Making List Building Work For You

February 23rd, 2009 by Shirley Grant 1 comment »

By Mark A. Abrahams

Whether you’re just starting your online business or have been at it for awhile, you know (or have been told) the importance of list building. Your online business may be very different than a traditional business but the one similarity they both have is that without customers, you have no sales. You can have a lot of “browsers” or “window shoppers” but it’s usually the regular customers that bring in the business. They’ve tried you once and were satisfied so they’re going to come back and bring you more business. They’ll probably even recommend you to others. You don’t just automatically get a list of potential customers. You have to build this list. As important as it is to build your list, it’s equally important to build it correctly and with ethics.

When potential customers come to your site to view your product and sign up for more information or some free merchandise you may be offering them, this is the start of your list building process. Before you begin sending them your newsletters and advertising, make sure that they really want to be part of your email list long term and not just for a one-time deal. Believe it or not, sometimes unethical people will sign up for free stuff with another’s email address so they’ll get the product without having to deal with repeated emails.

This is where a double opt-in system works great. You’ll respond with another email asking them to please confirm that they do want to be part of your list. This can be the start of a great business relationship between the two of you. Once they’ve become part of your list, send them more than just “generic” emails. Get to know them so they’ll look on you as a friend and not just another email to sift through.

Are you really interested in driving massive traffic to your website? Here’s the answer:

Secret Article Weapon – Download your free ebook now.

Would you like to know more about the magical marketing techniques that have helped me to quit my day job? I have just completed my new ebook.

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Mark Abrahams is a full time internet marketer who has helped others to earn a living online.

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

Increase Your Business with a Blog

February 21st, 2009 by Shirley Grant No comments »

By Liz Tomey

When running your own business, a blog can really help to make your website successful.
It can give readers information about your product and can also actually be the thing that
brings new visitors to your site. It is a business tool that can help you update your site
with informative content to keep readers coming back for more.

There are two main reasons that you should include content on your website. Content
can help visitors develop trust in your product and your knowledge. Also, it will help to
increase your site’s appearance in internet search engine ranks.

First of all, having content that is relevant can help to increase the credibility of your
business. It can do so by providing important information to your clients and potential
clients. If your blog is full of interesting and relevant information, people naturally
assume that your company is interesting and relevant to them. This improves your
chance of adding these readers as future customers. Once they realize that you are
providing an informative service to them, they will gain trust in your and your product,
thus producing sales in the future.

Secondly, the only way to increase your site’s chances of being ranked high with search
engines is to include that good content. With optimized content you are able to keep your
site in the top picks. Search engines will locate and rank your site based on the content
provided there. If they determine that the content is good, unique, and relevant to people,
your ratings will improve. Higher rankings mean potential customers can more easily
search and find your company, and that, in turn, means higher profit for you!

So, you have decided that you are ready to try blogs. You are confident that you can
write good, relevant articles to promote your business and product. However, you just
are not sure how to get started? You need to figure out how to publish your articles and
make sure search engines are aware of the content available on your site. To do this, you
should employ the use of blogging software, blog directories, and article directories.
Let’s consider your choice of blogging software.

Blogging software can help you to manage the articles that you write. Most will provide
features such as word processing, database storage, archiving, search options, and RSS
newsfeed. Each of these, along with others offered, can help make using a blog more
effective and time efficient for you.

In many cases, you can order customizable blog software. This means you can choose
which features to use, adding or deleting various features at any time. For example, some
bloggers choose to turn off the comments feature to discourage spammers from leaving
unrelated comments just to leave their own link.

You can choose between two main types of blogging software. You can choose hosted or
integrated, depending on your needs. Both can help you manage articles, and there are
even some free options available.

Hosted blog versions are those such as Wordpress and Blogger. They are websites that
host individuals’ blogs for free. Any articles published on a company’s blog are actually
held or stored on the website that is provided by the software company. You will not use
your own website as the address of your blog but instead will use the company’s website
with an extension that is personal to you. This option is good for those with limited
funds, but it also can be less beneficial to your website since your content is not available
on your site itself.

An integrated version of blogging software means that articles and software used to
manage them are all set up live on your own website. Your site will increase due to the
blog being hosted there and the new visitors that are attracted by that content. It also
helps to increase your site’s rankings with search engines and helps to make your
business seem professional and credible.

When setting up a blog to use in your marketing plans, consider your options carefully.
There are number of ways you can go with blogs, but be sure to use the one that is right
for you. Consider your needs and take some time to research your options before making
a final selection.

