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affiliate program
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7 Reasons Why Affiliate Programs
Are Superior To Paid Advertising
by Glenn Sobel
As a consultant to merchants who want to improve their online sales,
I am constantly asked why they should start their own affiliate
program, and what is the best way to do that. The answer to the
"why" part is the subject of this list.
Since basically
all merchants attempting to sell products via a Web site are going
to spend money on advertising/promotion, they really need to know
how an affiliate program fits into their overall sales effort.
Advertising
is a gamble. You can spend $2 million on a Super Bowl ad and the
results can be zilch. The wrong choice of words, the wrong color
background, or the wrong spokesperson can be disastrous.
Beyond the minimal
start-up costs, your major expense in an affiliate program is commissions.
Since you are paying for performance, your costs are controlled
as a percentage of your sales so you can predetermine the expense
ratio.
People are conditioned
to ignore advertising. You have to be really good to get their attention,
and even if you do, they may not believe your message.
Affiliate programs
make other trusted resources your partner. When another site recommends
your product and sends its visitors to your site, it has partially
pre-sold the customer for you. You should be able to easily close
the sale after the choice is made to click to your site since people
don't have the same level of skepticism as they would if they had
come from just a plain banner ad.
With an affiliate
program, you can often have thousands of sites promoting your product
within a very short time. How long would it take you to solicit
and negotiate thousands of ad deals? And how many of those deals
would result in sales?
You can try
to justify a failed ad campaign as "branding," but with
an affiliate program you get the same benefit without the cost.
There is a built-in exposure or branding value that comes from every
active affiliate whether they generate a commission or not.
With a properly
designed affiliate program, your affiliates will do your advertising
for you, assuming the risk and the cost in exchange for the commissions
earned. Many affiliates promote the products they sell through these
programs by either purchasing ad space in newsletters and search
engines or by running ads in their own newsletters. So you get the
ads in the form of a third party endorsement without the up-front
cost.
I hope the above
list gives you new reason to evaluate your business with an affilate
program in mind. Maybe next time I'll get into the "how"
part of the question. For now, you can either go to my site for
further info or see http://www.roibot.com/w.cgi?R344_CJ

Glenn Sobel
comes from a business and law background and runs AffiliateAdvisor.com
where he gives advice on how to start and maximize an affiliate
program as well as how to be a successful affiliate. His recommendations
on programs to join and avoid are widely followed by affiliates
worldwide. As a featured speaker at Affiliate Force 2000 in Miami
last March, he joined several panels on subjects ranging from what
merchants do wrong to the importance of the Amazon.com patent debate.
He regularly consults on affiliate program agreements, commission
structures, promotional materials, etc. and can be reached at mailto:Consulting@AffiliateAdvisor.com
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