Category: Affiliate program

Don’t Let Self Doubt Stop You from Recruiting JVs and Affiliates

Online marketing as a career seems like a very lonely pursuit. But the reality is, it’s not. You have blog readers and loyal customers, and affiliates and joint venture partners that can help catapult your success to the next level.

For many marketers, self doubt hangs like a low cloud over their ability to make those connections – especially when it comes to recruiting affiliates and JV partners, because they worry that they won’t be worthy of a promotion.

How Self Doubt Keeps You from Making the Right Connections

Some people mistakenly assume that they’ll simply get the ball rolling, create great products, and affiliates and joint venture partners will flock to them. That’s just not the case.

It requires recruitment and networking, and that means you have to be willing to put yourself out there and get to know them – or more importantly, let them get to know you. That’s how business deals are done on the ‘net.

You probably feel self doubt initially because you come onto the Internet Marketing scene as a relatively unknown competitor. Even if you have the greatest product on Earth, branding and promotion might be non existent for you at first.

You witness people sharing selfies at seminars and talking like they’re old friends who go back 20 years – and you start to feel like you’re just not part of that crowd. Or maybe the way they interact (like bragging about attending a JV party at the Playboy mansion) has you feeling isolated because that’s just not you.

Sometimes you might hear of large partnerships between two huge marketers – or maybe even a trio or four marketers coming together to launch something special. You wish you could do that, too – but hang your head because nobody’s asked you to partner up like that.

You might feel self doubt because, as you look around the Internet, you see tons of amazing joint venture pages – so professionally done – and you worry that your do-it-yourself version won’t impress potential partners.

There’s another part of you that’s just scared to approach people because you’re worried you’ll do something dumb and look stupid or amateurish. But the reality is – everyone was new to this at some point, and your newcomer status is actually a perk!

When someone is new to the scene, it’s an opportunity for seasoned JV partners to get in on something that might really take off. As long as you present yourself well up front, it’s a win-win for both parties.

What Affiliates and JV Partners Really Want

You might be thinking about it all wrong – assuming that prospective JV partners want the other person to already be established. And in few cases, this might be true. But really, their main concerns are quite different – and very doable – even for the greenest newbie.

First, the JV partners and affiliates really want someone to understand that they’re protective of their lists. Imagine building a list of 10,000 or 100,000 loyal buyers – would you promote a product that made them not trust you any longer?

So once you understand that they’re protective of their list, they hope you’ll approach them with a truly great product that you’re proud of. Too many people rip someone else off or slap together a shoddy product just to try to make money.

The affiliates want to know that what they’re recommending won’t make them look foolish. Remember – they risk having to pay back commissions in refunds if your product doesn’t do what it says.

Affiliates and JV partners want you to approach them in the right way. The wrong way is to spam them without ever introducing yourself on the day of your launch, and hit them up with a request begging for them to promote you.

It’s rude – almost like attending a dinner party and instead of walking up and introducing yourself, you simply walk up and hand the other person a business card and walk away. Nobody wants to be used.

Another thing joint venture partners and affiliates desire is enough time to create a nice bonus that will help them rake in sales. You may not know it, but bonuses are what help increase sales by a lot.

And these are different from bonuses you create or allow people to use. These are exclusive bonuses that the affiliate creates for their list if the buy your product through their link.

So the earlier you contact someone, the more time they’ll have to whip up a bonus their list will love. This is most important if you are hosting an affiliate contest, because the bonus could help them win cash prizes.

Affiliates and JV partners also enjoy perks for their promotions. If you’re new, one way to clear your self doubt is to approach people with special perks like a bump in commission or bonuses that you provide for their list.

That might include hosting a webinar (if you’re comfortable with that) in conjunction with them to answer any questions their subscribers might have when it comes to your product.

Learn the Right Way to Toot Your Own Horn

You’ve been taught growing up that it was unsavory to be a braggart. And that was true to some degree. You don’t want to stick your tongue out and tease another kid about what you have that they don’t.

