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How to Make Affiliate Marketing Work for Your Business

July 17, 2012 by Guest Author

by
Tara Hornor

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Many affiliate marketing programs claim users can make thousands of dollars a month by doing nothing. Sure, there are a few big-time marketers and businesses that have made wads of cash through affiliate marketing, but this is the exception. Many programs claim marketing through affiliate programs are a piece of cake, but for every affiliate marketing success, thousands of businesses have failed to make a dime.

Is Affiliate Marketing Right for Your Business?

Most businesses engage affiliate marketers as a strategy to extend their reach. To attract quality affiliates you’ll need to offer high commissions on sales, but this can cut deeply into your profits. Depending upon your margins, your business may be able to support affiliates or you may find it more effective to market on your own.

If you can’t support affiliates, you might consider performing the affiliate marketing role on your own. If you have a strong market or a strong marketing background and your firm has the capabilities, find other products and services that you can market alongside yours. This is a perfectly acceptable affiliate marketing arrangement that benefits you, your customers, and the other companies involved. Some companies actually start out by marketing affiliate products to build a market while they’re still working on their own product line to offer.

You may consider this if you find that you cannot currently create these extra products and services your customers want. For example, you may want to sell insurance for your products. Instead of self-insuring, you could simply sell insurance as an affiliate, make a little money, and everybody wins.

How to Make Affiliate Marketing Work

Not every business can effectively use affiliate marketing. If no one in your company can focus efforts entirely on affiliate marketing for a couple of days a week, maybe affiliate marketing programs aren’t for you. Affiliate marketing isn’t about sitting back and collecting money. It does involve work – and lots of it. Here are a few tips for success in affiliate marketing:

  • Send massive amounts of traffic to affiliate websites.
  • Associate with reputable affiliate programs only.
  • Look for programs that pay high commission rates.
  • Look for programs with products you’d want to buy.
  • Create relevant content for affiliate programs.

Relevant Content is Essential to Affiliate Marketing Success

Relevant content is vital to the success of any affiliate marketing plan. Choose affiliate marketing programs in line with the type of content offered. For instance, if the content on a site is about dogs, visitors would not be drawn to click affiliate links to chocolate or shoes. Neither is relevant or related to the subject that attracted the visitors.

Also, blend affiliate program links with content but not deceptively. The affiliate links should be in keeping with the general flow of a page. Otherwise, affiliate links will appear out of place. But don’t forget you can use affiliate marketing with more than a link-based program. Learn to upsell other products and services that may be of benefit that you market as an affiliate.

Getting Started in Affiliate Marketing

Before starting out with affiliate programs, it is essential to read up and glean from the success of others. There is a great deal of information online about affiliate programs. Don’t be taken in by get rich quick books or blogs promising millions. Steer clear of outrageous claims and put your nose to the grindstone. Scour the web for reliable resources and test different programs.

Some types of affiliate programs are effective for some sites, while other programs work better for other types of sites. Experimentation is necessary to find your sweet spot. Don’t expect to be an overnight success. It takes knowledge, time, and effort to succeed with affiliate marketing programs. Succeeding with affiliate marketing can be an exercise in trial and error, but it can be worth it in the end.

Author’s Bio:
Tara Hornor writes about marketing, advertising, branding, web and graphic design, and desktop publishing for PrintPlace.com a company that offers online printing for print marketing media. Find her on Twitter as @TaraHornor .

 

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Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: affiliate marketing, bc, How to start affiliate marketing, LinkedIn, small business

Standing on the Shoulder of the Marketing Giant Known as Weight Watchers

July 12, 2012 by R. Mfar

Capturing weight loss market is not a mean feat at all. To start with, we are talking about an industry that generates revenues exceeding a whopping $61 billion in United States alone.  According to a rough estimate there are more than 110 million people on a diet plan with a majority looking to lose weight. Another survey suggests that Americans spend more than 50 billion on weight loss products per annul, with hundreds of companies battling for the market share. To come up as a clear winner in a market like this, and that too with an impressive margin that makes its competitors look like dwarfs in comparison, certainly needs extra ordinary marketing skills and business acumen. And that is why I think, being marketers, we can all learn a thing or two by taking a leaf out of weight watcher’s marketing book.

Remember that weight watchers stands head and shoulders above its closest competitorse.g. Nutrisystem or eDiet (have a look at the difference). And looking at the growth rate in the recent past, it doesn’t seem to have any plans of slowing down in near future. So how does this company has managed to capture one of the most competitive markets out there? Especially when we look at their target customers (folks looking to shed those extra pounds), there is quite some confidence building required. It’s a fact that a big majority of weight loss customers are quite skeptical of those diet plans or training equipments that promise big and deliver nothing. And still weight watchers manage to get more than one million members on board in a relatively short period of time … it must be doing something right?

