LinkTrust CEO Bret Grow Waters Affiliate Seeds

About a year ago someone told me about LinkTrust and told me to take a look at it. At the time I was really entrenched with DirectTrack and had no idea there was anything out there. However, George Avery, the CEO of GetAds told me that I must try LinkTrust. I have to admit, I was pretty damn surprised with what I saw: it wasn’t just a different system than DirectTrack, but it was on a different level entirely. I decided that it was about time to sit down with Bret Grow the CEO of LinkTrust and find exactly what made him decide to create an affiliate marketing software and more importantly, what type of car he drives.

What made you want to create your own affiliate tracking software?
When I first got started in the affiliate marketing space, the company I was working for was using massive excel spreadsheets to track everything that was going on. To make our jobs easier, Frank Ouimette (my business partner from the beginning) and I created our own tracking system. It wasn’t long before we realized that this was something everyone could use. From there we started working on the software development full-time and soon we had our first client using LinkTrust.

What is unique about your fraud prevention tools?

We have multiple fraud prevention tools that cover every aspect of your affiliate from their identity, track record among other clients and their traffic.  We provide detailed affiliate fraud scores that are a product of an affiliate’s history with other clients, custom sand traps for new applications, tracking flags that detect possible fraud and proactive tools to prevent fraud from tracking as commissions to an affiliate before it becomes a problem.

As you know, a competitor was hit last year with the revelations that all the affiliate data of their affiliate networks were stolen and resold. What have you done to prevent this happening from you?
Without giving too much information away regarding our security measures, we have implemented layers of data, network, and application security enhancements.  We use cutting edge technology and time tested producers to protect our client’s information.  Because our security cam be managed across all of our clients utilizing our private cloud environment, we are able to better monitor and adjust security quickly, much like many of the most sophisticated financial and enterprise level companies.  This is in contrast with others systems where security must me managed for each client individually and therefore risk of a breach increases.  We also welcome audits of our security systems and procedures by our clients when requested.

What type of integration is available for display advertising?
We feel that we offer the most comprehensive integration features for display, mobile, Pay Per Call and other advertising mediums whether it be through advanced link options or API access.

If you could name one thing that sets you aside from other tracking platforms, what would it be?
Our customer service is hands down the thing that sets us apart. Ad networks, affiliates and merchants tell us our tracking is the most reliable and they love our consistent feature releases, but the thing they value most is that every single LinkTrust employee is dedicated to making their companies succeed. If that means 24-hour emergency support, we’re happy to do it. If we can help promote your network through the LinkTrust OfferBoard, our newsletter or at tradeshows, we do. We know that when our clients are successful, we’ll be successful – we’re always looking for ways to make it happen.

Tell me a little about your lead capture system? What made you want to do this?  Is lead generation a part of the industry that you feel is more and more important? If so, why?

The lead generation side of LinkTrust was actually the original base for the system.  It has been added to and fine tuned over the course of many years.  We wanted to create a way to capture and validate leads more efficiently and effectively than anything out there. The lead generation side of the industry is constantly changing and we’re excited to be a part of that. This year we are updating our entire lead generation system to bring some new features to the table.  The new and improved lead generation system to be released this year will again propel LinkTrust way ahead of our competitors.

Tell me about the lead validation and why it’s important that it’s part of the system?
Capturing data is one thing, making that data valuable is quite another.  Internally validating data as well as partnering with other data validation firms is imperative to producing a platform that can deliver valuable and trusted lead data.  We have built into LinkTrust layers of validation that offers the most sophisticated and profitable experience to our clients.

If someone wanted to move over to LinkTrust from another system, how would they do it? What is the time period involved, the ease of use?

Moving over to LinkTrust is simple. First, get in touch with Jeremy or Mindy of our sales team (sales@linktrust.com) and they can get you a demo as well as your agreement all setup. Second, we’ll get your staff trained on the ins and outs of the system and get your custom domains ready to go.  After your domains are set up, you are ready to start running traffic. Access to your new account is generally within one day and the entire setup process takes less than 3 business days to complete.  Of course, we offer free ongoing support thereafter.

How important is pay-per-call in the industry, and what can you tell me about your integration?

Pay-per-call has only just begun and is already bringing in millions in revenue for those that have gotten an early start. We are integrated with RingRevenue, meaning that any LinkTrust client who uses them can quickly set up phone numbers and start tracking calls as well as clicks on campaigns through LinkTrust.

I notice there is a LinkTrust Community, why did you do that? What is important about the Community feature?

We created the LinkTrust Community to create a place for LinkTrust users to interact with other LinkTrust users and the LinkTrust team. One of the best parts of the Community is the OfferBoard where LinkTrust users can publish their offers to other LinkTrust-powered networks and also find offers to enhance their own network. The LinkTrust Community is a one-stop shop for our users looking to get in touch with us or fellow LinkTrust users.

For affiliates, if they are on a LinkTrust system what will they see in the network that they wouldn’t see in any other program?
According to our clients, the first thing they’ll notice is the intuitive interface for managing links, getting creatives and running reports.  However, since our affiliate interface can be customized by our clients, you may not be able to recognize a LinkTrust powered network or merchant simply by the appearance of their affiliate center.  The other most notable difference we hear is that conversion rates are generally higher because LinkTrust tracks extremely well and provides no conversion scrubbing tools for networks.  This builds confidence between networks and their affiliates if an affiliate were to recognize the LinkTrust interface.

Why use LinkTrust instead of building your own system?
As anyone with their own system will tell you, the cost of building and maintaining an enterprise-level system is big. For most companies, the cost is too great to even consider. With LinkTrust, we take pride in staying up to date with our technology, hardware, and industry trends.  By us taking care of the technology side of the house, our clients can focus on what matters most to their business and industry.  We know it’s critical to keep the system as relevant to end users as possible. Let us know which features you’d like to see and we’ll do our best to get them into development. In 2010 a majority of the features we released were suggestions from LinkTrust users.

What else would you like to tell us about LinkTrust?
I come to worked excited everyday.  Not everyone can say that.  I feel that building a reputable company on a cutting edge industry with fantastic people makes all the difference.  There is a sense of satisfaction and honor that accompanies working at LinkTrust and I hope that carries over to our clients and as well as others we meet in the affiliate marketing industry.

What is your dream car and why?
I
am lucky that I own my dream car, a 1966 Buick Electra Convertible.  It’s smooth to drive and the sun and wind on your face makes driving it an experience, not just a mode of transportation.

If you weren’t doing this as a career what would be your second choice?
My second choice would probably be something in real estate.  I get a kick out of getting something built and improving it for others!

Wanna Check out LinkTrust? Go to http://www.linktrust.com/
Wanna join a Cool Affiliate Network? Check out AxionMedia Group http://www.axonmediagroup.com/publishers.html
Wanna Generate Automatic Traffic Check out AutoTraffic Monopoly

—–

GetAds Affiliate Network | Tracking202 | What Offers Work? |

Brian McLevis of Envyus Media is Seeing Green

About a year ago I shaved my head. Since then everyone in the industry has decided that it was a really cool thing to do. However, Brian McLevis, the CEO of Envyus Media has been touting a bald head for a while, since he had that accident with the Gamma Ray Device. Not only did it make him bald, stronger than Rosie O’Donnell going after a piece of German Chocolate cake, but also turned him into an affiliate monster. Since then he’s opened his own Affiliate Network, EnvyusMedia which has been slowly building a name for itself.  We interviewed him this week and found him to be blunt, honest and to the point.