But when it comes to business, it’s a whole ‘nother ball game. You have to toot your own horn or else nobody else will, and people will wonder why you’re not! It’s a feeling of uneasiness that you may have grown up with, but now have to let go.

Nobody is asking you to disparage another marketer’s hard work to make yourself look good. In fact, that kind of behavior will backfire on you. But you do have to be able to put a spotlight on what makes you a wonderful leader in your niche.

This is something that gets easier over time and with a lot of practice. Sometimes it’s a good idea to see how other people do it. Implement the same qualities little by little as you work your way up to feeling good about your boasting.

For example, start with being able to say you’ve created an amazing product. Surely you wouldn’t have poured your heart and soul into creating a subpar product (and if you did, then go back to the drawing board).

So what makes you personally proud of what you created? Is it well-researched? Does it have a unique spin to it that nobody else has done? Are the components like the writing and video and graphics all professionally done?

Then it’s okay to be proud of that fact and say so! Just because you say you’ve done something great, it doesn’t mean you’re saying that everybody else is beneath you – it simply means you’ve joined the ranks of quality product creators.

Understand that joint venture partners and affiliates expect you to have confidence in what you put out there – and that includes everything from your sales copy to your ability to contact them with ease.

The way they see it – if you aren’t confident, then they will start to feel concern that maybe your product isn’t the right one for their list of subscribers. Think of it like being a pilot.

If you knew how to fly a plane, would you reassure everyone that you’re a good pilot? Or would you greet passengers by saying, “I hope we don’t crash. I’m pretty sure I’m an okay pilot, but you never know?”

Obviously, you’d reassure the passengers – just as you want to reassure people spending money on your course or product – that what they’re about to buy is worth their investment.

Prepping Your Product Confidently for an Attractive Affiliate Offer

The best way to get rid of self doubt is to do your very best in preparing your product for an attractive affiliate offer. You want to feel as good as possible when approaching JV partners.

The first thing you can do is make sure the aesthetics are good. That means nice graphics. Taking the do it yourself route sometimes saves you money, but diminishes the appearance of professionalism.

It’s not expensive to hire a graphic designer for a complete minisite (around $50), and many of the platforms now – like WordPress Engine and Optimize Press – require no expertise at all in design because they have everything built in for you.

But the looks are important because it’s the very first thing affiliates, JV partners – and customers – will see upon landing on your site – even before they read a word of your offer.

Sales copy can be intimidating, and it is one of the most important components – but it’s nothing to fret about. All you have to do is look at what’s been done in the past. This does not mean copying and rewriting someone else’s sales copy.

That makes you look unprofessional. It means learning what elements people put on their sales copy in your niche – do they give statistics? Is there a personalized storyline? How many bulletpoints are normal for these vendors?

Make sure you weave a good dose of self promotion into the sales copy, where you let people know that this is a fantastic product and that you’re someone who can be trusted to deliver.

Make sure you set your product apart from the masses. Anything you can do to make sure your product has an edge is a good idea. Maybe that means a fresh twist on an old idea.

Or it could be that you’re the first person to create a membership for the concept, or a software or plugin tool. Perhaps your product is a coaching product where nobody else has offered hand holding in the past.

Your JV page should be well polished and professional. It should include many common elements such as:

* Dates and times of the launch
* Possible earnings throughout the funnel
* Details of exactly what’s in each level of the funnel
* Contest information, if applicable
* Links on where to get their affiliate links
* Swipe email file(s) for them to use in promotions.

They shouldn’t have to contact you with any further questions. If you leave out important elements, they might figure it’s not worth their time and hassle, and pass you by. You want everything at their fingertips.

Make sure you go through the launch test phase to iron out any kinks along the way. If you’re using a platform like JVZoo, it will allow you to make $0.01 test purchases to make sure the funnel flows correctly and that customers are taken to their downloads.