Let’s take a look at some of the most salient features of their marketing strategy.

Coming up with a Commercial Solution:

The word “commercial” is the key here; because a successful business is that comes up with a “money-spinning” solution to some common problem (even though the emphasis on “money making” might sound a little evil). But doing so is easier said than done … at times a problem and its apparent solution might appear too simple that you will be hard-pressed to try and find a way to make money out of it. And obesity is one such problem, because all one needs to do is to follow a strict diet and exercise plan? But that is where market research comes into play … because a simple study will reveal that a big majority of potential customers in the market, being overweight or obese is just one of the many problems in their lives, and most of them are too caught up in their routine lives to be able to calculate the calories in everything they eat, or the number of calories burned every time they move a muscle. They need a more practical solution instead of just a simple advice which is not feasible. You shouldn’t just stop at showing them the way; you need to escort them all the way to their goals. Not only, you need to give them a plan, but you also need to make sure that the execution doesn’t take lots of planning or thinking on their part.

Do the Convincing:

This can be the most difficult part, you can create a solution that you deem to be the ultimate answer to their problems, but you will need to transmit this conviction to your customers.If you’ve been a keen observer of the markets, you must have seen some quality products failing to make the mark, while some lesser ones manage to sweep the market. The difference lies in marketing and branding. You can’t really expect the customers to buy and try all sorts of different products. You have got to do the convincing, which is precisely what weight watchers have been doing quite profoundly.

Innovation and Evolution:

Doesn’t matter if you are on the top or bottom of the ladder, you cannot afford to get stagnant and stop innovating, because if you do that, it wouldn’t be long before you see a new business overtaking yours and capturing the market in a jiffy. Weight Watchers has recently launched its line of products specifically for men, which bring us to our second point which is evolution. Weight loss companies, for some reasons, have always been targeting the women, maybe because ladies tend to be a bit more conscious about their looks and appearances, but the times are changing, and you have got all sorts of salons, cosmetics, and fashion products targeting the men. Not to forget the health risks associated with the obesity, so there’s no reason why men wouldn’t be as eager to lose those extra pounds as any other woman out there. Being a marketer, you cannot afford to close your eyes from shifts in the trends.

360 Degree Marketing:

One of the strongest feature of weight watchers marketing strategy is that they are making the most of almost all available marketing mediums, be it the offline ones like magazines, newspapers, or television, or the online platforms like social media or search engines. The company is almost 50 years old, and throughout this period they have managed to stay one step ahead of their competitors. Instead of just sitting back and waiting, they have managed to take the right initiative at the right time, be it the launch of their new website, or the decision to have an active presence on social media, creating a mobile friendly version of their website or an entire range of smart phone apps for their users.

And this multifaceted approach is not just limited to their marketing strategy, when we look at their revenue generating sources, we will find that they are as diverse as their marketing mix, for example a large proportion of their revenue comes from the subscription or membership fee, then comes the sale of products, followed by revenues generated online, and in the end we have the revenues generated by licensing and royalties, all in all a winning combination and the numbers speak for themselves.

__

Rahil is an online entrepreneur and fitness enthusiast. Check his site to find reviews of weight watchers. Bistro MD and Weight Watchers coupon codes can help people looking to lose weight and stay fit.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Strategy/Analysis Tagged With: bc

12 Ways to Focus Your Email Marketing

July 11, 2012 by Guest Author

by
Tara Hornor

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Get Off the Fence! Focus Your Email Marketing!

Email marketing is an excellent way to reach out to customers and promote a brand. It’s cheaper, easier, and more effective than many offline marketing methods such as catalogs or posters . Unfortunately, this makes email marketing a prime target for abuse by unethical marketers. The result is that many emails get ignored by potential customers, but there are several tips, tricks, and secrets that can increase the success of email marketing campaigns:

