Ten tips for going global with your affiliate activity

If you’re considering taking your business international, our simple tips will cover how to make it work on a global scale with an affiliate marketing campaign.

Going global with your brand used to be an expensive exercise. Watching overseas e-commerce markets closely and assessing your product’s viability in a market you didn’t completely understand was challenging to say the least. Then there was the task of physically setting up offices in new countries and hiring local staff to get the job done.

Today, however, the landscape has changed. Consumers are becoming increasingly more comfortable with purchasing from overseas companies at the click of a button. Accenture and Ali research predicted that by this year, 900 million consumers would be making their purchases online from another country. This is great for brands who want to grow, but it also means an increase in competition. So is it worth it? The answer is yes, if you’ve calculated it into your strategy.

Reaching overseas customers is now easier than ever before and with a well-constructed affiliate marketing campaign, you can access audiences you may have never thought possible.

Why grow your affiliate marketing program overseas?

Most businesses wish to see further growth. The overseas market opens up the possibility of so many new consumers who are willing to spend with a company.

Affiliate networks such as ShareASale’s can connect advertisers with active and successful publishers worldwide who already know the buying behaviors of their audience and can demonstrate potential growth in certain countries. On the flip side, if by looking through your data you have already assessed the potential market size in a particular area, a network like ours can show you which advertisers are successful in these regions and can facilitate mutually beneficial partnerships.

It’s also been noted that international shoppers could be considered price-sensitive, searching for the best deal outside of their home region. This creates a great opportunity for competitive pricing or for the affiliates who run their campaigns on voucher sites.

In 2017, Pitney Bowes conducted a study which highlighted that not only did overseas purchasers have a 17% higher average order value (AOV), but they also had a far lower returns rate. This is presumably due to the difficulty of making an international return. Whatever the reason, this is valuable data for both advertisers and their publishers who can use this to tailor their campaigns for international markets.

How to grow your global affiliate activity

1. Assess what you already have

Taking a deeper look into where your online visitors are already coming from can assist in forming your overseas growth plans. When you look into your digital data you may find potential customers coming from a certain country, but not completing a purchase as you haven’t put the processes in place to help them follow through with their order. This kind of assessment and noticing the country-specific drop-offs can show you where you have huge potential for sales with a few simple changes.

2. Do your customer research

If you have a particular country in mind for growth, do prior research on your audience there. It sounds obvious, but this is something marketers often forget. Though there has been progression in the digital landscape and the world is quickly developing towards a globalized buying audience, there are still so many localized concepts that can create barriers to purchasing for overseas consumers. Not only do they have localized shopping behaviors, but cultural behaviors can also affect buying patterns.

For example, if you’re hoping to expand into China it’s important to consider the vitally important cultural values around luck: fish, the color red and the number eight are all considered incredibly lucky – but the number four, giving someone a book as a gift and even putting a black border around a photo are all thought to be bad luck omens.

Doing a thorough and refreshed target customer assessment is important when looking to go global with your affiliate activity. You’ll need to do this separately for each specific country or region, as everyone can’t be lumped into one area.

3. Localized trends and business development

Research what products and services are doing well in particular countries or regions. Keeping an eye on current trends in your own industry and in the wider market can help with your overall business development and your plans for future growth. Your business may have something that can already meet the needs of these regions, or you could consider developing something that would in the future.

4. Create locally focused content

If your publishers are pushing their audience to your website, having content that quite literally speaks their language when they get there can remove some of the final barriers to purchase. Google’s language translator often does this automatically, but there are other provisions you can make online that also affect this.

For example, having the cost of products convert to local currencies (or be explicitly clear what the dollar sign stands for) can help the buyer comprehend their final purchase cost. The spellings or phrasing used vary from country to country too, so using words that an overseas customer is more familiar with helps build trust and the vision of a truly global brand. There are also events that occur that vary from country to country that you could target new audiences with.

Localized events, whether these are national holidays or “shopping events,” are far easier to take advantage of in the current buying landscape. Some of these are well known now, such as the Black Friday sales, which traditionally began as the day after Thanksgiving in America, or “Singles Day,” the new Chinese bachelor shopping holiday.

It is incredibly challenging to have a website meet all customers’ needs globally, but understanding where a majority of buyers are coming from, you can make alterations to suit their buying behavior.