Approaching the JVs and Affiliates to Get a Yes

The most nerve-wracking part of your recruitment process will be sending the actual email or opening up a private message to contact a potential joint venture partner. First, make sure this person promotes the kind of product you have in mind.

Once you verify that (and you can get on their list and check contest leaderboards to see who promotes, what) then you can reach out – but make sure you do it the right way.

First, be willing to share the finished files. They need to know what they’re promoting. Don’t share a snippet or a glance – share the entire thing with them. You’re asking for their list.

Don’t ask if they want to see it, just send access upon your very first communication. You want as little hassle on their end as possible. Have everything ready. This includes the files, a link to your JV page, swipe emails, bonus pages and anything else you have in mind.

Impress them with your knowledge of why this product might be a good fit for their list. If you don’t know, that’s a problem. You never want to cold contact people just to see what sticks – make your JV recruitment process exclusive.

To tempt them into saying yes, proudly offer them a bump in commission. If you have a funnel, you can offer a bump from 50% to 75 or 100% on the front end, keeping the rest of the funnel in place at 50% like the other affiliates get.

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What’s The Best Way To Learn Affiliate Marketing?

So you’ve spent some time figuring out what’s what with Internet marketing. You realize there are lots of different ways to make money online, but the one that really resonates with you is affiliate marketing. You’re ready to dive in and become a successful affiliate earner. Maybe you’ll even make the Leader Board in some of those big launches.

Usually the best place to start is with some research so you can study the subject and also learn best practices. Look for the quality products about affiliate marketing – the ones that get rave reviews from buyers because they’re getting results from what they’ve learned from the product – and buy them to study. Best practices are tried and true business tactics that don’t resort to blackhat shenanigans or exploiting loopholes in the system.

Another idea is to watch over the shoulders of successful affiliate marketers and do what they do. This is a great way to learn. Don’t copy them exactly; you need to show your own personality. Perhaps pick three super affiliates and optin to their lists. That way you can be the potential customer and you’ll see exactly how they promote products to you.

I recommend you make a spreadsheet and track specific things about these marketers such as: how often they email, how often they pitch in their emails, what social media outlets they use, how often they promote via these outlets, whether they offer bonuses of their own with purchase and what those bonuses are, how they use content to recommend products (podcasts, interviews, PowerPoints, infographics, video, webinars, blog posts, guest posts, article marketing, advertising, etc.). This way the bigger picture of how these marketers are successful will become clearer.

Get coaching. You may be able to get group coaching or access to an insider forum as part of a package you purchased about affiliate marketing, and that’s one way to get some special attention and your questions answered. Group coaching is certainly a less expensive option, but to really move forward quickly, one-to-one individual coaching is usually a better way to go. Yes, it’s not going to be cheap but if they can train you into a super affiliate extraordinaire, then the money you’ve paid them to coach you might be well worth it.

Pick a coach that walks the walk. This person has to have a lot of success and experience with this income stream before you should even consider them as a possible coach. It also needs to be someone you respect, who doesn’t spam people, and who resonates with you. Give it lots of thought and choose carefully. If you don’t know anyone offhand, ask other people whose opinions you value.

If you’re determined to become a successful affiliate marketer, take some time to do some research, learn strategies from quality products about this subject and follow a successful marketer to see how they do it. If you want to jump ahead several paces, consider investing in a coach who can help you.

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How NOT To Do Affiliate Marketing

Affiliate marketing is all about promoting other people’s fine products and earning a commission. That sounds like a wonderful way to earn money – you don’t have to create your own product and you don’t have to deliver the product or handle customer service after the sale. But HOW you operate as an affiliate marketer requires some finesse.

Here are examples of what NOT to do as an affiliate marketer:

Do not promote junk. Promote one bad product and customers question your decision. Promote many bad products and you ruin your reputation. Pick products created by reputable businesses and check out feedback about the product and their customer service.

Do not continually promote products without ever giving your list valuable free information too. The people on your list aren’t on your list because they love to be constantly bombarded with promos, they’re there to learn from you and they want to see you and your personality, and learn what you have to teach them.

