The Secret Shady Practices of Affiliate Marketing
You've probably heard it a hundred times...affiliate marketing
is a great way to make money online.
What if I told you affiliate marketing was basically unethical
or that the field is dominated by shady practices?
You disagree?
Well let's explore affiliate marketing from the merchant,
affiliate and customer viewpoints.
Affiliate marketing is a revenue sharing partnership between a
web merchant and one or more affiliates, where the affiliate is
paid a commission for referring clicks, leads or, most often,
sales to the merchant.
The affiliate signs up to the affiliate program via an online
application form, receives an affiliate link, and can then
promote the products and services of the web merchant via his
own website, ezine, pay per click search engines or other
advertising means.
The affiliate's role, then, is to introduce the potential buyer
to the seller acting as a kind of middleman.
In return he is paid a commission of any sales resulting from
referrals.
But haven't we always been taught to cut out the middleman where
possible?
Well, yes, but in affiliate marketing the customer pays the same
price regardless of whether he arrives at the web merchant's
site directly or via the affiliate's link.
Or at least that's how it should be.
How does the web merchant benefit from running an affiliate
program?
The main advantage to the web merchant is that via his affiliate
program he can recruit a large sales team of affiliates at zero
cost and make many more sales in a way that his website alone
could never hope to do.
How does the affiliate benefit?
The advantages to the affiliate are that he can make money in a
business where he doesn't have the upfront costs of creating his
own product, and doesn't have to worry about ecommerce,
bookkeeping, or customer support because that's all handled by
the merchant.
How does the customer benefit?
The customer gets a solution to his problem (provided the
product or service does what it says it does) that he may not
have found without the affiliate's help and does not have to pay
extra.
So it's a win-win situation for everyone involved.
Or at least it is in principle.
However in the real world both affiliates and affiliate program
owners can be involved in some shady practices.
Shady Practice #1
Unscrupulous merchants close down programs without warning and
without paying commissions or tempt new affiliates with high
commissions then drop those commission rates dramatically a week
later.
Affiliates - protect yourselves from this situation by selecting
the affiliate program carefully.
Ask yourself these questions.
Has the site existed for more than a year? Is it clear what the
site is providing and are the terms and conditions of the
affiliate program explained clearly and comprehensively in
simple language? Are there good online reviews of the program in
websites or discussion forums? Does the program provide realtime
commission stats online? Are ready-to-use affiliate marketing
tools available?
Shady Practice #2
Affiliates are sometimes guilty of misleading or false
advertising - making claims or promises about the product or
services which are totally untrue or greatly exaggerated.
Shady Practice #3
Illegal use of logos, trademarks or other branding. This
includes infringement of intellectual property rights and
violation of copyrights.
Shady Practice #4
Spamming.
While legitimate affiliates are jumping through hoops to comply
with the can-spam laws, the shady characters continue to find
their way around it.
Shady Practice #5
Affiliate link hijacking is the replacement of your affiliate id
with the hijacker's in the affiliate link.
You don