Affiliate
Marketing
Affiliate Marketing
Business Models
E. You're Not Alone -- The Affiliate Marketing
Team
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The affiliate (that's you) connects potential buyers with
the product -- basically absorbing "customer acquisition
costs" for the merchant -- in return for a
commission.
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The merchant is always owner or licenser of the product or
service. Good merchants supply an easy-to-navigate website,
a working sales process, and both customer and affiliate
support.
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The affiliate manager's job is to make sure that affiliate
sales are properly tracked, that all affiliates abide by
the program's rules, and that affiliates are supported and
paid promptly. When a program has a dedicated affliate
manager, that's a good sign.
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The affiliate agreement is a legal contract between the
merchant and you. The legal language may be boring, but
read it anyway -- it's important.
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Sometimes merchants use affiliate networks to help them run
their program. An affiliate network is a third-party
service that may represent hundreds, even thousands of
merchants. You'll find many advantages to using networks,
particulary the browsing through lots of programs through
one interface.
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Website visitors are called "traffic." Attracting the right
kind of traffic will be one of the most important skills
you will learn as an affiliate.
F. The Basic Affiliate Business Models
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Your business model is important, because it will determine
what you spend your time doing each
day.
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The four basic business models are Search
Engine Marketing, Email, Content, and
Community.
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Search Engine Marketing covers two types -
paid search and natural
search.
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Paid search involves buying,
writing, and tracking ads on search engines, such
as Google AdWords.
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Natural search involves learning
search engine optimization (SEO), a process of
acquiring relevant incoming links and making sure
your website code allows search engines to find
your site for keywords.
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Email affiliates build opt-in lists, send
offers for affiliate products, and work hard to make sure
their mailing lists are clean and compliant with spam
legislation.
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Content affiliates develop websites that
provide free information, write and create content for
them, and use keywords, article syndication, and other
similar methods to get traffic.
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Community affiliates interact with groups
of other users online through forums, blogs, and Web 2.0
networks and communities.
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Business models are flexible, and in practice you will
often combine aspects of several.
G. Putting It All Together
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The first thing you'll do is sign up for an affiliate
program when you decide on the products you'd like to
promote. The merchant will then send your special affiliate
links.
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Next, you build you affiliate website, populate it with
your affiliate links, and get
visitors.
- Build a list of e-mail subscribers
(opt-ins) to regularly send a newsletter containing
additional products.
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Those visitors will click through to the merchant's website
using your affiliate links.
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When your visitors make a purchase on the merchant site,
you'll earn commissions..
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Affiliate Marketing Terms
- Affiliate
Marketing
- Affiliate
Marketing Concepts
- Affiliate Marketing Business
Models
- Affiliate
Marketing Terms
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