Get the Basics About Choosing the Right Affiliate Product to Promote

November 18, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

Choosing the right affiliate product to promote is one of the most important steps in achieving success. It can also be one of the most difficult to achieve for any beginner. Selecting the wrong product to promote can kill off your business before you even start it.
It is therefore imperative for you to know some basic skills in selecting affiliate products to promote, and so increasing your chances of achieving results.
Here, we will be covering why it’s important to choose a product which you believe in, how to check if the market is viable to compete in, and what level of commission to expect.
Choose what you fully endorse
Before you sell, be a consumer first. Do research and search at Google for reviews on the affiliate product, as if you are purchasing a new, expensive High Definition LCD TV. When you think you have found one and AFTER you have completed the next step, you should buy it and go through it multiple times to familiar yourself with it.
Once you are certain that an affiliate product has the quality and worth your money as a consumer, will you be able to truly promote it as an affiliate. You should only sell what you fully endorse for. Only then can you convey that satisfaction and promote it successfully to your prospects.
You can try to ‘fake’ it but shoppers will be able to sense you are not telling the truth.
Demand and Competition
After you have found the affiliate product you like to promote, check out the demand and competition. Is there a substantial demand for the type of product you are promoting? Is there too much competition vying for that limited amount demand?
Use Yahoo’s Keyword Tool at inventory.overture.com and type in the name of the affiliate product. The results that appear will show you how many times that product was search for using Yahoo during the past 30 days.
Next, go to Google or Yahoo and search using the name of the product. How many websites come up as the result? If you see only about 50 people searching for that product and there are more than 5 million websites on it; move on and search for another to promote.
You have to be aware of your competition, especially if you are a beginner. You chances of success competing in an overcrowded field dominated by experienced players are going to be slim. You can succeed, but it will take you a lot of time and effort to do so.
Commission
Go for affiliate programs which give you at least 50% of the price of the product as your commission to ensure maximum returns for your efforts.
There are also some affiliate programs which have multi-tier payments, where you receive a percentage of sales made by an affiliate who signed up under you. These kind of payments are certainly a bonus.
Also take note the frequency which the affiliate program pays you. It’s frustrating to earn thousands per month but receiving the check only once every 6 months. So choose affiliate programs which pay you frequently.
An excellent place to check out, if you have not heard of already, is ClickBank.com. The latter specializes in promoting downloadable digital products such as eBooks. Affiliates who sign up under ClickBank can receive their checks once every 2 weeks.
Lastly, if an affiliate program requires you to pay to become an affiliate, forget about it and search for another one. Affiliate programs should pay you to promote their products, not the other way round.
Conclusion
As you can see, selecting an affiliate product to promote is not as easy as going to supermarket to purchase a loaf of bread. But choosing the right affiliate product is a solid foundation on which to ensure affiliate marketing success.
The information which I covered here is just one of the few techniques to start off successful affiliate marketer, and what you will need next is information on effective internet marketing strategies which any beginner should know and master. For more information, click the link in my bio below to check out my review on one of the best and affordable Internet Marketing eBooks available.
I hope this article has given you the necessary information you will need in selecting the right affiliate product. But as always, 756 words cannot tell the whole story, so please do research on your own and I wish you success in your ventures!

Kai Wei is sharing his online ventures and experiences through his blog at Internet Marketing 4 Noobs to let visitors to get a feel of what building an online business is like.

Check out his blog and you may pick up some information you are looking for.

Search Engine Optimization For Ecommerce Stores – How Does That Work?