  1. Subject Lines Matter
    Don’t use spam phrases, capital letters, or exclamation marks in the subject line. Your emails will end up in the trash if they read like spam. Be ready to test and adjust your campaign as you go. You’ll find certain subject lines are more effective than others.
  2. Fulfill Expectations
    Provide readers with whatever product or service they might be searching for. Targeting specific readers with focused messaging makes this much easier. Coordinate carefully with operations to ensure that the promises made in any email campaigns can be kept. Nothing is more frustrating than to get excited about a product or service only to find that the email was wrong or even deceptive.
  3. One Size Doesn’t Fit Everyone
    Collect subscriber information and send targeted information instead of generic messages. Effective messages are always personal. If at all possible, include a first and last name – even in the subject line when practical.
  4. Don’t Hide the Sender
    Successful email marketing campaigns begin when senders ensure that receivers know where the messages are coming from. If recipients can tell who is sending the messages, they are more likely to trust the message. On the other hand, when you can’t tell who it is that sent the email, you’re much more likely to skip it.
  5. Never CC Subscribers
    This tactic can annihilate an email marketing campaign. Using CC options cause marketers to violate privacy terms and can damage a business’ reputation. We’ve all seen those emails where hundreds of other people are included in the CC. Now all those people have your email address and there’s nothing you can do about it. Not only is this amateurish, it’s often illegal. Use the BC option instead when sending out an email to more than one recipient. Remember, though, to only put your email address in the main “To” line so that, again, only your email is the one seen.
  6. Include a Clear Call To Action
    If an email doesn’t contain a clear call to action, customers won’t know what to do. Ensure all emails have a clear call-to-action like “call us now!” or “click for more information” or even a “purchase now” button.
  7. Don’t Rely on Images
    Images are often blocked by spam detection software. Images should never be included in email marketing messages as a primary piece of information. It’s fine to include them if you want to add some branding, but don’t rely upon images for your message to be read.
  8. Use Text and HTML Email Newsletters
    Create two versions of all email marketing newsletters. Create an HTML version and a text-only version with an available link to each. This gives readers the option of choosing which to view if their email program doesn’t interpret HTML.
  9. Remember the KISS Rule
    Never create long email messages: Keep It Simple Silly. They take too much time to read. Keep all information scannable and relevant. A common standard is to make sure that the primary message shows up above the “fold” of the page (the area of the screen seen without the reader needing to scroll down).
  10. Timing is Key
    Sending marketing emails too frequently can annoy customers. Sending emails sporadically can cause forgetfulness. Try to strike a balance with frequency and be consistent.
  11. Don’t Sell–Build Relationships
    Don’t resort to hard selling. Focus efforts on networking and building relationships. While emails are a simple form of communication, they can be the first impression a customer has for your company. So think long-term, not short-sell.
  12. Let Readers Leave Easily
    Email should always include an unsubscribe link so that subscribers can choose to opt out. It’s only fair that consumers should have a choice in communications and relationships with businesses.

BONUS:
Bounce Those Bouncing Addresses
Don’t waste time trying to correct addresses that bounce. It’s not worth it. Just remove the offending email from the subscriber list and move on. The problem here is that too much time is often spent trying to fix a few emails that are no longer valid. If it bounced once, it’s likely going to bounce again.

Email marketing can bring positive results quickly if marketing efforts are focused. Engage readers on a personal level to lay a solid foundation for future sales. Use these strategies to provide the fuel you need to ignite your next email marketing campaign.

Author’s Bio:
Tara Hornor writes about marketing, advertising, branding, web and graphic design, and desktop publishing for PrintPlace.com a company that offers online printing for print marketing media. Find her on Twitter as @TaraHornor .

 

Thank you, Taral!

–ME “Liz” Strauss

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Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, email marketing, LinkedIn, print, print marketing materials, small business

Let your competition focus on you

July 5, 2012 by Rosemary

by
Rosemary O’Neill

Focus on the Path Ahead

The Summer Olympics are coming up, and I for one will be perched in front of my TV and iPhone app (yes, there’s an app for that) watching the proceedings.

I draw inspiration and courage from these athletes who dedicate their entire lives to achieving greatness in their event. There are so many lessons to take away, but one seems to jump out.

Have you ever noticed that the runners, swimmers, and other races NEVER look behind them during the race?

They focus their entire attention. Their entire being. Everything is focused on the path ahead, the swim lane ahead. The world may be on its feet screaming “he’s coming up behind you” and the sprinter is in a zone of silence.

Let your competition focus on you

Business competition in a foot race
BigStock: Business Competition

The next time you’re tempted to spend time worrying about the competition, think like an Olympic swimmer. Stretch, jump, and swim like hell toward the other side.

Let them worry about you.

Author’s Bio: Rosemary O’Neill is an insightful spirit who works for social strata — a top ten company to work for on the Internet . Check out the Social Strata blog. You can find Rosemary on Google+ and on Twitter as @rhogroupee

Thank you, Rosemary!

You’re irresistible!

ME “Liz” Strauss

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Filed Under: management, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, competition, focus, LinkedIn, small business

3 Steps to Start a Successful-Online Business

June 29, 2012 by Guest Author

by
Danielle Rodabaugh

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Take Charge

If you have a tech-savvy entrepreneurial spirit paired with an old-fashioned hard work ethic, starting a web-based business might be a great option for you. By managing web-based businesses, innovative entrepreneurs can work from home, set their own schedules and take charge of how much they earn each week. But what does it take to start, and then manage, a web-based business that’s profitable?

1. Choose a product or service in a profitable niche.

The first step to starting and running a successful web-based business is determining the products or services you should sell. As with traditional brick-and-mortar businesses, you’ll have to do a great deal of market research before you even think about starting an online business. If you want to make a profit for the long-term, you need to choose a market in which people consistently spend money. Then you need to find a niche audience within that market to specifically target online.

