Gear
Your Affiliate Marketing Strategy To Exploit Other Sites' Traffic
Affiliate marketing is a branch of online marketing that
uses one website to drive traffic to another. Considered a valuable method of
website promotion, affiliate marketing works when site A (affiliate) agrees to
feature banner ads from site B. When a visitor clicks site B's banner, goes to
their site, and takes meaningful action (a purchase, subscription, membership,
etc) the affiliate site is rewarded with a commission or fee.
For those looking to increase their website traffic and
awareness, affiliate marketing is a great way to tap into the large visitor
numbers of popular sites in your market or demographic. But as with any sound
marketing initiative, promoting your site by way of affiliates must be done
under the purview of a detailed affiliate
marketing strategy.
Developing An Affiliate Marketing
Strategy
By generating a large amount of traffic, a web site owner
can attract revenue from other businesses (like you) wanting access that
traffic. But how do you know who to partner with?
The key to a prudent and precise affiliate marketing
strategy is to identify online partner sites that compliment but don't compete
with your business. You can achieve great results at little cost by focusing
your affiliate marketing strategy on sites where your customers are likely to
be. And as with many online marketing techniques, affiliate marketing allows
you to test certain sites and ads to see which are working most
effectively.
But while chopping and changing partners and ad messages can
be a great way to find what works, it can also be counter-productive. The wiser
way to go is to have your affiliate marketing strategy, replete with a host of
contingencies, prepared before rolling your campaign out.
In establishing an affiliate marketing strategy you'll
consider things like whether it's best for your business to target very narrow
niche sites or to go wide on popular branded sites, for instance.
Let Your Affiliate Marketing
Strategy Determine How You Pay
Affiliates have several ways of charging you. Which method
you choose should be determined by the approach you mapped-out in your affiliate
marketing strategy.
An affiliate may use a Pay Per Click (PPC) method whereby
you pay every time a visitor (potential customer) clicks on your ad. It's
irrelevant (in terms of compensation) how often your ad is displayed.
Commission is due only when the ad is clicked.
Alternatively, your affiliate marketing strategy may require
a Cost Per Mil (CPM) method of compensation. In this case you pay the affiliate
for every 1000 impressions. Note that an "impression" is NOT a click;
it's a page view or display of your ad.
The original but rarer method is Cost Per Sale (CPS). As an
example, say you have an ebook for sale. If a visitor comes to your site via
your affiliate and buys your ebook, then you'll pay a percentage of the sale to
your affiliate.
While CPS is still possible, you need to have a red hot product
to get the affiliate interested. Otherwise they prefer to guaranteed revenue
that PPC or CPM models offer.
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