November 13, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

I was recently posed a question from a reader specific to ecommerce stores. The question was that since search engine ranking is so heavily contingent on a website’s content being relevantly optimized, how do online stores get high search engine rankings? Being that one of my first websites was an ecommerce store with general merchandise, and I spent several months myself stuck on this dilemma, I knew exactly why they were asking. Ecommerce sites such as that use the keywords for “shopping”, etc, but the majority of their pages contain item descriptions that aren’t relevant to the term “shopping”. Selling items from handbags to vacuum cleaners makes it hard to keep your content consistent and relevant to your search engine keywords, and it doesn’t help your ranking for a search engine to find irrelevant keywords between your website pages without a common theme. It’s a unique challenge for stores and shopping malls that don’t sell all the same types of items and contain an inconsistent keyword theme throughout their pages. Through my work I found that eCommerce stores can overcome these obstacles by taking these 10 steps:1. Use the same two to three keywords between all of your pages whether it’s a highly used keyword on that page or not, like “shopping”, “discount”, “on sale”…whatever your common store theme is, regardless of the item (we’ll use these three as examples for the purpose of this discussion, but you might feel that different keywords better describe your store as a whole). Optimize your main page content very heavily on these keywords with a description of your business and explanation of your website’s mission and theme. It will serve the purpose of driving search engine traffic to your front page, which should be very relevant to your front page keyword tags, as well as convincing shoppers that they want to shop there. The beginning of this text will also show up in your website’s description in some searches and could effect how many people click through to your site from your listing. Weave your keywords throughout the page, but more heavily in the top of the first paragraph.2. Categorize your store’s selections. Separate each item into a category such as “handbags”, “luggage”, “jewelry”, etc. rather than lumping them all together disorganized. Create as many separate categories as possible. If you only sell jewelry in your store (in which case “jewelry” is one of your primary website keywords), separate the items into categories such as “necklaces”, “earrings”, “bracelets”, etc. for example. Use these category names as the second group of keywords on your main page, right behind your primary keywords. Make sure there’s a navigation bar on your front page that links directly to each category by name, matching these keywords exactly in bold text links. 3. Tag your category pages with your primary home page keywords: “shopping”, “discount”, “on sale”, and then add the category name as your next keyword (”Jewelry” for example), followed by a few descriptive words for the items in that category, such as “bracelet”, “necklace”, “gold”, “diamond”. This methodized string of keywords provides connection and relevancy from your main page, through your category page, to your item pages, which might not have appeared relevant otherwise. 4. Add page descriptions on each of your category pages and include all of your page tags in your page content. For instance include a very brief summary of your front page website description (without copying text directly). This will allow visitors who landed directly on your category page to still get an understanding of your business and enables you to use your primary website’s keywords (”shopping”, “discount”, “on sale”) so that, primarily, it shows search engines direct relevance between your top page and each second level page. Then provide a description of the category itself and the items within the category, utilizing the rest of your page’s tags. This text will persuade visitors to shop on your site, in this category particularly, while convincing search engines your page content is relevant to your keywords and this second level page is directly relevant to third level pages as well as your top level page. 5. Tag your item pages with your primary website keywords (”shopping”, “discount”, and “on sale”), then your relevant category keyword (”Jewelry”), followed by additional descriptive keywords specific to that item, as if it’s a directory map.Include all of your keywords for each page in your content where it’s tagged, whenever it makes sense. So you have the “shopping” keyword tagged on all of your pages to make your whole store relevant to that very important keyword, now you need your item pages themselves (third level pages) to be relevant to the first level and second level pages. For instance, a page that describes a gold bracelet as explained in the simple rules above, might be categorized in “Jewelry” and tagged as “shopping”, “discount”, “on sale”, “jewelry”, “bracelet”, “gold”, “bangle”, and so on. Your description for that item might start with, “If you’re shopping for an exquisite addition to your jewelry collection, this gorgeous gold bangle bracelet is on sale at an incredible discount…” You get the idea… Make each page’s description meaningful, interesting, persuasive, and rich with keywords.6. Add as many (optimized!) pages as possible. Stores with the biggest catalogs, the most categories, and the most item pages have more of a presence on the internet, of course. As long as each category is accessible from the main page and each item is accessible from a top level category (your whole website only goes three links deep: main page, category page, item page), no links are broken, there’s a navigation bar on each page, and all the pages are optimized as described above, the more the better. The highest ranked online stores have thousands of well optimized product listings, however my ecommerce store reached a decent ranking with 300 item listings.7. Use “Alt Tags” for your images. This is text that will show to human visitors only if your image is unavailable, it makes your images searchable on the internet, and it is always seen by search engines as content. Use your keywords heavily in image alt tags to increase your page’s keyword usage, making your page content even more relevant to search engines without boring your shoppers. On a page where one of your keywords lacks very much presence and it would take away from the quality of your content to squeeze it into the text anymore, include that word again in an image “alt tag” instead.8. Use relevant cross-reference links between pages within your site. If you have the capability to provide cross-references from one item to other relevant items in your catalog, do that! Search engines love cross references. You’ve already shown the search engine through use of keywords and page descriptions that your third level pages are relevant to your first and second level pages, and cross references between item pages show additional relevancy between third level pages as well. Under the image and description for a particular item, if you have a section that says, “…you might also be interested in…” with thumbnail descriptions that link to other relevant item pages of your site, it makes it easier for search engines to find relevancy between more of your pages, with a direct path for them to follow. It also helps convert visitors into paying customers by helping them find exactly what they’re looking for in fewer clicks. It’s all-around a great tool and worth the expense and effort. 9. Add a blog or allow comments and reviews. Each comment on your site is new relevant content for search engines to review. You can use a blog page for creating network contacts and free sales publicity. The added functionality also encourages visitors to utilize and then return to your site, potentially bookmarking a post for their own purpose, providing free viral marketing…the benefits are practically endless. 10. Think outside of the box. Always keep your eyes open for new ideas for relevantly linking your pages, providing additional relevant functionality to your pages, increasing your categories, and improving your content.

