"Best Affiliate Program For The Newbie: Identifying An Affiliate
Program That Matches Your USP"
When a newbie begins an online business, the temptation can be
high to join most any affiliate program they see in the hopes of
making extra money. Given the amount of products and services
that newbies get presented with, and since newbies have a
burning desire to make money fast, it is easy to see how the
online newbie can get lured into joining a lot of affiliate
programs without knowing if they should join them or not.
For the newbie, the danger in joining lots of affiliate programs
is multi-faceted. Joining affiliate programs takes time, time
the newbie could be using defining their USP, learning about
getting targeted traffic, or learning other Internet marketing
skills that will actually generate revenue for them. In
addition, the newbie who joins lots of affiliate programs in the
hopes of making instant profits, is at risk of being
disappointed when they don't make money by joining the latest
affiliate program and that leads to yet further "unproductivity"
and poor use of time.
So, what steps do newbies take to identify the best affiliate
program(s) that matches their USP?
It will differ based on the goal of each newbie Internet
marketer, but here's a small set of steps that are useful to
start with:
*Define how the affiliate program's offering complements your
USP. You should be able to clearly map out what the affiliate
program's offering (product or service) will be useful to
patrons or visitors of your web site, list or customer base. If
the product that you will be promoting is something that will be
useful to you and people you sell or try to sell to, it may be a
useful affiliate program to join.
*Make sure that you fully review the product offered by the
affiliate program, use it, and make your own assessment of it.
Don't promote a product from any affiliate program unless you
own the product yourself and love it. If you own and love the
product that you are promoting, you will be able to sell it more
effectively because your energy and excitement level will show
through in the deliver of your message to would be customer. In
addition, you will be able to list and explain in detail the
features of the product or service that the affiliate program is
offering.
*Make certain that the web site that sells the affiliate program
is set up correctly to sell the product, and sell it well. The
web site that sells the product of the affiliate program should
be professional in its layout, design, sales copy, and delivery
of the product itself. The web site should have a mechanism to
capture the names and emails of the visitors. The web site
should also have a strong auto responder series in place to
follow up with and sell the visitors of that site on the
product.
*Check to see if the affiliate program should be tracked with
cookies so that the referring web site will get credit for each
affiliate sale, even the sales that come as a result of the auto
responder series. If the affiliate program doesn't use cookies
to track referrals, do not sign up.
*Take a look to see if the affiliate program is two-tier so that
you can earn money from recruiting other affiliates to that
affiliate program. Most of the the noteworthy and professional
affiliate programs will be two-tier although there are some
notable ones that aren't, Clickbank being the most widespread.
At the very minimum, the affiliate program should offer some
sort of incentive to recruit new affiliates. If an affiliate
program is not two-tier, make sure that you determine whether or
not the product(s) being sold are professional and have good
conversion rates.
*Ensure that the affiliate program makes it easy to sign up,
complete with welcome email and full contact information of the
point person who can answer any questions. If the affiliate
program isn't run by a third party like Clickbank, the affiliate
program sign up form should also ask for your EIN # or your Tax
ID # for proper reporting. For the business owner who has
established a business identity, this is key for accurate
bookkeeping. Some marketers have gotten away from welcome emails
to their new affiliate partners because the potential affiliate
partners sometimes do not want to give their name and email,
they'd just like to join and make money with no 'marketing'
messages hitting their Inbox.
*A strong affiliate program ideally should have plenty of help
tools including any or all of the following: real-time tracking,
solo email templates (even though I suggest writing your own),
graphics, banners, etc. For the newbie, the better the help
tools, the easier it will be for them to feel comfortable
selling the product. In addition, the affiliate program should
offer follow up emails to all affiliates offering help to sell
more products as well as relaying success stories of how other
affiliates have made strong sales numbers.
*Ideally, the affiliate program's affiliate links should be
unique to the affiliate but should also be structured so that
the link is distinctly protected from would be commission
thieves. The affiliate link ID should not be visible in the URL
after the would be customer gets to the sales page of the
product in question.
For the newbie, the abovementioned steps will help mitigate
wasting time and will maximize their time and efforts. The best
affiliate program for the newbie is the one that satisfies most
or all of these criteria and sells a product that meshes well
with the newbie's USP.
Karl Augustine "Starting Smart!"