CEOs of AdFoundry, BluePhoenix, RevenueStreet take on Porn, Jaguars, Virgin Airlines and provide insight.

One of the most popular features we’ve done is asking CEO’s of different companies their opinions of different things. In asking them separately and then comparing answers, one can get really good insight into the industry as a whole and what the leaders in our industry are thinking. In these interviews, we asked them questions about the industry in general, what type of cars they like and what they’ve learned from porn. Based on their answers, I can tell you that we have in our industry some really good ceo’s with a wide variety of opinions … and tastes in cars.

What is the most interesting thing you learned at Affiliate Summit this year? Do you think the word “Affiliate” should be used anymore in our industry?

Nick Foley, RevenueStreet:  This years Affiliate Summit West, in my opinion was the best AS to date.  The amount of people and booths this show was impressive.  We learned a lot this show but what stood out was the surge of Mobile.  The mobile arena is already big and seems to be on track to be HUGE.  It seems everyone is getting their feet wet with Mobile.  We foresee it being a great revenue stream in the years to come.

Holly Brown, Wheaten & Wheaten: More than what I learned is that it appeared that there were more affiliates at the show this year.  Did I call them affiliates, I meant Publishers. Seriously, the show was the best yet.

Amy Sheridan, Blue Phoenix: I am not so wrapped up in whether or not to use the word affiliate.  The word itself alludes to people working together and partnership with something larger which is the way we should think of network/publisher relationships.  What I dont think is that people outside the industry will care what we call each other if we do not self govern and decide how to stop the rampant fraud.  I think we could all use a best practices on affiliate approval so new and emerging networks can at least have guide to start with.  We could also use a electable governing board that would put forth these and other actionable items which will show progress in working together as an industry so we can continue to regulate the actions of each other and not have a third party not involved directly in our industry to do so. Most interesting thing I learned: That 2 people invented and patented network to network affiliate marketing from a dormroom in UC Berkley in 1999?!?

I noticed that not a single publication outside the affiliate industry covered Affiliate Summit? What does the press need to pay attention to in our industry?

Nick Foley: Performance base marketing is here to stay.  The press needs to catch wind of this and they need to start giving PBM the coverage it deserves.  More and more companies are moving budgets and allocation  to the online space and the PBM model.  In our opinion the press needs to get involved and help our industry get the word out on what PBM can do.  The PBM model is a win win for all parties.  Advertisers only pay for results and affiliates are rewarded for their marketing efforts.  Who know why the press didn’t have a strong presence at the show but the fact is they need to start getting more involved.  Our industry has proven itself and the press needs to give credit where credit id due.

Holly Brown: Why the press needs to pay attention is simple, we offer an alternative to the “branding” experiments that most companies spend their budgets on.  If the press in this industry ever took the wraps off of performance they would see a more perfect model arise.  Some larger advertisers such as Kodak and Microsoft are starting to see this as the way to spend their money instead of branding only.  A good mix of branding and direct response will become the norm in online as I see it.

Amy Sheridan: I am not sure why the press wholly ignored 4600 people who attended Affiliate Summit this year.  Perhaps some of the money paid to Affiliate Summit could have been used to hire a PR firm to hype this conference up in the press.  I would suspect it was because of CES which we got to Las Vegas at the tale end of.  It is also possible that the press outside the industry does not take our industry too seriously because it still is a pretty emerging industry as far as internet marketing goes and is definitely still thought of as the wild west.  By some people in this industry as well 🙂  I am of the mind that until we clean up and attract bigger brands to the space that have quantifiable success that we will continue to be ignored.  The press follows brands and money not blackhats launching campaigns from their parents basements.

Someone told me the industry is separating itself into two parties: the Blackhat type affiliates and make-money guys versus the growing professional side of the industry. What do you think about that idea, and can the two sides work together?

Nick Foleyt: This is the first I heard of this divide so it’s hard for me to give my opinion.

Holly Brown: Yes the separation has begun, and I feel that larger brands will align themselves with the more trusted networks that afford transparency.  If there is no transparency then the lower levels will be stuck with Acai berry, while the more compliant networks will be running with Fortune 2000’s budgets.  You decide which you would rather be associated with  and in the long run which will have sustainable budgets as opposed to short term “kill it and run” strategies.

Amy Sheridan: The industry is separating into two parties.  There are advertisers and networks for the blackhat types and professional types.  As far as working together I am not sure how long that can possibly last.  You can really tell by the types of offers offers the network has who accepts and wants to work with the black hat type of affiliates

What verticals do you see growing in 2011?

Nick Foley: I think this holds true for most companies when I say Education is a vertical that will continue to grow. The lead generation companies who focus on EDU will continue to make nice money.  As long as the lead quality is monitored and maintained the education vertical will continue to grow. Additionally we foresee travel, business opportunity, timeshare and health to be a few of the verticals growing in 2011.  When we look at the big picture any vertical which leads can be generated for will be a healthy revenue stream for most companies.

Holly Brown: Daily Deal Sites , Health and Aging, Insurance, CPG, (almost anything that saves consumers money)
Amy Sheridan, Blue Phoenix: I see the education and home services vertical growing.  Obviously, we are going to see tons of growth in the localized market as well.

What changes for the better would you like to see in 2011 for the industry?

Nick Foley: Communication between companies and network would be a nice change.  Our industry has a significant amount of fraud, fraudulent affiliates and companies.  It would great if companies would communicate and share this information.  This would help reduce fraud issues and weed of the fraudulent affiliates and companies in our industry.  Unfortunately the online space is a playground for people trying to make money using fraudulent tactics.  Establishing a line of communication between companies would help reduce this activity.

Holly Brown: Standardization of compliance guidelines, Affiliate Certification, Greater transparency of publisher traffic, More integrity from networks.

Amy Sheridan: I would like to see some more self regulation and a more cohesiveness in the industry.

If you could sell a movie company on using performance based advertising, how would you do it? Can you give me a simple pitch?

Holly Brown: Why pay for trailer views when you really wants butts in seats.  Stop branding and get them standing (in line).  Performance marketing ties your ads to purchasing tickets and getting friends and family to purchase tickets directly at their local theaters.  In addition, performance marketing encourages viral pass along’s particularly when there is a discount included.  So stop wasting your marketing budgets and start making your movies pay off immediately without having to hope and pray that your media buyers got it right. With performance, all the impressions are free, you pay only for the action.

Amy Sheridan: I would use the same formula I used with Brittish Airways when I was on their account years ago.  Just like any other CPA product you figure out how much the movie company will pay per seat to get people into the theatre and arbitrage media to hit that metric.  I would also run a sweepstakes involving the movie or movie tickets and get people to put all their information in the form including email, demographic details and cell phone.

What have you learned from the porn industry about interactive marketing? What has been the best “invention” internet porn has created that has gone mainstream?

Nick Foley:  We stay away from adult stuff so I don’t have comment

Holly Brown: Testing.  The adult industry incessantly tests everything.  That is something we do not see so much of in mainstream.  Best invention porn ever introduced, the pop up or exit pop.  2nd to that, CPA Marketing.

What is your opinion on incentivized marketing? Are there legit mechanisms for incentivization or is most of the industry fraudulent? What are issues in incentivization?

Nick Foley: When we first started our coreg network the majority of our coreg sites were incentivized.  The traffic volume was great but over time advertisers just were not happy with the quality of the data.  We switched to 85% non-incent a couple years ago and the results have been fine.  In my opinion, if used properly and for specific promotions incentivized marketing can work.  The problem is companies use the incent technique fraudulently which creates a bad taste in peoples mouths when they talk about incent marketing.

Amy Sheridan: Personally I dont mind incentivized marketing as long as it is clearly stated what type of incent the advertiser is looking for.  What I dont accept or support is affiliates taking non incentivized offers and putting the in the incent environment to make a quick buck or see if the network or advertiser catch them.  This is an awful industry practice and must be stopped.  There are loads of deals that can accept incent whether in be on the back of a coreg path, using virtual currency or points.  Mypoints.com is a great example of a company that has done incentivization properly and kept happy advertisers.  Some virtual currency placements have yielded good results as well in my experience.  All in all as a network, our policy is to only let the incentivized publishers see the incentivized offers and all in all that has worked well for us.  We have had offers in the incentivized space like Stamps.com that have not gone down from our network for the entire duration of our business.  Conversely, we have terminated many publishers from our network that chose to ignore our policy’s and attempt to run non incent offers on an incent basis.  There most definitely is a place for this type of marketing; however, it is something that need to be carefully managed for it to be effective.