Speaking to your web developer about adding code to your website that shows different content depending on the IP address of the visitor could be a real advantage to establishing and growing your brand globally.

5. Minimize moving parts

Having one dedicated platform that can handle all aspects of your affiliate network, such as ShareASale, minimizes stress and confusion. Breaking into overseas markets alone can be complex, with many local considerations in place. But by using established publishers in these regions, the localization issues have often already been catered for.

6. Consider overseas logistics and compliance

Reaching out to an overseas market is all well and good, but if you’re producing a physical product in particular, you need to consider overseas logistics. Ask yourself if it’s feasible for you to deliver your product to a certain region and how that system will work over international borders.

There are varying legalities and costs that may not make these purchases possible, but if a large enough audience is looking for your product, delving into these logistics and legalities could end up being incredibly profitable for your business. Create a clear ordering, shipping and returns policy for each new area.

Compliance also applies to international privacy laws, particularly around data. Therefore, your digital presence should consider this too. There is a wealth of knowledge available online that discusses the GDPR, CCPA and other international data laws that are essential to understand if you wish to not have your digital efforts impacted or be shut down online.

7. Create face to face partnerships

This can be challenging when dealing with overseas publishers. However, it’s certainly something to keep in mind. If you are considering international travel and happen to be in countries your publishers reside in, a face to face meet up could exponentially strengthen their brand loyalty and their existing audience by association.

If you happen to have several publishers in a country you’ll be visiting, consider organizing an event to get everyone in the same room. This doesn’t have to be large or overcomplicated, even just inviting your affiliates for a coffee can show you value their work with you.

Obviously this isn’t always possible, but it’s something to keep in mind. Although not as personal as face-to-face meetings, hosting a video meeting with these publishers to get to know them and their brand better can also show the value of the partnership, and help you both work toward a common goal.

How to manage a global affiliate program

8. Find your focus

Once you have assessed your data and your potential for growth in certain areas, create a sense of focus. Attempting to spread yourself too far and too wide too quickly could mean spreading yourself thin and failing to harness the potential of these new markets. Select one or two new countries where you see the most possibility for growth, and focus your energy there.

9. The best international affiliate networks

The easiest way to do this is with a professional international affiliate network like the Awin US Group. There are many benefits to a network which understands all sorts of overseas data, as opposed to just localized markets. One major advantage is having access to a wide range of local currencies. This benefits you as the advertiser, and your publishers too. We can pay your affiliates in their local currency, as well as convert and track sales and click-throughs in local currency. It removes a level of complication for both parties, who are attempting to grasp their own data.

As previously mentioned, enabling network compliance for traffic and transactions is vital. Getting caught out for not meeting requirements in this space can be a costly exercise and unfortunately, merely pleading ignorance to the rules and regulations won’t get you out of trouble.

10. Talk to your affiliates

Once you’ve used a great network to connect with new overseas affiliates, connect with them and ask for feedback. What do they think their audience could need? This could be specialized web content, particular seasonal sales, visual branding that connects with the audience and much more. They know their audiences and their countries; don’t miss out on this valuable source of information by not opening the lines of communication.

Spreading your wings

Going global with your affiliate activity can be daunting, but with a plan in place and a dedicated affiliate network behind you, the process can be simplified to suit your business’s needs.

Don’t be afraid to ask lots of questions, either from other business owners who have spread their business internationally, from the publishers you’ve connected with or speak with our staff at ShareASale. The world is your oyster.

The post Ten tips for going global with your affiliate activity appeared first on ShareASale Blog.

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The Advertiser Wishlist: How Affiliates Can Get on their Agenda in Q3

It is one of few channels where you pay for genuine performance and with limited up front cost it compares favourably against more expensive advertising channels. 

E-commerce is also booming: eMarketer expects it to account for 27% of UK retail sales in 2020 and online sales in June grew 33% year-on-year, a 12 year high.

That makes it all the more important for affiliates to get on advertisers’ radar early. With key events like Back To School ongoing and the all important Q4 period on the horizon, publishers need to understand what advertisers have on their wishlist.

Thanks to our experience working with over 50 affiliate networks and 48,500 advertisers we’re in a good position to advise what retailers are really after this quarter. 

Transparency on your commerce content performance 

Transparency has always been important to advertisers, but it is even more so now. 

