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Review of James Martell's Affiliate Marketer's Handbook
Copyright © 2005 Jerry Corners
I have a girlfriend and a job. I like my girlfriend a whole lot better
than my job and she feels the same way. One of the things we have been
doing for the past 6 months is talking about how cool it would be to
quit our jobs and do a full-time business on the Internet. Its all my
fault. I started this dreaming by telling her things like:
there’s has got to be a way to do it, we just need to find
out how.
Quite by accident I stumbled across James Martell’s Affiliate
Marketers Handbook — 2005 and I think I’ve got it.
I had only a vague understanding of affiliate as it applies to Internet
marketing and I did have some doubts at first. I confess to a case of
contempt-prior-to-investigation because when I first opened this e-book
I thought it was some kind of MLM nonsense. I don’t do MLM,
not even a little bit.
I can assure you that no where in this little how-to book on affiliate
marketing will you be asked to buy into something. There are no
meetings that you need to drag your friends to, quickly converting them
to distant acquaintances. No down line that you need to keep motivated
to create your income. And most importantly, no web space to sell to
soon-to-be former friends, no soap, no gummy bears.
For those wishing to get rich quick while sleeping, don’t
bother reading this book or this review. This is a method which can
provide income if you work at it. And if you work hard at it, a good
income. That is all James Martell claims and in my experience that is
what you can expect. So, after that reality check, lets drill down into
this little ebook to find out what it does say.
To begin with an overview of affiliated marketing, as presented in the
book, Amazon.com (a seller) pioneered the concept of offering a small
fee to any web site (an affiliate) who would place a link back to
Amazon of any product sold on the Amazon web site. It wasn’t
very much, maybe a nickel or so; the theory was that if you wanted to
discuss a book on your web site, you would like to get something for
telling your visitor where she could get that book. The business plan
caught on and pretty soon many sellers copied Amazon. Someone, probably
10 seconds after Amazon, realized they could get paid for becoming a
kind of boutique Internet marketer in which they created a web site
devoted to groupings of like products, all of which were sold by
affiliate sellers.
OK, so where’s the magic? Lets suppose you decide this is a
good idea and you decide to make a site selling gold socks. You go out
and find all the affiliate retailers who are willing to let you put
their logo for gold socks on your website and agree to pay you a dime
every time someone clicks on their link. If that’s all you
did, you’d be sitting around for a long time before anyone
knew you were there, much less people who were actually in the market
for gold socks. And you’d better not quit your day job just
yet. In James Martell’s Affiliate Marketers Handbook
— 2005, we are taught a better plan in 8 steps. This plan
works from carefully chosen products and works
“backwards”. Gold socks? — stupid idea.
Clothing boutique? — good idea. And that is the magic. Lets
drill down a little deeper and paraphrase these 8 steps to support our
discussion here.
Step 1 is about creating an organized infrastructure for yourself. You
may think you don’t need advice about organization and you
may be right. On the other hand, maybe you do. For example, a
username/password database to manage a large number of different
UN/PW’s is probably too basic for you, but for some of us,
the structure is welcomed. This may be a working definition of my ADD.
In any case a careful read of this step, following the directions
explicitly, just might save you some serious turmoil in the near
future. Having an expert help you lay down an organized infrastructure
based on what you will need in the future is priceless. Too, I like the
following philosophy from page 129:
Plus, do not set yourself up for failure by thinking you will get rich
overnight.
If you’re doing this part-time, while holding down a
full-time job, then it would be wise to set a realistic goal of,
let’s say, $500/month for your first site.
That amount is VERY realistic. And once achieved you can build from
there.
Step 2 was the first realization of my own back assward thinking about
Internet Marketing. See, I thought you get a product and then market
it. James’ program tells us to get marketable products first.
It does make a modicum of good sense. There is no point selling wadgets
if everyone is buying widgets. And if you must sell your beloved
wadgets, that’s OK too, just don’t plan on paying
the dental bill with the proceeds.
The rubber meets the road when it comes to finding out what people are
looking to buy on the Internet and which merchants offer good affiliate
programs. He details how to use Commission Junction (there are many
others) to define the best industries. Commission Junction (www.cj.com)
collects data on retailers who offer affiliate marketing programs.