Holly Brown: Incent has always been with us and will never go away, so long as there are people who want stuff for free.  The main issue with incentivization is how the offer is presented and in what context. Direct Incent vs. Indirect Incent.   Selling life insurance to someone who just wants to buy a chicken in Farmville would seem like an example of how NOT to do incent.  On the other hand, if you want to give me 250 Bing Rewards points and a chicken, such a deal.

What is your dream car?

Nick Foley: What is my dream car .. Mmmmmm??  I enjoy SUVs and have 2 GMC Denali’s but what I truly love is my Honda Ruckus scooter.  Our office is a mile from the beach so having a scooter in Florida when the weather is perfect out is the best way to travel, in my opinion.  Ask anyone who works in our office.  I love my scooter.  I would take it over any car.  Take a look http://powersports.honda.com/2009/RUCKUS.ASPX/NEWS/090111C080A99288/dealers/search.aspx

Holly Brown: Vintage Jaguar Roadster

Amy Sheridan: 1956 Jaguar XK140 Roadster

What is your favourite airline and why?

Nick Foley: AirTran. We travel between 6 and 8 times a years for trade shows.  I need an airline that has a business class seating area and they MUST have internet access on the flight.  AirTran has both.  You can get a first class/business class seat for around $400-$500 (each way) and every flight has on-board internet access.  Flights that have internet help pass the time AND you can get a ton of work done while you travel.

Holly Brown: I’m not loyal to any one airline.  I travel frequently so I typically go with the best combination of schedule and fare.

Amy Sheridan: Virgin.  I like the disco lights 🙂

What would you like to tell us about your company?

Nick Foley:  TheMediaCrew is in it’s 11th year of business.  It feels like we just started because we so have so many projects going on.  It’s so exciting to come to work.  I truely enjoy and have a string passion for what I do.  The people we have here are great.  I can not say enough about the team we have put together.  I can honestly say I feel we have assembled the best employee base in the industry.  Everyone is honest, hard working, fun and extremely intelligent.  This is the blood that keeps TheMediaCrew running and being a successful and profitable company year after year after year.  When you do business with us you will see what I’m talking about.  The people are the company.

Amy Sheridan: BluePhoenixNetwork is not the largest network but we work very hard to bring branded and unique offers to our publishers.  We have built out over 20 proprietary offers in the EDU, home services and insurance verticals (all lead gen based).  Additionally, our networks goal is to attract clients that are usually branding clients to try the CPA side of the business.  We have current CPA clients like Ballys, Bing and Lunesta and are constantly working on attracting unique and different clients to the CPA space to give our publishers new and exciting offers to run.

Sign up as an Affiliate with RevenueStreet.

Read also our interview with Nick Foley of RevenueStreet.

Pace Lattin interview.

Discover The Secrets of Email Secret Sales

When we’re not “in the know,” it’s human nature to exercise our curiosity and seek out the truth. When we’re kept in the loop, we feel special and privileged.

Your email marketing can appeal to those emotions, too. You want subscribers to feel privy to select information about your company. After all, that’s one reason you have an email campaign in the first place – to keep customers and prospects in the loop.

By positioning promotions as “secrets,” you can create buzz and start a game of whisper down the lane with your subscribers, hoping they will spread the word to their friends who weren’t as lucky to hear from you first.

secret-tactic1

When it comes to secret persuasions, Bloomingdale’s certainly has the right idea.

For their first ever online secret sale, they rolled out invitations only to email subscribers. The beauty of this tactic? It’s not really secret at all. Bloomie’s wants their readers to forward the message to friends and chat the event up.

secret-bloomingdales

How You Can Do It:

At first glance, it may seem like Bloomingdale’s can execute this kind of campaign because they have hundreds of thousands of dollars to spend on email marketing. Looking closer, however, there’s no reason that you can’t have the same impact with your own campaign.

  1. Create a broadcast message that promotes a “secret” limited time event. Use urgent language to inspire quick clicks.
  2. You don’t have to make a coupon code or get technical about sales deductions. Notice that Bloomie’s never mentions a code, they just include a link to the “sale” page on their site.

secret-tactic2

Everyone loves scratch-off coupons. It’s like playing the lottery, but always winning!

Overstock offers email subscribers a virtual scratch-off coupon in this genius email. The added element of the unknown inspired me to click through and see what item I could get a good deal on that day.

secret-overstock

How You Can Do It:

  1. Pick an item on your site that you want to make the special sale item and copy the URL.
  2. Save the following coupon images to your computer, then upload one to your website and use it in your next email. Link it to the special sale item, and you have a mystery sale item instantly!

secret-tactic3

Rue La La’s Secret Suite invitation is another brilliant use of secrecy. The very idea of a guest list oozes exclusivity. If you’re not on the list at the hottest club in town, you’re not getting in, right?

secret-ruelala

How You Can Do It:

  1. You’ve already got your guest list, so the hard part’s complete.
  2. The trick is writing an email that uses language to paints a portrait of limited access. Using phrases like “under-the-radar” and “exclusive” lets your subscribers believe that they are special for receiving the email from you, which increases the odds that they will click through and purchase something from you.

Have You Ever Run a Secret Sale Campaign?

What kind of language did you use to inform subscribers of the sale? Were your emails successful? Share your experiences below!

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New Do-Follow Article Submission Sites List

If you aren’t familiar with article writing for traffic, it is still one of the best ways to generate targeted traffic to your website about specific topics. If you are trying to write articles about education offers, not such a good idea, because the market is completely saturated, but if you have a new topic, especially a new trend topic, it could be a great way to get attention to your product or products. For affiliates, this can be a sure-fire method of generating traffic to a topic-specific blog. One guru will charge you money to get this list as part of his “secret” to how to do article marketing.  I’ve decided that it’s easier to give to you for free. Pace Lattin tells us what we need to do.

Of course, if you are going to do this, I highly recommend learning to write many articles or getting a really good article spinning program. If you are like many of us, here is a whole article spinning (rewriting program) and submission program that will do some of the work for you. Please note some people really hate article spinning, and some love it. Either way, if you want to take a little time out of your normal marketing techniques any long-time affiliate marketer will tell you that submitting articles is always a plus.

  1. articlesalley.com Page Rank 7
  2. suite101.com Page Rank 7
  3. ezinearticles.com Page Rank 6
  4. articlesbase.com Page Rank 6 (With 10 articles, will change to do-follow)
  5. articlecity.com Page Rank 6
  6. isnare.com Page Rank 6
  7. buzzle.com Page Rank 6
  8. helium.com Page Rank 6
  9. site-reference.com Page Rank 5
  10. articleslash.net Page Rank 5
  11. thewhir.com/find/articlecentral Page Rank 5
  12. a1articles.com Page Rank 5
  13. sooperarticles.com Page Rank 5
  14. searchwarp.com Page Rank 5
  15. articlesnatch.com Page Rank 5
  16. articlealley.com Page Rank 5
  17. articledashboard.com Page Rank 5
  18. selfgrowth.com/articles.html Page Rank 5
  19. ideamarketers.com Page Rank 5
  20. bukisa.com Page Rank 5
  21. goarticles.com Page Rank 4
  22. carolinaarticles.com Page Rank 4
  23. articlesfactory.com Page Rank 4
  24. articleclick.com Page Rank 4
  25. submityourarticle.com/articles/ Page Rank 4
  26. infobarrel.com Page Rank 4
  27. abcarticledirectory.com Page Rank 4
  28. upublish.info Page Rank 4
  29. e-articles.info Page Rank 4
  30. articlemonkeys.com Page Rank 4 (Now No-Follow)
  31. dime-co.com Page Rank 4
  32. web-source.net Page Rank 3
  33. EvanCarmichael.com Page Rank 3
  34. articlerich.com Page Rank 3
  35. amazines.com Page Rank 3
  36. articlewarehouse.com Page Rank 3
  37. acmearticles.com Page Rank 3
  38. article-buzz.com Page Rank 3
  39. fourpxarticles.com Page Rank 3
  40. articlebliss.com Page Rank 3
  41. articles.everyquery.com Page Rank 3
  42. thecontentcorner.com Page Rank 3
  43. affsphere.com Page Rank 3
  44. articlecell.com Page Rank 2
  45. articlestars.com Page Rank 2
  46. articlecube.com Page Rank 0
  47. articlecompilation.com Page Rank 0
  48. articlepool.com Page Rank 0
  49. 365articles.com Page Rank 0
  50. articlenexus.com Page Rank

Is Article Spinning a Waste of Time?

