20 Affiliates on one review site

tjtigers14

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Feb 9, 2012
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Metro Detroit
www.tylercreator.com
Are there usually rules against this sort of thing? Or do marketers just not profit with so many coupons and links going around and just stick to the best brands? Just starting my campaign and I'm wondering if anyone has some information about this
 


I'm not too sure as to what you're speaking about. Explain, please.

Sorry, I was being inarticulate. If you sign up for, say 20 affiliate programs for the same type of product and then start a review site for that product for a campaign, is it typical to use all of those 20 competing affiliate links/codes throughout the one review site?

If not, do they usually just stick with 2-3 programs or spread the 20 out over other domains in their network?

Newbie
 
Sorry, I was being inarticulate. If you sign up for, say 20 affiliate programs for the same type of product and then start a review site for that product for a campaign, is it typical to use all of those 20 competing affiliate links/codes throughout the one review site?

If not, do they usually just stick with 2-3 programs or spread the 20 out over other domains in their network?

Newbie

Umm. Not 100% sure what you're talking about but on review sites you do it a few different ways.

You can stick to a single product review.

You can pick around 3 offers and rank the highest converting / best paying offer as number 1.

Or you can go and do a big comparison list of a bunch of offers in the same niche.

Ultimately all that matters is that you make money with the method you're using.
 
Umm. Not 100% sure what you're talking about but on review sites you do it a few different ways.

You can stick to a single product review.

You can pick around 3 offers and rank the highest converting / best paying offer as number 1.

Or you can go and do a big comparison list of a bunch of offers in the same niche.

Ultimately all that matters is that you make money with the method you're using.

Oh yeah I just realized that if you did like 10 reviews and ranked them, there's no point in signing up with an affiliate for the product you're going to put as #10 because you have to be a legit reviewer
 
It's an American-dominated Internet, where capitalism and competition are king. I don't see how there could be a rule about having multiple, competing affiliates on one's site. If so, places like I.M. Report Card would be out of business.
 
I have found that if you have more than 3 choices on a site it creates "analysis paralysis" for customers and they don't end up buying anything. You can do a "top 10" list but it causes customers to spend too much time looking at the products rather than buying the products.

Compare 3 similar services that have slightly different feature sets/price points/whatever. Choose the 1 with the highest payout/best conversion rate and put it at #1. Compare it to #2 and #3 making #1 look like the best option.

People love choices but they don't like to make decisions. Give them a choice then tell them what to buy.