Recently in affiliate marketing Category
There must be some unhappy Amazon affiliates this week with the announcement of Amazon Giver and Grapevine. TechCrunch has the scoop. These two new facebook apps allow you to get an Amazon wishlist right on your Facebook profile page. They also allow you to get product recommendations and actually buy products without leaving Facebook.
My
initial thought was that this is a big bummer for the half a dozen or so other
apps that already link to amazon product pages (with a nice little affiliate
link). Competition from the big fish has gotta hurt the conversion rate. It
also makes you wonder how successful are these Facebook apps that try to monetize
by driving affiliate conversions? There are apps like visual bookshelf that are
actually useful. They provide a useful service that users actually want. In
Visual Bookshelf's case they let you see what your friends are reading. They also
provide a link to Amazon were you can buy your copy. Visual Bookshelf has over 29,000 active users today. Apparently someone likes the app, but are people buying books from it?
Amazon must think there is some
potential here, but as of today Grapevine and Giver
have 124 and 221 active users respectively. Granted the apps have been live for less than a week, but thats still not much of an adoption. Time will tell. Bill care to weigh in?
The setup:
PPC-"e-Retail" arbitrage
is using PPC search, such as Google AdWords, to drive traffic to an e-Retailer,
such as Amazon, for a particular product and earn revenue from an affiliate
commission. Essentially, this is very
basic affiliate marketing.
Here it is again, by steps:
- Pick a product you want to promote. Something between $100-$200 will work well. I'll use the example of the Rock Band video game for Playstation 3 ($169.99).
- Establish an affiliate relationship with an e-Retailer like Amazon. Commissions typically range between 4%-8% depending on volume. I'll use 6% as the market average.
- Go to your PPC Search provider of choice, create an ad, and select specific keywords to bid on. I'll use Google AdWords as an example.
Although this is one of the most basic forms of affiliate marketing, this is not an affiliate marketing "how-to" so I won't go into too much strategy or depth.
The ad will want to look like something like this:
$170 Rock Band for PS3
Rock Band Special Edition for PS3
Free Shipping from Amazon.
The ad will direct the visitor to the product page at Amazon.
In order to have our ad displayed, we have to bid on keywords--competing against others who want to display ads for the same keywords. So, you will want to bid on keywords like this: "buy rock band ps3, buy rock band bundle ps3, buy rock band se ps3". Very targeted, very specific keywords increase the likelihood of the visitor converting (buying the product).
Now run the ad. The key here is not volume, but highly targeted, motivated buyers. Typically a 5% conversion rate on Amazon is rather good. That means for every 20 people you send to Amazon from your ad, one of them will purchase the product.
Assuming these numbers will stay true and relatively constant, we can calculate the most we can pay-per-click (per visitor) in order to break-even:
- We know that our commission will be 6% of $169.99, which is about $10.20.
- We also know that typically 5% of the traffic we send to Amazon (if we are good) converts, meaning they purchase the product.
- So in order to break even, we can bid roughly 5% of our commission, $10.20, per click. Remember, we are competing for our ads to be displayed. So we can bid a max of $.51 to break even.
Now, if we want to make a profit we have to do one of three things:
- Improve our conversion rate
- Increase our commission
- Hope the visitor buys an additional product which is pure profit if we are bidding for break even.. This is not uncommon.
Now for the interesting, academic part:
When searching for specific products using very targeted keywords, you will notice that the ads displayed are almost always pointing to retailers. There are generally two types of people bidding on these keywords displaying these ads: (1) The Retailers, (2) Affiliate Marketers. The retailers generally have higher profit margins and can make higher bids, so they are generally in the high ad positions displayed.
Because the Internet is so efficient--many profit-seeking
firms, many price-taking consumers, and near perfect information--competition
over prices is increasing and consumers are more easily able to compare prices
across retailers. Professor John Morgan
at the Haas School of Business gathers and analyzes plenty of data on Internet Competitiveness
among retailers along with his colleagues.
You will find his Internet Competitiveness Index
an interesting insight and academic perspective on this topic. He can also provide you with data that I
cannot.
Also, because of this
competition, the ranges of prices among retailers are narrower. Borrowing Professor Morgan's definition from
his Price Range Index:
"The
Similarly, the Price Gap Index tracks the percentage difference in prices between the two lowest prices.
So then, the effects of this competition on affiliate
marketers in the situation described above are as follows:
- Most affiliates are competing at roughly the same commission rate for the same product price (because retailers are competing with each other and the price range and price gap are small). Thus, the range of commissions among affiliates is rather narrow and close to the average.
- The
affiliates are essentially only competing against each other (as well as
retailers posting ads) on bids for PPC search.
Thus, when there are competitive bidding markets for
keywords Marginal Revenue (the commission rate multiplied by the product price
multiplied by the conversion rate) equals Marginal Cost (the bid amount, or
what you are paying per click). In
competitive markets, like the ones described, average profit for the affiliates
will be zero. This is the same as the
break even analysis done earlier.
So to sum this up: You need to have a distinct advantage
over your competitors in order to profit.
This can mean having a higher commission rate, having better converting
ads, or finding ways to have the visitor buy more products.
One solution to all of this is to find a market that is not as competitive!