“Is Article Spinning a bad idea,” asks a reader.

By article spinning (sometimes known as article cloning) I assume that you’re referring to the practice of reformatting others’ articles in order to create content on your site and avoid penalties for duplicate content by the search engines.

Or perhaps you’re spinning your own article in a dozen ways to disguise the duplicate content.

Though you mention that you plan to do this manually, many use software programs that automatically replace words or phrases in an article with synonyms from some kind of database thesaurus. They also move blocks of content from their original position in an article to another position to make it appear that this is a different article.

Article spinning from others’ article is akin to scraping techniques in which websites pull content off of other websites and put it on their own to attract traffic. Because of massive scraping and repurposing of content, there is a huge amount of useless clutter that shows up in searches. You have, no doubt, gone to webpages that match your keywords, but all you find are a lot of Google AdSense ads and a few random paragraphs that are unhelpful. Yes, they sometimes achieve search results, but they are neither helpful nor relevant.

I don’t know if Google has an official position on article spinning. I do know that they are actively working to disallow scraping sites the ability to earn money using AdSense Ads and that they are trying to help their search clients find relevant material. Article spinning takes what is bad about search and makes it worse.

I oppose article spinning on several grounds.

  • Morally, it is wrong to use someone else’s work for your own benefit without permission or payment. It is stealing, even if it is thinly disguised.
  • Legally, much article spinning is in violation of copyright laws, which protect authors from “derivative” works that are based on their original work.
  • Educationally, writing clear, easy-to-understand articles is difficult enough. But when people replace words for close synonyms, they often distort the precise meaning intended by the author. The ignorant can’t tell the difference, perhaps, but the ignorant are not well-served by articles that are misleading. Switching the order of paragraphs or blocks of material to disguise the source obliterates the logical flow of an article. Computers can’t produce good articles. Neither can amateur re-writers and re-spinners who haven’t studied subjects carefully and precisely. Who is hurt? The reader who is desperately trying to learn.
  • Socially, the common good is impaired as people fill the Internet with scrapings, spinnings, and regurgitations. Knowledge isn’t increased, but hindered, and finding useful material becomes harder and harder.

It is important to note, however, that the line between rewriting an article and mindless article spinning is a fuzzy one. All writers learn from other writers, especially from the work of experts. Writing an article is often a reformulation of others’ ideas in your own unique way for your own unique audience. But honest writers usually indicate their reliance upon others’ insights in various ways.

Yes! By all means study a subject and, once you understand it, write an article about it. That’s article marketing at its best. But don’t take others’ work and just change a few words and paragraph positions. That’s not rewriting, but plagiarism. It makes hash out of what was once a perfectly good meal.

I know that teachers and professors are seeing more and more article spinning submitted to them as original papers. Sleazy students do it to manipulate their grades. After all, the end justifies the means. Sleazy Internet article spinners do it to artificially manipulate search rankings. After all, the end justifies the means.

William, I hope that as you investigate article spinning, you’ll conclude, as I do, that article spinners deserve an “F” on moral, legal, educational, and social grounds.

Dr. Ralph Wilson is an Internet marketing pioneer and author of a dozen books on Internet marketing, including Planning Your Internet Marketing Strategy, Report on Article Marketing, Guide to Search Engine Optimization, the Shopping Cart Report, How to Develop a Landing Page, and others.

Email Marketing for the Mobile Set

ADOTAS – Reading this article on your smartphone? You are not alone. With the advent and further enhancements of the iPhone, Blackberry, Droid and HTC devices to name a few, there is now a growing mobile market that offers consumers a wide range of well-designed, efficient and just plain cool devices to choose from.

But it is the functionality of mobile phones that makes them a powerful tool for marketers, especially when it comes to email marketing.

Checking email via a mobile device has risen considerably in recent years as more phones enter the market and more consumers are drawn to them. According to a 2010 Pew Research Center study, 40% of adults use the Internet, email or instant messaging on a mobile phone, up from 32% in 2009. In addition, over two-thirds of business-to-business emailers read emails on their mobile devices.

This trend has quite a few implications for marketers trying to reach consumers. Now more than ever there is the ability and even a need, to reach individuals through their mobile devices as more consumers are using their phones to open emails directly. Following are some tips that marketers should take into consideration when designing emails for mobile devices.

Make your display mobile-friendly. Remember that unlike a desktop or laptop screen that can measure up to 21 inches, mobile email display appears on a screen of not more than 4 inches. Keep your design simple and un-cluttered to avoid too much distraction on a more restricted space.

Include a plain text version of your message. This will avoid any possible problems that you may encounter with HTML emails. No images will be shown, so make sure that the text-only version makes sense. You may have to do some re-wording so that users who are not receiving the HTML email will understand what you are offering.

Include links to your offer. With the development of smartphone technology, most users are able to visit any link instantly. Providing links for mobile users is a great way to get them directly to your site.

Keep your message short and to the point. Readers will not want to scroll through massive amounts of text or images. Remember that mobile users are only seeing a short portion of your message at a time due to the limited screen space.

The subject line should summarize your offer and entice the reader. A dull subject line will not make the reader want to open the email.

The growth in the smartphone market has created changes in the email marketing industry. With more and more users turning to their mobile devices to read emails, marketers must adjust their formats and design to accommodate this new trend. Making these changes can lead to higher open rates, better response rates and overall appreciation from smartphone email users.

—–

Jill Solomon is the Online Marketing Manager at Direct Agents, a performance-based interactive advertising agency specializing in providing brand advertisers and affiliates with customized online advertising solutions. She works on developing online marketing campaigns for Direct Agents and their clients. Previously, Jill worked in the sports and entertainment marketing industry.

Great Email Subject Lines Explained!

Despite repeated proclamations of its extinction, rumors of the death of email marketing have been greatly exaggerated — especially since email and social media are a powerful combination. You might not reach the average college freshman, but for slightly older types (you know, the ones with the money), email is still the way to go in many lucrative mainstream niches.

You must first, of course, get your emails read. And it all starts with the subject line.

Email subject lines are a form of headline. They perform the same function as a headline by attracting attention and getting your email content a chance to be read.

So, headline fundamentals still apply. But the context is different, with the email space having its own funky little quirks that need to be accounted for.

Here’s the good news — email also implies a special relationship with the reader; a relationship that will get more of your messages read, even with subject lines that wouldn’t work in other headline contexts. Let’s take a look back at headline fundamentals, the specifics that apply to subject lines, and the “secret sauce” that makes email your top conversion channel.

1. The Fundamentals:

When you’re writing your next subject line, run it through this checklist, based on the Four “U” Approach to headline writing:

  • Useful: Is the promised message valuable to the reader?
  • Ultra-specific: Does the reader know what’s being promised?
  • Unique: Is the promised message compelling and remarkable?
  • Urgent: Does the reader feel the need to read now?

When you’re trying to get someone to take valuable time and invest it in your message, a subject line that properly incorporates all four of these elements can’t miss. And yet, execution in the email context can be tricky, so let’s drill down into subject-line specifics for greater clarity.

