re going to get 1,000 clicks starting day 1 from article marketing, unless by luck you get syndicated on a major website, but that’s highly unlikely. What’s more likely is that you will get 50-100 visitors within the first few days and continue to get lingering traffic from that article that slowly builds over time (as the article spreads through the internet).

So, First of All, Why Even Bother With Article Marketing?

Well…why not? It’s still free traffic. If done right, it can be highly converting traffic while also helping build your brand.

But, here’s the best reason…

You’re not at the mercy of Google or anyone for that matter. Even if I WANTED to shut my article marketing traffic off, it would be impossible. There is no way I can possibly contact over 100,000 websites that have my articles on them and ask each of them to REMOVE my link.

The Biggest Downside To Article Marketing Is The “Work…”

To really get the most out of article marketing, you need serious discipline. When a site is brand new, you need to submit at least 1 article a day to the top directories. Even after a few months, you want to make sure you continue submitting a few a week to keep building.

Compare that to the concept of pumping a bunch of keywords into Google and simply tweaking and checking every day (rather than writing and submitting) and I start to understand why PPC affiliates don’t care for article marketing.

But what if you could automate it all? What if you can make your article marketing into more of a science where you even calculate things like ROI for each article?

Now, do I have your attention?

The Art of Outsourcing Article Marketing

Let me start by saying that when you’re first starting, outsourcing article marketing is not easy. You’re likely to get burned a bit in the beginning as you learn. Why? Because you need to find INEXPENSIVE QUALITY writers who can produce work fast (that’s a lot to ask for).

So, here are some tips:

1. Use www.Guru.com (I find the best quality writers here at the lowest prices).

2. Never use anyone that has no feedback or rating.

3. Always ask for sample work - make sure they’ve written articles SPECIFICALLY for article marketing.

4. Find out if they have staff and if they can commit to X articles a day. People that have staff never tend to work well for me.

5. Buy articles in lots of 10 (at a minimum) - you get better pricing.

6. Supply the writer with the following: article title, keywords and length desired (keep it around 450 words).

7. If they’re late or submit bad work even once, move on - trust me on this one.

8. Ask them to write the articles in NOTEPAD - easier to copy/paste into directories. Word puts in weird characters.

There are other tips too, but those are the most crucial.

Now, for the MILLION dollar question - how much do I pay the writer?

Calculating Article ROI…

Before you can figure out how much you can pay a writer, you’ll have to figure out what your article ROI is. To do that, you’ll have to first write a few articles yourself, submit them and track your success.

It’s really dead simple.

I create a unique landing page for an article where all my affiliate links use SUB ID tracking so I know which article referred the sale. I write about 5 articles, so I create about 5 unique versions of the page.

I submit the articles, give it a few days and go in and calculate my sales.

Typically, here is what I find…

Of course this is going to be very different based on the NICHE, but when I do my research PROPERLY using my own self-created techniques, I’m usually able to achieve the following results…

NOTE: I tend to prefer promoting Clickbank products when I do article marketing OR high converting and high-paying CPA offers.

I usually can count on each article generating roughly 1 sale/lead for me. The sale will typically average $25 (if it’s a CB product).

However, that one article probably creates much more “lifetime” income for me, but I’m too lazy to track that far - this one sale that I’m talking about typically comes in within the first 3-5 days.

So, let’s say each article is worth $25 to me…

If I search well on Guru, I typically can find great writers willing to write each article at about $6-7 an article (given that I bulk buy at least 10-20 articles). Additionally, I have built a small “submission” team that submits all of my articles, I estimate that it costs me about $3 per article to get them submitted the way I want.

So, now I’m spending about $10 per article to get it written AND submitted (all I’ve done myself so far is checked the quality of the article and written the title, not too much work so far).

At $10 an article and $25 commission, I’ve achieved a 150% ROI.

The other thing to remember is that the article will continue working for me for LIFE. The 150% ROI may very well become 300% or even 500% given life-time value.

So the key to making article marketing work for you is to apply some of your PPC discipline to the practice. Be smart when you outsource and know what your articles are worth. But even more importantly, make sure you do research to assure that article marketing will actually work in that niche.

Some niches that do very well in PPC may not be that hot in article marketing (and vice versa).

