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Finding Affiliates to Promote Your Product

Written by: Chris McNeeney, Guest Blogger

When I first got started as a ClickBank vendor several years ago, I faced one of the major challenges that faces all new ClickBank vendors: how to find and attract affiliates to promote my product. Since then, I’ve sold several very successful products through ClickBank, and have learned what it takes to get affiliates to promote your product, which is absolutely key if you want to make a lot of sales. In this post, I’ll share what I’ve learned over years of finding and attracting affiliates.

First Things First

An extremely important step in attracting affiliates that many new vendors don’t know about or ignore is promoting your offer yourself before seeking out affiliates. The reason for this is that you need to make sure your offer converts. Otherwise, all your efforts will be wasted. Many affiliates, especially highly successful ones, will only give a product one chance. If it doesn’t convert into sales for them, they’ll stop promoting it and probably won’t try again, especially if they spend money to promote it.

Pay Per Click traffic is a great way to test how well your product converts. The goal is to get a conversion rate of at least 1% – ideally closer to 3%.

This may sound like unncessary groundwork, but it really is a vital first step: the importance of having a high converting offer can’t be stressed enough.

If your offer converts, recruiting affiliates will be a piece of cake. Any affiliates you bring on board will make money and continue promoting you. Their efforts will quickly pull in many new affiliates, and so on – its a virtuous cycle. Your offer will go viral if your conversions are high, as other affiliates start to see what their competitors are promoting.

However, if your offer does not convert you will have a tough time keeping any new affiliates you do manage to enlist. Your offer will likely stagnate and then disappear for good.

So be sure to run a simple PPC campaign to test your conversion rates before reaching out to affiliates. You can get more info on PPC at my Affiliate Videos page.

Next Steps

Now that you have a proven 1-3% conversion rate, its time to start contacting affiliates. The good news is that some of the work is already done. With ClickBank, you are never working from a dead start.

First, the ClickBank Marketplace will introduce your new site to a potential network of hundreds of thousands of affiliates (you should submit your product to the Marketplace as soon as you are approved). Second, the fact that all payments are handled by ClickBank ensures you have instant trust with affiliates. ClickBank have paid out over $1 billion to vendors and affiliates – so your affiliates know they will be paid on time, which is important since you don’t have any reputation right now. In short, listing your product with ClickBank gives you a firm platform to recruit affiliates from. You may well even attract affiliates passively before you start work.

But a mere presence on ClickBank won’t be enough; we have to actively build on that platform and reach out to affiliates if we want to succeed.

So how do we do that? And what kind of affiliate do we recruit? To a large extent, it depends on your niche. In the fat loss niche, for example, you have many avenues open to you. There are thousands of potential affiliates, some with lists of customers (so they can promote you via e-mail), some spending huge amounts of money on Pay Per Click traffic, and others with well-visited “authority sites” that pull in masses of free (“organic”) traffic from the search engines.

Smaller niches may be more restrictive, with all the sales coming from one traffic source or affiliate type. For example, in your niche, perhaps there are 10 big e-mail affiliates (“list owners”) who account for 70% of all sales. I’ve seen it happen before. Perhaps all the action is happening on a handful of search engine keywords that can be targeted via “organic search” or “pay per click” (this is actually the norm).

I have divided affiliates into 3 types here, but there are many other traffic sources, such as affiliates who purchase ad space on media networks (“media buys”). For simplicity’s sake I have restricted the affiliate types to e-mail, Pay Per Click and organic.

Pay Per Click Affiliates

PPC affiliates are very often the easiest to reach of all, although often the most fickle (they are constantly tracking their return on investment, and so will move to the highest converting offer in a heartbeat – another reason to ensure you are converting before you recruit affiliates).

PPC affiliates basically buy traffic from search engines such as Google, so that when people enter a keyword relating to your niche (e.g., “fat loss guides”), their ad shows up on the right hand side of the search results page.

If you enter a few keywords that relate to your niche, look at the ads that appear down the right hand side. Do any affiliates appear here that are promoting your competitors’ offers? Are there are any vendors promoting their own offers but collecting leads? If so, they may be open to promoting your offer to their lists.