2. The Specifics:

Beyond headline fundamentals, these are the things to specifically focus on with email subject lines:

  • Identify yourself: Over time, the most compelling thing about an email message should be that it’s from you. Even before then, your recipient needs to know at a glance that you’re a trusted source. Either make it crystal clear by smart use of your “From” field, or start every subject line with the same identifier. For example, with our own Internet Marketing for Smart People newsletter, every subject line begins with [Smart People].
  • Useful and specific first: Of the four “U” fundamentals, focus on useful and ultra-specific, even if you have to ignore unique and urgent. There are plenty of others who work at unique and urgent with every subject line — we call them spammers. Don’t cross the line into subject lines that are perceived as garbage. But do throw in a bit of a tease.
  • Urgent when it’s useful: When every message from you is urgent, none is. Use urgency when it’s actually useful, such as when there’s a real deadline or compelling reason to act now. If you’re running your email marketing based on value and great offers, people don’t want to miss out and need to know how much time they have.
  • Rely on spam checking software: We all know that certain words trigger spam filters, but there’s a lot of confusion out there about which words are the problem. Is it okay to use the word “free” in a subject line? Actually, yes. All reputable email services provide spam checking software as part of the service or as an add-on. Craft your messages with compelling language, let the software do its job, and adjust when you have to.
  • Shorter is better: Subject line real estate is valuable, so the more compact your subject line, the better. Don’t forget useful and ultra-specific, but try to compress the fundamentals into the most powerful promise possible.

3. The Secret Sauce:

Getting someone to trust you with their email address is not easy. Twelve years ago when I started in email publishing, people would sign up for anything remotely interesting.

No longer.

But if you do gain that initial trust, and more importantly, confirm and grow it, you can write pretty lame subject lines and people will still read your messages. Just as with that ditzy friend from high school who nonetheless always has something interesting to say, trust and substance matter most.

Don’t get me wrong, writing great subject lines combined with the more intimate relationship email represents is much more effective. And you have to get your initial messages read to establish the relationship in the first place. Regardless, your open rates will improve based on the quality of your subject line.

But there’s something special in this jaded digital age about being invited into someone’s email inbox. You just have to over-deliver on the value to ensure you’re a treasured guest who gets invited back.

The inbox can be a stressful place. How do you make it brighter?

Learn More About How to Generate Free Traffic Here.

4 Keys to Negotiating with an Affiliate Manager

Some affiliates like to fly “solo” and others prefer to utilize their Affiliate Manager’s knowledge and resources to maximize their opportunities and payouts. Over the years, I have had numerous negotiations with affiliates on offers and payouts. Before negotiating or discussing payouts, it is important for affiliates understand a networks business model and take full advantage of maximizing their relationship with the affiliate manager. Here are 4 keys to negotiating that I believe will create a “win-win” for both the network and the affiliate.

1. Understanding Margins
A network’s business model is similar to a manufacturer/distributor/retail sales chain. The Manufacturer (Advertiser) creates the product and utilizes the distributors (Network) resources and capital to generate sales through retail stores (Affiliate/Publisher). The network makes a margin for assuming the risk of acting as the middleman between the advertiser and publisher. Some affiliates receive payments daily or weekly which leaves the network assuming risk as most advertisers have longer net terms.

2.  Integrity
Just be open and honest! If you are interested in an offer and need a certain payout, then just ask. There have been times when I have told an affiliate that I couldn’t payout what they were requesting. Conversely, there have been instances when I approached management about giving a particular affiliate a certain payout with very slim margins. Bottom line, you have to be able to trust the affiliate manager and vice versa.

3. Capabilities/Results
Before entering any negotiation it’s imperative to know what’s important to you and what you’re willing to ‘give up’ for the sake of getting what you want. What’s the least you’re willing to accept in order to pick up the offer? Do your research and know what the going rates are. Let the affiliate manager know what type of results you anticipate and discuss any previous success or failures. There will always be “hot” offers, but you shouldn’t place all your focus on what’s hot. You know your business, what you’re good at and what you’re not.  Focus on what you know, and specialize in it.

4.  Communication
As I stated earlier, some affiliates prefer no or minimal communication with an affiliate manager which is perfectly fine. However, if you decide to actively work with an affiliate manager it is important to talk with the affiliate manager about your intentions. Communicate your goals, strategies and what you expect of the network and your affiliate manager. When it comes down to it we all have the same goal – to make money while not compromising our ethics. Be candid with your AM about your experience level. Everyone starts somewhere so don’t be shy; the affiliate managers job is to help you grow your business.

Keeping these four points in mind when talking and negotiating with your network affiliate manager helps foster a good working relationship and ultimately will create a long term relationship.

Colleen Darwent
is an affiliate manager
at RevenueStreet,
a division of TheMediaCrew
She loves affiliates big time.

Guide to Affiliate Summit West 2011 in Las Vegas

The time has come again for the affiliate marketing industry to meet in Sin City. My old friends Missy and Shawn have moved their leading event to the glamorous and elegant Wynn as their previous space had no more room. As Shawn pointed out to me yesterday, while much of the industry is contracting, Affiliate Summit keeps on growing and growing.  Next week everyone from affiliate marketers , agencies, networks to wannabe “guru” experts will congregate for a few days to talk about the industry, provide advice and get really drunk while wearing ugly sweater vests.

Many of you will have your first Affiliate Summit in Vegas, while others are old veterans of the seedier parts of the Strip. Still, here is my guide to what to do while in Vegas and what events to actually go to.

Dough4Hoes Party

Sunday January 9th @ Spearmint Rhino.
Pro: Party with the Ads4Dough crew and many of the top cutting edge affiliates at one of the most famous Vegas strip clubs. Ads4Dough has made a name for itself as a simple, easy to use network with great customer service and good payouts.
Cons: Since the economy crumbled in Vegas, all the hot girls have left Spearmint Rhino. Expect acne ridden 38 year old women with alcohol fueled cellulite legs who will bother you with the pickup line “my name is olga, wanna dance?”

ShareASale Party (Pick up an invitation at the Meet Market on Sunday @ the ShareASale Table.)
Sunday January 9th @ Tryst Nightclub
Pro: Won’t have Wickedfire members looking for a circle-jerk.
Cons: Won’t have Wickedfire members.

5th Annual Kick-Off Party
Sunday January 9th @ Wynn
Pro: This get-together from Kevin De Vincenzi of XY7 is always a great place to meet new people in a quieter setting. Kevin’s a great guy with an interesting way of doing business.
Cons: You have to listen to Kevin’s constant impersonation of Robert De Niro from the movie Casino.

Clickbooth’s Blackcard Party
Monday January 10th @ Location TBD
Pro:  Party with Adrant’s Steve Hall and his gaggle of girls that follow him everywhere.
Cons:  This “private” party still doesn’t have a location from what I’m told and Clickbooth CEO John Lemp has promised a strip tease.

The Affiliate Ball
Monday January 10th @ Rio’s Crown Theater
Pro:  Since its sponsored by Blu Cigs, you’ll get to smoke on fake cigarettes all night with the crew of a variety of good networks like Peerfly, ProfitKingsMedia, OJQ, Clickbank, Underground Elephant & Neverblue. This party is being thrown by Darren Blatt famous for his ghetto pimp n’ hoe “Players Ball”
Cons:  You’ll have to go through a metal detector to enter, frisked and perhaps be Chad French’s bitch for the night.

AffiliateSummit TipOff Party
Monday January 10th @ Palms
Pro: Party with the Gleichenhaus brothers of Doubleplay Media as they entertain you. Don’t worry, there is an open bar all night for anyone who comes.
Cons: Something to do with playing with balls that I don’t quite understand.

Sushi Samba @ The Venetian
Pro: Perhaps one of the best sushi places in the Las Vegas, it is a recommended place to take any client, friend or date.
Cons: The girls at the bar who express interest in you, are not really that interested unless you want to spend $800/hour for them to be interested.

JoelRobuchon@ MGM Grant
Pro:  Bar none, one of the top restaurants in Las Vegas. Features an amazing menu with an even better wine list. If you are looking for a place to take that “could be sexy if she lost 30 lbs” chubby affiliate manager that you’ve always wanted to hook up with, here’s the place.
Cons:  Expect to pay about twice the value for the wine, plus deal with a really snooty waiter who might not appreciate your Nebraska accent.

N9 SteakHouse @ the Palms
Pro: One of the few steakhouses in Las Vegas that actually gets it right.  While I lived in Las Vegas, I went there frequently.
Cons:  Expect to have to listen to some 50 year old sugar daddy seated in the booth next to you explain to his paid date why she shouldn’t be ordering her steak “well done.”