You Probably Have More Questions…

I hate to leave you at that, but at least I’ve gotten you hungry to start thinking about article marketing. Most likely you have questions like…

1. So, how do I do the research?

2. Where do I submit my articles?

3. What kind of landing pages should I use?

4. Are there any special outlines the articles should follow?

5. What about duplicate content penalty?

6. What other sites can I use to find writers?

If Amit allows me to, I’ll be glad to come back in the future and talk more about all the questions above. The good news is that Affiliate Classroom is working on a detailed report on exactly how to do article marketing that is based on my trials and errors from the last 5 years of doing it.

We’re getting ready to launch our own article directory that we’ve been working on for a year, so we’ll release the report along with that in about 3 weeks (hopefully Amit will let everyone know about it).

===============================================

Now, since Amit did not pay me for this post, here are some shameless plugs for where you can read more from me. :P

1. Affiliate Classroom Blog

2. IwillFIGHT.com - My new “passion” blog (the 2nd domain name I ever bought!)

3. AffSphere.com - The new article directory we’re getting ready to launch (still in BETA).

Source: Super Affiliate Mindset | 4 Jul 2008, 8:00 am

Google Ordered to Hand Over YouTube User Info, But Not Ad Records

YouTube.jpgA federal judge yesterday ordered Google to hand over to Viacom information about YouTube users' viewing habits.

U.S. District Judge Louis L. Stanton's order set off a firestorm among privacy advocates, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation. The group contends the disclosure of the information would violate a federal privacy law and could potentially expose private information about YouTube users.

"The Court's erroneous ruling is a set-back to privacy rights, and will allow Viacom to see what you are watching on YouTube," Kurt Opsahl, EFF senior staff attorney, wrote on the EFF blog.

Viacom filed suit against Google's YouTube in March 2007, claiming the online video sharing Web site had failed to sufficiently stop users from posting and watching copyrighted material. The judge's order came Wednesday in response to that lawsuit, according to published reports.

Google was ordered to release: a user's log-in ID, the video ID, and the IP address that locates computers on the Internet, though doesn't necessarily identify them by owner.

While Viacom also asked for records involving advertising transactions for Google's AdWords and AdSense programs, the judge rejected that request. Viacom reportedly had sought an electronic index that shows how data in a database are organized by listing the database’s fields and tables, though not its underlying data.

Viacom had contended this information would have shown that Google could or should have known that its advertising revenues were associated with the pirated videos.

Google also will not be required to disclose its computer source code for the YouTube.com search function and the Google.com search engine.

Google doesn't disclose how much revenue it generates from advertising or branded video on YouTube. But Forbes estimates it at $200 million this year and $350 million in 2009.

Source: ClickZ News Blog | 3 Jul 2008, 8:08 pm

Google, Microsoft and Yahoo Collaborate for IAB U.K. Search Help Site

The Interactive Advertising Bureau U.K. has launched its dedicated Search Help Centre, offering advice to marketers on best practices, policy and legal regulation regarding search marketing.

Content for the site is supplied by Google, Microsoft and Yahoo, alongside a panel of agencies and advertisers from the IAB U.K.'s Search Council.

The free resource is intended to provide regularly updated information on issues surrounding trademarks, copyright, invalid clicks, click fraud, user privacy, and intellectual property. It will also include help and advice for advertisers on how to go about hiring a search agency.

Intellectual property will form a key focus for the center. An IAB U.K. release issued today read, "Protecting intellectual property is a growing area of concern because it has become extremely valuable, therefore marketers need to understand what campaign property they own and how to protect it.”

Jack Wallington, chair of the IAB Search Council told me, “For advertisers this is important because they may not be aware of the increasing value of [intellectual property] in search marketing and how to handle and protect it. For agencies it will become a larger issue because they need to decide exactly what they are willing to share with each other and their clients – what is and isn’t competitive information for instance.”

He added that the IAB now recommends making intellectual property a key consideration when starting a relationship with an agency.

The Help Centre resource goes live today.

Source: ClickZ News Blog | 3 Jul 2008, 1:12 pm

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Always try to match your adversiting to your readership. If you're writing about Irish 18th century literature, but your only affiliate advertising are techno ring-tones, don't expect to see cash flowing in!

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