Q: You like to emphasize that Envyus has a very complex system of fraud prevention. Without going into details what makes your fraud prevention system good?
A: We’ve considered more or less every possible technical aspect imaginable while building our fraud analytical research system. Essentially, we capture and analyze every single click and conversion against all known and existing technical data points. There isn’t really one technical aspect that we would say, leave behind or not analyze completely. Ultimately, the system monitors the traffic in real time so if there’s anything sketchy, abnormal or out of the ordinary we can spot it immediately.

We really want to emphasize that this system isn’t just something that we hastily built and then decided to settle on mere initial functionality. It really exists akin to a living, breathing system that is constantly and knowledgeably evolving thanks to new patterns, trends and other sketchy activity we come across. We can currently say with unfaltering confidence that we don’t have any fraud of any kind occurring on the network. As you might expect, this makes for a much less stressful and ultimately more rewarding relationship with all of our advertisers. We can happily say that there exists a peace of mind for both our advertisers and our own in-house team. It makes sleep come much easier than it has in the past, that’s for sure!

In addition to all of this, since that was technically an explanation of our traffic monitoring backend system only, we also go to whatever extraordinary lengths are necessary with our new affiliate application sign-up. By this we mean that all technical aspects are checked just as rigidly as on the backend in order to ensure the applicant is indeed who they say they are.

Q: What is the biggest issue fraud-related in the performance marketing industry right now?
A: Well, let’s see – that’s an excellent question! I would say the biggest fraud related issue in the industry right now is that some networks simply don’t know how to properly manage fraudulent activity. You really see this with a lot of the newer networks since they come into the whole thing thinking it’s going to be a walk in the park and they ultimately receive a very unpleasant reality shock. New networks will always exist as large targets for fraudsters because these people prey upon the relative innocence and usually undermined resources of the new network team. Many of the new affiliate networks also broker offers from other networks and once fraudsters target the network, they pump the fraud for all it’s worth and the network doesn’t even know how to spot it. As such, the advertiser for the particular offer in question gets inundated with tons and tons of fraud traffic. It’s a damn shame.

When you take a step back and break everything down to its core parts, there’s just no way to prevent failure of any kind without adequate levels of risk management. Plain and simple! It’s just so frustrating to try and wrap your head around, really. How do you even survive for more than a few months without the technology, resources and necessary precautions in place? It’s absolutely asinine and is also directly related to the pathetically short turnover time for new affiliate networks. You can’t help those that can’t help themselves so there’s really no sense in getting too emotional about the whole thing.

Q: Why did you switch to Cake Marketing as your platform? What is so good about it?
A:  Well, if you’ve learned anything about us thus far than you can probably already guess that we demoed every single tracking system that was available on the market. In a perfect world, we wanted a robust admin side and a clean, streamlined, easy-on-the-eyes affiliate side of things. Since we have our own analytical fraud system in-house, we needed a company that was willing and able to work with us very tightly and in a very detailed overall integration process. When we first talked to CAKE and had a chance to demo their fine product, we were ridiculously impressed by the system because it was incredibly clean while also being extremely robust. The user interface all by itself is a work of art in our eyes – it’s very quick, very clean, very, very pleasing to the eye. And in addition to all of this, it’s also fully functional.

Even with the visual and technical aspects aside, the CAKE development and support team is hands-down one of the best we’ve ever had the pleasure of meeting and working with throughout the entire business. In a word, they’re just incredible. Not only do they listen to your needs, they also sincerely want to improve on anything that would ultimately give you a better product from their point of view. And as if all of this wasn’t enough, they’ve been just as fantastic in providing us with API’s that we need to integrate our fraud analytical system. Top marks all across the board!

Q: In 2011 what verticals do you see growing?
A: Hmm… well, I suppose I need to start off with lead generation (or lead-gen for short) as those offers just in general are growing and growing. We’ve talked to a vast multitude of different publishers who are also seeing more and more traffic in the overall lead-gen realm. Since the publisher themselves are not responsible for actually closing the deal, it’s very intriguing – very promising as well. They’re ultimately only responsible for generating the initial lead, which is arguably infinitely easier than getting a potential consumer to bust out their credit cards.

There’s a lot of buzz and talk about mobile offers but that’s likely to continue growing gradually throughout the year. It will develop slow and steady and ultimately be a major player in the endgame down the road into the future. As such, I don’t really see it skyrocketing this year as so many people have been predicting. It looks as if the development cycle for mobile will continue to increase and slowly gain momentum over the next three years or so as mobile technology continues to be harnessed and developed (think bandwidth limits finally getting pushed into the market as a whole).

Q: What types of offers do you seeing disappearing?  What type of offers would you like to see disappear?
A: Well, I think continuity offers are going to fade away, but not completely. I don’t think they can ever really fade away for good per se, but for smaller companies that don’t have access to 300 MIDs on their backend – well, they’re ultimately going to fall prey to charge-backs and other merchant accounts locking up completely. The continuity space overall is incredibly risky and, from a network stand point, you really need to know exactly who you’re working with. You also need to understand the backend workflow and how they manage the entire lifecycle of the product from start to finish. If you don’t do either of these things, or at least don’t have direct access to whoever you’re working with, then you’re strongly increasing the risk of becoming involved in working with a deadbeat advertiser.

There’s a ton of money to be made in the continuity space, but as with everywhere else where there’s profit, you need to learn how to do everything while combating your own conscience and greed. Some merchants and networks merely see the dollar signs and lose track of their overall path.

Think about it, you rack up a few hundred thousand dollars off an offer but the merchant’s bank account(s) freeze up completely the same day or the following day. I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy…

Q: Is there any place for incentive-based marketing?  What type does work, how, and what are the problems about that part of that industry?
A: There’s obviously always going to be a place for incentive-based marketing if only because of certain business models that exist within the industry today. They’re practically built around it and money is flowing in and out of these companies like clockwork. As long as there’re business models that exist and are built around the entire concept of incentive offers, there will always be a place where they can be accessed, yes.

: Overall, incentive-based marketing is a completely different ballgame. When we first launched we ran some interactive offers on the network and found that to be a mistake – at least for us, rather. Since publishers will always try and bend the rules whenever and wherever they can, they start running incentive traffic on non-incentive offers. For this reason and this reason alone, we decided to remove any and all incentive offers from the network. And to be honest, I’d do it all over again if I had to. It’s definitely been worth saving on all that hassle and stress.

Q: What are key things that you look for in a new affiliate?
A: First and foremost we always want to try and make sure that the new affiliate is indeed who they say they are. We see so much identity theft in regards to applicants and it’s quite obvious that the fraudsters out there have a whole laundry list of stolen identities. Once we get past the part of verifying their identity, then we can try to figure out just how serious they are about making money online.