Rick’s Las Vegas
PRO: Rick’s has taken over the stripclub scene in Las Vegas and has become the premiere gentleman’s club. This is partially because Howard Stern now frequents the one in New York now,  but also because Rick’s has turned stripclubs from an underground business into a publically traded company.
CONS: Expect to spend some significant money to get a private area.
Email Wylie@ricks.com for a free limo ride. Tell them Pace sent you.

Sponsored by CPAWAY
Booth #413 @ Affiliate Summit

The time has come again for the affiliate marketing industry to meet in Sin City. My old friends Missy and Shawn have moved their leading event to the glamorous and elegant Wynn as their previous space had no more room. As Shawn pointed out to me yesterday, while much of the industry is contracting and events like AD:TECH are shrinking, Affiliate Summit keeps on growing and growing. Next week everyone from affiliate marketers , agencies, networks to wannabe “guru” experts will congregate for a few days to talk about the industry, provide advice and get really drunk while wearing ugly sweater vests.

Many of you will have your first Affiliate Summit in Vegas, while others are old veterans of the seedier parts of the Strip. Still, here is my guide to what to do while in Vegas and what events to actually go to.

Dough4Hoes Party. http://a4d.com/dough4hoes2011/
Sunday January 9th @ Spearmint Rhino.

Pro: Party with the Ads4Dough crew and many of the top cutting edge affiliates at one of the most famous Vegas strip clubs.
Cons: Since the economy crumbled in Vegas, all the hot girls have left Spearmint Rhino. Expect acne ridden 38 year old women with alcohol fueled cellulite legs.

ShareASale Party (Pick up an invitation at the Meet Market on Sunday @ the ShareASale Table.)
Sunday January 9th @ Tryst Nightclub
Pro: Won’t have Wickedfire members looking for a circle-jerk.
Cons: Won’t have Wickedfire members.

Clickbooth’s Blackcard Party http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=139555949436017
Monday January 10th @ Location TBD
Pro: Party with Mr. Missy Ward (aka Beaudon Spalding) and Adrant’s Steve Hall and his gaggle of girls that follow him everywhere.
Cons: This “private” party still doesn’t have a location from what I’m told and Clickbooth CEO John Lemp has promised a strip tease.

AffiliateBall
http://www.affiliateball.com/registration
Monday January 10th @ Rio’s Crown Theater
Pro: Since its sponsored by Blu Cigs, you’ll get to smoke on fake cigarettes all night with the crew of a variety of good networks like Peerfly, ProfitKingsMedia, Clickbank, Underground Elephant & Neverblue. This party is being thrown by Darren Blatt famous for his ghetto pimp n’ hoe “Players Ball”
Cons: You’ll have to go through a metal detector to enter, frisked and perhaps be someone’s bitch for the night.

Sushi Samba @ The Venetian
Pro: Perhaps one of the best sushi places in the Las Vegas, it is a recommended place to take any client, friend or date.
Cons: The girls at the bar who express interest in you, are not really that interested unless you want to spend $800/hour for them to be interested.

JoelRobuchon@ @ MGM Grant
http://www.mgmgrand.com/restaurants/joel-robuchon-french-restaurant.aspx
Pro: Bar none, one of the top restaurants in Las Vegas. Features an amazing menu with an even better wine list. If you are looking for a place to take that “could be sexy if she lost 30 lbs” chubby affiliate manager from AKMG that you’ve always wanted to hook up with, here’s the place.
Cons: Expect to pay about twice the value for the wine, plus deal with a really snooty waiter who might not appreciate your Nebraska accent.

N9 SteakHouse @ the Palms
http://www.palms.com/dining/restaurants/n9ne-steakhouse
Pro: One of the few steakhouses in Las Vegas that actually gets it right. While I lived in Las Vegas, I went there frequently.
Cons: Expect to have to listen to some 50 year old sugar daddy seated in the booth next to you explain to his paid date why she shouldn’t be ordering her steak “well done.”

Rick’s Las Vegas http://www.rickslasvegas.com/
PRO: Rick’s has taken over the stripclub scene in Las Vegas and has become the premiere gentleman’s club. This is partially because Howard Stern now frequents the one in New York now, but also because Rick’s has turned stripclubs from an underground business into a publically traded company.
CONS: Expect to spend some significant money to get a private area.
Email Wylie@ricks.com for a free limo ride. Tell them Pace sent you.

What is Affiliate Summit?

So, what is Affiliate Summit? Having survived a canceled flight back from Vegas and the craziness that ensues after being out of the office for a few days, I have finally had the chance to reflect on my experience this year at Affiliate Summit West hosted this year at the Wynn Hotel in Las Vegas.

I find myself thinking about how much the performance-based industry has grown and matured over the past few years. At ASW this year I found myself talking to more and more brands who in the past would have never attended this type of show but now attend since they see affiliate marketing as an integral part of their marketing efforts.

These leading brands are making a statement by putting in the time to understand the space, attend the sessions, and overall get a better understanding on how the affiliate marketing process works. Their presence and dedication really attests to the change in the overall industry.

In terms of publishers, I spoke with more dedicated and professional people who were serious about how they run their business. The newcomers along with the more experienced affiliate marketers were looking to have a business conversation about partnering and working together successfully, rather than looking for ways to just make money quickly.

In addition, affiliate marketers from all over the world were in attendance at this year’s show just proving once again that we live in a global business environment where it is necessary to expand beyond one’s comfort zone. I personally held several conversations where both clients and affiliates were interested in growing their conversions and effective CPMs in Europe and other areas outside of the U.S.

Of course the show was full of a lot of the same faces and companies from previous years but the underlying vibe of the show was more professional due to the increased attention brand advertisers are now putting into the performance-based advertising industry.

While there will always be companies trying to stick to the old way of doing business, I believe that those who are unable to make this change may not survive in our increasingly professional and growing industry. I look forward to continuing to be a part of this ever-changing industry!

—-

Megan Conahan is responsible for training, developing and advising the advertising sales team of Direct Agents, a full service performance-based interactive advertising agency. Megan started with Direct Agents in 2005 and is currently excelling in her role as VP of Advertising Sales. She has played a crucial role in expanding Direct Agents’ client base into the UK and Germany. In 2008, Megan was recognized as a Stevie Awards for women in business finalist. Megan is very active in the online advertising industry and recently spoke at Affiliate Summit West 2011 on the topic of Email Marketing and the Brand.

Five Effective Copywriting Tactics for Affiliate Marketing

There’s a well-known “guru” of marketing (ie, wants to take your money and give you BS) out there who gives a course costing over $5,000. In that course he has “expert” copywriters come and speak about copywriting. One person shared with me their notes and it was identical to this article by one of the most famous copywriters out there. Save yourself $5,000 and read this great article. – Pace

What’s the secret to effective affiliate marketing? It all boils down to engagement.

If you have a page with an affiliate offer that ranks well for searchers in buying mode, that’s pretty high engagement. You need a trusted, authoritative site to pull that off, which means strong content and plenty of links.

But don’t forget that the very same content creates engagement with regular readers first. If you’re building authority sites that attract subscribers, you get more than one shot at affiliate revenue. You profit first with your direct readers who trust you, and then continue to generate revenue over time thanks to strategically-placed cross-links and search traffic.

The lowest form of affiliate marketing engagement comes from simply sticking affiliate banner ads on your site. I’m not saying you won’t make any money from those ads, but it’s certainly not the most effective way to capitalize on the relationship with your audience. And banner ads don’t rank in search engines, right?

So let’s take a look a five copy tactics that can bring you immediate and long-term revenue from affiliate programs:

1. Endorsements

A personal endorsement is the strongest way to pre-sell an affiliate offer, assuming your audience values your opinion. Effective endorsements are sincere and enthusiastic based on real experience with the product or service. That’s not to say that people don’t pitch things just for the money, but that can be a dangerous game that erodes your trust and authority if the product or service is poor.

As with any effective copy, endorsements focus on benefits more than features. You might find that picking out the most compelling benefits is easier in a personal endorsement, because you’ve experienced those benefits first hand. Share how a recommended product or service has changed your life for the better, and you’re naturally talking benefits.

