|
Questions that I regularly ask myself include: How high is the merchant’s conversion rate (approximately) Is the merchant well-known and enjoys a high level of trust among users? What type of tracking does the merchant offer (cookie tracking, session tracking, cookieless tracking)? How long is the average conversion time? This is particularly important in connection with the question of whether cookies are used. How big is the average shopping cart? Which merchant do the top SEO affiliates involve.
How trustworthy is the merchant towards affiliates? Is there a direct affiliate program without a India Car Owner Phone Number List network? Are sales tracked properly? Make test orders! Which networks is the merchant registered with? What advertising materials does the merchant provide? Which of these are high in conversion? Do you notice that affiliate marketing is important to the merchant or is it just a channel that was opened in 2001 and still has the same advertising materials? How quickly does the merchant respond to questions? How dynamically does the merchant react to suggestions and new ideas? How many sales are canceled, when are they canceled and is the cancellation rate realistic.

These are just a few questions and most merchants screen themselves out. Third rule: Build conversion-oriented websites Your site needs to encourage people to click on advertising materials. This doesn't work by integrating a banner into your website! Provides an overview of various offers and highlights the best of them. You need the trust of the user. Ideally, they click on the advertising material and then immediately click on the “Buy” button because they have already learned everything they need to know on your site. He must already have an intention to purchase, the more specific the better.
|
|