Do not email too often. How often is that? It depends on your list and what they’re expecting from you. When they opt in to your list it’s best to explain a little in your first email about what they should expect. If you are going to email them every day or every Monday, tell them. People like to know and they like routine.

Do not send promotions via email to your list about offers that are not targeted to your list. If your subscribers are interested in finance and financial issues, then stick with that topic or something closely related. Don’t start sending them promos on off-topic offers that sound good to YOU.

Do not promote only one way. To be successful as an affiliate marketer, you need to show the offers in other forms. Email is only one avenue. Write up thorough product reviews and post them on your blog, interview the product creator and put a link to the podcast on your blog and throughout your social media channels, do a How To video and post it on YouTube, host a Google hangout or webinar answering questions, etc. It’s better to take the time to thoroughly promote one product in all ways you can think of rather than shallowly promote offer after offer.

Becoming a successful affiliate marketer does take effort on your part. Even though you’re not the one having to create products, you’ve got to do your research to make sure they’re something you’d be proud to promote – your reputation depends on it. You also need to watch how often you promote to your email list and learn how to successfully recommend products in various ways. It may take a little trial and error to find what’s successful for you, but once you do, you’ll be smiling every time you check your PayPal account.

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Consider These Things Before You Promote…

As an affiliate marketer you have a huge number of products and programs you could promote. In fact, you probably have too many choices. To help you decide, consider the issues below.

When someone asks you to promote their new product, consider the timing. Are they letting you know enough ahead to give you time to put together a proper promotion?

Is the timing going to conflict with another exciting promotion coming up? Of course promoting your own products will take precedence over someone else’s unless you don’t mind moving your date back. But what about that thing you were already going to promote? Your email slots are valuable real estate. You don’t want to hammer your subscribers with a bunch of promo emails one week and then not email them again for three weeks. As you can see, timing is important. It’s a good idea to have a promo calendar laid out so you can showcase each on different days or different weeks to your list.

Another thing to consider before promoting is what kind of cookies the product owner uses. If they use first or forever cookies it means when someone first clicks on an affiliate link, they are cookied by that affiliate. So no matter how hard you push at converting sales, you won’t get the commission when they buy if they’re already cookied by another affiliate. This a bummer for you if your hard promotional work is giving someone else the commissions. Last cookies mean if a customer clicks on your affiliate link last and they buy, you get the sale.

There are pros and cons to first and last cookies. It makes the most difference to you depending on whether the product you want to promote is brand new and you get to be one of the first to tell others about it, or if it has been around for a while and other marketers have already been advertising it. Always make sure you know which type of cookie you’re dealing with.

And importantly, take a look at the product itself. You should have a list of criteria it needs to meet before you endorse it. The first one can cut out a lot of them from the start – is it a good fit for your list? You know your subscribers, will it really help them? Do they need it to fill a void, fix a problem? It doesn’t have to be an exact match; maybe you’re in a non-IM niche but you found a tool or software that they’d benefit from having, even in that non-IM niche.

While looking at the product, look at the creator too. Their reputation for putting out quality goods is mandatory, but they also need to have stellar customer service and back it all with a good guarantee.

Start by considering these three things when looking at products to promote as an affiliate. It’s crucial for it to be of high quality, but the timing of the promotion and the type of cookies will matter to you too.

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Affiliate Marketing Myths

Myths abound when it comes to affiliate marketing. Let’s go over some of these myths now and see what the reality is.

It’s better to create your own products instead of marketing others’ products.
While it’s always a good idea to have some products yourself, it’s not the only way to make good money. You can do both! In fact, one can complement the other.

For example, if you’re promoting an ebook about A and B but people want to know about C too, whip up an ebook or video series about C to sell to these customers. Or set up a paid membership where you can group coach them through further aspects of ABC.

If you’re selling your own ebook about how to do something, you can promote someone else’s tool within your ebook or on the backend that helps automate that something. Or maybe after customers learn about it from you and they decide they want a done-for-you option, you can promote, as an affiliate, a company that will give them that.

