The ShareASale star is taking on a new look, but it needs your help.
Go and customize the ShareASale star and you just might create the new face of ShareASale.
More at http://www.shareastar.com/.
Affiliate marketing and other stuff from Shawn Collins, co-founder of Affiliate Summit.
The ShareASale star is taking on a new look, but it needs your help.
Go and customize the ShareASale star and you just might create the new face of ShareASale.
More at http://www.shareastar.com/.
SUPER Affiliate Strategies for Sustainable Businesses presentation from Affiliate Summit East 2006, which took place July 9-11, 2006 in Orlando, FL.
Are you tired of spending long days and lonely nights researching and building one affiliate site after another, and frustrated by those tiny commission checks? Are you afraid you may have to scramble to make your mortgage payment the next time Google changes its algorithm? Does paid advertising make you see red? Would you like to secure a richer, more rewarding future by working with a sustainable affiliate marketing business model instead? Then attend Rosalind Gardner’s presentation to learn the strategies Super Affiliates use to earn hefty six-figure annual incomes from just one or two Super Sites.
Note: the companies and positions listed above were current as of the time of the conference. Some of this information may have changed since then.
Introduction to Affiliate Marketing for Affiliates panel from Affiliate Summit East 2006, which took place July 9-11, 2006 in Orlando, FL.
Note: the companies and positions listed above were current as of the time of the conference. Some of this information may have changed since then.
Commission Junction has announced that they are phasing out keyword links, which were typically used by search affiliates.
The problem with the keyword links was that affiliates didn’t always know when an advertiser made a change. So, CJ is modifying the way search policies are changed and communicated to affiliates.
Now advertisers will be including the same information that they’ve included in their keyword links into their program terms as optional search engine marketing (SEM) policies.
Whenever an advertiser modifies the SEM policies in their program terms, affiliates will receive an email notification outlining the details of their current program term and the new term, including any changes to the SEM Policies.
Since the SEM Policies will now be in the program terms, affiliates will also be guaranteed a full 7 days advance notice prior to the new program term going into effect, so they’ll be able to make any necessary changes to SEM campaigns.
Some advertisers have already updated program terms with SEM Policies. On October 1, 2009 all remaining keyword links will be expired and advertisers will no longer be able to create new keyword links. The expired keyword links will remain visible in the CJ Account Manager for affiliates to review through October 31, 2009.
Epicenter Network has launched a new feature on their DM2 Web site development and hosting platform where site owners can quickly add products from Amazon and/or eBay.
DM2 is a free platform for creating sites where users can select one of the design templates from DM2’s gallery of over 250 category-specific alternatives. Then the template can be customized with a color scheme.
As far as the affiliate part of it, DM2 offers several options for monetization, including display advertising, integration with CPA networks and offers, affiliate program integration, and CPC XML feeds.
More details at http://dm-2.com/.
I can still see, hear, and smell NYC from that day. I was the affiliate manager at ClubMom, and I was excited that day, because we were relaunching the affiliate program (I guess I get excited easily).
There weren’t many people in the office, yet, and I heard about the first tower being hit when one of my co-workers sent an email to the whole company with an image of the WTC burning. I think he was on a list to get email alerts from CNN or something.
Anyhow, the first thing I thought was “what is wrong with this idiot that he created this fake picture and sent it to the company?”. Because it had to be fake. I’d just seen the World Trade Center about a half hour before as I walked across town from Penn Station.
Then I tried to go to CNN.com. It was down. Every news site I tried to visit was down. And I got an IM from a friend in Maryland asking if I was OK. I was confused and getting increasingly freaked out.
Somebody put on a TV and as people came into work, we were all locked on the footage. It was just this scene of shock in the office. After about an hour, when nobody had moved from in front of the TV, I decided I needed to get out of the city. I was the first one to leave the office that day.
When I got home, I posted a message to a discussion list of affiliate managers I’d started the year before. The list was a sort of support group for the bunch of us, as we tried to figure out what happened on 9/11 and the days after.
Here is my report to the list after making it home that day:
From: “Shawn Collins”
Date: Tue Sep 11, 2001 5:15 pm
Subject: Re: Are you OK?The ClubMom crew is ok – our office is in midtown Manhattan. But since we’re close to the Empire State Building, I was a little freaked out that it might also be a target, and I left for home at 10:30 AM.
Just seconds after I left the office, I was walking down Fifth Avenue and people started screaming and crying – I looked up and the 2nd World Trade Center tower was collapsing before my eyes.