Some networks won’t give the newbie affiliates the time of day – mainly because they don’t see any reason to work with the less-profitable, asking-questions-all-damn-day guy. One of our network philosophies is that we aim to work with each and every person regardless of their experience and without discrimination – period. If you think about it, every single super affiliate in this industry started out as a newbie just like everyone else. To not try and establish and harvest new talent would be like a professional sports team forsaking the draft completely in favor of signing old veterans. It’s just a dumb philosophy overall.

Q: Honestly, why should an affiliate work with you? Aren’t all networks the same just brokering the same offers? Is there really a difference?
A: On one hand you can say that offers are offers and most affiliate networks do indeed have very similar offers. It’s common knowledge that some networks pay more than others and some networks have completely exclusive offers.

It’s almost become like a rinse-and-rewash cycle in regards to what new affiliate networks say when they first hit the ground running. Everyone claims to treat their affiliates the best, everyone claims to possess the best offers and highest payouts and everyone claims that they hold customer service above all else in their network philosophy. Just spin those three statements up with new adjectives and a noun or two and you’ve got yourself the script for what will be said for years to come.

Ultimately, we feel that the way we treat our affiliates and publishers will ultimately, somewhere down the line, have a direct reflection of said goodwill and kindness back upon us. You can go to the highest buildings in the most crowded cities around the world and spout off the most phonetically pleasing promises and claims as a network, but ultimately, all it’s going to get you is face time. While there are a lot of affiliate networks all throughout the industry, if you’re not getting face time just from existing as a network in this industry then you need to close up shop because you haven’t the first idea on how to market your company.

On this same token, we feel that treating all of our affiliates and publishers to the best of our ability, with all of the kindness and compassion we would want to receive in their steed is the way to go. We know from experience that doing this is the fastest route to real, loyal affiliates who will not only continue to run with us for the remainder of their careers, but will also go out of their way to let people know that Envyus Media is the place that you need to go if you wanted to be treated with dignity; if you want to be treated with respect and kindness and zeal regardless of how many years you have logged doing the damn thing. A full-on, loyal testimonial from an affiliate is a truly beautiful thing indeed!

Basically, when it’s all said and done, you need to review affiliate networks not by their words or overall affiliate list, but by their actions. By how they act and treat their affiliates when they don’t think that anyone is looking. This along with a network’s cadre of loyal affiliates, offer the truest representation of just how valued a particular network truly is.

Q: Do you pay affiliates even if you don’t get paid? Is the standard of affiliates not being paid when networks mess up good for the industry? Love some comments.
A: A networks relationship with a publisher is essentially just that – between the network and the publisher. The network is ultimately responsible for taking the risk involved in regards to working with merchants and as such, networks should show due diligence and manage relationships and contacts with merchants in the smartest way they know how. If the network doesn’t get paid then that should never, ever, EVER reflect upon whether or not a publisher is getting paid – unless of course there was fraudulent activity taking place…

Although it’s getting bigger all the while, this industry is still relatively small. If you want to start burning your publishers by not paying them then word is going to get out fast and you’re essentially going to be writing yourself a one-way ticket to bankruptcy for your network. All trust would be gone and you’d be screwed up-stream without a paddle. And that’s never a good thing.

Q: What is your dream car?
A: That’s a tough one… I think I’m going to have to go with a 1969 Chevy Camaro, built on an Art Morrison sub frame with four-link rear suspension. In the engine bay would sit a twin turbo LS7 motor (the same motor as the 2011 ZR1 Corvette) pumping out upwards of 1,000 horsepower. The car would be built in a way that would keep the stock look but also have a slight twist of “badass-ness” in regards to the motor and mechanicals.

It would have to have all of the most recent technology in regards to brakes, suspension, electronics and so on and so forth. There’s just something to be said for building your very own classic car because it’s not just something you can plop down six-figures on and drive it off the showroom floor. It’s an extension of yourself and allows you to let your creative side come out to play!

Q: What airline do you guys use and why?
A: Whatever deal we can land on Orbitz.com! =)

Envyus Media can be found here.

Find an automatic clickbank script here.

Pace Lattin resume

Q: You like to emphasize that Envyus has a very complex system of fraud prevention. Without going into details what makes your fraud prevention system good?

A: We’ve considered more or less every possible technical aspect imaginable while building our fraud analytical research system. Essentially, we capture and analyze every single click and conversion against all known and existing technical data points. There isn’t really one technical aspect that we would say, leave behind or not analyze completely. Ultimately, the system monitors the traffic in real time so if there’s anything sketchy, abnormal or out of the ordinary we can spot it immediately.

We really want to emphasize that this system isn’t just something that we hastily built and then decided to settle on mere initial functionality. It really exists akin to a living, breathing system that is constantly and knowledgeably evolving thanks to new patterns, trends and other sketchy activity we come across. We can currently say with unfaltering confidence that we don’t have any fraud of any kind occurring on the network. As you might expect, this makes for a much less stressful and ultimately more rewarding relationship with all of our advertisers. We can happily say that there exists a peace of mind for both our advertisers and our own in-house team. It makes sleep come much easier than it has in the past, that’s for sure!

In addition to all of this, since that was technically an explanation of our traffic monitoring backend system only, we also go to whatever extraordinary lengths are necessary with our new affiliate application sign-up. By this we mean that all technical aspects are checked just as rigidly as on the backend in order to ensure the applicant is indeed who they say they are.

Q: What is the biggest issue fraud-related in the performance marketing industry right now?

A: Well, let’s see – that’s an excellent question! I would say the biggest fraud related issue in the industry right now is that some networks simply don’t know how to properly manage fraudulent activity. You really see this with a lot of the newer networks since they come into the whole thing thinking it’s going to be a walk in the park and they ultimately receive a very unpleasant reality shock. New networks will always exist as large targets for fraudsters because these people prey upon the relative innocence and usually undermined resources of the new network team. Many of the new affiliate networks also broker offers from other networks and once fraudsters target the network, they pump the fraud for all it’s worth and the network doesn’t even know how to spot it. As such, the advertiser for the particular offer in question gets inundated with tons and tons of fraud traffic. It’s a damn shame.

When you take a step back and break everything down to its core parts, there’s just no way to prevent failure of any kind without adequate levels of risk management. Plain and simple! It’s just so frustrating to try and wrap your head around, really. How do you even survive for more than a few months without the technology, resources and necessary precautions in place? It’s absolutely asinine and is also directly related to the pathetically short turnover time for new affiliate networks. You can’t help those that can’t help themselves so there’s really no sense in getting too emotional about the whole thing.

Q: Why did you switch to Cake Marketing as your platform? What is so good about it?