Liz Tomey runs http://www.BigWebBlogs.com where you can submit your blog for incredible exposure at no cost! Check out our latest blogs on online blogging today!

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Liz_Tomey

How to Write Carrot-Wielding Copy! By Michel Fortin

October 9th, 2008 by Shirley Grant No comments »

A significant reason behind websites that fail is the
lack of an effective response-driven message. A message
that gets people to do something, even if it’s to keep
reading.

A direct response message is not just about response.
It’s comprised of three elements: it must be 1)
captivating (it captures the reader’s attention), 2)
riveting (it pulls her into reading further) and 3)
engaging (it calls her to act). (In fact, these are the
“three simple steps” I talk about in my DVD video.)

How can you incorporate those three vital elements?

If I were to answer that question adequately it would
likely take me an entire book the size of an
encyclopedia! But for now, let me give you a succinct
explanation…

First, write to be scanned.

On the Internet, people are fast-paced, click-happy
(with an attention span the size of a DNA molecule) and
easily bored. The burden of getting visitors to stop
what they’re doing and start reading rests entirely
upon the headline, the headers and any grabbers —
things that help grab people’s attention (e.g., boxes,
borders, graphics, etc).

But once you captured your readers’ attention, the next
step is to keep them (and to keep them reading).

If you know the AIDA formula, you know this is where
you need to generate interest. But I go a step further
by saying that your job is even more important here,
since you must not only generate interest but also
maintain it. And that is a much harder task, especially
online.

It’s also the crux behind a long copy salesletter’s
success.

The debate about long versus short copy can be
wearisome for most copywriters, since they must
constantly explain to their clients the benefits of
using long copy. Even though long copy is statistically
proven to outperform short copy, many clients still
tell me that longer copy will never be read, and that
on the Internet things are short and fast. And then
they ask me to trim my drafts down.

(I often fervently protest when this happens, and
you’ll soon find out why.)

Sure, I completely agree that things are short and fast
online. But there is a difference between grabbing
people’s attention and holding on to it. Keeping
readers riveted, hanging on to each and every word with
an intense desire to know what’s next, is the goal of
any direct response copy.

Remember this:

There’s a difference between long copy and long-winded
copy.

(It sounds the same as reading a story, right? Well, it
is. Like a book that’s called a “page turner,” copy
that keeps people glued to each and every paragraph is
one that is intensely interesting, curiously inviting
and uncomfortably compelling.)

As an aside, why do you think we now include
“stickiness” as a measuring stick in web analytics?
Granted, some of it is entertainment value, like videos
and graphics. But 9 times out of 10, it’s copy. Period.

Here’s a known fact:

Prospects who are qualified and genuinely interested in
the product or service being offered always want more
information about it, not less. If they are not
qualified or interested from the outset, no matter how
long or short the copy is, they will simply never buy.
If they’re not interested or qualified, they won’t read
15 words, much less 1,500 words.

Shorter copy can lead to three potential outcomes:

1) a lower response due to the lack of information;

2) an incessant need for more data, leading to a
barrage of information requests or questions;

3) or a higher number of cancellations, refunds and
returns since the product or service turned out to be
different than what was initially expected.

If long copy leads to poor results, it has nothing to
do with the length. It has everything to do with the
copy.

It’s simply too boring.

It didn’t elevate the reader’s level of interest, and
it failed to keep her reading. Admittedly, it’s a
challenge — and the reason why most online business
owners usually opt for short copy, since writing long
copy that engages, entices and entertains is very
difficult. (Yes, I did say “entertain.” It really is
all about storytelling.)

Good copy, on the other hand, is where the reader hangs
onto every word, and becomes more and more excited the
further she reads it. You see, long copy is like
telling a good story — and copywriters are indeed
storytellers. If your copy tells a compelling story,
people will read it … All of it. When it is written
well, long copy can lead to a much greater level of
response.

Look at it this way:

You visit a bookstore and notice a book that seems to
entice you. For instance, the cover, the title and the
cover copy, such as editorial raves or the author’s
biography, pull you into the book. Even the opening
chapter is delectable. So, you decide to buy the book.

The book seems to be inviting, exciting and
entertaining, and the story compels you to read every
single page, no matter how big the book is.

Take Stephen King, for example. If you’re a Stephen
King fanatic, that means: 1) you’re in his target
market, and 2) you’re interested in everything King
writes. Now, let’s say King publishes a massive, 800-
page tome. Are you not going to read it simply because
“it’s too long?” Of course not.