2. Reviews

A review differs from an endorsement in tone and structure, but by the end of the piece, you end up with an endorsement nonetheless. Let’s face it… writing up a negative review might be a great way to vent, but it’s not the smartest revenue strategy when it comes to affiliate marketing.

So, as with endorsements, it’s smart to review products and services you actually use and benefit from. From a copy perspective, you add credibility by pointing out how the product or service isn’t perfect (let’s face it, there are very few perfect offerings), and then go on to explain why the imperfection doesn’t negatively impact your perception and enjoyment of the product or service.

3. Tutorials

Years ago, the easiest way to do really well with content-based affiliate marketing was to release a free ebook loaded up with affiliate links and watch it go viral. That strategy can still work, but generally the content must be much stronger, and the affiliate pitches more subtle. Another long-time strategy is the email mini-course, in which you deliver tutorial-style content by autoresponder that ultimately promotes one or more relevant offers.

These days, producing video tutorials that show how to use a product or service are extremely effective at pre-selling affiliate offers. Remember, teaching and selling are closely related, so “how to” content that naturally gets a prospect more comfortable with a purchase is smart. Plus, you can use broader tutorial content as an “ethical bribe” to get people to subscribe to your blog or a targeted sub-list, which allows for multiple relevant offers to be made over time.

4. Bonuses

Using a bonus or special deal approach is a great way to uniquely sweeten an affiliate offer. You essentially promise to add in an additional item if people buy through your link, or you work out a promotional deal with the merchant that only you can deliver. You then work the extra value into your endorsement, review, or announcement with a great headline and benefit-oriented copy.

You’ll see this strategy used quite a bit in competitive pay-per-click situations, and also during big product launches where lots of people are promoting at once. But it’s a really strong strategy anytime, because it demonstrates that you’re focusing on adding value and delivering great deals to your audience.

5. Articles

Can you promote affiliate offers with your regular content? In other words, can you create content that has independent value and also makes you money, no matter where it’s syndicated or scraped?

You can, but it’s tricky. Let me give you an example with an article I wrote last year called How to Create Ebooks That Sell.

In this article I managed to:

  • Create a compelling keyword-rich title
  • Deliver independent value
  • Attract links
  • Generate positive comments
  • Endorse a product while disclosing the affiliate link
  • Make a healthy 4-figure profit immediately
  • Rank for my targeted keyword phrases
  • Collect continued monthly commissions
  • Receive reader emails thanking me for the recommendation

When I spoke at PubCon late last year, I dissected this post and explained everything I did and why. But I think if you simply take a look at it in light of what we’re exploring in this series, you’ll figure it out.

What about Disclosure?

Disclosure of affiliate links has been a hot topic lately. From a pragmatic standpoint, being transparent with your audience can solidify your relationship with them, and that’s really what this is all about. But there are also ethical and legal issues to consider, none of which are cut and dry.

Sponsored by WebTrafficMachines
Learn how to generate SEO based traffic using this proven technique

About the Author:
Brian Clark is the co-founder of Teaching Sells.

How to Create Magnetic Copy to Maximize Your Content Appeal

Getting people to take actions from your content requires a deep connection with your audience.

We all know the need to implement the right tactics to capture the emotion that leads to those desirable actions. Provide valuable content, use ethical SEO (search engine optimization) tactics, give away free eBooks, free webinars, whitepapers, special reports, you name it.

But if you really want to elevate your conversion rate, you need to understand the art and science of content marketing.

You need to figure out what motivates your audience to click here and sign up there.

Why people give their emails away to complete strangers, follow every call-to-action and come back for more.


Let’s look at the 3 keys of creating powerful content to help you increase your product appeal.

Grab and Keep Attention

How do you read newspaper? How about magazines? Do you every sentence of every word from start to finish cover to cover?

If you do, that’s great, but for rest of us we scan.

In today’s drive-by attention grabbing culture, people do judge a book by its cover.

That’s why magnetic copy must have magnetic headlines that get people curious. It should always be organize around benefits, the “what’s in it for me” must jump out at your prospective customers.

This is why content marketing mimics the format of news with powerful headlines, sub-headlines and bullets. Simply put, human beings are wired to tune out advertising because that’s the natural of our brain to detect deceptions.

People have less resistance with news style formatted content than advertising that looks like, well, advertising!

So start getting into the mindset that you need to write effective copy in order to grab and keep attention.

Focus your coy on the results that your customer will get instead of what your product does or the fancy technology behind it. Research your customer’s behaviors, attitudes and demographics.

People only really care about themselves so keep your copy simple to the point and write in a way as if it’s you and one other person that are in conversation.

Your content can break through the noise if it’s interesting and exciting.

Demonstrate Social Proof

Ever since we’re little we associate ourselves with certain type of identifiers. Whether it’s the cloths we wear, the car we drive, the food we eat, the music we listen to, we’re obsessed with being part of a group.

This is human nature and the foundation of our society.

When people first land on your website or visits your social media profile they are looking for validation. The idea of social proof is all about perceived value of your influence and authority.

Who you are, what you do and why should people trust you?

You simply can NOT ignore the fact that people will form opinions in their own mind that reflects the perceived status of your stuff. You literally have less than 10 seconds to make an impression and that’s your instant reputation.

If you want your visitors to stay you must show them you’ve got the goods.

You can do this by leveraging testimonials and user-generated content (UGC) such as reviews or questions and answers (Q&A). Then follow up with some high value stuff that resonates with them right away.

Another method is to show the number of subscribers, comments, retweets or followers you have. The bottom line is that social proof is all about positioning.

Get Them To Take Action

So now you’ve demonstrated your expertise across multiple communities. The next step is to get your audience to take action.

Getting people to take action on the internet is all direct response marketing strategy with effective copywriting techniques. This means integrating measurable call-to-action that gets your visitors to do what it is that you want them to do.

It can be as direct as asking people to buy your product, contact you, input their personal information, share your content or leave a comment.

The trick here is that you must provide enough real value to earn the trust of your prospective customer so you can start building a relationship with them.

People are more likely to do what you ask if you’re open, honest and transparent.

Speak like a friend and stay relevant is the key to motivate people to take action.

The take away: Magnetic copy is about appeal and getting attention not about you or what you know. It’s about becoming your customer and getting people genuinely interested so they will want to know more, see more and take actions that you anticipated by design.

Your customers don’t want your product, service or sign up for anything. What they want is the solution to their problems.

Sure you can create content that appears to do that but ultimately magnetic content helps connecting the dots in all your information to drive out miscommunication.

Real effective content actually does help people and get them the result they want.

How about you? Are you creating content that sticks? Share your top tip for creating effective content in the comments.

Sponsored by Revenue Street.

My ideas are for motivated individuals to do extraordinary things. I write through personal experience, including lessons learned from failures and successes. I believe the road to success is paved with incremental actions from knowledge. And knowledge without actions is just potential power.

11 Marketing Predictions for 2011

Welcome to 2011! Well, not yet, but we’re just about there. With the New Year being just around the corner, it’s about time we lay out our predictions for next year’s major marketing trends.

Here’s what I think will both happen and be important for businesses owners and brand marketers.

  • Offline Mobile Marketing will Grow
  • Social Media will Mature
  • Increased Importance of SEO
  • More Small Businesses will Invest Online
  • Metrics and Measurements will Increase
  • Tracking will Become More Difficult
  • Publishers will Increase Focus Online, and Struggle
  • Brands will Minimize Social Platforms and Invest in Websites
  • E-commerce will Become More Intelligent
  • Offline and Online Advertising will Merge
  • Convergence will be One Step Closer

It’s pretty clear that mobile marketing will be extremely important. Foursquare has been a great indicator of mobile marketing’s power.

Mobile marketing growing is not the trend I’m excited about though. I’m more excited about how it will continue to be integrated with offline marketing.

As much as I dislike it, Facebook Places is in an opportune position with the release of Facebook Points. It won’t be long before we see fully integrated loyalty programs for check-ins that become Facebook Points which consumers can use to buy product or get discounts.

The integration of the mobile world and the offline world (think Coca-Cola in Israel) will be huge. The ability to integrate consumer credits cards, cheap RFID chips, and more dependence on mobile phones will drive this trend.