For example, my boss was interested in starting an online insurance company. He soon realized how difficult it would be to build one from scratch when so many national brands had already claimed substantial ownership of the market. So, he zeroed in on a very specific segment of the industry: bond insurance (http://www.suretybonds.com). This allowed him to market his company to a specific online audience that insurance providers had largely been ignoring.

You can determine whether a niche is profitable by researching keywords related to that market. A variety of free and paid SEO research tools can help you determine what your potential clients are looking for online. These tools can also give you an idea of what the competition looks like within the industry as a whole or one of its specific niches. Once you’ve gathered a comprehensive understanding of how your market works and what it’s missing, you’ll be able to develop a brand.

2. Launch a professional website.<.h3>

Once you’ve selected a niche that has the potential to turn a profit, you’ll need to launch a website that features your products or services. Although you could hire a professional web developer to create a fully customized website for your company, you might not want to invest a significant amount of your start-up capital on web design right away. If you want to keep start-up costs down, consider using a template for your website.

Free templates usually don’t offer many ways to customize the look, feel and navigation of a website; however, you can usually purchase a $100 template that offers a great deal of customization. These templates are simple for beginners to install, and many provide user dashboards that will simplify the way you manage your site’s layout, colors and other features.

3. Implement a commanding online marketing strategy.

Simply setting up a website doesn’t guarantee that customers will find your online business (http://www.sba.gov/content/setting-online-business); you’ll have to heavily market your company to garner traffic that generates sales. Paid placement advertising can drive traffic to your site immediately; however, doing so requires a substantial investment upfront. If you choose to use paid placement ads, start with a small budget and test your options before spending a ton of money.

Setting up free profiles on social media sites such as Google+, Facebook and Twitter is one cost-effective way for you to build interest in your business and attract potential customers. When you work with these sites, though, keep in mind that most of your interactions should build trusting relationships rather than promote products or services. You should focus on promoting your company though on-site content development and other SEO marketing strategies.

As a professional who works with entrepreneurs every day, I’m aware that many more factors go into managing a successful web-based business. However, I firmly believe that developing strategies to achieve these three goals from the beginning will give any new business owner a solid starting point.

—-

Author’s Bio:
Danielle Rodabaugh writes about surety bonds, business licensing and entrepreneurship at SuretyBonds.com. You can find her on Google+ or Twitter @darodabaugh (https://twitter.com/#!/DaRodabaugh).

Thank you, Danielle, for getting us started!!

–ME “Liz” Strauss

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Filed Under: Business Life, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, leadership, LinkedIn, marketing, online business, small business, startup

Is Social Noise Unraveling Your Quest?

June 18, 2012 by Liz

Social Noise Steals the Fuel to Do Extraordinary Stuff

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When I was a kid, I wasn’t looking for my direction. No one said to follow my passion. I was a kid. I was on a quest to be extraordinary.

When I was a kid, I wasn’t bombarded with information from every dimension. My social circle was small. Now I have more social network passwords than the number of connections I had when I was kid.

Everyone seems to doing more than I am. Everything seems to be growing faster than anyone could manage to follow. Conversations bifurcate, trifurcate, and splinter off in bit and pieces. Sorting value from spam isn’t always a case of checking whether it came from a friend.

Ideas get kicked around like a soccer ball on the field where I hang out. I’m following echoes down trap of social media noise and deafening conversation straining to hear what my friends are saying.

In the process, I’m losing my own voice.
And the social noise is unraveling my passion one thread at time.
Sheer exhaustion steals the inspiration and the direction that I had when the day began.

Is Social Noise Unraveling Your Quest?

It’s a challenge to stay calm when the screen is always updating and we’re always chasing the next link or headline that shows up. Curiosity takes fuel to run. And every generous spirit who does a good turn or sends a good wish seems to be calling us to return a good one now then. Do you find that after some time on Twitter or Facebook, your head needs a long, cool transition? It only makes sense that all of that fragmented data makes a brain want some time to sort.

The social interaction can undermine the strongest determination we have to move forward by using it all just to keep up with what’s going on. Is social noise unraveling your quest?

Do you lose track of the kid in you who wants to do extraordinary stuff?

Here’s my recipe for getting past the noise and distraction and back to doing extraordinary stuff.

I turn it off.

In a minute of silence, I remember my quest.
When I look out the window or stand and stretch, it gets easier to tune into my resolve.
Knowing where you’re going is irresistibly attractive.
It also fuels the noble cause.

Passion needs direction, or it gets lost.

How do you keep the social noise from unraveling your quest?

Be irresistible.
–Me “Liz” Strauss

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Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Productivity, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, determination, focus, irresistible, LinkedIn, Liz, small business, social noise, social-media

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