Archive for December 2011

How to Get Started in Affiliate Marketing: Market Research

If you are interested in making money online, affiliate marketing is one of the best ways to begin. The startup cost is low, you don’t need your own website and you can start with using free methods. In this article I will share with you how to get started in affiliate marketing: market research.

Market research is the very first step you need to take. Promoting just any product online today does not guarantee success. It’s important to find products people want to buy. There are a few different ways you can accomplish this.

1. Your interests:Think about what are you interested in? What are your hobbies? Think of what you enjoy doing the most, write down on a piece of paper what those are and then do a search on Google for those keyword terms. The next thing you need to find out is if there are any offers that promote your particular interest. If there are then you would need to see if they offer an affiliateprogram.

2. Trends:

Another direction you can go is spotting the trends that are happening right now. You can do this by going to sites like:

Google Hot Trends Yahoo BuzzEBay PulseAmazon Bestsellers

Those are just a few sites where you can find what the latest trends are. You want to chose something that will last though and not something that will be here today and gone tomorrow.

3. Spying:

Although this may sound sneaky, it’s a very effective way to do market research. Go to the different affiliate networks such as:

ClickbankCommission JunctionLinkshareShareASale

Go to the marketplace and check out their top two most popular products in the category that interests you. Make sure that there is not too much competition and also ask yourself if this is a onetime product offer or can you find other products to offer this same market. Do this with each of the different affiliate networks so you can see the differentresults.

I hope this article about how to get started in affiliate marketing using market research has been helpful. Remember there are several ways you can locate products people are eager to purchase. You can start your research by writing a list of what your interests are, see what the hottest trends are at the moment or spy on the competition. Either way, you will be able to find some very popular products to promote.

Would You Rather be an EEL or a Shark? Why PPC is a More Targeted Form of Promotion than SEO Particularly for Local Small Businesses!

Let’s say you have a hundred bucks to spend on Internet marketing this year, and you have to use either Search Engine Optimization (SEO) or Pay-Per-Click advertising (PPC).

You can’t use both; and you can’t use anything else, either.

Which one do you choose?

SEO or PPC?

Well, I don’t know about you, but I would choose PPC.

Importantly, I would make that choice only after all efforts to secure both forms of marketing had been exhausted. Obviously, doing both (and lots more besides that) is the right marketing approach.

In this hypothetical realm, though? Again, I say PPC.

PPC gets the nod only because it has more target ability than SEO.

But please, let me explain in more detail by way of a colorful, aquatic metaphor!

Free lunch?

With SEO, you optimize your website to please the almighty search engine industrial complex.

Chiefly, this means your web text has beensubtly riddled with keywords than lay a path, like popcorn in the dark forest, to your storefront.

But after you do that, what do you do?

Do you know what you do?

You wait.

You wait for the business to come to you.

In our aquatic environment, your SEO campaign is like the big, ugly, camouflaged eel that sits stoic for hours with its mouth agape, waiting for lunch to swim by so he can chomp down.

Oh, you’ll be ready, sure. You’ll be ready when lunch swims by. But still, you have to wait for that moment to arrive.

PPC, on the other hand, is a different breed of hunter.

In fact, compared to SEO, PPC is a shark.

For one thing, a shark doesn’t wait for lunch to swim by — a shark goes out and gets it and eats it and then immediately starts looking for the next meal.

It’s that proactive, forward moving dynamic that makes pay-per-click my best bet over SEO.

With PPC, I can choose my own hunting grounds, as it were.

If, for example, I want to PPC advertise on just a small, local scale, I can do so because PPC allows me to direct my campaign to within, say, a 20 mile radius of my place of business.

Sure, with SEO I’ll mention my street address on my site, once maybe twice. But with PPC, all of my clicks will come from browsers within 20 miles of that street address.

Now that’s targeted marketing.

And that’s why, in my view, PPC trumps SEO. That one dynamic — “target ability” — means that much.

I simply need to have it in my marketing mix! I need to have that ability to set my sights in different directions. I need to be able to move off in any direction, and move fast. I need to be able to turn on a dime if a business situation requires it.

SEO, I feel, doesn’t give me those more exhilarating feelings of marketing motion, especially forward motion, like PPC does.

I mean, with PPC, I can change my keywords, I can change my geographic target, I canincrease my reach in many ways, I can do lots of things, I can really shake things up (especially if something isn’t working).

But when you apply this dynamic to my “choose one or the other” scenario… what would I do if I had gone all-in with SEO instead of PPC?

Rewrite my website?

I don’t think so.

To be fair, though, it isn’t really fair to compare these two forms of Internet marketing. PPC is the fastest growing form of advertising on the Internet, after all. It’s an incredibly robust and successful (read: multi-billion dollar) industry. It’s pretty tough to compete with it right now.

But should you employ SEO?

Of course!

Frankly, you’re mad if you don’t have your website optimized. It practically goes without saying. But that’s not all you can do. You need to do a lot more than that.