A: Well, if you’ve learned anything about us thus far than you can probably already guess that we demoed every single tracking system that was available on the market. In a perfect world, we wanted a robust admin side and a clean, streamlined, easy-on-the-eyes affiliate side of things. Since we have our own analytical fraud system in-house, we needed a company that was willing and able to work with us very tightly and in a very detailed overall integration process. When we first talked to CAKE and had a chance to demo their fine product, we were ridiculously impressed by the system because it was incredibly clean while also being extremely robust. The user interface all by itself is a work of art in our eyes – it’s very quick, very clean, very, very pleasing to the eye. And in addition to all of this, it’s also fully functional.

Even with the visual and technical aspects aside, the CAKE development and support team is hands-down one of the best we’ve ever had the pleasure of meeting and working with throughout the entire business. In a word, they’re just incredible. Not only do they listen to your needs, they also sincerely want to improve on anything that would ultimately give you a better product from their point of view. And as if all of this wasn’t enough, they’ve been just as fantastic in providing us with API’s that we need to integrate our fraud analytical system. Top marks all across the board!

Q: In 2011 what verticals do you see growing?

A: Hmm… well, I suppose I need to start off with lead generation (or lead-gen for short) as those offers just in general are growing and growing. We’ve talked to a vast multitude of different publishers who are also seeing more and more traffic in the overall lead-gen realm. Since the publisher themselves are not responsible for actually closing the deal, it’s very intriguing – very promising as well. They’re ultimately only responsible for generating the initial lead, which is arguably infinitely easier than getting a potential consumer to bust out their credit cards.

There’s a lot of buzz and talk about mobile offers but that’s likely to continue growing gradually throughout the year. It will develop slow and steady and ultimately be a major player in the endgame down the road into the future. As such, I don’t really see it skyrocketing this year as so many people have been predicting. It looks as if the development cycle for mobile will continue to increase and slowly gain momentum over the next three years or so as mobile technology continues to be harnessed and developed (think bandwidth limits finally getting pushed into the market as a whole).

Q: What types of offers do you seeing disappearing? What type of offers would you like to see disappear?

A: Well, I think continuity offers are going to fade away, but not completely. I don’t think they can ever really fade away for good per se, but for smaller companies that don’t have access to 300 MIDs on their backend – well, they’re ultimately going to fall prey to charge-backs and other merchant accounts locking up completely. The continuity space overall is incredibly risky and, from a network stand point, you really need to know exactly who you’re working with. You also need to understand the backend workflow and how they manage the entire lifecycle of the product from start to finish. If you don’t do either of these things, or at least don’t have direct access to whoever you’re working with, then you’re strongly increasing the risk of becoming involved in working with a deadbeat advertiser.

There’s a ton of money to be made in the continuity space, but as with everywhere else where there’s profit, you need to learn how to do everything while combating your own conscience and greed. Some merchants and networks merely see the dollar signs and lose track of their overall path.

Think about it, you rack up a few hundred thousand dollars off an offer but the merchant’s bank account(s) freeze up completely the same day or the following day. I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy…

Q: Is there any place for incentive-based marketing? What type does work, how, and what are the problems about that part of that industry?

A: Overall, incentive-based marketing is a completely different ballgame. When we first launched we ran some interactive offers on the network and found that to be a mistake – at least for us, rather. Since publishers will always try and bend the rules whenever and wherever they can, they start running incentive traffic on non-incentive offers. For this reason and this reason alone, we decided to remove any and all incentive offers from the network. And to be honest, I’d do it all over again if I had to. It’s definitely been worth saving on all that hassle and stress.

Q: Is there a place for incentive-based marketing?

A: There’s obviously always going to be a place for incentive-based marketing if only because of certain business models that exist within the industry today. They’re practically built around it and money is flowing in and out of these companies like clockwork. As long as there’re business models that exist and are built around the entire concept of incentive offers, there will always be a place where they can be accessed, yes.

Q: What are key things that you look for in a new affiliate?

A: First and foremost we always want to try and make sure that the new affiliate is indeed who they say they are. We see so much identity theft in regards to applicants and it’s quite obvious that the fraudsters out there have a whole laundry list of stolen identities. Once we get past the part of verifying their identity, then we can try to figure out just how serious they are about making money online.

Some networks won’t give the newbie affiliates the time of day – mainly because they don’t see any reason to work with the less-profitable, asking-questions-all-damn-day guy. One of our network philosophies is that we aim to work with each and every person regardless of their experience and without discrimination – period. If you think about it, every single super affiliate in this industry started out as a newbie just like everyone else. To not try and establish and harvest new talent would be like a professional sports team forsaking the draft completely in favor of signing old veterans. It’s just a dumb philosophy overall.

Q: Honestly, why should an affiliate work with you? Aren’t all networks the same just brokering the same offers? Is there really a difference?

A: On one hand you can say that offers are offers and most affiliate networks do indeed have very similar offers. It’s common knowledge that some networks pay more than others and some networks have completely exclusive offers.

It’s almost become like a rinse-and-rewash cycle in regards to what new affiliate networks say when they first hit the ground running. Everyone claims to treat their affiliates the best, everyone claims to possess the best offers and highest payouts and everyone claims that they hold customer service above all else in their network philosophy. Just spin those three statements up with new adjectives and a noun or two and you’ve got yourself the script for what will be said for years to come.

Ultimately, we feel that the way we treat our affiliates and publishers will ultimately, somewhere down the line, have a direct reflection of said goodwill and kindness back upon us. You can go to the highest buildings in the most crowded cities around the world and spout off the most phonetically pleasing promises and claims as a network, but ultimately, all it’s going to get you is face time. While there are a lot of affiliate networks all throughout the industry, if you’re not getting face time just from existing as a network in this industry then you need to close up shop because you haven’t the first idea on how to market your company.

On this same token, we feel that treating all of our affiliates and publishers to the best of our ability, with all of the kindness and compassion we would want to receive in their steed is the way to go. We know from experience that doing this is the fastest route to real, loyal affiliates who will not only continue to run with us for the remainder of their careers, but will also go out of their way to let people know that Envyus Media is the place that you need to go if you wanted to be treated with dignity; if you want to be treated with respect and kindness and zeal regardless of how many years you have logged doing the damn thing. A full-on, loyal testimonial from an affiliate is a truly beautiful thing indeed!

Basically, when it’s all said and done, you need to review affiliate networks not by their words or overall affiliate list, but by their actions. By how they act and treat their affiliates when they don’t think that anyone is looking. This along with a network’s cadre of loyal affiliates, offer the truest representation of just how valued a particular network truly is.

Q: Do you pay affiliates even if you don’t get paid? Is the standard of affiliates not being paid when networks mess up good for the industry? Love some comments.

A: A networks relationship with a publisher is essentially just that – between the network and the publisher. The network is ultimately responsible for taking the risk involved in regards to working with merchants and as such, networks should show due diligence and manage relationships and contacts with merchants in the smartest way they know how. If the network doesn’t get paid then that should never, ever, EVER reflect upon whether or not a publisher is getting paid – unless of course there was fraudulent activity taking place…

Although it’s getting bigger all the while, this industry is still relatively small. If you want to start burning your publishers by not paying them then word is going to get out fast and you’re essentially going to be writing yourself a one-way ticket to bankruptcy for your network. All trust would be gone and you’d be screwed up-stream without a paddle. And that’s never a good thing.

