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Five Pitch Page Mistakes ClickBank Vendors Should Avoid

Posted by: Matt Broich, Guest Blogger

Every successful ClickBank vendor knows that having a large number of affiliates promoting your product is the key to driving more sales. Unfortunately, many ClickBank vendors make mistakes when designing their Pitch Pages that hurt their ability to attract and retain valuable affiliates. The biggest mistakes vendors make when designing their websites include:

1) Accepting non-ClickBank forms of payment. Nothing upsets an affiliate more than losing a commission because the vendor accepts multiple forms of payment. Multiple forms of payment include PayPal (which ClickBank already accepts), a second non-ClickBank option for credit card processing, or a mail or phone-in payment option. ClickBank can only track affiliate HopLinks through the ClickBank order form. If an affiliate refers a customer and they end up mailing in their payment, the affiliate loses out on their hard-earned commission. Most affiliates check to see if a vendor offers multiple forms of payment before promoting their product, and might not promote the product if it does. I realize that vendors want to be customer-friendly by offering multiple forms of payment, but they may end up missing out on a lot of potential affiliate-driven sales.

2) Openly advertising the affiliate recruitment page. I often see vendors putting ‘Join Our Affiliate Program’ or ‘Webmasters Make Money’ links below the product order button or in their website navigation. This may upset some affiliates because a customer can easily view this link, learn they can sign up for ClickBank, get an ID, and receive a commission rebate. It therefore bypasses the affiliate commission. Instead, a vendor should bury their affiliate sign-up as a small text link in the footer of their sales page where it won’t be noticed as easily, and instead promote the page in their ClickBank Marketplace listing and other locations.

3) Presenting a poor design. Your website design should be optimized for the highest conversion rate possible, since affiliates want to feel confident that their efforts will regularly convert into sales. This requires: 

  • Professional graphics. Vendors should present a clean, professional, fast-loading design with an attention-grabbing title. Invest in a professionally designed logo, header and footer graphics. Include a professional graphic of an e-book/software 3-D product box or, if you run a membership site, a membership “swipe card” graphic. These boxes and membership cards have been proven to drastically improve conversion rates.
  • Well-written copy. Copy should be grammatically correct, conversational and free of typos.
  • Minimal navigation. Sites that convert best have a single sales letter. If a vendor presents potential customers with a page full of links, it can prompt confusion or indecision. A page filled with links can overwhelm users so they don’t know where to start and may eventually leave without placing an order. A single page ‘squeezes’ potential customers into either buying or not buying, without unnecessary distractions. To increase conversions, provide only one decision.  If you are a vendor who needs multiple navigational links, keep them to a minimum and be sure to make navigating your site easy.
  • Multiple calls to action. Place text or graphical order links throughout your sales page. Vendors should invite people to order after a few paragraphs of sales copy. If there is only one order button at the bottom, conversion rates will be lower. Vendors shouldn’t overdo order buttons. They should be fairly aggressive, but never annoying or pushy.

4) Placing ads on site. Vendor Pitch Pages should not include third-party text or banner advertising on the sales page, such as Google AdSense or ClickBank HopAds. Affiliates aren’t going to send traffic to a vendor and risk losing that traffic to a user clicking a text ad or buying another ClickBank product through the vendor’s HopAd. 

5) Not offering upgrade products. Affiliates love vendors that offer upsell opportunities because it’s a chance to earn more money. Take two products that are comparable in every way, but one offers upsells and the other doesn’t; which one is the affiliate going to promote? When you offer attractive upsells, you will not only attract more affiliates, you’ll also attract more aggressive and active affiliates. 

Avoiding these costly mistakes can help vendors attract and maintain productive affiliates, which can have a huge impact on sales. Above all, it’s of the utmost importance to treat and respect affiliates like the valuable business partners they are.

Matt Broich is a seasoned ClickBank affiliate and vendor. He manages CBengine, a ClickBank Marketplace product finder and analysis tool that helps ClickBank affiliates find high converting products. Discover more: http://www.cbengine.com

About

Beau is the Client Knowledge Guru for ClickBank and covers the latest trends, tips and techniques for building profitable Internet marketing businesses.

Take a look at these related posts:

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  3. ClickBank Vendors: Create Your Vendor Spotlight Now
  4. Pitch Page Design Success Using the Block Approach
  5. Tech Tuesday: ClickBank Custom Order Form Now Available to All Vendors

61 Responses to “Five Pitch Page Mistakes ClickBank Vendors Should Avoid”

  • Surac says:

    I just got approved for my products. Product have some upgrade. I hope someone notice it in the marketplace. I did sale this product before, out of ClikBank. Did sale very good.
    My sight is clean. No advertisement of any different product, no links to any thing except ClikBank.
    I do not have any way known to me to help affiliates with banners, keywords or any other mines. I do not think it is a good idea to place any link for affiliates on the open to.
    I believe, better idea will be to place link in the marketplace description which will take affiliates to completely different sight unrelated to the sight I wont you to promote. I have ability to create page for affiliates in such sight. Can you guys tell me is that good idea?

  • jack says:

    I’m a newbie myself in the Interview Questions niche. I am already following most of these tips but I’ll follow each one of these tips now to attract more affiliates.

  • Beau Blackwell, ClickBank says:

    Jack,

    We’re going to have a great guest post coming soon from an expert interviewer- I think you’ll find it very interesting, so be sure to subscribe to the blog or keeping checking back!

  • BB says:

    I have a quick question…

    We already accept credit card payments via a merchant account and also accept PayPal. Do we need to stop processing our own payments to use ClickBank per the guidelines above?

    Thank you,

    Tom

  • Beau Blackwell, ClickBank says:

    BB-

    You don’t have to stop accepting your own payments (though to be a ClickBank vendor you do have to have the option of accepting payments via ClickBank to sell a product with us). However, if affiliates see that you have non-ClickBank options available for payment, they probably won’t promote your site, since they might not get credit for any sales they generate unless the customer pays via ClickBank.

  • …. So what if you have separate web sites that are setup just for clicbank affiliates to sell product?

    This would allow us to also sell on other channels… like Amazon/eBay.

  • Thanks for the article it’s very helpful because I would say I’m guilty of point #2. Not because I have the affiliate link on the sales copy page but I have put post on several forums and a couple of Facebooks groups.

  • Hi,

    Quick Question:

    I’m about to start selling a $300 product on ClickBank. Can I have 1 Click Bank option that is $300 upfront and create a second ClickBank payment link that is 4 $100 payments?

    I want to give people the ability to stretch the payments out if they need to. Also, if they stretch the payments out they will ultimately pay a little bit more.

    ***I want to make sure that if I’m do the multiple payment option strategy I would like the sales to contribute to the ONE product’s gravity score you know.

    Please let me know,

    Thank you!

    Nick

  • Akin Fadeyi says:

    Thanks a million, this information is very helpful for some of us that have no idea of legal terminology really meant. I will stay away modifying affiliate product unless I really, really need to a minor changes to it to improve sales.

  • Thank you for this article. I have made newbe mistakes, but am on the way to change that.

  • Don Martin says:

    I have created an afiliates page to help rell my e-book. How and where do I tell affiliates about the page?

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