Passing the Test
By: Rosalind Gardner
Super-affiliates should evaluate a site from both the
affiliate's and a visitor's perspective.
In the May/June Affiliate's Corner
column, I wrote about the ways
super-affiliates prefer to be approached
by affiliate program managers
and merchants for the purpose of program
recruitment.
Wooing a super-affiliate over drinks
and dinner with offers of exclusive
landing pages, significantly higher-than-advertised commission rates, or
showering them with free product samples
will certainly get their attention,
but it does not guarantee that you will
get the heavy hitters to join your program,
however.
Even if your product is a fabulous
fit for the affiliate's audience and your
commission rates are more generous
than your competitors', no super-affiliate
will send copious amounts of targeted
traffic (read: their highly valued
subscribers with whom they've worked
hard to develop loyal and lasting relationships)
to your site unless it first
passes an affiliate's Merchant Site Test.
This test evaluates many aspects of
the site from both the affiliate's and a
visitor's perspective. I personally start
with factors that will affect a visitor's experience,
and keep the following questions
in mind as I peruse a merchant's
site for the first time.
Does the site load quickly or does the
server bog down under graphic-laden
pages? If there is a Flash home page,
is there an obvious "skip intro" link or
am I forced to watch the video to the
bitter end? Is the site attractive and
professional in appearance or are there
broken links, graphics and scripting errors?
Is the sales page comprehensive
and well written, or is it fraught with
spelling and grammatical errors or
"holes" in the sales copy?
I also check to see whether the site
uses excessive newsletter sign-up popups
or advertising fly-ins. Do site preview
pop-ups such as Snap Shots block
my view of the text each time I cursor
over a link? Does a new window open
every time I click a link? Although I
may understand a merchant's motivation
for using such tactics, I am more
concerned that visitors to the site will
find such intrusions confusing and/or
annoying to the point that they are likely
to exit the site and kill any chance of
a sale.
Appearance, functionality and copy
rarely pose problems with professionally
designed and maintained sites. Nor
are they an issue for ClickBank affiliates
who can code links to send traffic
directly to the order form. However,
having to bypass a merchant's home
page means that pay-per-click arbitrage
isn't an option for some affiliates, while
others will have to write sales copy
rather than a product review. Although
some affiliates may be willing to make
that effort to promote one exceptional
product, most will pass on the program
if the merchant offers a diverse or large
selection of goods.
Another significant factor that I will
evaluate is search functionality. Visitors
must be able to search for and find
what they want quickly and easily. For
example, does a clothing site let visitors
drill down to choose between designers, color and
function, or does a click on the "Dresses"
link slowly load a page that displays
50 thumbnails of cocktail, evening and
wedding dresses?
If the visitor can find a product that
she wants to buy, good affiliates will
check to see whether the order process
is functional, intuitive and secure. Does
the site post a "Hacker-Safe" logo and
a privacy policy? Are shipping policies
and prices easy to locate, or does a customer
have to go through the entire
order process to determine the cost to
ship to Canada or if GST and PST will
be added to her order? Can the customer
ship to an address
different from the
billing address and can
she have that dress gift
wrapped for her cousin
in Amsterdam?
What happens if
our customer has
questions about either
the product or
her order? Is there a
sizing guide or a customer
FAQ? Does the
site offer order tracking?
Is there a contact
link, Live Help badge or telephone
number displayed on every
page for support?
I'd be thrilled to see all but the last
item on that list, as a prominently
posted telephone number that encourages
phone orders means that potential
commissions will be lost through
traffic leakage.
Traffic leakage occurs at any point on
a site that allows visitors to leave the
site without making a purchase through
the affiliate's link. Affiliates that pay for
their traffic are particularly sensitive to
this problem, and most affiliates will
not join a merchant's affiliate program
if there is any leakage at all.
Phone orders must therefore be
tracked to the referring affiliate – which
does not mean asking your customers
from which site they originated. Merchants
who aren't equipped with the
technical wizardry to track phone orders
should allow affiliates to send their
traffic to a version of the site that does
not post a phone number, and trust that
their super-affiliates' promotional efforts
will more than make up for any
sales that may be lost by doing so.
Most traffic leaks occur when merchants
link to other sites that may be of
interest to their visitors, or to partner
sites with which they have reciprocal
link agreements. Traffic leakage also
occurs when a merchant with two or
more online stores links to
those other sites without
compensating affiliates
for sales from any and all
of their stores.
The most offensive type
of outbound link traffic
leaks are affiliate or contextual
advertising links
(i.e., Google Adwords ads)
from which the merchant
hopes to profit. Most affiliates
consider this practice
more "traffic theft" than
traffic leakage and will not
only not join the program, they will also
warn other affiliates of the merchant's
commission-stealing practices.
That's not to say that as a merchant
you shouldn't promote other merchants'
products. You should. But do it on the
back end or from within the secure area
of your site, only after your own affiliates
have had a fair chance to earn a commission
for sending traffic to your site.
As you can see, the Merchant Site
Test is comprehensive and super-affiliates
are picky to the nth degree! If any
aspect of the site misses the bar, most
super-affiliates will go on to consider
your competitor's offer and promote
their products without so much as a
TYBNTY (thank-you-but-no-thank-you)
note for your time and treats.
If you're lucky enough to have a super-
affiliate take time from her busy
promotional schedule (or lounge chair)
to explain why she's chosen not to join
your program, consider implementing
her recommendations as soon as possible
– and let her know as soon as the
changes have been made.
Don't stop there. Continued on Page 2...
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