Q: What is your dream car?

A: That’s a tough one… I think I’m going to have to go with a 1969 Chevy Camaro, built on an Art Morrison sub frame with four-link rear suspension. In the engine bay would sit a twin turbo LS7 motor (the same motor as the 2011 ZR1 Corvette) pumping out upwards of 1,000 horsepower. The car would be built in a way that would keep the stock look but also have a slight twist of “badass-ness” in regards to the motor and mechanicals.

It would have to have all of the most recent technology in regards to brakes, suspension, electronics and so on and so forth. There’s just something to be said for building your very own classic car because it’s not just something you can plop down six-figures on and drive it off the showroom floor. It’s an extension of yourself and allows you to let your creative side come out to play!

Q: What airline do you guys use and why?

A: Whatever deal we can land on Orbitz.com! =)

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.

Nick Foley and his Crew works the Revenue Street

I wanted to get the skinny on the industry from Nick Foley this week, partially because I’ve known him for a while, but also that despite being around for over a decade, his company isn’t always listed on the top  lists of networks. Well, this year that changed with the readers of Performance Marketing Naming him as one of the top 20 performance marketing networks in the world. It’s obvious that he’s quickly making a name for himself, and TheRevenueStreet is a network to examine as a possible major player in the industry.

How did you personally get into Affiliate & Performance based Marketing?
I started TheMediaCrew in 1999 and RevenueStreet in 2004.  I got involved with performance based marketing or affiliate marketing because I noticed the CPC/CPM model slowly changes towards the CPA/CPL model.  We wanted to be able to capitalize on this change hence; RevenueStreet.com was born.

What makes Revenue Street Unique and interesting?

Well, we have great offers but so do a lot of networks.  My true answer is our Experience, People & Technology.   I have been in the industry since 1999 and in my opinion we have the best team of industry professionals a company could put together.   We maintain a relatively small and tight ship which allows us to respond quickly to changes in our industry and the needs of our advertisers and affiliates.  In addition, we have always leveraged our experience and built our own software platforms, and most recently implemented  EFFECTUS (effectus-software.com).  This is our proprietary performance based marketing tracking software which was in development for close to two years.  It’s now powers RevenueStreet.com and we have started to license it.

What does Revenue Street look for in its affiliates?
We typically look for 4 key ingredients:  Experience, Integrity, Communication, and Results.  We take an in depth look into the affiliates industry experience and the individuals drive to succeed.  Next we lay out our expectations for the affiliate and discuss openly and honestly the process the affiliate plans on using to generate traffic.  Then we encourage a solid line of communication and transparency.  We want to help our affiliates earn as much money as possible so having a solid line of communication with our AM’s is the key to achieving this.  Finally, we want to understand the results they are expecting and come up with a game plan to achieve those results.

What is your perception of all the get rich blogs? Does this hurt or help the industry?
As with many of the “get rich schemes” this just inundates our industry with inexperienced people thinking affiliate marketing is a quick easy home based business.  I believe this mainly spawns fraud and a bad image for our industry.  This is becomes a burden when larger branded advertiser look to affiliate marketing as part of their marketing plans.

What changes have you seen in the industry since 2001, and what changes do you wish you’d see?

I have seen CPM rates going from $150 CPM down to $10 CPM.  I also was involved with the transition from CPM/CPC models moving to CPA/CPL models.  I would like to see a reduction in fraudulent activity.  As I previously stated, big name advertisers and fortune 500 companies need to be able to trust our industry to provide true performance based results without all of the hassle of fraud.  I understand this is a part of business, but also believe it can be controlled and reduced.

What is the most common fraud you’ve found in the industry, and what steps does RS take to combat that?
A majority of our campaigns are lead based and we see a lot of form filling.  One of the steps we take is to maximize the quality of the lead on the landing page.  For example, we implemented a simple not interested button on one of our landing pages which reduced non-interested leads.  In addition, we don’t allow any host & post, all traffic is driven directly to the advertisers landing page which we have seen to reduce fraudulent traffic.  Our platform, EFFECTUS has fraud features which alert us of fishy lead generation and sales.

If you could have any wish, what tool would you like seen made for affiliates?
Sometimes, I can’t understand the way some businesses in our industry operate and stay in business.  If I had a wish, I would probably wish for a way for affiliates to x-ray a company and really see how a company or network operates its business and takes care of its people.

What ideally would you like to teach brands about affiliate marketing?
Affiliate Marketing (aka Performance Marketing) is TRULY a win/win situation for a company and it’s marketer.  The main thing is to educate brands about the legitimate and illegitimate practices in our industry.  If we can create an open line of communication and transparency with big brands, they will ultimately join in the reduction of fraud and the growth of the industry

Whose is the sexiest girl in our industry?
My wife .. 🙂  (another wimp, what da hell?)

CEOs of Ads4Dough, MediaTrust, COPEAC & RevenueStreet take on SPAM, Gurus and Teenage Affiliates

When I look around the affiliate industry, all I see if one fluff interview after another from the Gurus of the industry. Frankly, I am sure how many interviews I can read that start with “CEO of this company is amazing, innovative and he has a great hairdo to boot.” So, I decided to try something new – which was ask some honest questions  of four different CEOs  of affiliate networks and see what they’d answer independently. What came out was a very interesting comparison between four different companies. I’ll let you do the analysis.

Q:  If you could develop a new technology to the industry to give to affiliates what would it be?

Mike Krongel, COPEC: I hope we developed technology that will benefit affiliates with our recent system launch, we have many enhancements planned that we hope will provide real value to pubs

Nick Foley, Revenue Street: Desktop & mobile apps so affiliates could easily monitor & check daily statistics and revenue.  This would save time for affiliates.  They could load the desktop app and run it all day on their computer and see what offers they are running, what revenue they have earned and what eCPM’s they are getting.  The same holds true for the mobile application.  Affiliates need to stay up to date on all campaigns they are running because if a campaign is not producing for them they need to shut it down.

Jason Akatiff, Ads4Dough: I think anyone that answers this would be crazy 🙂 As someone would just steal their idea and do it. Unless they were lazy of course.

Peter Bordes, MediaTrust: Conversion analytics allowing real-time intelligence and efficiency to manage/trade across media channels. to much media buying is done manually and there is a tremendous amount of data that can be used to become a highly effective trader of media. Think about being to trade from the Bloomberg terminal of affiliate marketing that allows you to trade cpm, cpc’s like they are currencies and connecting the “impression to performance” (btw this is under construction at MediaTrust for 2011) our industry is very parallel to Wall Street in that is all about liquidity and trading it.yet we have sub par trading tools…

Q:  Do you allow affiliates to mask their links (hide them so you can’t see source?) What is the reasoning behind your answer?