We say this almost every year, but it’s finally reached a tipping point. Major brands have embraced the value of social media and the online world. Businesses across the board have realized its importance and have pledged significant resources to the new media medium.

Watch for an increased adoption of corporate blogs and dependence on riskier online marketing plans (I say risky in the sense that brands will begin to slowly move away from the tight lipped corporate culture, to a more consumer friendly culture). Social media will drive businesses to re-think their culture and create a shift in how we do business and how we present ourselves.

Maturity does not increase use of social media, simply more effective and intelligent usage. We’ll see less wastage and more businesses asking the question “Why”.

It’s easy to look at major brand websites and see that most have little to no interest in optimizing their sites for search. Many are created in Flash, ignore coding best practices, and are confusing even for humans.

Businesses are beginning to realize the important of optimizing their websites for search engines. There are too many consumers searching for specific products for businesses to ignore them.

Small businesses, especially, gain an advantage by having an optimized website. Online, small businesses and major brands, are on equal footing – a well optimized small business website has the opportunity to perform better than some major brand websites.

I alluded to it before – small businesses have realized the advantage the Internet gives them and are investing in it. The ability to connect with consumers directly without high prices (think cable television ads) is an appealing proposition for many business owners.

Online marketing is no longer a risk; instead it’s becoming a necessity. The ROI can be measured and when done correctly can be phenomenal. Also, year-by-year, business owners have grown to be more and more tech savvy, recognizing the power of the Internet and investing in it.

The trend has continued and 2011 will be no different. We’ll see a continued increase in online investments with small businesses paying closer attention to their website realizing their sites are their online storefronts.

As more people begin giving online marketing their full focus (no longer experimenting), there will be a renewed focus on metrics. The idea that certain things are not measurable will no longer be accepted; instead people will demand metrics and measurable achievements.

Already, in 2010, we noticed a growth in online marketing metrics theory and strategies; in 2011 this trend will continue. We’ve become more sophisticated in our marketing models and are looking at new indicators to track success.

As more monitoring tools appear and more data becomes available, we’ll be able to more clearly track and define what’s working and what isn’t.

Even though I say tracking and measurements will increase, there is a potential obstacle to the trend. Government has shown an interest in reducing the ability for publishers to track and measure consumers online.

Consumers fear a lack of privacy online, an idea that already doesn’t exist, and never will, and government may over-react.  Curbing publishers’ ability to track and understand consumers could hurt online marketing as a whole. When it comes to measuring results, we may be pushed away from strict metrics and be forced to use the same guestimates we already do for traditional media.

Not to be left behind we’ll see more traditional publishers begin focusing online, realizing that traditional media is too expensive to be sustainable. Print publications have already moved online, but in 2011 we’ll see a true focus given to the web property – they won’t be portals for subscribing to the print publication.

I say they’ll still struggle because most print publishers fail to realize that moving online is not as simple as re-investing into your website. It’s a culture shift from print to real-time writing.

Publishing on the web is extremely different than publishing in print – two different strategies that take time to learn. 2011 will be the year publishers truly realize this difference and will either evolve or become extinct.

As brands become more mature in the way they interact with consumers online, they’ll also mature where they interact with consumers. Instead of focusing on creating the optimal social media profiles, businesses will begin to strengthen their website’s integrations with social media features.

Businesses will realize that by integrating the features of a social media site, they’re able to connect with consumers without giving up the analytics and control of branding.

Watch for increase integrations with Facebook connect and Twitter @anywhere. These social media API’s help business websites merge seamlessly with social media.

How we buy products online continue to grow more sophisticated. E-commerce site have collected data by letting consumers like and dislike products, leave comments, and even rate the shipping. Using the data, sites are able to create algorithms to recommend products, based on what we looked at previously.

In the next year, expect ecommerce sites to become even more intelligent. Social media sites allow us to compile large amounts of data to find and present products that solve problems for consumers.

Instead of having to search for a wrench on Amazon – the site may be intelligent enough to recognize that I just Googled how to fix my sink and recommend wrenches that would help with my product. Ecommerce that is predictive and targeted is something we’ll see in 2011.

I spoke previously about mobile marketing and offline merging, bridging the gap for marketers. The same holds true for advertisers.

Google has already shown that advertisers will be able to buy billboards through Google’s Adword system. Similarly, we’re seeing the same system for TV ads and soon enough radio ads as well.

The basic trend here is that we’ll be able to easily bid and manage our offline advertising through online systems – introducing new people to advertising they were previously exempt from.

The second trend here is much more subtle. It relates to the actual ad itself. In 2011, we’ll begin to see more and more websites begin to be added to advertisements.

I propose that in 2011, brands will begin integrating their TV ads with customized landing pages. No more will we see a brand homepage, but instead a relevant information page.

The integration of online and offline is something that already happens, to a lesser degree, in 2011 it’ll be done intelligently and effectively – instead of as an after-thought.

Technological convergence states that one-day technology, our multiple devices, will come together. The theory states that in the future we’ll only have one device, to do everything. It’s already prominent, as we see the adoption of tablets increase and processing power becoming more mobile.

The next age of convergence will come from the web converging with our TVs. We already see this phenomenon with Google TV and Apple TV, a trend that will only continue to grow.

It won’t be long before our tablets are our computers, our TV’s, our phones and anything else we may need.

Final Thoughts

Overall, I think 2011 will be a truly exciting time. There’s a lot happening and so many changes in technology. We’re on the brink of major adoption of social technology, businesses giving renewed attention to technology, and the potential for major break through in tracking and measuring marketing actions.

If you’re an online marketer, brand manager, or even small business owner, 2011 will not be an era where you continue doing what has worked. 2011 will be a year of risks and trying new things. It will force people to rethink how they reach consumers and what they think is important or effective.

That’s what I think, what about you? What are you anticipating in 2011? I’d love to hear your thoughts, so please leave a comment and share!


Samir Balwani is a digital marketing strategist, helping businesses create holistic marketing solutions. His areas of expertise include digital communications, online marketing, and new media pr.

9 Essential SEO Tips For Small Business In 2011

The end of a decade is upon us and as we ring in and welcome the new year, we do so by building upon what we have accomplished and hopes of achieving our new goals we have set forth. Social media has broken down the communication barriers and helped to pave the way for small businesses to emerge and thrive. While we continue to see growth amongst users within social media, we cannot overlook the power of search engine optimization and getting found.

Getting found online for small businesses is essential to remain competitive in today’s marketplace. The way consumers search has changed, the way they receive and consume the information has changed through sharing on the various social media platforms and also through the way that the search engines present the results for the search queries. In early 2010 the buzz was optimizing for local search, then, were re-introduced to Bing as they went full speed ahead to attract users and making optimizing for Bing worthwhile though creating more of a niche search. Google was hard at work creating instant search and Google Places and most recently confirming that yes, indeed, they are starting to pay attention to our online activity through the social signals. 2011 promises to be as action packed so enacting the essential SEO tips only keeps you ahead of your competitiors. Google was hard at work creating instant search and Google Places and most recently confirming that yes, indeed, they are starting to pay attention to our online activity through the social signals. 2011 promises to be as action packed so enacting the essential SEO tips only keeps you ahead of your competitiors.

9 Essential SEO Tips for Small Business in 2011

1. Keyword Phrases. One word phrases are a thing of the past. Yes, it is important to have specific keywords targeted as they relate to your brand and overall industry however we have to keep an eye on what phrases people are querying to find us. Delving into your analytics and analyzing how people are finding you and comparing that to what you wish to be found for will help to secure your ranking.

2. Content. The content that you are creating is not only built around keywords, it is built from what people are going to find useful, has a high propensity to be shared and also to be created from what people would want to link to. The content when we think in the different ways it will be viewed enhances how it is created.

3. Mobile Friendly. A site that is not mobile friendly is losing visitors. We have become a mobile dependent society and adapting your site to mobile devices is not only increasing your chances of searchers having the ability to view your site, it is also securing the trust with them as ultimately when we are searching, we want results. The results via a mobile device need to be more immediate and valuable.

