How to Choose the Right Affiliate Programs
Presented by MyAnimalBiz
There are a
lot of affiliate programs out there to choose from. It’s
often difficult to know which are the best programs to
promote. Here are a few tips to help you find the best
affiliate programs.
Life-time cookies – A really good affiliate program will
offer life-time cookies. Unfortunately, some shopping
cart systems don’t allow the vendors this feature, which
isn’t so great for you – the affiliate. A life-time
cookie means that you will get paid for referring a
customer who makes a purchase through your affiliate
link even if they buy at any point in the future.
When looking for a good program, try to lookout for
those which offer life-time cookies or at least a
minimum of a year. Remember sometimes it takes customers
months before actually making a purchase.
Training and Customer Service – A good program will
provide training tools and resources for their
affiliates. Ideally, they should have a member’s area
where you can log in and grab promotional materials,
your links and check your stats and commissions.
Good communication is also important. If you email an
affiliate program with a question and don’t hear back
from them or hear back from them 2 weeks later, what
will it be like if you ever have an issue with payments
or other important question? A good affiliate program
will respond to your questions in a timely manner. By
the same token, a good affiliate will make sure they
read all the provided materials provided on the website
before contacting the program.
Sales Pages that Convert – Before promoting a specific
product, have a look at their sales page. Does it look
like it will convert into sales? If a sales page is
sloppy, has grammar and spelling mistakes, or just looks
unprofessional, you may not make too many sales – no
matter how good the product is.
Now that you know some of the things you should look for
in a good program, here are a few things you should be
careful of!
Advertisements and Google Adsense – If you’re promoting
an ebook and sending customers to a sales page, be weary
of sales pages with Google ads or other types of
advertisement on the sales page. If you’re working hard
to send traffic to that page, it’s not fair that your
traffic will be used to make someone else money through
ads (without you getting paid anything in return).
If you see a sales page with ads on the page, I say stay
away. You work hard as an affiliate and you don’t want
to waste your traffic.
High Sales Minimum – Watch out for programs who ask you
to sell a certain amount before being paid. For example
if the commissions on a $20 eBook are 10% (that’s $2 per
sale) and they ask you to accumulate a minimum of $200
dollars in commissions before they send you payment,
that’s a whole lot of books you need to sell before
getting paid – 100 books to be exact.
Some of these programs operate on the basis that
affiliates will usually not make that many sales and
they’ll never need to pay out. It’s unfortunate but this
does happen, so always check payment terms before
promoting a program.
If you are looking for a
more in-depth study of affiliate marketing, I recommend
I recommend The Super Affiliate Handbook by Rosalind Gardner.
If anyone knows what it takes to make money as an
affiliate it's Rosalind. She went from being an air
traffic controller to a super affiliate who has
reportedly earned $500,000 per year.
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