Archive for October, 2009
Online Retail Giant ClickBank Expands Services to International Markets
BROOMFIELD, Colo. – (Oct. 27, 2009) – Serving more than 114 countries on 6 continents, ClickBank announced today that the company has taken great strides toward globalization of its platform in a continued effort to expand services offered to the company’s international markets.
ClickBank officials say they’ve taken a phased approach to this endeavor, starting with the translation of the order form and all customer related material such as receipt emails and customer service content into German, Spanish and French. Having completed that phase last year, the company moved onto phase two—translation of the entire ClickBank site outside the login into the same three languages. Work on this phase has just been finished and the new pages are live as of today.
“More than one third of the 26,000 transactions ClickBank processes each day are made from outside the U.S.,” said Dush Ramachandran, ClickBank vice president of sales, marketing and business development. “It is important that we continue to cater to international markets. The globalization of our platform is just one of the many benefits we offer our global vendors and affiliates.”
In addition to offering content in multiple languages, ClickBank has made significant improvements to its payment processing and accepts 13 international currencies including the Euro, the British Pound, and the Swedish and Danish Kroner
ClickBank Analytics Improvements
Posted by: Che Horder, Business Intelligence Manager
Recurring Billing
You have spoken and we listened. We’ve made changes to our analytics tool that will help vendors and affiliates who promote recurring billing products. Previously, it was not possible for you to differentiate between sales made through the ClickBank Order Form and rebills on recurring billing products you sell or promote. This made the conversion statistics (Hops Per Order, Earnings Per Hop, and Order Form Sale Conversion) difficult to work with when reporting on recurring billing products.
With our release on October 26, 2009, you will now be able to differentiate rebills from sales that occur on the ClickBank Order Form. We have added two new fields in analytics called Initial Sales Count and Initial Sale Amount. These fields represent sales made on a standard product and the initial sale of a recurring billing product. These fields also replace Gross Sales in the conversion statistics (Hops Per Order, Earnings Per Hop, and Order Form Sale Conversion).
Coming in the near future, we will also introduce new analytics reports designed to further inform our clients on their recurring billing promotions.
Vendor Tracking ID
Our October 26, 2009 release will also be the introduction of reporting by Tracking ID for our Vendors. This feature has been, and will remain, available for our affiliates.
The Importance of Relationships in Affiliate Marketing
Posted by: Beau Blackwell, Community Manager
Last week, I attended the BlogWorld Expo in Las Vegas. It’s a great event for learning about the latest advances in online marketing, and is filled with people who are serious and passionate about learning the best methods for achieving online success. Although only a small portion of the event and sessions are geared towards affiliate marketing, I highly recommend it to anyone who wants to learn more about writing, selling, expanding their sphere of influence, and who wants to make some great networking connections.
While there were a lot of nuts-and-bolts marketing tactics taught at the learning sessions at BlogWorld, there was a recurring theme that popped up in several presenters’ speeches and panels: the importance and power of cultivating relationships.
Without exception, building strong and mutually beneficial relationships with your customers (or potential customers), clients, partners, industry peers, or anyone you’d like to work with, can be the difference between success and failure.
Why You Need to Work on Relationship Building
For a lot of new affiliate marketers, when they first get started, they jump right in to things like writing articles, creating ads, building landing pages, etc. While this is of course very important and necessary, I believe that spending a significant portion of time trying to build relationships can have a far greater long-term impact on potential success.
I’ve met and spoken with quite a few of ClickBank’s top-performing vendors and affiliates, and nearly all of them have connections with other top people in the industry. Some have collaborated on creating a product, some recommend products to their customers from vendors they know and trust, and some form “mastermind” groups to develop strategies and offer each other assistance. Almost no one gets to the top alone, without having received significant help and advice from other people at some point.
Not only is the advice and help you can receive extremely important, but having strong relationships can create opportunities and open doors you didn’t even know existed. It’s the same as it is for job hunting- it’s often not what you know, but who you know. You could end up getting invited to be an exclusive partner for a project, getting tipped off to a fantastic product to promote, or being introduced to other potential partners in your space.
Relationships are About Giving
At BlogWorld, author and marketer Chris Brogan discussed how the only relationships that really work are ones where both parties benefit. This is an extremely important point, and one where I think many people who are trying to create relationships with important people in their space run into problems.