You can make more money when you have your own products.
Yes, it’s true IF you have a good-sized list of ready buyers. But… think of the time it takes to make something yourself – you have to make all the components, get a sales page written, set up all the pages, have something to offer people as a lead magnet, get the marketing parts set up and in place, and so on. It’s pretty time-consuming and exhausting. You really don’t have to recreate the wheel. If another marketer just introduced her own huge whiz-bang creation, then promote it. You could make just as much money introducing three or four affiliate products to your list in the time it would take to make your own.

As an affiliate marketer, you never have to handle customer service.
Technically, your name is not on that product. But realistically, you’re endorsing it and when customers don’t get their downloads or their bonuses, many will come to you about the problem. Your reputation is on the line and sometimes you have to step in and represent the customers who bought through you.

You should only promote profitable niches.
If you’re new to affiliate marketing, it’s better not to jump on the bandwagon of the newest and biggest product launch. There’s quite a bit of competition from seasoned players. Instead, start with a niche and products that appeal to you. It’s a real yawner to try and sell stuff you have absolutely no interest in. Your efforts will come across as flat, if you can force yourself to even keep promoting. If it’s something that excites you, it’s a lot easier to excite others.

Affiliate marketing doesn’t take much work.
While it’s true you don’t have to do the initial work of putting a product together, your work comes on the other end, the marketing end. It won’t sell itself just because you put a small ad on your website, you have to promote it in a myriad of ways.

That could mean a video where you walk through the product, a podcast interview with the owner, a webinar answering questions, a blog post showing your results from using it, PPC ads, emails to your list and lots and lots of social media posts, tweets and pins. Where do your potential customers hang out? Those are the places you want to be.

Hopefully this has busted a few myths for you and given you some further insights into affiliate marketing. It’s not a Sunday stroll in the park but with some strategic work, you should find this particular income stream quite rewarding.

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5 Things You Need To Get Started With Affiliate Marketing

Perhaps you’re switching business models or maybe you’re totally new online. Either way, you’d like to create an income stream by promoting products as an affiliate marketer. So what do you really need to have to start making affiliate sales? Here are 5 things in no particular order:

#1 You need at least one promotional platform to start, but several are better. By a platform I mean something like a niche blog or static site. A place, your home base, where you can showcase the products. People need a place they can go to check out the item they’re interested in, learn about it and get their questions answered, and decide if it will solve their problem. Importantly, they need the opportunity to buy it, and from a trusted source.

It is possible to promote products by simply doing a redirect from your website address to the creator’s product page, but that’s not usually the best way to do it. You need to presell before you send them on. Potential buyers are more comfortable having a recommendation before they buy.

#2 Every affiliate marketer needs an audience. You can write up a nice little product review on your blog but obviously if no one reads it, you won’t make sales. SEO every piece of content you put on your site, offer free lead magnet material that people actually want, join online forums, offer your lead magnet material somewhere highly trafficked such as on a forum, do joint ventures, partner with marketers who have followers, run ads, create and post YouTube videos, and any other method that gets exposure to you and the products you’re promoting.

#3 Related to #2 and the desire for traffic, you need to open several social media accounts. Which ones? Start with Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest. You won’t know which are the most successful for you until you get them established, work them, and look hard at your results.

#4 This probably goes without saying, but you need quality products to promote. The best place to start is with products you already own and use. If you want to promote Internet marketing items, what have you purchased that you’ve had great success with? Tell your story. People respond to authentic stories and they want to have the same great experiences.

Otherwise, choose carefully. Products need to be well presented, without problems or the problems already fixed, backed by a guarantee, have good customer service, and plenty of “meat”.

#5 Successful marketers need to track their various promotions. Why waste your time throwing everything at it in hopes that something will stick and you’ll make some sales? Not only does it waste your time but drains your energy and is very discouraging. Track your promotions! You can use tracking software and do split tests with ease. At the very least, use a separate affiliate link for each way you promote. Are you selling a bunch via email or your blog post? Is the tweeting a bust? You will know with tracking.