Deborah is a professional SEO and internet marketing consultant based in Fort Worth, TX. She can be contacted directly through her website at www.seo4one.com. You can find more of her SEO and internet marketing articles and resources there for free as well.

The Best SEO Tip Ever

November 4, 2009 by IBI · Leave a Comment 

Let’s take it for granted that:

a. You want to be top of the search engine results
b. You understand about on-page optimization
c. Your website is up and running and indexed

Now what? How do you take your site from the middle of the pile and push and pull it slowly to the promised land of the top 5 positions?

And slowly here is the key. If you want short-term, quick-profit solutions (in other words ‘black hat’ techniques) you may as well stop reading now. I’m talking about long term investment into the future of your website and business.

I’m also not talking about ranking number 1 in Google for your business name or a 10 word phrase that absolutely no-one else would want to rank for. If you haven’t done that yet, you need to go away and get some very basic SEO grounding.

What I want to discuss is out-performing your competitors on the absolutely top-notch make-you-a-fortune keywords that bring laser-targeted traffic. In other words, the ones you’re only dreaming about ranking for!

Enough pre-amble; how do we do it?

Simple, really – we stand on the shoulders of giants. In other words, we look at what successful websites do and have done – and we use that information. No, we’re not going to re-invent the wheel and copy others’ business models, we’re going to take the cream from their hard work and pour it onto our sites!

Ranking in Google is about two things – it’s about relevance and it’s about popularity. We’ll assume that our sites are relevant to the traffic we’re seeking – no point attracting shoe shoppers if we’re selling ice cream! So it’s about popularity. And in Google’s case, that means backlinks. Put simply, the better the links to your site, the more they’ll see you as being popular, and the more they’ll pull your site to the top of the results.

Notice I said ‘better’, not ‘more’. In this case, quality is far more important than quantity. I can give you examples of sites with 300,000 inbound links that are far outranked by sites with 2000.

SEO experts talk about ranking number 1 in Google rather than Yahoo or MSN simply because Google is the search engine that most searchers use. Ironically, though, we need to use Yahoo to get to number one in Google. This is because Google is really bad at showing inbound links.

Yahoo Site Explorer (siteexplorer dot search dot yahoo dot com) is far better at this. YSE will show you which sites link to your competitors. And better still, they’ll rank them in terms of importance, so all the hard work’s done for you!

You just need to type in the URL of the site into the SEARCH box at the top of the screen, click on ‘Explore URL’, then click on ‘Inlinks’ and select ‘Except from this domain’ in the drop-down box. Lo-and-behold – a list of your competitor’s most important links. Not bad, eh?

So here’s your strategy:

First, draw up your list of must-have, top-drawer keywords and keyword phrases.

Second, search Google for them and take a note of the top 10 websites for each.

Third, examine each of the top 10 in YSE and see where the important links are coming from.

Fourth, filter these links into three categories: 1, the sites you won’t get links from; 2, the sites you’ll get links from with some hard work; 3, the sites you can get links from straight away (these can include blogs that allow comments, directories, article sites etc)

Fifth, get to work on acquiring links from the third category, then move on to the second.

This takes time, obviously, but not as much time as randomly searching for links that you’ll ultimately discover have no importance whatsoever.

If you follow this procedure diligently and methodically, I can guarantee that you’ll soon begin to see your sites slowly but surely marching up to the top of the rankings.

Andy Follin is diligently and methodically applying this SEO tactic in a quest to drive a website to the top of the rankings in the online casino niche. Only by applying such techniques can he have any chance of showing in the top 10 for terms such as best online gambling guide, best online casinos, and online casino bonus offers.
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