In fact, the book is so good that you either wish it
was longer or, once done, are prepared to read it over
once more. You just can’t put the book down, even if
time is limited, and you’re busy or preoccupied with
other things.

Here’s a flipside.

Let’s say, as you read it further, the story makes no
more sense. You become confused, perhaps a little
frustrated, and you slowly begin to lose interest. The
plot no longer invites you to keep reading. You drift
away and find it harder to continue. Ultimately, the
storyline fails to keep you excited about the book. So,
you stop, close the book and then shelve it. Now, it
gathers dust in your library.

The excuse? It’s TOO long!

Let me ask you, how many books in your library did you
fail to finish reading (or to start reading, for that
matter)? Perhaps some. Perhaps many. But the same thing
holds true with direct response copy.

Long copy works better than short copy. But it only
works if it’s interesting, captivating and riveting.
Call it “edutainment.” Copy must be educational and
entertaining.

However, in a handful of cases shorter copy is
warranted. (There is such a thing as “overselling” in
copy.) But the only real way to know for sure is to
test, test and test. Claude Hopkins, author of
“Scientific Advertising,” wrote an important axiom:

“Almost any question can be answered cheaply, quickly
and finally, by a test campaign. This is the only way
to answer them, not by arguments around a table. Go to
the court of last resort… The buyers of your product.”

As my mentor, copywriting genius Dan Kennedy, once said
in a recent interview:

“Now, the person who says ‘But I would never read all
that copy’ makes the mistake of thinking they are their
customer … And they are not. We are never our own
customers. (…) There is a thing in copywriting I teach
called ‘message-to-market match’. It is this: when your
message is matched to a target market that has a high
level of interest in it, not only does the level of
responsiveness go up but readership goes up, too…

“… The whole issue of interest goes up.”

The next step is to engage the reader.

Again, you’re like an author telling a good story, and
your copy must read like one. But like all good
stories, the reader must become intimately involved in
the plot. They see themselves in the shoes of the
characters living out the story.

And to do this, you need what I often call “UPWORDS.”
It’s an acronym that means: “Universal picture words or
relatable, descriptive sentences.”

First, using “universal picture words” means to use
words and mental imagery that help to paint vivid
pictures in the mind. Lace your copy with words that
engage as many of the senses as possible, and cause
your prospects to easily visualize already enjoying the
benefits of your offer.

As for “universal,” it means to use words that appeal
to, and can be easily interpreted by, the vast majority
of readers. In other words, use words to “encode” your
message so that, when they are read, can be decoded in
the same way by most of your readers. Your job is to
get the reader not only to read your copy but also to
understand it, internalize it and appreciate it.

Remember this simple yet extremely important rule:

“Different words mean different things to different
people.”

Some words can be interpreted in one way by one reader
and in a different way by another. Your job, therefore,
is to choose words that cater and universally appeal to
the bulk of your readers in order for them to fully
appreciate what you’re conveying.

For example, a challenge among cosmetic surgeons is the
fact that prospective patients will call for an
estimate over the phone when obviously the doctor needs
to see her beforehand. (An initial, in-person
assessment is always required, even by law, to see if
that patient is a surgical candidate. Giving out an
estimate implies that the patient is indeed a good
candidate for the surgery when it may not be the case.)

Here’s the crux of the problem:

Most patients don’t understand the significance of
seeing the doctor in person. Some may feel intimated by
doctors or by surgery, while others may simply be in a
rush and want to “shop around.” While they may
understand the reason, they may not necessarily
appreciate the importance, because cosmetic surgery is
an uncommon process. So, doctors will use analogies,
referring to a more common approach, such as cosmetic
dentistry.

Why? Unlike surgery, most people have had their teeth
done at some point in their lives. They already know
it. They already have a “reference point” in their
minds they can relate to.

So, doctors will say: “Like a dentist, I can not give
you an estimate over the phone without any x-rays of
your teeth let alone the knowledge of how many cavities
you actually have.” People now understand not only the
reason but also the importance of seeing the doctor in
person in order to obtain an accurate estimate.

This applies to every business.

Business owners often become so intimately involved
with their product or business that they tend to forget
to look at them from their prospect’s perspective. For
example, they tend to use a language that only people
in their industry or “on the other side of the fence,”
so to speak, can fully appreciate. But that approach
can backfire… And often does.

Therefore, your job is to use analogies, metaphors and
comparisons, and most importantly stories, all in a
language to which the prospect can relate.