Advertisers need to be able to prove the value of their affiliate program, demonstrate the potential ROI of any commerce content partnerships and be sure that if they do have a limited budget, which is now the case for many, they’re spending it in the best way possible. 

Primarily that boils down to showing what success will look like: What results can they expect from a partnership, how good are your ecommerce KPIs like average order value and conversion rate, and fundamentally what outcomes you can deliver. 

They’ll also want to understand the audience and demographic. Audience can make all the difference to success: While one brand might perform well with young women and therefore target a lifestyle magazine like Cosmopolitan, another might want to target parents for which a brand like Mumsnet makes more sense. Increasingly in our experience advertisers want dedicated profiles of publishers to get a feel for the affiliates they’re going to partner with. 

What exposure they can expect

For advertisers, a key advantage of affiliate marketing is the exposure without up front payment. Your products can be in front of audiences predisposed towards purchasing and you only pay when sales actually take place. 

But different kinds of exposure are more valuable than others. So affiliates need to be clear about what advertisers can expect. 

For events like Back To School, timely pieces can make sense, as they’ll have instant impact and raise brand exposure immediately during that relevant period. 

Equally evergreen content can be advantageous too: It may not have the instant impact but lifetime value can be higher, which for brands means a longtail of sales that stretches on after initial sales events take place. In our own network evergreen commerce content articles continue to earn 20% of their first quarter revenue in every subsequent revenue, so this can be a more attractive option for advertisers. 

Ultimately, affiliates need to be clear on the exposure they can deliver and what content options they have at their disposal. Affiliates in our network have found providing dedicated content plans for how to scale has helped make them a priority for target advertisers. 

Look ahead to Black Friday and beyond 

While Q3 is important with timely opportunities like Back To School, Back To University and (in ordinary years) Summer Holidays, it makes sense to look ahead to Q4 too when approaching advertisers for partnerships. 

Black Friday and Q4 as a whole is the most impactful time of year for brands. A survey of our managed portfolio of UK merchants found 100% of them expect an increase in sales year-on-year in 2020. 

Inclusion in the content can make a huge difference for advertisers and receiving priority placement in the articles will also help to drive sales for them. So affiliates should expect to have those discussions with advertisers and be mindful of what seasonal opportunities they can offer. 

Consistent promotion 

Advertisers want to understand how their brands will be promoted. 

This can be sensitivities to the content their brand appears alongside – e.g. controversial subject matters – and it can also be understanding how much an appearance in content will advance their aims. 

For example, if they partner with a publisher, will an article be promoted on the homepage? Or will it feature in social feeds? Or in newsletters?

Ideally affiliates want to offer all of those options to advertisers when they talk about partnerships. Brands are naturally now more thoughtful about where they spend budget and will be looking for the best promotional bang for their buck. 

We also advise affiliates to have insights to share around content performance: Time of day to publish content for higher yield, whether articles focused on single brands or multiple merchants perform better, and what level of order values generates highest conversion rates are all things advertisers are interested in. 

Discretion

A major concern for advertisers in their programs is the discretion of affiliates. 

Promotional information from product launches, to exclusive offers, to forthcoming sales all need to be handled confidentially. 

Advertisers are understandably anxious that if they share that information, they don’t want it getting out before it is ready and are therefore keen to partner with affiliates who value the importance of discretion.

With that in mind, affiliates need to be sensitive and flexible to advertisers wishes, and be willing to work with them confidentially. In many cases, our advertisers’ promotional calendars are now shared under NDAs, so affiliates need to be open to that kind of cooperation if they really want to get on an advertisers’ agenda in Q3. It can be worth it though: 60% of our managed merchants would preview promotional information under NDAs.  

Conclusion

In sum, advertisers have a long wish list and are only inclined to be more demanding in light of the strains the pandemic has placed upon them.

However, there are key priorities which affiliates can understand and adapt to, in order to ensure fruitful partnerships in Q3. 

Above all advertisers want: 

  • Transparency on performance 
  • Exposure for their brand
  • Partners they can rely for Q3 and forward to Black Friday 
  • The longevity of partnership, rather than single event focus 
  • Consistent promotion 
  • And discretion in partnerships 

The post The Advertiser Wishlist: How Affiliates Can Get on their Agenda in Q3 appeared first on PerformanceIN.

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