There is a lot more to affiliate marketing and as you go along you will settle into methods that work best for you. But if you’re just getting started, these 5 things are what you need now.

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Building Your Affiliate Marketing Program

Affiliate marketing isn’t a fast results type of program. A well-planned affiliate marketing program built today can pay off in spades tomorrow. But, remember – it’s a long-term plan, not a short-term overnight success type of situation. So, get started on the right foot so that you can do it right.

Set Up Your Website Right

You don’t want to have a terrible website with ineffective sales pages if you want affiliates to take an interest in your offerings. Ensure that your about us, privacy policy, return and shipping policy (if dealing with physical products) and contact information are clear for all to see.

Don’t Link Away from Your Site

When it comes to promoting a product, the page should promote that product and nothing else. You don’t want to lead people away from your website when they’re coming there to learn about a specific product or service. Take away anything that links them away. Your affiliates will appreciate it.

Clear Contact Information

If someone has a question that they need answered, you want clear contact information so that they can contact you easily. You can also use a service that provides a chat with people to help them make purchasing decisions. Whatever you decide, make it easy for people to ask questions and get answers.

Product Pages That Convert

It’s imperative that you have a clear call to action, great images, good descriptions and benefits of the product on the page. If your product pages don’t convert, then affiliates won’t want to touch the product.

Converting Marketing Collateral

Affiliates need copy, images, text and more to promote your products and services. They’re not going to create it for you. If you want them to send out emails to their list, create an email that they can edit and make their own. Do the same with all the marketing materials you offer them to ensure that they promote your offerings.

A Fair Commission

Affiliates are like sales people who get paid only when they make a sale. If you want them to do a lot to make that sale, then they’ll need a fair percentage of sales to make it worth their time. If you don’t offer at least 50 percent, you are unlikely to attract high-level affiliate marketers to your program.

Offer Incentives to Affiliates

In addition to a fair commission, you can also offer prizes to top sellers so that they work harder to promote your offerings. People like competition and if you give it to them and let them win prizes such as additional money or a physical prize, they’ll want to win.

A Fabulous Product

Of course, if you want to attract affiliates, you need a product that is everything you say it is and more. You want your affiliates to be excited to promote the product because it does what the sales page says it will do.

Having affiliates to promote your products and services is like having a legion of fans screaming your name. They’ll blog about you, promote you, and be excited about it – because if you are offering a great product or service, they know that it makes them look good. After all, their job is to promote things to their audience that solves their problems. Your product could be the answer.

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Common Affiliate Marketing Mistakes to Avoid

It’s easy to make a lot of mistakes when you first start affiliate marketing. But, if you take the time to educate yourself you can avoid a lot of the problems that might arise. Affiliate marketing is a good way to produce an extra income, add an additional income stream, and even to earn a full-time living, but only if you are prepared and go about it the right way. Here are some mistakes you’ll definitely want to avoid.

* Choosing the Wrong Products – Any product you choose should offer a solution to a problem that your audience has. First choose who your audience is, then find solutions for them. Doing it the other way around can include the risk that there is not an audience for that product in the first place.

* Joining Too Many Networks – You cannot make good income from affiliate products if you spread yourself too thin. Choose just a couple networks and work directly with some good products and their managers to ensure the best mix of products for your audience’s needs.

* Not Investing in Helpful Resources – There are a lot of very helpful products, services and solutions today that can help make your life easier as an affiliate marketer. Set a budget and invest in your business. You can’t make money without spending, but you want to spend it wisely.

* Not Using Technology to Its Fullest – Email lists, autoresponders, social media, blogs etc… all involve using technology. Seek to learn fully each new piece of tech that you add to your business before adding the next one.

* Avoiding A/B Testing – A/B testing means to test two different versions of something like an email subject line, a sales page headline, or something else. But the trick is to change only one small aspect of it during the test. The one that works best can then be used throughout your marketing efforts.