If you find advertisers like these, you should contact them and ask them to promote your offer.

You can brainstorm keywords to find these PPC affiliates by entering the URL of your website or related keywords using the Adwords Tool or my affiliate keyword tool. Search for each related keyword that the tool returns and look for affiliates advertising on that phrase.

Organic / Website Affiliates

Some affiliates buy traffic from the search engines via PPC, but others have established sites that actually get free rankings in the search engines. These “organic” affiliates often have a huge amount of traffic coming to their sites, and so can be superb affiliates.

The first step to finding them is to take the keyword list you generated earlier (when you were looking for PPC affiliates), enter the same keywords, and now look for webiste owners appearing on the left hand side of the results page. Visit every site and head to their contact page, explaining how your offer is relevant to their website. Some website owners may not be familiar with affiliate marketing, so you may need explain to them why it can be lucrative for them and a good fit for their audience.

You can also search for the name of a competitor’s product (e.g., “The Ultimate Fat Loss Guide”) and contact any website that has a review of your competitor’s product. If they are promoting your competitors, they may well promote you also. When contacting these organic affiliates be sure to emphasise why your offer will add value for their visitors.

E-mail Affiliates (“JV Partners”)

These are the hardest affiliates to get on board, but also potentially the most lucrative. E-mail affiliates have a list of customers that they can promote offers to. It stands to reason that many of your top e-mail affiliates will be your competitors, such as other product vendors. These guys have a customer list of their own, and may be interested in promoting your offer to their list.

If you do get them to promote, they can generate huge numbers of sales with a single e-mail. Secondly, e-mail affiliates are the key to going viral: since all the big product vendors and affiliates sign up to each other’s lists, if they do promote you, other affiliates can jump on board quickly. A high-converting offer can go viral off a single e-mail, as more and more affiliates see the e-mail blast and jump on board. That’s the power of reaching thousands of people with a single e-mail.

List owners like this are in theory very easy to find – just do a simple search on the ClickBank Marketplace and contact any vendor in your niche who is collecting names and e-mails on their Pitch Page.

However, while they are easy to find, these affiliates are also the hardest to recruit. Many of your e-mails asking for promotion will probably go ignored, much more so than the other kinds of affiliates. These guys are bombarded with e-mails like yours, and they just don’t have the time to answer every one they receive. It isn’t personal, its just business.

For this reason, I advise you to focus on the PPC and organic affiliates to start with. Then, when you have some grass-roots traction behind your offer, and you know your product converts well, you can approach the big e-mail affiliates from a position of strength.

What to Say When You Contact Affiliates

You usually only get one shot at contacting affiliates, so it’s vital that you do it right the first time. First, make your e-mail personalised to the affiliate in question. Reference their site and start by telling them your offer is relevant and will deliver value to their visitors/customers. Please do not send out a “one size fits all” e-mail. Any potential affiliate receives dozens of e-mails like yours – you need to make it personalized if you want your offer to stand out.

Next, tell them why they will make money by promoting your offer – give them your overall conversion rate, details of any affiliates you already have on board, and how successful they’ve been. Explain what is working especially well for you. Finally, close by giving them a call to action – tell them to either visit your affiliate page or e-mail you back for further information and a review copy of your product.

Closing Thoughts

I’ll repeat my advice from earlier: it’s vital that your Pitch Page converts before you recruit affiliates.

This will make it much easier to retain the affiliates who you do recruit, and also bring on new affiliates once you get your first set of affiliates on board. Once you have a high-converting offer, set up your affiliate page, listing details of your conversion rates at the top of the page. The affiliate page is where you will be sending potential affiliates, and should include your HopLink info and any resources (Adwords ads, e-mail swipe copy, etc) that affiliates can use.

You should also submit your offer to all the affiliate directories that are out there, along with the “announcements” sections of the top affiliate forums. This will take some time, but is vital to establishing your initial grass-roots foundation. Then, once your offer converts, your affiliate page is live, and you are listed in some directories, you can approach the above 3 affiliate types and start generating some real sales for your ClickBank product.

