GeekArm Organic Web Marketing Blog

27Sep/110

“Where to Buy” Widget for Manufacturers

This is a no brainer solution for manufacturers or brand names who publish online product info, but do not have ecommerce enabled on their web site(s).

Attention brands and/or manufacturers: Are you considering going direct-to-consumer with an ecommerce platform? If so AvantLink has an alternative option for you. Join AvantLink as an Affiliate, and through the use of their existing network functionality, you can partner with your retail vendors to drive customers their way...instead of competing with them!

Options include placing a "Where to Buy" widget on your site's product information pages that displays links to merchants who carry your products (as long as the merchant is offering their Affiliate program through AvantLink). Or you can use their Affiliate Link Encoder to automatically convert links you might already have to your retail vendors, to referral tracking and revenue generating links.

It's simple. Create brand loyalty by referring customers to your retail partners while increasing revenue. If your retail partners are not already part of the AvantLink Affiliate network, refer them and earn a commission for that as well. See the flyer below, and contact AvantLink if you would like more information.

Where to Buy Widget from AvantLink

5May/110

Affiliate Marketing 101 – Video

Wanted to feature a short "Intro to Affiliate Marketing" video that one of ours guys put together for the AvantLink YouTube channel. Nice work, Chad! That just about covers it for anyone who needs the 101 overview...

13Feb/101

Good vs. Bad Affiliate Traffic

Despite our rigorous authentication and acceptance processes for our Affiliate network, we periodically bust Affiliates who are sending bad traffic by various unethical tactics. Just the other day I wrote up some specifics on the Affiliate traffic fraud we find periodically. Well last week Scott was dealing with yet another scammer, and he gave us the same old song and dance when asked to disclose traffic driving methods. Apparently his "trade secrets" had been stolen before, so he wasn't about to explain his unorthodox traffic patterns, lack of any referring URLs, and not a single Affiliate link active on any of the sites configured within his account. So by failing to provide transparency, as per our terms of use for Affiliates, we said bye bye to him.

We know how to make an analysis of web traffic that makes it 99.9% probable that Affiliates are using CPV/PPV Networks to drive traffic, as in this case. We have the secret sauce, and the cheaters don't know what that is. And neither will anyone reading this article...

At any rate, during the vetting this individual didn't seem to understand what we meant by "bad traffic", so Scott spelled it out for him in an email. I thought it was worth posting here to help others understand what we believe to be Good vs. Bad traffic:

We would consider "good" traffic to be (but not limited to):

  1. Sites that visitors come to naturally or through search results, and then click through affiliate links to merchant sites.
  2. PPC bidding (not on trademarked terms and that follows our network level and merchant level terms and conditions) on search engines to drive traffic through affiliate links.
  3. Opt-in email campaigns (not SPAM) that drive traffic through affiliate links.

We consider "bad" traffic to be anything not covered by the above, including (but not limited to):

  1. The use of browser toolbar/add-ons that trigger content including affiliate links to users and as a result intercept the natural click stream of the user.
  2. Trademark-term PPC bidding and/or any PPC bidding that violates our network level or merchant level terms and conditions.
  3. Spamdexing, or any attempt to use black hat SEO methods to game the search engine results.