That’s what “relatable, descriptive sentences” mean.
Words are not messages in themselves. They are merely
symbols. Your choice of words can actually alter the
understanding, and particularly the emotional impact,
of your message.

Finally, use action words (i.e., active verbs and not
passive ones) that not only compel your readers but
also “propel” them into action. Tell them what they
must do and take them “by the hand,” in other words.
Don’t stick with mere verbs. Use action words that
paint vivid pictures in the mind, too. And the more
vivid the picture is the more compelling the request
will be.

For example, you’re a financial consultant. Rather than
saying something like, “Poor fiscal management may lead
to financial woes,” say, “Stop mediocre money
management from sucking cash straight out of your
wallet!” (People can visualize the action of “sucking”
better than they can “leading.”) Instead of, “Let me
help you maintain your balance sheet,” say, “Borrow my
eyes to help you keep a steady finger on your financial
pulse.”

— About the Author —
Michel Fortin is a direct
response copywriter, marketing strategy consultant, and
instrumental in some of the most lucrative online
businesses and wildly successful marketing campaigns to
ever hit the web. For more articles like this one,
please visit his blog at http://www.michelfortin.com/
and subscribe to his RSS feed.

Blog Promotion: 7 Strategies That Work By Jack Humphrey

October 7th, 2008 by Shirley Grant 1 comment »

I just finished looking at my stats and thought I would
show you where my traffic is coming from and what
marketing tactic I used to get it.

Below are only the things that produced visitors to my
site in the last 48 hours. Nothing theoretical
whatsoever.

1) Search Engines

Yesterday was my biggest day yet with this new site
platform and the performance is unlike anything I have
ever experienced before.

I had more search engine traffic from more phrases in
one 48 hour period than ever.

>From very nice short tail keywords like “video
syndication” to fat long tail phrases like “how to get
more friends on myspace.”

And everything in between.

How do I do so well in the engines?

I use the very best publishing system on Planet Earth.
Nuff said.

2) Article Syndication

LOL – right? Wrong. Article syndication is still a very
powerful traffic driver if you do it properly.

Rather than try to be on every article directory on the
web, I go for the most important article directories on
the web.

I also write the best content I can on highly relevant,
topical, hot issues in my niche.

I do not wirte and syndicate articles for links. I
write for traffic. Huge difference most people
completely ignore.

I syndicated this article over the weekend and am
getting traffic from the following article sites:

* GoArticles.com * Ezinearticles.com

I will get traffic from many others, but I am only
showing you today what happened to drive real targeted
traffic in the last 24 hours. (People don’t do this
anywhere else that I know of by the way!)

I syndicate my articles exclusively with
SubmitYourArticle.com.

3) News Readers

Because I have several feeds to choose from, and a wide
range of related topics I publish on, I have feed
subscribers on all kinds of readers.

In the last 24 hours I have gotten traffic from people
using feed readers from:

* Yahoo * Google * Bloglines * Delicious, and *
different versions of desktop readers like
MyWebTop.com.

4) Links

I’ve gotten significant traffic in the last 48 hours
from sites such as:

* BradFallon.com * CreativeBits.org *
WillieCrawford.com * MichelFortin.com

and many many others.

These are link partnerships or just people pointing to
specific posts here and commenting on their blogs.

The better your content, the more people comment and
trackback your site. So good content equals good link
traffic.

5) TrafficSwarm

I get a good amount of traffic each day from
TrafficSwarm, which is no new kid on the block.

I have tested the traffic from this service and opt-in
rates are good, meaning the traffic isn’t junk traffic,
if you were wondering.

They have a free and paid version. Don’t bother with it
on the free level. It is extremely inexpensive traffic
compared to Adwords and Co-registration, and there are
other benefits of membership aside from direct traffic
and subscribers.

6) Video Syndication

I have been doing screen capture blog marketing videos
lately and syndicating them on all the free video
sharing sites available.

Since I started (I have only done 4 so far) I can
attribute top 10 rankings in Google for terms like
“blog marketing videos” and many others to this
marketing tactic alone.

Since video sharing sites are all popular (none of the
sites I syndicate videos to are under PR5, most PR6 or
higher) the links are worth a lot and the traffic is
great each time I submit a video.

Video syndication will be one of the buzz phrases of
2007. Glad I am in the top 10 for that phrase too!

7) Tagging and Pinging

Or simply posting properly and showing up automatically
(and practically instantly) in places like Technorati
which track blogs, is a big daily traffic driver.