Mike Krongel, COPEAC: We discourage pubs from masking their links as it reduces our ability to go to bat for the publisher if there are issues with their traffic. This practice is why some big advertisers are hesitant to work in the space, as they feel if you need to hide something then you’re not really on the up and up

Jason Akatiff, Ads4Dough: Sure. We’ve had numerous advertisers steal campaigns from affiliates reversing out what they were doing based on refers. As an affiliate your only asset is your campaign information. The more you can protect this data the better. Sometimes you have to share it but just be very careful who you share it with and definitely don’t let everyone in the food chain see your data.

Nick Foley, Revenuestreet: Our software EFFECTUS has a referring URL feature.  This feature allows us to trace the URL to its orgin so we can see exactrly what is going on with traffic.  It’s not 100% fool-proof but it does work the majority of the time.  Transparency is a big deal in our industry.  Anytime an affiliate masks URLs and will not allow you to see what is what then red flags fly all over the place.

Peter Bordes, MediaTrust: We do not encourage this practice and push for more transparency which creates more trust for brands to come into our space. “if you are being real you have nothing to hide” and this creates great trust between networks, affiliates, advertisers and consumer. We have to become a transparency & quality driven industry. No more smoking mirrors or short cuts!

Q: Email Marketing aka SPAM is still huge in the industry, what changes do you see to be made? Will it ever go away, or do you feel it’s a necessary evil?

Mike Krongel, COPEAC: I don’t think you’ll ever get rid of spam because it works well for so many people, I do think that spam is a lot less than what it was in the past

Nick Foley, RevenueStreet: I come from email marketing.  It’s how I got my start so I’m a fan.  In 1998 SPAM was not SPAM it was a way to make great money.  Now the ethical way to make money is to email properly.  Email marketing is one of the fastest way to produce traffic but knowing how to email is an art form.  It’s not just loading a list, creative and hitting send.  Ethical opt-in email marketing has taken a form.  It’s must be done correctly for it to profitable.  The Can-SPAM Act has helped and companies like LashBack and UnSubCentral.   They keep email marketing ethics in line.  So in my opinion email marketing is a necessarytraffic vehicle and will will be for years.

Jason Akatiff, Ads4Dough: I don’t think it’s evil first off. As with the drug problem if users stopped buying the the whole drug trade would crumble. Email is much the same way, as long as people want mortgages, acai or their santa letters email will continue. Nothing can stop it or make it go away.
There will always be a way around any filter. It’s gotten a lot more compliant and reputation based. Not so much spray and pray anymore so I see it moving in the right direction.

Peter Bordes, MediaTrust: It is not a necessary evil. Spam is a disease and indicative of people who are interested in a quick buck and not building real businesses. This game continues to happen and appears to be diminishing as the cat and mouse cycles shorten thru industry regulation and less tolerance. It should not be tolerated and should be ousted because it hurts everyone else who is working hard to build real long term value and enterprise ROI.

Q: What do you think the FTC is going to go after next in performance based marketing?

Mike Krongel, COPEAC: I don’t think its any one thing that they will go after next, but I am very concerned over the issues congress is raising with behavioral advertising and what effect it’ll have on the performance marketing space

Peter Bordes, MediaTrust: I hope not and NO.  Inb my opinion the only issue with PBM is the fraud.  It’s on the affiliates who produce the fraud.  The FTC should target those fraudulent affiliates, not the industry.

Jason Akitaiff, Ads4Dough:
Whatever is doing the most volume with the most complaints as always.
So in this case I’d guess Penny Auctions.

Peter Bordes, MediaTrust: I don’t think there’s any particular one yet. They have to much to deal with now regarding fraud, privacy and have not finished in the areas they are currently attacking. i think they will start taking a more proactive role in setting guidelines and regulation frameworks. Right now they are playing catch-up on the super highway of digital grey they have left open for far too long. What’s taken the FTC so long to regulate? DRTV and others are!

Q:  What is your opinion of the current GURU and get-rich trend of performance based marketing?

Mike Krongel, Copeac: even guru’s need to earn a living, I do think that newbies getting in to the space need to realize that these guru’s mainly make their money by selling newbs on how they made money online or supposedly made money online

Nick Foley, RevenueStreet: As with many of the “get rich schemes” this just inundates our industry with inexperienced people thinking affiliate marketing is a quick easy home based business. I believe this mainly spawns fraud and a bad image for our industry.  This is becomes a burden when larger branded advertiser look to affiliate marketing as part of their marketing plans.

Jason Akatiff, Ads4Dough: I actually got into this business buying a business opportunity. So as far as the trend I think it’s always been there. The guru is just a different angle for selling them that seems to work well. The whole guru angle is building a following, much like Robert Allen did with offline media back in the day. If you follow you believe. It’s all just marketing love it or hate it.

Peter Bordes, MediaTrust: Just another bubble being created that is only going to cause more issues with the credibility of affiliate marketing. Same as what happened in biz opp. I get 10 tweets a day from the latest new self anointed marketing expert. There is to much noise and bs in this respect which ultimately equals negative backlash.

Q: How do we rectify the growing opinion that the industry is just full of 18 year old kids?

Mike Krongel, COPEAC: The industry was a bunch of 18 year olds, 10 years ago, now they are 28 :). Also bill gates, steve jobs, etc were all 18 at some point as were most of the people reading this. Age shouldn’t deter people actions should

Nick Foley, RevenueStreet: Ten years ago it was, now they are in thier late 20’s and early 30’s.  The industry is evolving and getting older or shall I say wiser.  As we grow as professionals so will our industry.  Unfortunately, we will always have those people who are reckless and create a bad light for our industry.   But as long as we continue to education people in our industry and keep them informed on best practices.  I feel our industry will continue to grow year after year.

Jason Akatiff, Ads4Dough: Honestly it is a lot of young kids that make the echo system go. They read a business opportunity, blog or whatever and want to get involved. That’s what makes our business amazing. Some 16 year old kid in a Brazilian village can become the highest paid person in his whole village ( a real affiliate of ours ). It’s that which make our business great and drives a lot of the sales. It’s up to the industry leaders to illustrate to the rest of the world that there are checks and balances in place to suit more of the ‘branded” world. Think of the CPM world for example they have 1000’s of publishers in a CPM network that could be 18 year old kids or 90 year old men. Most people that look at the industry deal with an account rep at Aol, Yahoo or some other media network. They’re not dealing with publishers directly, I think the same thing needs to happen here if we’re to make a consolidated view.

Peter Bordes, MediaTrust: We need to act like a unified industry and create a centralized voice and organization that focuses on building our industry and its reputation. Every major marketing segment has one. We have the PMA and absolutely need to all get involved. Affiliate networks, affiliate marketers, affiliate publishers, merchants, advertisers and service providers.  We cannot continue as a fragments and black boxed marketing channel. We will not realize our fullest potential and it’s time to grow up. I feel like most people fight the PMA because they don’t want to grow up. I do!

Chad French is Peerfly

As part of my mission to educate affiliates and the industry, I’m hoping to introduce other companies in the industry that are keeping it clean. By keeping it clean, I don’t mean wiping down your seat after watching porn in your private office. I mean trying to play by the rules and make a difference in the industry. I have taken an interest in the company Peerfly and Chad French, mainly because I’m digging the guy’s hairstyle and goatee.

