The Web Site
As an affiliate marketer, you should plan your site in advance. From domain name to design, lay-out, content, and ads, you need to have a good idea who your customer is and what they want to see.
Web sites with high quality contents - relevant keywords and informative content about the product – will produce far more customers than empty hyped-up advertisements.
Good content improves traffic to the site. Sustain the interest of your site visitors, and not only you will get better sales, your visitors will refer others to your site.
Keep pages targeted to the interest of the visitor. Regardless of what you are selling or promoting, keep the content relevant and relatively short. Do you like wading through 10 screens of hype just to find out what the product is and what it costs? Chances are, neither do your site visitors.
Instead of huge multi-screen ads or hype, keep your content short, eye-catching, and relevant. If you want to elaborate on certain points, offer links in the text that will allow the visitor to view the information if they wish.
If you are using testimonials, put them on a sidebar so they won’t distract from the content of your ad. If the testimonial is lengthy, use just a few pointed lines from it, and offer a link to “read the full testimonial” underneath the lines.
Look at the web site page from the point of view of the consumer. If it doesn’t appeal to you, why would it appeal to your potential customer?
Make sure you have a place on the page where the user can click to purchase the item! This seems like it should go without needing to be said, but far too many ads have the purchase link buried in too much ad copy.
One of the worst ads I have personally seen had decent product info, but it was displayed on an extremely lengthy page. After reading the copy, I was quite interested in the book, but instead of a link to purchase at the end of the ad, all that was offered was a box requesting my name and email. Not only did the person fail to make a sale, I was so annoyed with the tactic that I refuse to even look at any more ads from them.
Keep watching for Part V, “Domain Names.”