As part of my presentation for Affiliate Summit East 2011, I have prepared an Editorial Calendar (“editorial calender” for those of you with spelling issues) to help bloggers, affiliates, and merchants take advantage of Seasonality in Affiliate Marketing. The calendar is basically a listing of different holidays, events, and seasons that you might want to write about or monetize in some way. While it certainly is not an exhaustive list, it should give you a good start on your planning as well as get your creative juices flowing about other similar events. Understand that some events change dates from year to year and that you need to be looking at least a month in advance to plan for many of the events.
Counting Down to #ASE11 and Getting Prepared
With just a little over a week until I leave for Affiliate Summit, the excitement is starting to set in. Are you almost ready? The crazy planner in me is going through all of this:
Packing: I posted in 2009 in my Real Scoop on Preparing for Affiliate Summit article the kinds of things that I pack that you might not think about: comfortable shoes, eye drops, gum or breath mints, and bottled water. I also now include hand sanitizer and ibuprofen. Don’t forget business cards! I’m taking some postcard-sized promotional sheets this year about my company that give more information than what I put on my business cards.
Affiliate Summit Indianapolis Meetup
On March 30, Indianapolis joined other cities across the world in the first ever Affiliate Summit Meetup Day event. Although we were a small group, it was a great opportunity for the newly-forming Indy affiliate community. We had a couple of other people pop in and out, but our four main attendees as pictured were Jim McIntosh (@mcintosh33), Tricia Meyer (me!) (@sunshinetricia), Blake Ensign (@BeSTForum), and Eric Jones (@ericrjones1).
Because affiliate marketing is just starting in Indianapolis and we have already had a couple of “introductory” presentations in the last 2 months, I decided to change up the official agenda a little bit. After introductions and order taking, we spent 30 minutes discussing hot topics in affiliate marketing including: use of social media, the Farmer/Panda Google Update, and favorite affiliate marketing resources.
Affiliate Manager, Be My Valentine?
Are you an Affiliate Manager, Merchant, or OPM that wants to know what it would take to get your affiliates to love…or even LIKE you more? Last month I was fortunate enough to speak on the Inside the Minds of Affiliates panel at Affiliate Summit West with Eric Nagel and Kim Rowley (moderated by Greg Hoffman). If you missed that presentation (or didn’t take notes), here are some of the basics that we covered.
Program Management
- Weight the pros and cons of using outsourced program management (OPM), including how much you already know (or do not know) about affiliate marketing, whether the OPM will have the authority to do their job, and if you need them to connect you immediately with new affiliates
- Understand the difference between hiring an in-house person to run your affiliate program as opposed to outsourcing. InĀ addition, will your in-house person be a dedicated affiliate manager or just a part of your marketing team?
Communicating with Affiliates
- Your initial recruitment email should specifically state which of our sites you think your program would be a good fit for. Make sure that you know our site and that your product actually fits out niche.
- Sign that email with actual contact information and not just “the affiliate team.”
- When you mention numbers to us, make sure that correspond with numbers we will find within the network (such as EPC, reversal rates, etc). Understand that those numbers do not mean much to most affiliates.
- Tell us how you are different from your competitor. There are likely a number of competitors in your niche and we need to know why we should promote you over them.
- Once you approve us to your program, provide us with full contact information such as phone number, Twitter, direct email, and IM.
- In that approval email, provide us with any non-standard terms (like coupon and PPC restrictions), your top-selling products, and any seasonal trends.
- Do we want an email when we have our first sale with you? Our panel was split.
- Be available via email, phone, Twitter, Facebook, and Instant Messenger. Respond timely if you want us to make sales for you. If you have to go search for an answer, at least let us know that you are looking for it. Be available to your affiliates. Be available for questions. Be available…are you getting this one?
Newsletters
- Newsletter frequency preferences vary but we all agreed that we do not want to see the same thing every week. We like newsletters at least monthly but only weekly if you have different coupons or specials each week.
- When should you send your newsletters? The panel was pretty split on this but overwhelmingly agreed that we need at least a couple of days’ notice for special offers and coupons. Anything sent for “today only” is probably going to be overlooked or ignored.
- Be sure to include the program name in your subject line. It’s also helpful to include the network somewhere in the email because sometimes you have programs on multiple networks.
- Include either our links in the newsletters or direct links to access the links. If you just say “find the links in the interface,” we are not as likely to take the time to go get them.
- Tell us what is working for other affiliates but be generic and don’t give out the actual domains of other affiliates.
- Tell us about seasonal trends because we do not know your business like you do.
- Let us know about any kind of media exposure that you will be getting.
- Send us any specialty categories that might be applicable to you like top sellers, best sellers, holiday specials, hot deals, and new arrivals.
Banners and Creatives
- Give us at least one text link to your homepage.
- Provide banners in popular sizes (see the iab.net “Ad Unit Guidelines“). Consider that different types of sites use them in different ways (coupon sites, content sites, cash back sites).
- Provide at least a couple of banners that are logo only.
- Let us know about any video that we can embed, including Youtube videos.
- Consider creating widgets.
