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> Get Articles > Affiliate and Associate Programs > How to Tell If an Affiliate Program is Any Good

How to Tell If an Affiliate Program is Any Good


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Clay Mabbitt
cmabbittaffiliatescreen.com

AffiliateScreen.com
http://www.affiliatescreen.com


The wide variety and flexibility of money making

opportunities available on line means there is no

concrete list of attributes a program should or should

not have. This makes it extremely difficult for

inexperienced entrepreneurs to make heads or tails of

all the programs out there.



How can you be sure that you aren't spending months of

your life building a downline in a program that will

fold within the next year? Unfortunately, there are

too many variables for anyone to be 100% certain that

a company will stand the test of time, but there are

certain clues that will increase your odds of being

right.



Here are things to look for (and lookout for!) in some

of the major categories of online opportunities to

help you identify which businesses are most likely to

succeed.



Product Resale/Referral

The first thing to examine is the product. Does this

product fill a need that more than a few isolated

people have? Is the price of the product reasonable

(even to someone who isn't participating in the

program)? Would you buy the product if you weren't in

the program? If the answers to these questions aren't



satisfactory, than the business won't be around long.

Move on.



The second thing to examine is the compensation plan.

How likely is it you will make money in this program?

Is the program structured so that most people can make

several hundred to several thousand dollars a month,

or is it set up so a few heavy-hitters make absurd

amounts of money that the company can use in its

marketing literature while members with less than

several thousand referrals in their downline struggle

to break even? If it isn't possible to break even by

filling the first level or two of the program, the

majority of the people who join the program will lose

money.



Traffic Generation

There are two successful approaches to traffic

generation. The first is winning the numbers games. By

that I mean if you get a ridiculously large number of

random people to visit your site, odds are at least a

few of them will be interested in what you have to

offer. The visitors who are interested might be a tiny

fraction of your total, but if you bringing enough

traffic, a small percent can mean quite a few bites.

Good examples of these programs will allow you

unlimited downlines for multiple levels. The programs

should be free (or it will take more effort than it is

worth getting people to join). The website for the

program should be very professional and convincing,

as this site is going to be closing the deal for you

when potential referrals click your link.



The second approach to traffic generation is targeting.

Targeting traffic is the practice of pursuing the

people who are most likely to be interested in your

offer. If you have a hardware site, you are trying to

get contractors and handymen to visit. Instead of

focusing on a large number of visitors, you pursue the

select group who is most likely to be interested in

your site. The value of these programs depends largely

on their categories. These programs will segment

traffic into different categories. The visitors you

receive are directed to your site by the program

because they are interested in whatever category you

chose for your program. So if there is a category that

very accurately describes your area, you will

experience better results. If you run an investment

banking web site, then you would want to find a

program that will bring you traffic under the category

Investment Banking. Not quite as good would be a

category of Finance. If the traffic sent to you is

under the category Business, then you're still getting

better than untargeted traffic, but not by much.



Note: Many traffic generation programs will use a

combination of both of the above approaches.



Paid Email/Surfing

A good paid email/surfing program is one that actually

sends out payments. These companies make their money

(some of which is passed onto you) from advertisers.

Some programs have difficulty collecting payments from

their advertisers. As a result they don't have money

to pay the members who are spending their free time

reading ads for vitamins and discount vacations.



The question then becomes how do you know a program can

collect from the advertisers. The simplest indicator is

often time. How long has the program been around?

Another good indication is the quality of their offers.

If the offers of their advertisers are at least

moderately interesting, then it's more likely some of

the people viewing these offers are signing up for

them. Advertisers are sure to pay (and continue to pay)

for marketing methods that get results.



Internet Marketing

If you want to create an Internet scam, masquerading as

an Internet marketing program is one of the easiest

ways to go about it. Even in legitimate marketing

programs, the product being sold is information.

Inherent to the sale of information is the fact no one

can check out the product until they've paid for it,

however, that does not mean that you can't check out

the company.



Newsgroups are crawling with the tales of people who

have been scammed. Do a search on the program name,

and you will quickly discover how many people have

been burned. Having said that, you should realize that

even the best programs will have a few negative

comments in the newsgroups. There are always people

who signed up for a program and simply waited for the

cash to start rolling in instead of putting effort

into building an income. When these lazy folks didn't

magically become wealthy, they decided to shout from

the rooftops (or message boards) how their program was

full of empty promises. Be sure to read through the

messages and get a feel for how much effort the poster

really put into trying to make the program work. You

can get a better picture of the quality of the program

by looking for posts in different places from different

people.



*******************************************************

Copyright (c) 2003 Clay Mabbitt.

Clay Mabbitt writes articles about evaluating online

money-making opportunities. Need in-depth reviews of

the latest affiliate programs? Find them at

http://www.affiliatescreen.com/

*******************************************************





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