It was a real nightmare – people were hysterical and transportation was shut down. I was afraid I would not be able to leave the city – as I made it to the West Side, I saw people running uptown on the West Side Highway – many were covered in soot, some were bloody – a really horrible scene.
Fortunately, the ferries were running, and I was able to get across the Hudson River to NJ, where I took a bus to Giants Stadium, and then hitchhiked home.
My prayers go out to all who are affected by this (who isn’t?).
Be safe,
Shawn Collins
ClubMom
The Performance Marketing Alliance (PMA) has announced the filing of an amicus brief in support of Amazon.com’s appeal of the advertising tax in New York State.
The brief explains that affiliates provide a form of Internet-based advertising that is closely analogous to traditional print advertisements distributed by a catalog retailer, and do not constitute a physical presence for an ecommerce merchant in any state. Affiliates sell no products, collect no payments from buyers and make no deliveries. They have no further involvement in the sales and marketing process beyond posting the advertisement.
The brief maintains that the statute harms the public interest by punishing performance marketing, a highly efficient approach to advertising which has allowed thousands to make a living through electronic advertising on the Internet. Further, the revenue stream generated from performance marketing has allowed many small businesses and individuals to accelerate the development of their Web sites, facilitating the more rapid diffusion of free information to the public that is the hallmark of the Internet.
Amazon filed its appeal on July 13, 2009, in the New York State Supreme Court Appellate division. The state of New York is expected to file a response by September 16, 2009.
Press release: Performance Marketing Alliance Moves to Reverse Unfair Tax Legislation Threatening New York Business Owners
Q: Why is WordPress recommended over Blogger? I find Blogger so easy, and WordPress seems so complex. Plus, I am told WordPress will not take AdSense, so I am curious… why is it recommended?
A: I am not sure if this is in response to a recommendation I made in the past. If so, the version of WordPress I would have recommended is the one you download and install on your host.
I would not encourage anybody to build an affiliate site on either Blogger.com or WordPress.com. You just don’t have the same level of control, and I haven’t read the Terms of Service on either recently, but you may be limited on the extent and type of advertising.
If you have a tough time installing WordPress yourself, there are many hosts, such as LivingDot, where they will do the installation for you for free.
As far as WordPress being more complex than Blogger, there is a learning curve with WordPress and Blogger is very basic, but that’s part of the point – you can do so much more with WordPress, and you are constrained with what you can do with Blogger.
With WordPress, you can pick the Theme that best works for your project – this is the layout of the blog, and it’s really easy to switch it up. Literally the click of a mouse to do it.
I would encourage you to pick up one of the books out there that help to build a WordPress site, such as WordPress for Business Bloggers or WordPress for Dummies.
Once you get used to it, WordPress is really easy to use, and you’ll find it to be an incredibly flexible and efficient platform.
I just finished up No Need for Speed: A Beginner’s Guide to the Joy of Running by John Bingham, and it occurred to me how running parallels affiliate marketing.
There are lots of folks that enter affiliate marketing the dollar signs in their eyes. They’ve been sold on the “get rich quick” daydream. And that sort of overnight success is just as rational as somebody who started jogging yesterday and thinks they will complete a marathon next week.
It’s funny. When I told people I was starting to run, many of them asked when I would run my first marathon. I explained how I was excited to complete my first 5k, and then another in the future, and I’d keep setting goals along the way.
Just the same, new affiliates aren’t going to be millionaires next year, unless they get lucky on PowerBall.
As John Bingham touched on in the chapter, “Basic Truths about Racing,” the race isn’t about the winner. Most runners aren’t going to ever win a marathon, or even be close enough to the front of the pack to see the winner break the ribbon.
Most runners won’t even win their local 5k, but if they enjoy what they’re doing, they’ve won. There is no specific timeline or benchmark for success in affiliate marketing or running.
“When it’s over, that’s the only question any of us need to ask. Did we do our best? Did we line up prepared to do our best, however we defined “best” that day? One day, our “best” may mean running as hard and as fast as we can. Another day, our “best” may mean running slowly with a friend who needs encouragement. On still another day, our “best” may mean simply savoring the experience of the run.”
When I started as an affiliate in 1997, I was ecstatic to get my first few bucks. Then I was paying the bill for cable… then cable and phone. I kept trying and learning and getting better at what I was doing. Eventually, I was supporting my family with those commission checks.
My advice to is challenge yourself and focus on setting a new PR (personal record) as often as you can. It’s not a race to the front of the pack. It’s a race to your own realistic finish line of success. Each time you get there, you’ve won.
Highlights from Affiliate Summit East 2009, where more than 3,000 affiliate marketers got together to network and learn in New York City on August 9-11, 2009.