That being said, here’s my brief but interesting interview.

How did you personally get into Affiliate Marketing?
I’ve been in different aspects of affiliate marketing since 1999 but I didn’t really start making good money in performance marketing until 2007 while I was in the incentive space. I started building PeerFly in the fall of 2008 and the rest is history.

What makes Peerfly unique and interesting?
a) We don’t have a huge overhead so our profit margins are extremely small which creates the largest payouts.
b) Our platform is unmatched and we’re always adding new features. Publishers can even request specific CUSTOM features for their account. We have API feeds for everything (offers, stats, earnings).
c) We have a lifetime 5% publisher referral program. We’ve had it since day one and will continue to encourage our publishers to refer others. In 2009 we paid out nearly $100k in referral earnings.
d) We’ll do just about anything to get your business including taking a negative margin to beat payouts on another network, giving monthly rewards, or helping you setup your campaign on the weekend at 3am.

What does Peerfly look for in its affiliates?
Nothing really in particular but we will deny publishers who don’t meet certain standards. We accept new affiliates to this industry but they need to at least know what affiliate marketing is and have some sort of goals in place.

What is the most common fraud you’ve found in the industry, and what steps does Peerfly take to combat that?
We’ve successfully stomped out most of the common fraud that may infiltrate other networks by utilizing several elements of technology and screening measures. However, fraud can still sneak in and cause problems. Sometimes just one bogus publisher can ruin our relationship with a client so we have become extra strict when it comes to compliance. Our biggest method for catching fraudulent signups is ID uploads. We have become pretty familiar with most state IDs/Passports in the US/Canada (and other countries) and can spot a fake quickly. We also have an internal scoring system that gives a publisher a score based on over 20 different cross reference checks with known publishers/known fraudulent IPs. In addition to that, we have a full time compliance team who watches incoming traffic like a hawk.

If you could have any wish, what tool would you like seen made for affiliates?
We’ve got a lot of tools already integrated into our platform and we have lots of ideas that we will slowly be adding over the next several months. The great thing about having a custom platform and a full time developer is that anything our affiliates wish to have, we can create for them. Some of the things we’re working on right now would be an instant search for our offer inventory and more controls and transparency for our clients (which can mean even better service for our publishers).

What ideally would you like to teach brands about affiliate marketing?
Before we really attempt to attract the big brands I’d rather us work out our kinks as an industry and grow into something more reputable. We need to be backed by an association who can weed out the scammy networks and also fight for us in Washington. Until that happens, brands are going to continue pouring their advertising dollars into more conventional methods. However – when we get to that point – I predict there will be a huge boom in our industry to the likes we’ve never seen. How are the big brands going to turn down the opportunity to extend their sales force by tens of thousands and only pay for results? I think this practice speaks for itself and is unlike anything else out there in terms of getting results and seeing the best ROI.

Who is the sexiest affiliate manager that you’ve met?
My wife! (although she is technically in accounting)

Peerfly can be found here.

George Avery Gets It, and so does GetAds.

George Avery used to be the right-hand man at Affiliate.com (the network formerly known as CPAEMPIRE) until a few years ago. Not soon after Affiliate’s parent company MediaBreakaway was hit, and then subsequently lost a multi-million dollar lawsuit from Myspace, he left the company along with half-a-dozen other employees to start GetAds, a direct competitor.   Avery’s company took its own path, broke away from the “spamking” labels that could have followed them and became a major player in the industry seemingly overnight. He’s one of those guys that everyone likes, his way of doing business down to earth and because of that has earned the trust of his clients and affiliates. Also, as an ex-hockey player and hockey fanatic, he’s always willing to get down and dirty to protect his clients best interests.  In the Denver area, when people ask about affiliate marketing, GetAds and George have become synonymous with the growing industry. He provides some real insight in this interview to compliance issues, how to run a company and how to do business in general.

GetAds has managed to stay out of trouble with no major lawsuits, no compliance actions. What are you doing to keep your company clean that other companies may not be doing?
At GetAds we have a very proactive approach to compliance. We monitor our traffic constantly to make sure that if a rogue affiliate is doing something against the Terms & Conditions of the offer, we are the ones to catch them first. You can’t rely on the Advertiser to monitor things, by the time it is flagged by them it is too late. Each of our Affiliate Managers is trained on what to look for and how to deal with fraud & illegitimate traffic. They are the front lines of our defense. It’s really just about staying educated about what is going on in the industry and keeping ahead of the frauders.

What is the biggest lesson you’ve learned in the industry? What can you pass on to others in the industry from this lesson?
The biggest lesson I’ve learned is that networks live and die by their relationships. It doesn’t matter how great your offers are if nobody likes you. With so many competitors in the industry, affiliates can choose to run with whoever they like. That’s how we get them in the door, and then we keep them there with our offers & service.

What do you feel that GetAds provides to advertisers that other networks do not provide?
We are constantly telling advertisers how they can improve their offers. Whether it is landing page tweaks, little details in the path, or even suggesting a new traffic type, we tell them what they need to know to make more money. We have advertisers coming in to our office, meeting with us at shows for strategy sessions, and doing calls on a regular basis to make sure the entire process is flowing smoothly. When you work with us, you aren’t just setting the offer live on our network and leaving it there, you are getting the full package.

What do you feel that GetAds provides to publishers that other networks do not provide?

For publishers, we really get to know them. We want to have an intimate knowledge of their business and how they market offers. That allows us to bring in better offers and make better suggestions to them on how to increase their profits month after month. We are always talking to our publishers to find out what they want, what we are doing right, and what we need improvement on. It really boils down to the relationship. The stronger your relationship is with your network, the more money you will make in the long run.

What lessons have you learned from Hockey that you can apply to managing affiliates?
The number one thing is that it takes a team. Hockey is not an individual game, and neither is managing affiliates. You need people that are each good at one aspect of the business, and when you put them all together you get the full effect. You also need to be ready for anything and look at the game from all angles. You never know where the game winning shot is going to come from.

What do you look for in affiliates that helps you know they might be a good choice to approve?
We look for affiliates that are serious about their business, and are willing to be transparent in how they market. I’m not saying we need to know your landing pages, keywords, campaigns, etc., just that we need to know how offers are being marketed. We want affiliates that know the difference between Incent traffic and Non-Incent traffic. Basically, we want to work with anybody as long as they are serious about making money and they are willing to follow the rules.

I know you are familiar with DirectTrack, but what made you choose LinkTrust?
We worked with DirectTrack for years at CPA Empire (affiliate.com), but when we started GetAds we decided to go with LinkTrust. The number one reason is tracking. We just have less issues with tracking discrepancies on LinkTrust. Plus, they are a smaller company, like us. I like that I can call the CEO on the phone if we have issues and he will get them taken care of ASAP.

What changes do you expect in the next year for Performance / Affiliate Marketing?
It’s only going to get bigger. The projections for 2011 are something around $28 billion for the online ad industry, and affiliate marketing is going to be a large piece of that. I think we are going to see more networks shutting down and consolidating, much like we saw in 2010. Margins are slimmer, and a lot of people are being pushed out.

