24 Feb 2008 12:33:29 | Veronica Dubak
Online affiliate marketing has taken the internet by storm and
has proven to be a highly effective way of maximizing website
revenue. Why limit yourself to selling your own products when
you can profit by selling somebody else’s too?
There are thousands of individual affiliate programs offered on
the internet, many being through third party affiliate program
networks such as OffersQuest, Commission Junction and Linkshare.
These companies connect a large number of advertisers and
publishers together via their own network. Advertisers sign up
through their network to have publishers promote their products
and publishers sign up to access a large network of advertisers
all at one location. In the process, the affiliate network makes
a profit via advertiser set-up fees, monthly account maintenance
fees, commissions, etc.
The question is, as a publisher, is it worth using these large
affiliate networks or is it better to form direct partnerships
with advertisers?
The Good
The primary selling point of third party affiliate networks is
convenience. As a publisher, one registration gives you access
to tens, even hundreds of advertisers simultaneously. Tracking
partner performance is easy, there is only one technical support
contact, things are easier and simpler to manage, and best yet,
payment is received as one convenient monthly lump sum.
The Bad
Because as a publisher you’re utilizing a service, advertisers
who also offer a direct affiliate partnership will typically
offer a lower commission for publishers who choose to partner
with them through a third party network. This is because it
costs advertisers money to use the services of a third party.
Also, without naming names, some affiliate networks have been
known for not tracking sales and leads properly as honestly as
they could be (which means money from your pocket). Payment
thresholds can often be fairly high – a $50 US minimum is common
for international publishers. Finally, a payment delay of two
months or more from the date of a sale/lead generation can
occur, as the third-party affiliate network waits until the
advertiser pays them, before they pay you (the publisher).
Conclusion:
In many (if not most cases), having both options of partnering
directly with an advertiser or through an affiliate network is
not a choice – it’s usually one or the other. If an advertiser
you like only offers their affiliate program through a third
party, you’re limited to the advertiser network they’ve
partnered with, or not partnering at all. Affiliate networks are
not bad programs to use, just keep in mind the issues outlined
above, and you’ll be making money in no time!
About Author :
Veronica Dubak is the owner of the successful SurveyBounty.com,
http://www.surveybounty.com free online paid surveys directory. With a comprehensive
listing of market research companies classified by region, and
background information on the online survey industry,
SurveyBounty.com is the legitimate source for online survey
information.