Finally, understand that affiliate recruitment is a numbers game. Look at it as a process rather than an “end game.” You’re looking to build gradual momentum, get your offer out there, and if it converts, the viral power of the Internet will do the rest. A high-converting offer only needs a little push before it gathers traction. So get to work – and build that initial buzz yourself!

About the author

Chris McNeeney is the owner of Affiliate X – a resource site for ClickBank affiliates with affiliate tools, affiliate videos and training information.

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:

  1. Seven Habits of Highly Successful Affiliates
  2. Six Steps to Finding a Great Product to Promote
  3. Choosing the Best Keywords to Promote ClickBank Products Using Search Engines
  4. 7 Ways to Get More Loyal Affiliates
  5. New Podcast: How to Recruit Affiliates to Promote Your Product

17 Responses to “Finding Affiliates to Promote Your Product”

  • Social comments and analytics for this post…

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  • That was excellent, I’ve written a few vendor programs for Clickbank but didn’t get many sales or constant affiliates, now I’m going to try all those suggestions. Thanks!

  • Fantastic post thanks for the valuable tips. I am looking into finding affiliates to promote my products and these tips are pure gold. Thanks

    Tom Horton

  • jon says:

    My first contanct with clickbank was thought and same time amazing!

    Now I can’t live without it!

  • Dag says:

    hey, I tested out my pitch pages with adwords and got about a 2% conversion rate out of about 500 hits.

    I currently have 58 affiliates promoting my product here on clickbank. Out of the 600+ hoplinks, I’ve only made one sale so far.

    Recap:
    adwords: 500 hits, about 10 sales
    Clickbank: 600 hits, 1 sale

    I find this strange. Is it?

  • Beau Blackwell, ClickBank says:

    Dag,

    Trying to compare the effectiveness of traffic from Adwords vs from affiliates is a bit like comparing apples to oranges. Adwords is highly targeted traffic, often from people who are searching for a solution to a specific problem.

    Affiliates drive traffic in many different ways, so it may not be nearly as targeted as Adwords traffic. Depending on how the traffic was generated, the visitor may not have been looking to spend any money on a product.

    The main benefit of affiliate traffic is that it’s free for you unless a sale takes place. Even though it’s still not quite an apples-to-apples comparison, comparing affiliate traffic to traffic from the Google Content Network is likely closer to the results you’d get from affiliate traffic.

  • Chuck says:

    I’ve a question for any affiliates reading this. We have a “core” web site that we’re trying to drive new traffic to via Clickbank Affiliate Marketing. We’ve a significant investment in this core site, and it’s imperative its use be the end result of our marketing effort.

    With that in mind, we’ve created our Pitch and Thank You Pages on CB, and think we’ve done a pretty good job at removing all references to the core site in order to keep new customers from bypassing you and going directly to the site. In short, the customer doesn’t get to our site until following the instructions on our Thank You page.

    The down side to this is all our current banner and ad graphics currently have the core site domain name/logo in them. We’re currently looking into redesign of these that will refer to some new domains we’ve purchased instead of the core domain. We’d then migrate the Clickbank pages to the new domain(s)

    My question is: How important is it really to an Affiliate Marketer that a potential customer NOT see any references to another URL or Domain? If a customer was reading a Pitch Page for Company “A”, and say an obscure reference to Company “B” (or just a different Domain Name), do you all think it’s a potential sale killer? Is it a “bad thing” if the Pitch Page resides on a subdomain of the core site (i.e., pitch page URL = http://promo.maindomain.com)?

    Any constructive feedback would be appreciated.

  • dogbisquit says:

    dear chuck, regarding pitchpage.
    according to Google Adwords, the destination url MUST directly relate to the ad, and the ad of course will relate to the clickbank url.
    Is this relevant to your question ?
    good luck, Dogbisquit

  • Steve says:

    Chris,

    Yes, you are totally correct. I have followed you methods to a tee and a can’t fault them.

    Regards

    Steve

  • Me Me Me says:

    Regarding contacting webmasters by email, couldn’t this potentially break SPAM laws?

  • Vern says:

    I’ve not seen such a comprehensive explanation of what to do to increase the number of affiliates. Thanks for this! re: Me Me Me – not breaking spam laws if you use the contact form that most big websites use to allow contacting the staff, that’s my understanding of it – and what I usually do. Cheers.

