8 Principles for Effective Affiliate Marketing on a Blog
Pat’s Principles for Effective Affiliate Marketing
on a Blog
Per a number of email requests, here are the rules that I
apply when it comes to affiliate marketing on this blog. You may have a
different way, but this is what works for me.
1. Affiliate Marketing Starts With the First Impression
First impressions are huge because
they set the tone for a visitor’s entire experience through your website,
including any possible transactions that may take place now, or in the future.
What is the first impression that you get when you go to a
site and it’s splattered with advertisements, for example? What does a site
like that say to a first time visitor?
“Hi, nice to meet you – click here so I can earn a buck?”
It’s like if you met someone for the first time and the
first thing they ask you is if you’re interested in buying something from them.
It reminds me of those guys who sell jewelry from inside their trench coats.
Maybe you’d buy a “folex” (fake-rolex) from them once, but you’d never do any
kind of business with that person beyond that.
I’d much rather get to know somebody first, trust them, and
then have them tell me what they might have to offer. Or better yet, be
genuinely interested in what they’re doing, and ask them about it myself. This
is the kind of philosophy that I use when promoting other people’s products.
What do you see when you land on my homepage?
2. Only Promote Products That You Have Used.
As I mentioned in a previous post,
the way I earn money with affiliate links in ALL of my online businesses is by
promoting only products that I have used, and only what I would recommend to my
friends who want to achieve similar results. I feel that anyone with an
audience has a responsibility to do the same thing.
There’s something fishy about someone promoting Apple
Computers who only uses a PC.
3. Always Describe The Product That You’re Promoting.
If you have an affiliate link that’s just a banner ad, or a
link at the bottom of a post with no real description – it’s a waste. If you’re
actively promoting a product (that you’ve used), you obviously know something
about it. Share your knowledge with your audience, and they’ll be intrigued and
more likely to click through to learn more.
4. Content First, Affiliate Link Second.
Although I just said you should always describe the products
you promote, the content that you write should drive the affiliate links that
you offer, not the other way around. Don’t write posts just for the sake of
placing an affiliate link within.
5. Share Your Experience With the Product.
When describing whatever it is your promoting, share your
experience! If you can throw in some data or graphs to go along with it, even
better. Back when I was more actively writing about eHow, I promoted an eBook
that I read which helped quadruple my earnings per article. I created a graph
that showed how much I earned before I read the book versus how much I earned
after. To this date, that eBook has been one of the most successful affiliate
promotions I’ve done on this blog.
6. Only Promote One or Two of the Same Type of Products.
There are a number of reasons why you should never promote
more than two of the same type of products:
·
The more products you promote, the
less believable each of them becomes. If today I recommended Company X, and
tomorrow I recommended Company Y and Company Z, each of their “stock”
immediately goes down.
·
The more products you promote, the
more difficult the decision to choose between them becomes. I’ve been to a
number of personal finance websites that offer sign-up bonuses for 4 to 5
different banks (sometimes within the same post!). It hurts my brain.
·
If you keep promoting the same
products time and time again, your audience will begin to realize that there
must be something special about the specific ones you keep bringing up.
7. Starve the Horses and Feed the Stallions
This is a fancy way of saying that you should only promote
the products that you know make you the most money, and forget about the ones
that don’t. You will only know this after trial and error, so see what works,
and get rid of the rest.
For a while, I had a number of banner ads on this blog that
were not generating any type of income for me. There’s no point in wasting
valuable ad space with banners that don’t pay out.
8. Utilize a Resources or Tools Page
A resource
or tools page is a page that consists of helpful links to websites,
products and services related to your niche. This is a perfect spot
for affiliate links, so take advantage of this if you haven’t already.
It takes the “books I’m reading” area you often see in blogs
(within Amazon affiliate links) to a whole new level. not only is this great
for you, but it’s extremely helpful for your readers who may be looking for
additional resources related to your niche. Plus, they may come across products
or services they weren’t originally looking for while on your resources page.
Everybody wins.
Is Affiliate Marketing a Form of
Passive Income?
In the pay-per-click sense of the term – I don’t believe so.
There’s too much upkeep and constant checking of data each and every day for it
to be even a little passive.
But, affiliate marketing with a blog with these principles
in mind – absolutely. The blog posts that you write today will be on the web
for a long, long time.
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