Datafeeds
- Make sure that they are updated and check the links before you upload the datafeed.
- Provide both thumbnail and full-size images.
- Understand how your affiliates are using your datafeeds (e.g. niche sites or product search/price comparison).
- Let affiliates know in advance or ASAP about any major datafeed changes because these could impact their entire site.
Coupons
- When possible, provide exclusive coupons that track back to the affiliate. Don’t know how to do that? Ask your network and they will help you.
- Give out the coupons at least a day in advance, not the day that they go active.
- Understand the coupon feed system of the network you are on so that your coupons are included and have the proper start and end dates.
- Make sure that exclusives are really exclusive.
Search Restrictions
- Know what you are telling your affiliates. Saying that “affiliates cannot use brand name in source code” is stupid because we can’t promote you if we can’t say your name.
- Really think about PPC restrictions. Would you rather have your affiliates bidding on your brand name or your competition? Even if you restrict your affiliates, your competitors may still be bidding and sending your potential customers to their sites instead of yours.
- Understand TM and TM+. One restricts the Trademark only and the other includes Trademark plus additional terms.
- If you have restrictions, enforce them fairly across all affiliates. Consider using Brand Verity.
Rewards and Incentives
- Incentive programs that reward only the affiliates with the “most sales” do not motive niche-site affiliates.
- Allow us to compete against our own stats–year-over-year or month-over-month.
- Personalize the rewards to your affiliates and make sure that they are achievable.
- Ask your affiliates what they want–cash, prizes, increased commissions?
- Don’t make us ask you for our prizes. Send them immediately or make them easy to claim.
Leaks
- Know what “leaks” on your site are. Essentially, anything that takes the traffic that we are sending you away from your site in some way that will benefit you and not us.
- Fix 800 number leaks with a PayPerCall program.
- Ensure that Live Chat does not overwrite our commissions.
- Do not link to other sites, including your “sister sites” if we will not be compensated for purchases made there.
- Take off AdSense because we receive nothing if people click on those links.
Network Account
- Have your own affiliate account within the network. Join your program and set yourself at 0% commission. This way, you will be able to see what we are seeing.
Thanks to the AffStat Report for providing us with some data that we were able to use during the presentation. I left out the quotes and pretty charts but you can read the whole report yourself. The rest of the presentation was based on the experience that the 4 of us have had in our 20+ combined years of affiliate marketing.
Questions for us? Anything we missed? Here are our Twitter accounts if you want to track us down:
Tricia Meyer @sunshinetricia
Eric Nagel @esnagel
Kim Rowley @kimarketing
Greg Hoffman @akagorilla
10 Things That Made Me Laugh at Affiliate Summit West
Normally this would be the time when I do a serious wrap-up post about everything I learned at Affiliate Summit. This time I can’t get out of my head just how much I genuinely enjoyed the conference. It’s not that I didn’t seriously learn a lot, it’s just that (shockingly) I felt myself giggling an awful lot the last few days. I think I’ve finally learned how to truly be 100% myself there so that I can laugh and learn at the same time.
In no particular order, here are 10 of the 100+ things that gave me a good laugh in Vegas.
1) Shawn Collins in the Patriot jersey. On the one hand, it was a sad moment for all of us AFC fans. On the other hand, knowing Shawn, it was pretty darn funny. And I won’t even start in about his “short pants….”
2) Not being able to find the Blogger Lounge for 2 hours. It was totally, completely my fault. I started feeling like I should be saying “Look, kids, Big Ben, Parliament” as I went around in circles seeing the same people over and over. I think maybe I was too busy socializing to find a map.
3) Jason Rubacky and the Jazzy. Jason could #GetSome serious senior citizen action rolling on that thing.
4) Trying to figure out how the curtains opened at the Wynn. Yep, I’m from Indiana.
5) Tiny coffee cups with baby spoons at lunch. The desserts were cute as could be, but watching people eat them was kind of a Gulliver’s Travels moment. (The book, not the movie. I haven’t seen the movie)
6) Trivia night and how competitive but not at all really competitive all my friends are. Did I mention that my team won?
7) The scared look on the faces of the merchants in the audienceĀ by the end of our Inside the Minds of Affiliates panel. We really didn’t mean to sound so grumpy. I promise I’ll be nicer if you email me. (Just don’t try to call me)
8 ) Putting on every single hat, boa, and pair of glasses in the ShareASale Photo Booth with Kim Rowley. And the number of people who asked if they could have a copy of the pictures that we took when I told them that we were making out in there.
9 ) My (non)sighting of Charlie Sheen before the Tuesday keynote and the fact that people back in Indiana actually believed it because it was retweeted so much. (Thank you, Erik Hom)
10) At least 50% of every conversation that I had with OPMs, affiliate managers, networks, and fellow affiliates. Each of you brought me so much joy that I couldn’t help but laugh at least a little. And I have to mention Eric Nagel specifically for putting up with more of my giggling than anyone else.
Thanks as always to Shawn Collins and Missy Ward for giving us an environment in which we can both work and have fun, ensuring that we will be back time and time again!
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