Poor Folk Marketing.com

 

marketing iedas internet marketing online marketing offline marketing

Featured Business, Start a Personalized Candy Wrapper Business:  Wrapcandy.com

  Home  | Small Business Information | Pay Per Click Advertising | Affiliate Revenue | Web Promotion

How To Really Make Money With Datafeed Merchants


I am not going to describe what a product feed (or a datafeed) is. There is a lot of information out there about how to use one to build sites. Instead, I want to talk about how you can actually make more sales with datafeed sites.

The program that I manage offers a product feed, and I get a chance to see a sad picture of many good affiliates wasting their potential.

Here is my advice from the affiliate manager's perspective.

Whenever you join (or think bout joining) a program, you need to look for two things:

  • Temporary or permanent opportunities

  • Flaws of a merchant

Here is an example of an opportunity that was created by an outside factor.

Recently, we got removed from the Yahoo index because of a penalty. I have no idea when (or if) we will get included back in, but I do know that it makes one decision much easier for our affiliates.

Judging by the numerous posts on various SEO-related message boards, it looks like Google and Yahoo use very different algorithms to rank pages. So for any given site, you have a choice to make. You can optimize for Yahoo, for Google, or for both.

Since Yahoo and Google use different algorithms, it is going to be hard to optimize the same set of pages for both of those engines at the same time, unless you employ heavy cloaking. And the way I see it, for an affiliate, it is better to appear high on one search engine than to appear low on both of them in an attempt to optimize for different algorithms at the same time.

Imagine that you are one of our affiliates. Given the information I just told you, shouldn't you concentrate on Yahoo for that datafeed site that is being used to promote our products?

Why spend (at least) half of your time and resources on optimizing for Google when you know that we are nowhere to be found in Yahoo?

You have to have an extremely well linked and optimized site to get ahead of the merchant for the exact product-name search terms. The merchant is your biggest obstacle when it comes to the search engine traffic. So if there is a route that lets you get around that obstacle - take it!

Most of our well-performing affiliates did just that. Either intentionally or unintentionally, they ended up making much more money by appearing high in Yahoo results, while not being ranked high in Google.

So on a practical side of things, here is what you should do.

For your existing merchants, check if they are removed from the index in any of the major search engines, and if they are, then start reading and implementing SEO tips for that particular engine.

And if you are thinking about joining a program and can't decide between several merchants, then check if any of them is not in the index of either Yahoo or Google. If you find a merchant like that - drop everything else you are doing and jump on that program.

As far as theory goes, this was just a simple, but specific example of what you should look for to make your efforts pay off. There are many different opportunities to get ahead in existing programs with datafeed sites; you just have to look for them.

Now, let's talk about flaws of merchants and how you can exploit them to make more money and help consumers at the same time.

I will give another specific example, but you should be able to apply this concept to many different programs.

Our site has one huge structural flaw: we only list products by product-oriented categories.

In other words, there is no way to navigate our site by a specific occasion or by the purchasing intent of a visitor.

You can follow a path like:

widgets -> wooden widgets -> red wooden widgets

This setup works fine for some type of shoppers, but is a complete turn-off for others.

And the problem is that most affiliates simply mirror the catalog structure of a merchant according to their feed.

But if you structured your site to list widgets as:

  • widgets for birthdays

  • widgets for girlfriends

  • widgets for those who are over 50

  • the Independence Day widgets

  • etc.

then you would attract different type of shoppers. You would no longer compete with the merchant, but instead you would complement them.

A visitor who is looking for a gift for his 50-something friend and has no idea that a red wooden widget would be perfect, will not travel down the path laid out by our catalog. So if he gets to our home page, we simply lose a sale. And if your datafeed-based site follows the same structure - you lose as sale as well.

Also, since the visitor does not know that he really wants a red wooden widget, he we not use those keywords while searching for a present on the search engines.

But if you attracted that visitor to your site, presented him with ideas for older friends' birthday gifts and guided him to that specific widget's page - then we would make a sale, you would make a commission, and the visitor (turned customer) would get his present with much less searching around. Everyone wins.

Such approach takes more work than simply cloning the merchant's site with a feed, but affiliates who actually do something to complement merchant instead competing with them make a lot more money. After all, if you create a copy of a merchant's site - you are not only competing with the merchant, you are also competing with all of their affiliates that use the same feed in the same way.

Copyright 2004 Konstantin Goudkov

Konstantin Goudkov,
bcc-news@genericgifts.com
2500+ products in a data feed. 20% commission.
5 years cookie expiration.

About The Author

Konstantin Goudkov is an affiliate manager with www.GenericGifts.com. He specializes on visitor tracking, split-run testing, and discovering ways to increase conversion rates for different presentation / action scenarios.


MORE RESOURCES:

StartupNation and Microsoft Office Live Small Business Search for ...
FOXBusiness - 11 hours ago
According to the Small Business Administration, over half of all US businesses are based out of an owner's home, and home-based businesses contribute more ...


Credit Cards Replace Small Business Loans
BusinessWeek - 9 hours ago
by John Tozzi The 30% interest rate on their small business credit card shocked James and Heather Hills enough to stop using it entirely in April. ...


BusinessWeek

Evaluating Small Business Credit Card Offers
BusinessWeek - 9 hours ago
Credit-card issuers have turned their attention to the small business market as the consumer card market has become saturated. To help you sort through the ...


SMALL BUSINESS Building on food fads
Inquirer.net, Philippines - 12 hours ago
By Chupsie Medina MANILA, Philippines -- Geronimo and Beth Casas are currently still riding on the growing popularity of the food cart business, ...


Small-business advocates jostle for spot in market
Arizona Republic, AZ - Aug 19, 2008
19, 2008 10:07 AM This year, the Gilbert Chamber of Commerce and the town have added programs design to aid small-business owners. ...


Small Business loans available for May storm victims
Shreveport Times, LA - 16 hours ago
The Small Business Association, which is another arm of the federal government, allows neighboring parishes and counties in disaster areas to receive money, ...
PA Governor Rendell Says Federal Assistance Approved for ... MarketWatch
all 9 news articles


Opposition flags tax cuts for families and small business
ABC Online, Australia - 22 hours ago
The Opposition Leader Colin Barnett looks set to announce tax cuts for families and small businesses during the election campaign. ...


UAB to host small business loan clinic
Bizjournals.com, NC - Aug 19, 2008
The University of Alabama at Birmingham’s Small Business Development Center is holding a free Community Express Loan Clinic next week. ...


Network has help for small business
Tampabay.com, FL - 41 minutes ago
They decided to form a network to support small business owners. "What we are sad about is that had we been in place we would have been able to help," ...


Indy Smallbiz, monthly small business newsmagazine, now available ...
dBusinessNews Indianapolis (press release), IN - 9 hours ago
Indy Smallbiz, Inc., a monthly newsmagazine dedicated to the needs and interests of small business owners in the Indianapolis area, is now available. ...

Small-Business - Google News

home | site map
PoorFolkMarketing © 2007