Internet Marketing Advice by Mark J. Welch (Copyright © 2007)
Affiliate Program Advice
Reasons Not to Add an Affiliate Program
- Should Your Affiliate Program Be Public or Private?
What Factors Do Affiliates Consider?
- Which Affiliate Technology or Network?
My Usual Recommendations (Affiliate Program)
- Affiliate Recruitment Strategies
Captive and Stealth Affiliates
- Special Affiliate Program Policies
Outsourced Program Management Agencies
- Selling the Affiliate Program
Types of Affiliates
Outsourced Program Management Agencies:
- My usual recommendation is that merchants should hire a full-time in-house affiliate manager to administer the program. However, you should be aware that there are a number of "outsourcing" options for administration of an affiliate program. Each affiliate network offers affiliate management services as an extra-cost option to merchants; several merchants and affiliates have expressed great satisfaction with the services provided by ShareASale staff (especially Carolyn Tang). There are also at least a dozen (probably many more) companies that provide "outsourced program management services" on a contract basis.
- Cost: Most of these firms charge a minimum of $3,000 to $5,000 per month for their services. Some charge a minimum fee against a share of gross sales (for example, 5% of gross sales generated by affiliates, with a minimum of $3,500 per month).
- Contract: Most firms do not have a clear contract that identifies the specific work which they will do, nor the time allocated, nor the specific staff persons who will do the work.
- Results: I've spoken with several merchants who were very unhappy with the services they received from OPM agencies. I've never had a "candid conversion" with a merchant who praised their OPM agency - but merchants who are happy with their OPM agency don't call
- When Things Go Sour: When the relationship between an OPM agency and a merchant ends, there are sometimes "sour communications," in which the OPM or merchant notifies affiliates that the relationship has ended, in a way that implies great dissatisfaction (or non-payment). When an affiliate receives such emails, they worry that "something is wrong" with the merchant or OPM agency, and may decide to avoid both in the future.
- My recommendation against using an OPM agency is based mostly on "common sense" - you shouldn't expect someone outside your business to understand your customers and affiliates better than you.
- While an OPM agency can bring industry knowledge and experience, your staff will never gain that knowledge or experience unless they are assigned these duties.
- If you do hire an OPM agency, your contract should specify:
- Who will actually perform the work (recruiting, talking with affiliates, etc.); will you be notified and asked for approval when work is reassigned or staff changes?
- What specific work will be performed, including "hours" and "quantities" (number of affiliates identified and solicited, submissions to affiliate directories, participation in discussion forums)
- Who will own the data (list of prospective affiliates, contact information, data about communications)
- How will the OPM's services be evaluated (number of communications with prospective affiliates, number of affiliates enrolled, number of new customer transactions through affiliates, transaction dollars, number of complaints received)
- When and how can the contract be terminated; on termination, how will data be transferred, and who will notify affiliates and the "affiliate community"?