Right after I post this I will see traffic from
Technorati and other sites that I ping.

Kind of encourages me to post regularly knowing every
post brings me more traffic and another chance to score
in the engines for more keywords.

If you don’t know how this is all done, the best
information available on the subject is from Sean Wu.

Again, the above tactics all resulted in real, live,
free targeted traffic to the Friday Traffic Report in
the last 48 hours.

Thought you’d like to see what is working based on my
actual log files rather than more theoretical pieces
from people who don’t necessarily use the tactics they
push to drive traffic to their own sites.

—About Jack Humphrey—

Jack Humphrey is the editor of the Friday Traffic
Report.  He teaches blog marketing, social marketing,
and link building strategies.  Stop by and subscribe to
his blog at http://www.jackhumphrey.com

Visitor Tracking with Hit Tail

October 3rd, 2008 by Shirley Grant No comments »

By Jack Humphrey

So I’ve been using Hit Tail (A free stats program) for
about 2 weeks now and I have some stats for you.

Hit Tail shows me long tail keyword phrases people are
using to find me. That’s not a huge deal as several
other stats programs do this as well in their own way.

What impresses me about my data coming back from Hit
Tail is that its entire focus is driven by long tail
phrase discovery for your site.

For instance, here are some stats for my site so far:

Top ten keywords are 19.4% of all your search traffic.
Long tail keywords are 80.6% of all your search
traffic. Hit Tail has also collected 143 keyword
phrases so far and makes recommendations of phrases,
based on the entire data set it collects from visits
and where and how they found me, that I should
capitalize on further.

Here is a novel idea for keyword research:

The only way to do proper keyword research for a niche
is to build a site and develop content for it. You can
get initial ideas from regular keyword tools about the
popularity of a topic, but developing a site and
watching real-time phrases being used to hit your site
develops the real keyword list you want to work from.
The keyword list I am developing through my content,
which gets picked up and ranked in the engines the way
it does because I publish on the Authority Site Center
system, is second to none and no one else in the world
has it.

No one can run a program to find out what’s on my list
because it is developed in-house.

Think about that for a moment.

1. You are developing a strong, real-life list of
phrases people actually use to find content in your
market.

2. No one else can ever have the same list if you are
writing original content on various topics in your
niche regularly.

3. While everyone else is using some generic tool like
Overture or Google phrase programs, you are developing
a unique list of phrases you know for a fact people are
really searching on, and that’s people who know exactly
what they want. (People in niches like mine who type in
one or two keywords to find something aren’t serious
enough to convert. They are just playing around and
wasting my bandwidth.)

4. While everyone else works like dogs to optimize for
those generic phrases they are rarely, if ever, going
to rank well for due to fierce competition, you are
simply providing content informed by all the other
searches in your market. Let the amateurs and Fortune
500s duke it out for the more useless phrases in your
market!

Stats tracking has come a long way. With a three-
pronged approach:

1) MyBlogLog.com, 2) HitTail.com, and 3) My log files
(yeah right, like I’m going to link you to THOSE!)

I am able to triangulate and pinpoint data in my market
that relatively few others in my market are able or
willing to find.

It makes my content better for you and it makes it
easier for you to find me because the engines find me
more relevant than millions of other sites and pages on
my search terms more often than not. When you know the
things I know about my visitors, the engines, and the
ways I can improve and create rankings out of thin air,
you will be a powerful publisher to watch out for in
your market for sure!

—About Jack Humphrey—
Jack Humphrey is the editor of the Friday Traffic
Report. He teaches blog marketing, social marketing,
and link building strategies. Stop by and subscribe to
his blog at
http://www.jackhumphrey.com

Directory Submissions that Matter

August 22nd, 2008 by Shirley Grant No comments »
By Sharon Housley

Links from different directories have different values.
A webmaster's time is limited, and most webmasters want
to get the biggest bang for their bucks. So where
should they start when it comes to directory
submissions? Search engines assign value to links from
the various directories differently, so how do you
spend your time where it matters most?

Yahoo

Yahoo is still, to some degree, the king of
directories. Whether a Yahoo directory link is worth
"paying for" is still a debatable question, but there
is no doubt that a link from Yahoo is worth the effort.
Do not leave a Yahoo link to automated submission
software -- take the time to manually submit your links
to the Yahoo Directory.

