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Archive for June, 2007

Yahoo Search Marketing Launches Quality-Based Pricing

Monday, June 11th, 2007

Yahoo announced the rollout of a new feature that they call quality-based pricing. They claim that this is an ongoing effort to raise the value of their sponsored search and content match products.

So far all traffic for a particular keyword was billed at a certain amount. Now, with the introduction of Quality based pricing the cost per click will differ based on the quality of the websites that are providing traffic to you.

Yahoo claims that “Quality” is calculated based on conversion rates and other measurements of the ability to deliver more interested and valuable customers to you from particular distribution partner sites and discounts will be automatically applied to your account.

They also claim that cost per click should decrease. Its too early to conclude if that is going to happen… Lets wait and watch!

 

What makes a successful Affiliate Marketing campaign?

Monday, June 4th, 2007

Dealing with clients is never easy - especially those who haven’t had any previous experience or knowledge of Affiliate Marketing. A few things I recommend are non-intuitive, and seem to go against accepted wisdom - but are essential to distinguish a mediocre campaign from a great one. What commission to pay is frequently an area which needs explaining.

Commissions aren’t everything. But when presented with a competitor campaign analysis, a client will point to his biggest competitor and insist on matching or bettering the commission he’s offering his affiliates. Obvious? Things aren’t as simple. Is a program that pays 15% comission necessarily more attractive than one that pays 13%? No.

What you really want for your client is a low cost per conversion - to sell as many items as is possible while paying out as little in commissions as is possible [1]. In that case, what you want to look at is the EPC, or earnings per 100 clicks [2]. The EPC for the affiliate is the cost per conversion (CPC) for the merchant.

We begin with an EPC value equal to or lower than, say, the client’s current EPC for his PPC (Adwords/Overture) program. Now we calculate what commission the client should offer:

EPC = (percentage of clicks that result in a sale) X (average value of a sale) X (commission) X 100

Now we know the EPC, the average value of an online sale (the client can tell you that, based on his past sales records). That leaves only the sales-to-click ratio to be estimated. This is where past experience is invaluable. I rely on past campaigns that I’ve run and use those as estimates (which turn out to be fairly accurate).

Now you know better than to rely on simply matching your competitor’s commissions - your client could be paying a lot more than he needs to for the same sales volume!

Notes:
[1] Note the difference - “as little in commissions” is a dollar term, while “percentage commissions” is a numerical term.

[2] Earnings for the affiliate, not the merchant!

- Rahul.

Rahul Gaitonde is an Affiliate Marketing consultant with Convonix Inc.

The Long Tail Dilemma Of Internet Marketing

Friday, June 1st, 2007

Any good affiliate marketer hits the Long Tail Dilemma of publishers fairly quickly. On the one hand are large publishers with lots of eyeballs which could get the merchant huge volumes of highly focused audiences. For instance, an India-centric Moto-enthusiast website such as http://www.xbhp.com/ would make a fantastic publisher for a motorcycle company such as Royal Enfield. These form the “head” of your publisher base - they number a few, but bring in substantial sale volumes individually. As an affiliate program manager, you will work with each individual large publisher to best position your merchant’s offerings on their web “real estate”. Here’s where you get real innovation, where magic with data feeds can be wrought, where true integration with content is possible.

However, affiliate program managers are also acutely aware that there’s tons of data being generated every single day on the web - and that every website, blog, service that comes online is more web real estate, and every new user is a potential affiliate. These form the “tail” of your publisher base. For an affiliate program to really scale (and scale tremendously), it must ride the wave of this data. As a program manager, you won’t chase and cut deals with each individual fish that jumps into the web pool. Today, you rely on publisher registrations on CJ, Shareasale, Linkshare and that minnow in the news lately, Performics. As the read-write web gathers mass, the tail is growing inexorably larger in comparison to the head.

The Dilemma, then, is this: you can’t offer the tail as much as you can offer the head. And reciprocally, the tail can’t perform acrobatics with your creatives and data feeds either. All your tail does today is slap banner or text ads on their blogs or home pages. That’s about the limit of adoption. Where’s the differentiation? Not only for your merchant, but also for you, the affiliate program manager? What value are you adding? If the only interaction with the tail is going to be making animated GIFs and catchy text ads, writing up a “Join our Affiliate Program” page on the merchant’s website, and registering on CJ et al (and waiting for the tail to sign up), the merchant will soon realize that the middleman isn’t adding any value, and will cut you out. He’d much rather do it himself.

What we’re seeing is the commoditization of the process of traditional affiliate marketing. The guys who’ll make the real bucks in the future are going to be those who’ll put easy-to-use tools in the hands of the tail. Or even better, make tools for affiliates that auto-deploy themselves. Who bring in the innovation that belongs in the head today into the tail. Amazon began the process way back with aStore, but that isn’t going far enough.

Hold it. Auto-deploy? Doesn’t that sound like Search Engine Marketing? Well, it does, in a way. From the publisher’s point of view, what’s the essential difference between AdSense and Affiliate marketing? With AdSense, the publisher has no control over what ads will be displayed in the AdSense code box that he/she slaps on his/her page, merely that they’ll be more or less relevant to the page content. With Affiliate marketing, the publisher chooses from a clutch of creatives provided by a merchant. Once you talk about auto-deploying merchant creatives in innovative, “head-like” ways, the line between them gets blurred. Several startups have caught on already. This comment on Sam Harrelson’s blog lists a few of the more interesting ones.

We’re at a fairly interesting juncture in the Affiliate Marketing market. The next big opportunity belongs to whoever will have the gumption to target the Long Tail, and do it in a way that goes far beyond the tired, banal banner-text-ad process that’s been perfected into a science. Watch this space!

- Rahul.

Rahul Gaitonde is an Affiliate Marketing consultant with Convonix Inc.

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