4. Local Search. Local search is still a hot topic. Google Places becoming the default for many industry specific searches has changed the way that people are accepting the search results. This is where the biggest change has taken place. Users have had to embrace this search result change. They want results that they feel that they trust. Appearing in the results, starts the trust.

5. Link Building. A link building strategy that encompasses internal and external linking through directories, reciprocal links as well as engaging in social media through commenting on blogs, creating content that is linked to as well as web pages that are a resource to be linked to is going to point to your site through the search engines as a point of reference and increase your rankings.

6. Canonical Pathway. Creating a clear and precise canonical pathway domain sets to avoid multiple page variations (ie http://www.yourwebsitepage vs http://yourwebsitepage and duplications. The search engine spiders crawl and are unable to determine which is the preferred pathway for your site. Establish one pathway.

7. Crawl Frequency. How often are your pages being crawled? Blogs are crawled and ranked very quickly. Internal web pages that are not linked to or updated and have high visit volume are not crawled as frequently. Monitor through your cache how often your pages are being crawled to determine which pages need to be crawled more frequently and this also can give some insight as to when a new page or blog (for those that are not blogging every day) should be posted to ensure that the page is being crawled and indexed when the crawlers are crawling.

8. Photo Alt Tags. Alt tagging photos seems sometimes to be forgotten. The spiders cannot see the photo, but they can see the text that is associated with the photo. Creating alt tags that contain keywords are not only preventing the stop gap for the spiders, it is allowing an extra source for keyword density.

9. Site Speed. The speed in which your site downloads matters. Visitors will click off a site is taking too long to load.The faster the site loads the more time is spent on the site. This not only is attractive to the user, but the speed of a site matters to the search engines. Of course, the content will outweigh the speed but if you have great content that is slow and people will not wait for it, the search engines will not rank it.

These tips are essential to be ready for 2011. Search is only increasing as we see users engaging online for longer periods and having an ability to do so on the run. Mobile usage, desktop/laptop usage while at work and at home will continue to increase. People are online and trust the search engines to give them results. Can the search engines trust you to give them what they need to rank you?

Are you optimized and ready for 2011?

Avoid These 5 Useless Website Promotion Techniques

SitePronews.com- Every owner of a website on planet Earth knows that getting a constant flow of targeted traffic is the key to making money online. The world wide web attracts such a massive number of buyers that regardless of what you sell, you will make some really good money when you have lots of traffic.

Internet marketers are constantly coming up with newer ways to expand their reach across the Internet because no website can survive without enough targeted traffic. In their quest to obtain more of the elusive traffic, the website marketers have come up with some rather creative ways to bring in greater amounts of traffic in a short period of time and with little effort.

My email inbox has been flooded with sales letters promoting some automated software or seldom used secret that promises an explosion of website visitors within 30 days. The disturbing part of all this is that it goes against the teaching of our early years; that nothing good comes easy and there is no quick path to building a successful business. As a result of these promises of abundant website traffic and exploding sales figures, many have abandoned those time tested methods of attracting real targeted website visitors that are prepared to take some kind of action. Keep in mind that website traffic isn’t something that you can just get, but visitors will come to your website when you have something to offer, enticing them to click on your link.

Too many people are cashing in on a person’s desire to get to the top without much effort by offering some really useless website marketing techniques that could actually kill their search engine rankings. The fact is that these are nothing more than ‘Marketing Fads’, that may produce some huge results in the beginning, but when the newness wears off their effectiveness will fade away forever just like the telephone booth.

Remember when pop-ups and pop-under advertising came out years ago? This was the hottest marketing tool since the time of placing fliers on cars in parking lots. However, when everyone in the world started using pop-ups to promote their websites there were windows popping up every time you visited and exited a website. Internet users worldwide got so sick of all those pop-up windows that someone invented pop-up killer software. The search engines even started penalizing websites that were using pop-up scripts and soon after that method of website promotion faded away.

I will attempt to identify and explain some of these useless website promotion techniques that should be avoided at all cost. Using some of these bad website marketing techniques could certainly kill your search engine rankings.

Automatic Search Engine Submission Services

These free search engine submission websites allow you to put in your URL, keywords and a description of your website. You then click Submit believing that your website is on its way to being indexed on thousands of search engines. Not so! First of all, the major search engines require manual submission by hand and even implement coding script to prevent auto submission. Secondly, when you click on that Submit button you have no idea where your website link will end up going. Your website link could be automatically posted to porn or international directory websites that are nothing but a colony of spam links. If Google crawls your website and finds out that you have links to your website coming from other websites with rotten content, then your website will pay the price in low rankings.

There is absolutely no substitute for manually submitting your websites to the search engines directly. You will have complete control over where your link is going, and the search engines will automatically crawl your website to get your title and description.

Auto Submission to Directories and FFA Sites

You may have seen those places that claim you can blast your website to over 2 million websites and directories. As a general rule, please stay away from anyone that uses the word ‘Blast’ because this is just another way of saying Spam. It sounds like you are literally placing your link on millions of other websites and getting tons of instant backlinks to your website. Those FFA or Free For All websites are nothing but a link farm containing links from sites with bad or irrelevant content. The search engines will never see your website as being respectable enough to rank high in the search results if it is affiliated with that type of environment.

Lead Generation Software

I once received an email that said, “Hello Webmaster, My name is John. I have been searching the Internet for some business opportunities and came across your website. I just wanted to know if you are still in business today. Please email me at this_email@emailaddress.com and let me know. Thank you.”

I replied to the person giving them more information about one of our websites. That particular email was forgotten until I received a few other emails with the same content from different names and email addresses. This matter sparked my curiosity and prompted me to do some further investigation to find out why these emails turned up so frequently.

I discovered that this was the work of lead generation software that extracts website links and email addresses from the Internet for any category. You just type the keyword in the search box and the software literally pulls in millions of email addresses. The software even allows you to mass email all those addresses. On the surface it appears to be the perfect way to put your website link in front of millions of people in the same industry as you.

This has the look and smell of spam, but because the one sending the email does not attempt to sell you anything, it’s not quite spam. This marketing technique is not very effective because the email is generic, impersonal and did not give the reader a reason to respond. Your emails should speak to a person’s needs and not just at them. Readers respond to emails if you find a way to reach their interests, giving them a reason to take action.

Backlink Generating Software

Google loves websites that have lots of quality backlinks, considering such links votes on the importance of those sites. Somebody got this crazy idea to automate the link building that Google loves, hoping to get huge numbers of valuable links and move to the top of the search engine results. Google has now gotten smart and has found to way to detect how you are getting your backlinks and even the speed at which you are getting them. So, if you are still buying links or using software to get instant backlinks, then chances are Google will find out and penalize your website. Nothing can substitute for writing valuable content that will automatically attract quality backlinks.

Automated Article Submission and Article Spinning

Writing high quality articles is a great way to attract targeted visitors to your website. Again, someone invented a way to automate this process as well. They came out with article submission software that they claim will automatically submit your written articles to hundreds or even thousands of article directories. There is even software that will take one written article, spin the title and words around, and submit them to more directories. This software sells like hotcakes because people don’t want to do the labor intensive work of writing their own articles and submitting them manually to article directories.

The real, authentic article directories that can syndicate your articles are getting smart and have installed a special code that disallows auto submission of articles. They have also installed a special script that can detect articles that have been spun off from the original. Most of them manually approve articles before they are published in their directory and can easily detect duplicate and spinned content.

Conclusion

Widespread use of these automated website marketing techniques has taken away the need to apply really genuine website promotion that gets real results and replaced it with push-button marketing. You may see some quick and positive results, but only for a short period of time. Treat your website like an infant; give it lots of attention, feed it some healthy content, protect it from dangerous spam activity and let it grow naturally over time.

Deek Ennis is the Founder and CEO of Buildstar Wholesale Resources. Since 2003 they have helped over 100,000 businesses fulfill their wholesale and drop ship product sourcing needs and save money with free worldwide shipping on over 5 million wholesale products. Deek is the author of numerous published articles on internet marketing and business such as, “7 Do It Yourself Techniques to higher Search Engine Rankings” and “How to Avoid Getting Scammed While Buying Wholesale”. Learn how Deek and Buildstar can help fulfill your wholesale product sourcing needs at www.buildstarwholesale.com.