Yahoo Directory -http://www.yahoo.com/

DMOZ

Amazingly, it appears that DMOZ is still relevant.
While some webmasters complain that DMOZ is outdated,
it is apparent that a DMOZ link still matters to the
larger search engines. DMOZ is a human-edited directory
with different editors for each category. As such,
patience is critical to obtaining a listing. Editors
can become annoyed when sites are submitted multiple
times, and before they've had the opportunity to review
the quality of the content. Some editors work quicker
than others, so be patient and polite, and you may get
lucky with a DMOZ listing.

DMOZ - http://www.dmoz.org/

Wikipedia

A legitimate link that stays in Wikipedia is very
desirable. Wikipedia is a human-edited online
encyclopedia. Wikipedia links are very difficult to
obtain, and even more difficult to retain. But if you
build a unique quality resource on a niche subject, you
might find yourself linked on a page in Wikipedia.

Wikipedia - http://www.wikipedia.com/

Major Download Websites

The major software download websites are all capable of
driving traffic, and can impact a websites popularity.
Make sure to manually submit your software to these
three major download websites:

Download.com - http://www.download.com/
Tucows.com - http://www.tucows.com/
Softonic.com - http://www.softonic.com/

Popular Directories

The more popular the directory, the better the link is
considered to be. Link popularity matters, and a link
from a webpage with a high page rank (as determined by
the Google Toolbar) is desirable. You can assess the
general popularity and value of a directory by viewing
the page rank of the webpages on a website.

Related Niche Directories

Websites that are an authority on related subject
material are great sources of web traffic. Conduct very
specific searches to locate popular niche directories.

Where To Find Important Directories

There are a number of resources designed to assist
webmasters in finding both free and paid directories
that will accept submissions. Use the following
resources to boost your directory listings:

Web Search Engines - http://www.web-search-engines.net/
One-Way Text Links - http://www.onewaytextlink.com/links.php?type= free&pagenum=1
Business Seek Business Directory - http://www.businessseek.biz/page.php?page=web-submit

About the Author: Sharon Housley manages marketing for
FeedForAll http://www.feedforall.com software for
creating, editing, publishing RSS feeds and podcasts.
In addition Sharon manages marketing for RecordForAll
http://www.recordforall.com audio recording and editing
software.

Where’s The Money? Adsense vs. Affiliate Programs

August 19th, 2008 by Shirley Grant 1 comment »

By Liz Tomey

The main question I get from my clients when coaching them on building content sites is wether they should use Adsense or affiliate programs. It’s a great question, and one that I haven’t seen addressed often. Hopefully this information will help you in making your decision.

My rule of thumb is always go where the money is, but in making the decision to use Adsense or affiliate programs, there are a few things you should look at. Let’s take a look at those things right now, so you know exactly what you should be putting on your site. Google Adsense or affiliate programs.

First, it will depend on your niche. If there is an affiliate program for your niche that converts well and pays well, then you should take the affiliate program route. I’m sure you would rather make dollars than you would cents, so using an affiliate program in this situation would be your best bet. However, if there isn’t an affiliate program, using a pay-per-click service such as Google Adsense will at least allow you to earn a little money from your content site.

This leads to another question though. How do you tell if the affiliate program you are looking at is a good one or not?

The answer to that question will take some research, but will be well worth your time. The first thing to do is to contact the site owner or affiliate manager and ask what the average conversion rate is for the affiliate program. You could also ask if they have any affiliates that would be willing to email you their experiences with the product. Once you have the answer to that question, visit a few affiliate marketing forums and ask if anyone has promoted the program before or if they have any experience with the owner or affiliate manager of the site. Usually if it’s a bad program, many people will tell you about it.

Now, if you don’t find any affiliate programs for your niche, then I would use Google Adsense or any of the other programs like it. Always check though to make sure you can’t make more money from something else. You don’t want to be making pennies on a site you could be making dollars from. Most of the time Google Adsense just pays pennies per click. So if you got 100 clicks on your Adsense ad, and made say $5, but you got 100 clicks on an affiliate link and made $50, wouldn’t it make more send to use the affiliate link on your site?

Using this as a guide will help you, but you still must test and track what works best for your site. You could put Adsense ads on your site for a few weeks, and then replace them with affiliate links for a few weeks. See what does better, and use the one that makes you more money. Just remember to keep testing and tracking!

Liz Tomey runs an affiliate marketing website that focuses on educating people about the different ways of making money through affiliate marketing.You can enjoy reading tips, tricks, and other information about affiliate marketing and finding the best affiliate marketing program on her site at http://www.TheAffiliateMarketingBlog.com.

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