Again, I was happy to get the detailed instructions on the effective
use of this humongous database. The process of deciding which retailers
have the best affiliate programs requires a few hours of careful
thought. But following directions here can save you a lot of time
later. About evaluating and comparing potential advertisers, he says:
Make note of their commission structure. Look at their home page.
How does it compare to others in the same category?
Is their affiliate join page user friendly? Or, does it employ a lot of
lawyer jargon and demonstrate an attitude of restriction in their
policy requirements?
Do they seem to appreciate their affiliates?
THAT’S the key as far as I’m concerned.
Step 3 makes me cringe just a little, as in why didn’t I
think of that. James claims there is a way to determine the most common
words that are searched in the major search engines. He further wants
us to use these most common keywords in our nascent web site, including
naming the site. He tells us how, in minute detail, of course. His
words:
And, this is because you will gain an AWESOME strategic advantage when
your domain name contains the most popular keywords for your industry,
-- especially since the advent of link popularity as a MAJOR search
engine ranking technique.
The idea is to be easily found by people who are trying to find you.
That is about getting ranked high on the search engines. I was
astounded to learn that www.wordtracker.com provides this keyword data
and in my perusal of their site, I found ideas coming to mind about how
to capitalize on this information. To stay focused, however, we are
reminded to always find keywords relating to the industry chosen in
step 2.
Step 4 covers the technicalities of web design using FrontPage
templates, a little on HTML coding, domain name registration, and web
hosting. These are topics I wish I had known when I first cracked my
book on Microsoft FrontPage 98 a few years ago. I say this because I
think James Martell does a great job of making a potentially confusing
area, especially for beginners, imminently simple.
I don’t care how you slice it, designing a web site is a
challenge. IMHO anybody who says otherwise is a wanker. There I got
that off my chest. But it can be made more difficult or more easy,
depending upon one’s attitude and willingness to learn and
take advice. And most importantly upon having a good source of
information. The biggest problem I have faced in this process is seeing
the forest for the trees. In my view James scores highest in this area.
After you get the latest update of FrontPage, buy a few templates, get
a keyword-based domain name and a hosting service —
don’t worry, this is detailed quite nicely in the book
— you publish to the Internet, and that is a way cool
experience. Hells bells you’ll probably run back to your site
every morning for a week just to see it on the Net. I did and I love
it, though I confess it never seems to be perfect, but that’s
just me.
But I’m getting ahead of myself, not too uncommon in the web
design world. Before we get on the Net there are some critically
important steps to take. Just read on.
Step 5 is a detailed answer to the question: how do I get noticed on
Google (or Yahoo, or, or, or)? I decided when HTML first came out that
I did not want to learn it. I am so lazy that certain people routinely
to hold up a stick to tell if I am moving. I knew there would be a lot
of software that would do it for me and I was right this time. That is
what FrontPage does. This chapter is about manipulating HTML on your
web pages to make it very friendly to search engines. James is pretty
good about respecting this part of my intellectual indolence. James,
thanks.
That doesn’t mean I can afford to be a chicken about learning
how web pages are constructed. I am not a chicken.
This 76 page chapter is a behemoth and is pretty close to the nitty
gritty of what James has to offer. You will learn about Title tag, Page
description meta tags, Keyword meta tags, Alt tags, Headline #1 (H1),
and Headline #2 (H2), among other things. In this review I will not
detail these topics except to say the way they are presented makes this
potentially tedious process as easy as I have seen. And we like easy,
don’t we.
This is all for the purpose of being search engine friendly and having
your site migrate to the front of the search engines when putative
customers search on the well-researched keywords. For me this is the
money shot.
Step 6 gets you intimately involved in Commission Junction, where you
will sign up for some affiliate programs...well, let James tell you:
…you will have become a member of the Commission Junction
network as a publisher, downloaded, printed and studied their 57-page
Publisher Account Manager Guide, joined some of their most lucrative
affiliate programs, selected links from your chosen advertisers, copied
the HTML code for each into the appropriate Product page, embedded
protective shareware into your pages to protect them from
‘scumware’ (more on that later) and previewed all
Product pages to ensure merchant links are loading correctly.
This is serious business. You work hard, you get paid well. Every page
you read or create is an investment in yourself. You’ve made
it this far, so no doubt you have some heart and are very motivated to
make a decent living as an affiliate marketer. Let’s get to
the homestretch.
