Showing posts with label affiliate marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label affiliate marketing. Show all posts

What Custom Content Can Do For You

Tuesday, May 26, 2009
In an increasingly crowded web marketplace, it can be difficult to separate from the pack. Sometimes even having a good page rank is not enough. You could have a number one ranking, but if your site is uninformative or poorly designed, web surfers are going to click and run. With the number of affiliate sites now entering the field, there is even more competition for web surfers' time. To succeed on the web, your site needs to be an absolute authority in a particular field.

A website is the best promotional tool an e-business can have. The business can advertise all over the web and set up pay-per-click campaigns, but if the site itself is weak, you cannot expect web surfers to stick around or come back a second time. Custom content is all about keeping surfers on site and coming back for more.

The more content you have, the more chance there will be that a surfer will type in that keyphrase that matches content found in content. However, keep in mind that web surfers can smell fake content— content that is purely used to generate traffic, with awkwardly phrased keyphrases and grammatical oddities. Your better bet is to write content that is factually relevant: informative content, rather than just keyword-driven content. In relevant content, a large number of keyphrases will be covered, in addition to being a trusted source on the topic.

A hundred pages of informative content can be far superior to a hundred pages of keyword-driven content. If a spider detects that too many keyphrases are mashed together on a page, the site could be red-flagged, or even banished to a permanent low ranking in a search engine. In the past, a website owner could write the same keyword over and over again at the bottom of the page. Spiders got wise to this and now this tactic can be more of a detriment than a benefit. Relevant, custom content will never be red-flagged by search engine spiders.

Custom content can lead to sales or new clientele. Think of two sites: one site offers little to no information on a topic. Another site addresses any and all topics affecting an industry. Which site do you think a potential customer is going to trust? Content is not just about ranking high in search engines via page ranking, but about providing a quality website. Custom content should be a mixture of both naturally keyword-rich content as well as highly useful information.

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Why Custom Content Is So Critical

Monday, May 25, 2009
Think of the alternatives to custom content: no content at all or content that has been taken from another site. If those two options seem unusable, you're getting a good idea of why custom content is so important. Looking at it another way: not having content is like designing a web site with the exact same layout as Amazon. This just isn't done— your site needs to be unique to be effective.
The two keys to custom content are uniqueness and authority. An informed buyer is an active buyer. Don't make a web surfer go elsewhere to find information on products and services. Everything a customer needs to know should be found on your site: informative articles, glossary definitions, reviews of products, answers to Frequently Asked Questions, and more. When all of this content is in place, a site will rank more highly in search engines, so a potential customer will have a better chance to come to the site and start perusing the information.
The idea is not just to sell specific products, but to sell the website itself, as well as sell the entire company. All of these things work in conjunction with each other. If people trust the information on the site, they'll be more willing to make a purchase. In addition, there's an element of gratitude for having direct questions answered. A site should never cover the bare minimum, but the gamut—every possible piece of information surrounding an industry, no matter how small.
Along with custom content there should be content organization. Just plastering long paragraphs of text on the screen will exhaust a web surfer before he or she even starts reading. Content needs to be well organized with relevant links both within the article and on the sidebar leading to information that corresponds to the original article. Just as the content needs to be well informed and well written, it needs to be well presented, or a web surfer is going to click out and move on.
All of these issues can make a website stand out from the vast array of sites online. People are more and more looking to the web for both information and shopping. At a content-rich site, surfers can kill two birds with one stone. These days, web owners are hiring copywriters to handle the task of preparing custom content. Each site will have a different demographic and require a different type of writing—for instance, technical or conversational— so it is important to find a content writing firm that specializes in a wide variety of industries.
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Affiliate Marketing:The Reward Of Direct Referals

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Aside from the profit potential of affiliate marketing from your own efforts, you can also earn money from “direct referrals”. When you introduce a new affiliate to the program, they become your direct referral, or sub-affiliate. Affiliate programs will pay you a commission for every direct referral you make. This is sometimes called a “residual” to distinguish it from the commissions paid in relationship to product or service.

While direct referrals are the most common type of residuals you can earn, you can find some affiliate programs that will pay you a residual on different levels, also called “tiers”.There are affiliate programs that have an unlimited number of tiers. These are Multi-Level programs. Tiers are just like steps, in a 2 tier program; your referral link is tier one, the visitor who clicks the link they find on your website and becomes an affiliate of the company is your direct referral or sub-affiliate. When they place their referral link on their own website, their referral link becomes tier two. The commission for each sub-affiliate usually is not as generous as for your own direct sales.

In a 3 tier program, the same process is extended; you are paid a commission or residual when your direct referral’s link is clicked on their website and as a result another person becomes an affiliate of the company. You now in a position to earn commissions three different ways:
  1. By referring visitors to the company website that results in a preferred action
  2. Through a referred visitor who becomes an affiliate of the company
  3. Through payment of a certain percentage from the first referral, a smaller percentage from the second referral and on through the number of tiers in the program for each sub-affiliate.

Depending on the number of tiers in an affiliate program, and the promotional efforts of your self and your sub-affiliates, residuals can add between 5-10% to your overall commissions.

You can create your own websites that can systematically generate income for you day or night, even while you sleep. You can link your web sites to the Online Merchants you represent, and earn commissions from the visitor traffic you “Drive” to them.