What products do you think would benefit from Performance Based marketing, and how would you bring them into the industry?
I think that any product in the world would benefit from performance based marketing. They key in bringing them into the industry is to make sure that the advertiser understands exactly what their goals are. They need to know exactly what a lead or sale is worth to them. They also have to have their back-end conversion funnel optimized so that they are ready for the traffic. Once they have those things in place, and if they have solid cash flow, we can bring their product to market.

What technology do you want to see created for the industry?
Anything that will help us prevent fraud and lower advertiser scrub rates as well as stopping other networks from scrubbing. Affiliates need to get paid for the work that they do in promoting offers. Nobody wins when there is fraud or scrubbing in the picture.

GetAds can be found here.

George Avery used to be the right-hand man at the Affiliate.com until a few years ago. Not soon after Affiliate’s parent company MediaBreakaway was hit, and then subsequently lost a multi-million dollar lawsuit from Myspace, he left the company along with half-a-dozen other employees to start GetAds, a direct competitor.Avery’s company took its own path, broke away from the “Spamking” labels that could have followed them and became a major player in the industry seemingly overnight. He’s one of those guys that everyone likes, his way of doing business down to earth and because of that has earned the trust of his clients and affiliates. In the Denver area, when people ask about affiliate marketing, GetAds and George have become synonymous with the growing industry.

Leadership Summit Interviews

The following interviews were conducted as a run up to the Offervault Performance Marketing Leadership Summit.  They were hosted by Jim Lillig, The Director of Business Development of Offervault.com.  The Leadership Summit brought together the top leaders in the Performance marketing Industry to discuss the issues that are vital for the industry to survive in the competitive online marketing arena.  Each interviewee was asked the same question, “What do you see as the single biggest obstacle to growth in Cost per Action Marketing over the next 6 to 12 months?”  Their answers are not what you would expect.

Todd Crawford Interview
Todd Crawford, co-founder of Impact Radius.

A recognizable veteran, Todd Crawford brings to Impact Radius a passion for performance advertising and a commitment to its growth. As a co-founder, he evangelizes the opportunities presented by a multi-channel approach to the performance model. Prior to Impact Radius, he served as vice president of sales and business development for Digital River’s affiliate network, oneNetworkDirect. Todd also contributed to the founding team at Commission Junction in 1998 and led its business and sales development efforts as vice president for more than seven years.

In 2007, Todd won the Affiliate Marketing Legend Award at the Affiliate Summit Pinnacle Awards in Las Vegas. He holds a bachelor of arts at the University of Minnesota, Twin-Cities.

Listen to his interview here.

Tom Cohn Interview
Thomas A. Cohn – Of Counsel – Venable LLP

Thomas Cohn advises clients on the legal and practical aspects of compliance with FTC and other federal and state consumer regulations and industry selfregulation programs, as well as representing clients during investigations and enforcement actions. His clients include a wide variety of online and offline advertisers and marketers, in many different subject matter areas. His practice covers all federal and state consumer protection and privacy laws and regulations, including newer ones such as the FTC’s ID Theft Red Flags Rule.

Mr. Cohn draws on experience gained during his 17-year tenure at the FTC, where he was Regional Director and Assistant Regional Director for the Northeast Region, attorney in the Division of Marketing Practices, and legal advisor to the Director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection.  As FTC Northeast Regional Director, Mr. Cohn supervised all professional and support staff and led multi-agency enforcement efforts against various anticompetitive, unfair and/or deceptive practices. He was also responsible for numerous local and regional media and outreach efforts to educate consumers, business groups, and law enforcement agencies about how to detect and avoid fraud as well as how to comply with antitrust and consumer protection laws enforced by the FTC, such as the Telemarketing Sales Rule, regulations under CAN SPAM Act, Children’s Online Privacy and Privacy Act, and Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, and consumer credit statutes such as FDCPA, TILA, FCRA and FACTA.

Mr. Cohn also spent four years as Legal Advisor to the Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, where he reviewed law enforcement recommendations, Congressional testimony, and other matters for the Director.  He served five years as a staff attorney in the FTC’s Division of Marketing Practices, where he litigated fraud and rule violation cases, coordinated test shoppings of funeral homes for compliance with the Funeral Rule, and played a key role in the development and implementation of the Funeral Rule Offenders’ Program, an innovative, self-regulatory alternative to traditional law enforcement.

Mr. Cohn is a graduate of Yale College and Boston University School of Law, and is a member of the New York City Bar Consumer Affairs Committee and the New York State Bar Food, Drug & Cosmetic Law Section.

Listen to his interview here.

Chris Graham Interview
Chris Graham, VP Business Intelligence for Atrinsic.

Chris entered the world of brand protection when he joined Email Data Source in 2004. CANSPAM was just getting into full swing and the initially vague nature of CANSPAM was scaring many brands away from third party email and affiliate marketing. So Chris went to them with a system that not only allowed EDS to see if anyone was violating trademark or using unauthorized creative, or any of the other issues that came with email, but it also allowed them to show their clients the companies and affiliates who were doing things right for their competitors and who should be considered valuable potential partners.

After EDS, Chris discovered Syntryx. A complex system jammed full of data that enhanced his EDS clients understanding of who was who and who was doing what in the world of email, and it also began to fulfill the same goals for the rest of the web . Taking Syntryx to market was his next venture and it allowed Chris to see even deeper into the world of online marketing; both the good and the bad

Today at Atrinsic Chris sits, somewhat, on the other side of the table. No longer selling intelligence systems, but instead, selling the importance of using the many systems available to us today that allow Atrinsic  to truly evaluate the marketing of their clients and their competitors. Chris’s main job is to battle the forces of evil and protect a brand’s identity from being tarnished in the performance marketing space.

Listen to the entire interview here.

Cari Brinker Interview
Cari Birkner – Compliance Specialist – Lashback

Cari Birkner leads social media, industry outreach, and email compliance content development for LashBack, LLC, the largest provider of actionable compliance and brand intelligence data for email marketers. In addition to contributing to Deliverability.com, FeedFront Magazine and the Smart Data Collective on the subjects of compliance and international email marketing, Cari edits and publishes the LashBack TRUSTED Blog and Email Compliance Newsletter.

Cari is well versed in compliance matters affecting affiliate marketers, particularly concerning the U.S. CAN-SPAM Act, European email legislation, suppression file management technology, social media, branding and email deliverability. While working at LashBack, Cari has been at the forefront of monitoring email compliance for advertisers, networks, publishers, legal professionals, ESPs and government regulators. Cari began her career in the online marketing space as an intern and officially joined the LashBack Marketing team in 2008. In 2009, Cari earned a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration with a specialization in Marketing from Southern Illinois University.

You can listen to her interview here.

Mark Roth Interview
Mark Roth, Founder and CEO of OfferVault.

In this interview, Mark will be discussing the future of Performance Marketing as he sees it, as well as some of the results and insights that we have gleaned from a recent survey of affiliates that are registered at OfferVault.  If you want to know what affiliates think of networks, you will want to tune in here.