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Understand The Language
You are about to encounter a language that you have never heard
before - the language of Internet Marketing, as it relates to
Affiliate Marketing. It is important that you understand what
it all means, to ensure that you are signing up for programs
that are worth your time.
As you will learn later, it is important to read the terms and
conditions for affiliates. Sometimes, you will be presented
with those terms before you sign up, and sometimes you will be
presented with them after you sign up - but it is important
that you read them, and it is important that you understand
what is being said.
It is also important that you understand what the following
terms or abbreviations mean:
CPC - Cost per
click. This relates to how much it costs for each click an ad
or link receives when advertising on a CPC basis. In other
words, instead of paying a flat rate for the advertisement, you
would pay a certain amount of money for each click the ad
receives.
PPC - Pay Per
Click. This relates to CPC, where you pay for each click that
your ad or link receives. Google AdWords is an example of Pay
Per Click advertising.
CPA - Cost per
action, or cost per acquisition. Basically, this means that you
will pay each time an action is taken. The action may be a
click, a sign up, or a sale. In fact, many affiliate programs
also pay on a CPA basis, meaning that each time someone clicks
on your link, or signs up to receive information through your
link, you earn a little money. Google AdSense is an example of
this.
CTR - Click
Through Rate. This number is usually represented as a
percentage, and it refers to the number of times your ad was
clicked on, in relation to how often the ad was viewed.
CPM - Cost per
thousand. The amount of money you pay for every one thousand ad
impressions.
URL - Uniform
Relay Link, otherwise known as a link, or a website
address.
Affiliate Link -
A URL or link that is assigned to you by the affiliate program.
This is the link that you will promote, as it is used to track
your clicks and sales.
Contextual Link or Text
Link - A contextual link is a link that looks
like content, because it is all text. It may be several words
long. A text link is a link such as www.link.com , as opposed to a banner
ad.
Charge Back -
This will be an important term to you. This refers to when
customers cancel their orders, or have their credit card
companies reverse the charges. It basically means that you lose
a sale. Some affiliate programs will hold money back each pay
period to cover potential charge backs/refunds, and release
that money to you after a specified period.
SPAM -
Unsolicited Commercial Email. This term also refers to
commercial posts on forums and blogs. Most affiliate programs
will have strict anti-spam regulations that you must
follow.
Revenue Sharing
Program - This is the same thing as an
affiliate program.
Co-Branding -
Some affiliate programs offer co-branding options, where your
company name or logo is placed on a reseller’s website, or on
the product itself.
Referral Link -
The same as an affiliate link.
Tracking - The
method or software used to record sales, clicks, leads, and
other information that has to do with your affiliate link.
HTML or HTML Code
- HTML stands for Hyper Text Markup Language. This is the
programming language used to build webpages. HTML code
generally refers to a small portion of HTML code, such as that
needed to place affiliate links or banners on your
webpages.
Partner Program -
This is the same thing as an affiliate program.
Super Affiliate -
This refers to anyone who is making a lot of money in affiliate
marketing, if you are an affiliate. However, if you have an
affiliate program for your own product, this refers to your top
affiliates - the ones who are making the most sales for
you.
Opt-In - This
refers to ezine subscriptions, newsletter subscriptions, or
email lists in general. Basically, it means that the
subscribers on any email list have chosen to receive the
information the list owner is sending. Typically, they have
confirmed their email address and their request by clicking on
a link in a confirmation email, which is known as double
opt-in.
1st Tier and 2nd
Tier - If you are signing up for an affiliate
program, directly through the company, you are first tier. If
you are signing up under someone else, you are 2nd tier.
However, when someone signs up under you, you are first tier,
and they are your 2nd tier. Each tier gets a different
commission rate for sales. In other words, when you sign up
under someone else, when you make a sale, you get a full
commission, and the person you signed up under gets a partial
commission.
Joint Ventures -
Joint ventures are similar to affiliate programs, but they
operate a bit differently. The concept is the same - one person
promotes another person’s product for a commission. However,
usually the commissions are bigger, and the person doing the
promoting is working directly with the owner of the
product.
Direct Mail -
This refers to advertising that is done via postal mail. There
are strict laws about direct mail, and many affiliate programs
will have terms and conditions relating to direct mail to
promote their product.
Cookies - A
cookie is a piece of code that is written to the cookie file on
a person’s computer when they click on an affiliate link - or
when they visit sites that use cookies, such as sites that
require a login. The cookie does not harm your customer’s
computer at all, and is simply there to make sure that you get
credit for the sale if they come back later to make a
purchase.
Affiliate
Agreement - The agreement that usually lists
the terms and conditions related to an affiliate program. In
most cases, you will agree to the affiliate agreement by
checking a box when you fill out an online form to join the
program. Some affiliate programs, however, will require you to
print out, sign, and fax the agreement. Make sure you read
these agreements.
Conversion Rate -
This is the number of sales in relation to the number of clicks
received. Usually portrayed as a percentage.
Commission - The
amount of money that you as an affiliate will receive per sale.
Some companies will list this as a percentage, such as 50%,
while others will list it as a dollar figure.
Associate or Associate
Program - This is the same as an affiliate
program.
Banner Ad - A
graphic that is placed on your website and linked with your
affiliate link.
If you come across other terms or abbreviations that you aren’t
sure of the meaning of, make sure that you stop and go find out
what it means before agreeing to anything - or before doing
anything. Not knowing can cause problems later
on.
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