Step 7, in which we finally get to upload to the Net and submit to the
search engines, produces something you can show your girlfriend. (My
GF, it turns out, beat me to it. Only she didn’t run through
the house going whoopee, so I didn’t notice. Demure little
thing.)
We are directed to www.selfpromotion.com, a site that is donation-only
and very user friendly, to automate the submission of this web site, we
have so carefully created, to a bunch of search engines. The point is
we want to be seen by people who matter— customers who search
on the keywords we have cleverly embedded throughout our web site.
James has a lot to say about www.selfpromotion.com with its Tooter
tool. Thankfully, he covers some of the basics about pay-per-click
engines and other important but difficult to find information.
As usual the detail that James provides is gratifying. For example
www.hitslink.com, a low cost multifunction hit counter for your site is
a gem and provides quite a lot of information about your site visitors.
Step 8 has some final touches that serve to increase our Google (and
others) standing considerably. I believe him when he says this is
inside information and I won’t go into detail here. Its about
ranking by popularity and some relatively simple things we can do to
make this whole thing come together so we are looking very
professional.
Since my writing is getting smaller and smaller, I must be at the end
of the page, so let’s finish this up and go home.
As I have worked through the tutorial, and at the same time shared it
with you in this review, you may wonder if this is a really easy
business. I don’t think so. It takes quite a lot of time to
wade through the material and, at least for me there is a fairly steep
learning curve. I have been assiduously reading about affiliate
marketing lately and man, the field is crowded, both with some honest
business people — I consider James in this category
— and with some dunderhead hucksters who have flashy
blinking-light web sites selling get rich (wealth is a common term
here) yesterday schemes. I find that crap sickening and always wonder
who is gullible enough to go for their pitch. So, sorting the wheat
from the chaff is an ongoing challenge. I’ve read some things
from payola analysts who would swear the pope is a Jew if the price is
right, who try to tell you how successful you can be if only you follow
the masters plan for financial salvation. (Projectile vomit here.)
When I view this as a job, albeit one my girlfriend and I can do
together at home, but still a job, I do get a little warm and fuzzy. I
guess its something about working in my underwear and only going out to
shop and party or ride my bicycle or stare at daisies in the park. But
lets not fool one another by claiming there is something automatic
about this. A lot of people want to make a buck in their underwear and,
like you too, bubba, I am no supermodel and make sure I am fully
dressed when a camera is within about ½ mile. That means
there is competition and that means that though I can take a nap when I
feel like it, I had better make plans to work to stay ahead of the
wolves. This brings me to a final point about my little friend, James
Martell’s ebook.
He evidently started this business giving work shops in 2001. We all
know what a changing behemoth the Internet is — think build a
50 story building on the shifting sands of the Sahara — and
by god keeping current is a problem. His solution is pretty cool, I
think. James Martell’s Affiliate Buzz is a 30 minute audio
thing you can listen to periodically for $10 per month. He
ain’t getting rich here, likely this fee just about covers
expenses in creating the thing, but it is worthwhile because getting
updated information about the ever-shifting sands of affiliate
marketing is no mean feat even for the jaded professionals among us.
Do you want to create a web site that is built around key words and
sells things that people want to buy on the Internet? Do you want to
have an ear plastered to the warm, shifting sand of the Internet in one
of the few successful business plans to emerge about how to do Internet
marketing? Do you want to stay home to fight with the kids and see
first hand what a deserted place the park is on Wednesday afternoon
with no particular time that you have to pedal on home? Would you like
to see your PayPal account go up more than down? If so, then James
Martell’s Affiliate Marketers Handbook — 2005 is a
damn good place to start and worth every nickel you pay to get your
sweaty eyeballs on this little ebook. IMHO.
Visit: work-at-home-net-guides
About Jerry Corners:
Jerry lives in Kyoto, Japan with his fiancée, Kumiko, whom
he claims is both more intelligent and certainly more demure than he.
He works as a teacher at a Japanese teaching hospital and writer/editor
of technical writing. He is co-author of several medical papers and has
edited a whole slew of journal articles for Japanese writers and
students of all kinds.
About James Martell's Affiliate Marketer's Handbook:
James Martell's Affiliate Marketer's Handbook - James
Martell is a master affiliate marketer and his book teaches you the 8
step process required to build a profitable website and make money from
affiliate programs.
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