If you’re new to a space, whether it’s affiliate marketing or any other industry with some established experts, immediately begging for help and going straight to the most influential people with requests for personal assistance is probably a bad idea. Best case, you might have someone take pity on you and give you a stock answer they’ve given to a thousand other people and then forget you completely. Worst case, you become a memorable annoyance to them and they do their best to avoid you altogether. Their first impression of you may end up being negative, and it’s hard to overcome this later.
How to Introduce Yourself Without Being Annoying
Instead of immediately asking for help, first become an information sponge and soak up all the information you can about a topic, whether it’s in books or on forums, blogs, Twitter, podcasts, or wherever. If you dedicate a substantial amount of time to just learning about a topic, without trying to first take action, it’s pretty amazing how quickly you can get up to speed and start really participating in the conversation and even helping other people.
Once you feel like you at least understand the conversation and are starting to form an opinion on the topic, starting contributing before you start making requests of people. If you follow an influential blogger in your space, start leaving thoughtful comments on their posts. Give your opinion on the subject, or offer up something you’ve learned in your research that could help others understand the topic better.
As a blogger, I can tell you that there’s nothing more satisfying than receiving comments on a post that show that someone has really thought about what you’ve written and is engaged with your ideas. If your comment shows me you’re really here to participate, and aren’t just commenting to get a link to your site, I’m far more likely to want to know more about you and listen to what you have to say in the future. I’m also a lot more likely to respond if you do ask me a question or make a request of me in the future.
This holds true all the way up from small bloggers to the most influential people in Internet and affiliate marketing. Before you can expect to get anything out of a relationship with people in your industry, you first have to show them that you’re willing to be authentic (don’t pretend to be interested just to get their help) and to give back to the community they’re a part of.
This is especially the case if you want to engage with someone who’s already achieved some success and is too busy to give significant time to every newbie who comes along. You’re going to really have to stand out as someone who’s worth their limited time. A great way to do that is by helping the same people they’re trying to help, and ideally, actually helping them too.
While I certainly can’t guarantee that you’ll develop a great relationship with the person or people you want to work with even if you do everything “right,” your chances of getting respect and becoming an influential person in your space will be much higher. For example, many bloggers and affiliate marketers who are now successful in their own right started out by commenting frequently on blogs or forums in their space. Even if the person you’ve approached doesn’t end up engaging with you, you may find that other people will seek you out and want to work with you, creating opportunities you never knew existed.
6 Quick-Fix Tips to Fire Up Your Click-Through Rate
Posted by: Simon Slade, Guest Blogger
As an affiliate promoting products through your own website, the CTR (Click-through Rate) from your promotional page to the vendor’s Pitch Page can be a key indicator of how well your promotions will convert into sales and commissions.
So what does it take to convert a visitor? What can change them from being a passing “tire-kicker” to an interested visitor – a visitor who takes the next step and clicks your affiliate link?
I want to share 6 high impact techniques for improving your promotional page’s CTR. These techniques are used and recommended by us at Affilorama, and have been reported as having a significant, positive effect on the CTR of our students’ sites.
Technique #1 – Know the fold
When something is referred to as being ‘above the fold,’ it means that it can be seen when the webpage first loads, so the visitor does not need to scroll to view it.
It is safe to assume that most screens are set to at least 1024×768 resolution (screen size) and it’s good practice to design your websites for that screen size. Set your screen resolution to 1024×768 and view through a common browser (Firefox, IE, Safari) with the default toolbars enabled to give you a rough idea where the fold is on your website.
Having high quality content above the fold that grabs people’s attention and holds it gives this content maximum opportunity to be seen and acted on. Never assume your visitor will scroll; in fact, most of the time if a visitor does not see what they thought they would find on the first visible screen load of the page they visit, they will leave straight away!
Technique #2 – Eye-catching header
A distinct and eye-catching header that is related to the theme of the product you are promoting will immediately catch the interest of the visitor and make them want to find out more.
It doesn’t have to be complicated; in fact, a simple, clean banner can have more impact than one that is ‘too artistic.’ Keep the file size down as well – you don’t want to keep visitors waiting while it downloads.
