3 Affiliate Email Marketing Ideas
Email Marketing - Justin Premick - February 28th, 2008 - PermalinkJust got back from Affiliate Summit in Las Vegas.
It was a great event, from all of the affiliate marketers and AWeber users we met to the keynote by Jason Calacanis about the need for affiliates to create additional value for visitors instead of simply replicating company-provided sites and resources.
I didn’t hear as much talk as I’d like about how affiliates can more successfully market by email. So let’s talk about it here!
Affiliate Bloggers: Syndicate Your Content By Email and RSS
Do you use a blog to deliver content and promote products as an affiliate?
Just like with any other site, most visitors aren’t going to make a purchase on their first visit to your blog.
By syndicating your blog’s content by RSS, and also using our Blog Broadcast tool to convert RSS to email, you can drive repeat traffic from your audience.
This not only increases the chances of converting affiliate sales, it’s more cost-effective than driving new traffic through pay-per-click and other advertising.
Add Affiliate Promotions Within an Existing Campaign
You may find it appropriate within email campaigns for your own products/services to discuss other tools or services that you have found helpful.
Provided you have gained the trust of your subscribers and positioned yourself as an expert in your field, you may find them happy to purchase products that come with your “seal of approval,” particularly if you can clearly demonstrate to them how those products have helped you and others to solve a problem.
For more on this tactic, read this post at Yaro Starak’s blog.
Offer Bonuses to Email Subscribers
One challenge for affiliate marketers is that many consumers are thrifty. They’re always looking for the best deal, and this can make them hesitate if they’re not 100% sure that the product you’re recommending to them is not only right for them, but is offered at the best value.
So, many affiliates try to position their products/promotions as the best value by offering extra incentives to buy through them.
While you might not always be able to compete on price, you can offer other incentives like a rebate (ebates is an example of a company doing this) or perhaps a bonus, such as a report/ebook/whitepaper you’ve created, or some other content that you no reserve for buyers.
To tie this into your email marketing campaigns, reserve those extras so that only your active email subscribers are eligible.
What Else Do You Do?
What other tactics have you used to successfully market affiliate products via email?
This entry was posted on Thursday, February 28th, 2008 at 9:10 am and is filed under Email Marketing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a comment response, trackback from your own site, or permalink.

February 29th, 2008 at 9:40 am
I received this post by email. I noticed in the email it encourages the recipient to forward the message on to others.
However, doesn’t doing this run the risk of the forwarded recipient clicking the unsubscribe link and inadvertently removing the original recipient (who had no intention of unsubscribing) from your email list?
Also, any click or tracking data generated by the forwarded message will appear to have come from the original recipient. Correct?
February 29th, 2008 at 10:43 am
Hi Paul,
An inadvertent unsubscribe is a possible risk when forwarding an email, unless your subscriber removes that link when they forward the email.
In some cases I’ve seen companies that do this include a line that tells the subscriber to remove the unsubscribe link when forwarding. So far, I haven’t seen any evidence of people getting inadvertently removed from our list, though, so I’ve opted to leave such a warning out, so we can keep our footer short.
And as you state, click and open data can be affected by how people who are forwarded your emails respond to them.
In my view this isn’t a bad thing, though. If I’m on your list and I forward your email to someone else who opens/clicks, you’re still getting an increased response from "me" as a subscriber (since I’m the reason that other person was able to open/click).
March 2nd, 2008 at 2:50 am
I have seen other newsletter systems include a ‘tell a friend’ function,will aweber be developing this?
March 3rd, 2008 at 8:14 am
Hi Shara,
Due to the inherent spam risks associated with Tell a Friend forms, we do not have any plans to incorporate them into AWeber.
We recommend as an alternative that you place text in your emails encouraging people to forward the message to others.
More on Tell a Friend in our Knowledge Base.
March 3rd, 2008 at 2:18 pm
"We recommend as an alternative that you place text in your emails encouraging people to forward the message to others."
Do you have the special "forward" link our customers can use so the control panel can keep count of how many times it was forwarded, and the images can stay intact?
I read that "campaigner" has this feature.
March 3rd, 2008 at 5:12 pm
Jessica,
This is not a feature we currently offer. By Justin’s suggestion, we’re encouraging subscribers to forward the actual message they received exactly as they received it in their inbox.
March 4th, 2008 at 3:09 pm
You know what the best way to tell a friend is?
How about actually telling the friend? Tell them why AWeber doesn’t give free trials. Show them all the cool stuff you can do with AWeber
I am not the greatest affiliate myself…
I’ve done a couple things that seem to work
1.) I made a video explaining why I chose AWeber.
http://mbcarterbooks.com/recommended/AWeber/aweber.avi
Realize that I am selling eBooks and things…but I think that the theme is pretty universal
2.) In every newsletter…right at the bottom I put this
Newsletters From MBCarterBooks Powered By:
http://www.MBCarterBooks.com/recommended/AWeber
3.) I get asked all the time…."how do you make that fly in ad" or "what do you use for your newsletter" ect. and I just talk about AWeber and give them my link
Pretty basic stuff…but I thought I would share
March 4th, 2008 at 3:43 pm
Matt,
Great ideas!
The "Powered By" linking is especially smart - taglines like that help spread the word about products subtly (Hotmail’s growth in the mid-1990s is perhaps the best example of this).
One thing you might consider: putting your video on a site like YouTube. That’s a pretty big video file that might be easier for users to watch via Flash.
March 5th, 2008 at 1:05 am
I have been messing around with a flash version but I can’t get it to work for Mozilla. (and I won’t spend the money on Camtasia right now)
YouTube I didn’t think of…very nice idea to at least offer an alternate link…thanks!
March 7th, 2008 at 11:18 pm
Thanks, Matt. I love the "Powered By" idea. Consider it stolen!
I think I’ll test and see if I can use it, like a tagline, at the bottom of every email. And I’ll test some variations on it.
Diggin’ it. Thanks
March 14th, 2008 at 1:54 pm
[…] Andrew asked me to join him on his podcast to discuss AWeber and more affiliate email marketing ideas. […]
April 4th, 2008 at 1:03 pm
Just thought I’d post a link to The Email Marketing Kit over at SitePoint for people who are new to Email marketing. It’s a great resource and I highly recommend checking it out if you’re serious about using email as an effective marketing tool.
http://www.sitepoint.com/launch/c6ac756/3/84