* Not Looking at Your Competitors – Many times your competitors are doing a lot of things right that you can learn from. If they are successful, you want to look at them. Buy some of their products and sign up for the lists. Make a note of what they’re doing right and wrong and make a plan to do even better.

* Thinking You Don’t Need SEO – Search engine optimization is super important, no matter what you’re doing. You can use it when you are completing a social media profile, a guest blogging bio, and more. It just means that you are considering the search engines (and your audience) in whatever you do, both on and off your website.

* Not Finding Multiple Streams of Income – You do not want too many products, but on the other hand you don’t want to deal with only one. You need to diversify your income stream by adding more than one product. The trick is ensuring that all products fit with your ideal audience.

* Spending Too Much Time Creating Marketing Collateral – With most products, choose programs that create all the marketing material for you. The reason is that you should not be driving marketing strategy; the company should. If they can’t take the time to create marketing materials for you, it’s probably not the product you want to promote.

Ensuring that you put in the needed time and effort to study your market, knowing what your competition is doing, and promoting the right products to the right people will go far in making sure that you are successful at affiliate marketing.

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Common Mistakes When Starting an Affiliate Program

Starting an affiliate program can help you develop an entirely new income stream. Affiliate programs for digital products provide smart business owners with an additional stream of income for selling the same product they sell directly. The ROI might be lower for each product now that you have to split the profits with a sales person, but the rewards can be enormous too.

Realize that when a product is digital, your cost per item goes down each time you sell a new one. Therefore you can absolutely afford to contract with affiliate marketers to promote your products. It might be a little harder to stomach if you are selling services, but if you sell for a high enough price, and are able to outsource the work, it can work great too.

It’s common to make mistakes when you first start an affiliate program. When you know the mistakes that others have made who went before you, you can learn from them and avoid those mistakes for yourself. Here are ones you’ll definitely want to avoid:

* Not Getting the Right Software – Don’t be cheap, but don’t think you have to get software that has all the bells and whistles either if you’re not going to use them. Test out different software to see what works for your program with the features you want it to you have.

* Not Creating Marketing Graphics – Affiliates don’t want to have to create their own graphics to sell your product, so you should create it for them. Plus, you do want to maintain some control over your brand by creating your own marketing graphics.

* Not Creating Marketing Content – The other thing that is important for a good affiliate program is to offer your affiliates plenty of marketing content that they can repurpose on their blogs, email newsletters and more.

* Not Developing Excellent Sales Pages – Nothing can be more maddening than trying to promote an excellent product with a horrible sales page, or worse, no sales page. If you don’t create sales pages for your product, no one else is going to do it for you. You’re going to lose out on a lot of sales and super affiliates.

* Not Recruiting Superstar Affiliates – Many times super affiliates won’t just land on your doorstep. You need to do something to recruit and attract them. Get some sales behind you, and then send a couple super affiliates a sample of your product if it fits in with their niche, offering them a special commission rate for promoting your products.

* Not Paying High Enough Commissions – Most people aren’t going to sell something for a 10 percent commission, or just a buck or less. Most people are hoping to get 20 dollars or more per sale. While some products are really great at lower prices with a 50 percent commission, the higher priced and higher commissioned products will naturally attract better affiliates.

* Not Treating Your Affiliates Like Business Partners – A huge mistake that some business owners make is treating affiliates as if they’re employees instead of business partners. They are sole proprietors just like you are, and they love working how they want when they want. Avoid making too many rules or requiring too many hoops, or you’ll lose good affiliates.

* Not Asking for Input from Your Affiliates – When you have some great affiliates who earn a full-time living being affiliates, it will work well for you to ask them for help designing and running the program. They will also give you input on products that they think the audience wants and needs. Just ask them.

Fixing these problems with your affiliate program will improve your income almost immediately. Plus, it will help you develop a long-term affiliate program that gets results – no matter how many products you create.

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