Technique #3 – Clickable advertising image
In a website context, the power of having images is that a visitor’s eyes are naturally drawn to them. Take advantage of this by not only having an attractive product image, but making it a call to action.
A call to action needs to be very specific. Don’t be vague or leave it to chance. Spell out what you want the visitor to do. If there’s room, include the benefits of completing the action. Many merchants actually have artwork you can use, so check the affiliates section of the merchant’s website first to save time.
Add your affiliate link to the image, making it clickable. Take this a step further by making it clear on the image that you want people to click it. So, for example, if the image doesn’t already say “Click here to get the best cure for panic attacks” then edit the image to add te text.
Technique #4 – A large text affiliate link
In addition to the clickable image, be sure to have a clear text link above the fold as well. It should be a bold, ‘hard-to-miss’ link that leaves the visitor in no doubt what they should do, making it a strong call to action.
For example, instead of an underlined “Panic attack cure” link, have “Click here to get the most popular guide to curing panic attacks.”
Technique #5 – An affiliate link at the end of your article
500 to 600 words is generally an ideal length for a single page of content: not too long for the human reader, but long enough to make sure it’s viewed as substantial content worthy of ranking by the search engines.
Ensure your article is well researched and written. If there are many spelling mistakes and/or grammatical errors you will fail to earn the trust of your visitor, which damages your authority on the topic you are writing about and substantially lowers your CTR.
At the end of your article, you should include a final push for the product you’re endorsing. A short, personal review works best, ideally with another clickable promotional image to the right. Having an affiliate link at the end is good for a number of reasons, but particularly because visitors are often looking for somewhere to go once they’ve finished reading the page they’re on.
Technique #6 – Focus on one product
Promoting several different products on the same page can sometimes leave a visitor confused, and a confused customer is likely to end their ’shopping trip’ abruptly and exit your site. To avoid this, focus the page on only one product and leave your visitors in no doubt as to how the product is the fix they’ve been looking for.
Use the ClickBank Marketplace to find a single product that is performing well, with a high gravity, payout, and a convincing sales page, to make sure that the extra clicks you get translate into actual sales and increase the size of your commission check!
Don’t forget to constantly monitor and test whenever making tweaks to your promotional pages. Keep notes on what you did and how your CTR was affected for future reference.
Do you have any additional techniques to share that have worked well for you? Have any of the above techniques helped improve your CTR? Let us know by leaving a comment below.
About the author
Simon Slade is the CEO of Affilorama, an affiliate marketing training portal that offers free video training, education and software tools to both beginning and advanced affiliate marketers.
Please note: Any opinions expressed here represent those of the author, and are not necessarily recommended or endorsed by ClickBank.
Affiliate Strategies: A Powerful Technique to Test New Products- Part 2
Posted by: Simon Slade, Guest Blogger
So, your page has been a success, you have some good rankings and you’ve decided to give the product its own full-blown website. Now comes the delicate task of directing that traffic to your new site. This is a strategy I use, and it works well for me. There are many ways to do it, but by following this strategy I minimize the disruption to my hard-earned rankings.
- Build the new site with a number of articles, each optimized for their own key phrases.
- Build external links to your site as usual.
- Wait a week or two.
- Assuming you are using a fresh domain, and depending on the extent of your link-building efforts, you will most likely be in the Google sandbox, and will be indexed, but not ranked for much.
- Put up an identical copy of your original product testing page that has been hosted on your other site. This time around, integrate menu and site links into the page and theme it with the rest of your new site. I recommend linking to all key pages on your new site from this page.
- Use a 301 redirect from the location of the test page on the old site, to the location of the test page on the new site.
This method ensures that approximately 70% or more (in my experience) of the PageRank or “Link Juice” from your original pages is passed on to the new page. You should see your old page fall out of the search results and your new page replace it. Additionally, the internal pages linked to from this article are given a boost as well, resulting in your new site gaining good search rankings at a much faster rate than without this boost.
About the author
Simon Slade is the CEO of Affilorama, an affiliate marketing training portal that offers free video training, education and software tools to both beginning and advanced affiliate marketers.
Please note: Any opinions expressed here represent those of the author, and are not necessarily recommended or endorsed by ClickBank.