  • Zafrir Ron says:

    Currently as stated in your help guides a “HopLink Target URL” is set at the account level.
    And if a vendor wants to promote more than one product you suggest a “Gateway” page, or open a new account.

    Well in internet marketing terms this is unacceptable approach. Such suggestion is non professional answer to the issue. Bad design architecture, misunderstanding of product marketing.
    As I know your company and think of it very highly, regarding your knowledge and service, I think you should consider to remove this paragraph.

    Please allow me to give you a short summary of Internet vendors view on product pages.

    A “hoplink target URL” is the selling/pitch page of a product (not an account not a vendor A PRODUCT).
    This is the most important page on any business web site, this page is continuously worked on to improve its
    Conversion performance, we test many many versions of this page to get to the most efficient converting page.

    We prepare few pages per product, sometimes per keyword, per affiliate, per traffic source and per variation of a product
    Just to try to match the user need and his expectation when he gets to this page.
    All this is no big secret as you know and it’s a fundamental marketing request.

    Currently clickbank architecture design allowing one url per account is unacceptable for a the very basic need.
    And worse than that you suggest a wrong solution for selling multiple products per account.
    Imagine a customer Click on affiliate page optimized to promote product A (by the affiliate for his revenue) arriving to a vendor “Gateway”
    Page (as you suggest), this vendor (uses your guide) created a gateway suggesting the user to go to one of 2,3,100 other products
    Convert is going down, affiliate is losing money, Clickbank losing money (LOSE – LOSE).
    1. The user get something he did not ask for (affiliate promoted product A)
    2. The user needs to click twice to get to the product (if he finds it on the gateway page)
    3. The products on the page are different from what the affiliate is singed to sell (and vendor meant to promote..)

    Imaging a vendor wants to promote even a single product but wants to compare two variations of pitch page,
    By your help he needs to open a new account, so all product and account building just for a pitch page?
    Two registrations, pay checks. Two accounts to compare the affiliate performance (same affiliates)
    Two accounts to log in, two accounts to…unacceptable!!!

    The “Hoplink target URL” should be at the product level (even can be few variations per product).
    This is a must for every vendor (on the technology side its adding field/s to the product and adding the hoplink to the product query). From business side if your concern is revenue from opening new accounts for this need (well it awkward way by you) but you can ask for additional fee for every new hoplink,
    I’m sure ALL vendors would love to pay (although I think its so basic need….).

    I strongly recommend you to consider this change. It will help everyone including your revenue and reputations (that currently…).

    I’m sorry for been so blunt about this, I hope it will help to improve your service.
    I’m certainly going to continue to use your wonderful web site and system.

    Regards.

    Best Regards,
    Zafi

  • Beau Blackwell, ClickBank says:

    Zafi,

    Thanks very much for your thoughtful feedback. We’re always looking for ways to improve our service for our affiliates and vendors, so we’ll take your thoughts into consideration!

  • Zafrir Ron says:

    Thanks Beau,

    Just another demonstration how big this absurd goes, let me refer you to CB help page:
    http://www.clickbank.com/help/vendor-help/vendor-resources/order-form-split-testing/

    Where CB recognizes the need for split testing, on the order form page. But where the impact on Clickbank’s revenue is greater – the vendor pitch page, CB does not recognize the need for split testing :-) .
    I just hope this will somehow will help to move this…

  • Emma says:

    I’m following your adivce, it’s more than great!thanks a lot Chris.

  • Josh says:

    Zafrir, it’s not an ideal solution, but on your affiliate page, you can give affiliates a link that directs traffic to a specific pitch page. Just use a redirect on the main page that checks the query string. Sample link: http://hop.clickbank.net/?AFFID/VENID&page=ANYVARIABLEFORPRODUCT

  • Meratvforum says:

    For those of you that create products and recruit affiliate marketers to promote your services, this blog post is a must read. Some of it will be old news to you and maybe a few new things you will get out of it. For new venders looking for tips on how to attract hungry affiliate marketers should take a good look at this blog post.

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