How to Work with Content Sites in Affiliate Marketing

Content partnerships have continued to increase in popularity year over year within affiliate marketing, yet the factors that go into a partner’s decision to work with a brand remain vague to many marketers. Some factors such as brand awareness and consumer reviews might be common knowledge, while aspects like commission thresholds and promotional calendars may not be as obvious. In this piece, we detail the factors that must be considered, and partners to work with throughout the funnel, for marketers to find success through content partnerships.

How can I prepare my brand to work with content sites?

Brand awareness and size

Generally speaking, content sites are looking to work with brands that have established their marketing touchpoints and have built a recognisable brand through the use of those touchpoints. The marketing rule of seven touchpoints to conversion continues to reign as king, meaning if a brand has existing digital content that is driving consumers through the buyers’ funnel, content sites are more likely to agree to a partnership. This is important because it increases the probability of a consumer landing on the content partner’s article. To ensure a content partnership fits seamlessly within the conversion funnel, marketers may provide the partner with a promotion to include within the article, enticing the consumer to continue moving towards a purchase.

Promotions

If a marketer is new to the affiliate marketing space and doesn’t offer promotions to partners, the likelihood of content sites wanting to write about that brand become slim to none. Content sites need a call to action, and promotions or discounts typically prove to be the best at converting. Therefore, it is highly recommended that brands who are interested in working with content sites provide promotions to offer their readers. In doing so, it draws in greater traffic for the  partner, attracts the consumer, and helps to drive a higher ROI for the marketer.

Commission thresholds

When looking to onboard content partners, marketers should anticipate the need for flexibility with their commission rates, both on a Cost per Action (CPA) and revshare model. As a general rule of thumb, content sites typically request higher commission rates than mid and lower-funnel partners; this is largely due to the fact that upper-funnel partners are less likely to receive last-click attribution, so a higher commission compensates for potentially not being paid out on the sale, in addition to the level of effort that goes into writing specific branded content. If a brand is not willing to be flexible with commission thresholds, content sites will likely go elsewhere. 

Consumer reviews

Content sites will often consider a brand’s online presence and consumer reviews prior to considering a partnership. Sources such as Trustpilot and Better Business Bureau are crucial to the health of a brand’s online reviews; if sites such as these are touting negative reviews of a brand, content sites will usually avoid that partnership. However, even if a brand’s reviews aren’t exactly stellar, that doesn’t mean that all hope is lost. 

If a brand is new to the space or needs to boost existing ratings, partnering with review sites like Trustpilot and others can work with brands to create a strategy to increase their ratings. Doing well by consumers generally drives ratings to be positive but it’s imperative for brands to be proactive when it comes to reviews. By establishing regular outreach to consumers post-purchase, brands have the opportunity to catch and remedy poor user experiences before they become negative reviews. 

Content calendar

Promotional or content calendars are a great way for marketers to entice content partners to write about their brand. By providing the partner with something fresh and newsworthy to write about up-front, marketers remove an extra layer of work for the partner, giving them a leg up on competitors who may not have prepared as thoroughly. Whether it’s a new collaboration, an exciting product launch, or seasonal promotions, content partners appreciate this level of visibility and being able to plan their editorial calendars accordingly. 

Why content partnerships are only a piece of a successful marketing strategy

Content partners largely serve the purpose of increasing brand awareness and driving consumers into the buyer’s funnel because traditional affiliate programs typically run on a last-click attribution model. However, depending on a marketer’s goals, there are additional attribution models that can be implemented to partner more heavily with content sites. If a marketer is solely working with content partners on a last-click model, the likelihood of their consumers converting is exponentially lower than a marketer who utilises a holistic approach to performance marketing. It’s a misconception of many marketers that working with content sites will lead directly to customer conversions.

Integrating a full-funnel strategy is essential to driving consumers to convert on a brand’s product or service. By employing mid and lower-funnel partners, such as coupon and loyalty sites, in addition to upper-funnel partners, consumers remain engaged throughout the entire buyers’ journey.

Upper-funnel partnerships like content sites are only the first step in creating a full-funnel performance strategy. By implementing a full-funnel strategy, marketers can put themselves and their affiliate programs in a much stronger position for success.

Looking to get involved with content partners? Reach out to Perform[cb] Agency now to get started!

The post How to Work with Content Sites in Affiliate Marketing appeared first on PerformanceIN.

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How Creative Can Improve Your Performance Marketing Campaign

As data and numbers people, performance marketers are constantly looking for ways to optimise their campaigns. In all of our analyses, we sometimes overlook one critical way to improve campaign performance: the creative.

Based on a decade of performance marketing experience, here are some of the creative-driven tactics which have enabled me and my teams to improve campaign performance:

Better/different product images

How many times have you re-edited texts and changed font colour and size for an ad while using the same image that you’ve been using for the last 24 months? Just because that image outperformed others two years ago, doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t refresh your product shot. Over time, images grow stale from overexposure and campaigns benefit from new and refreshed images. That’s why I recommend adding or refreshing product images regularly.

One image-related tactic which works well is adding seasonality to your product shots. Where relevant, include your product in holiday settings or winter or summer settings (though remember which hemisphere you’re targeting).

More creative

Beyond just changing your product images, I’ve seen better results by running performance marketing campaigns with different ad creatives. When you segment your marketing efforts to make each campaign more relevant, you’ll need different ad creatives to personalise the campaign for each segment. Recent research from Nielsen confirmed that ad creative is the most important advertising element with the greatest contribution to sales and more than double the second most important element, ad reach. Therefore, after spending resources to segment and target your campaigns, make sure you’re also using the best, most personalised creative for each segment.

More creative units and channels

Changing images to refresh a campaign is a great way to improve performance. As an effective best practice, add new creative units and channels. One channel which I recommend performance marketers consider is local marketing. From Local SEO to localised campaigns on social media, local channels are effective if you have an offline presence. This is also effective for products and services with specific locality demand.

Mobile video is a creative unit that is underutilised in performance marketing., 94% of marketers said the importance of mobile video has increased in the past few years, with 70% of marketers preferring mobile videos shorter than 15 seconds. With engagement migrating from desktop to mobile, actions which no one would have considered doing on a mobile phone a few years ago – like watching a movie – are happening with increased frequency on mobile phones. If you haven’t already, you should consider adding mobile video to your performance marketing mix.

Another channel that is becoming more important for performance marketers is retargeting. Retargeting enables performance marketers to re-engage with users who downloaded their app but didn’t proceed through the funnel OR have simply become dormant. Thanks to campaigns measuring incremental lift, retargeting technology can show exactly how profitable each retargeting campaign is, and by implementing retargeting as part of the user acquisition funnel, retargeting makes user acquisition more effective. 

Dynamic creative optimisation

A new technology which enables performance marketers, and particularly, retargeting, to be more successful is dynamic creative optimisation. Dynamic creative optimisation technology facilitates the creation of an ad in real-time based on multiple creative elements including headlines, images, ad copy, calls-to-action, based on the data received from the programmatic exchange. The dynamic ad will direct the user to the relevant place within the app based on that user’s intent in the funnel.

By offering users a relevant ad aligned with their intent, I’ve worked with a company called YouAppi and have generated much higher click to conversion rates while also improving Effective CPM.

Sometimes left-brain, analytical performance marketers overlook the creative side of the business, leaving it to their right-brain colleagues. Based on the results I’ve seen, both right and left brain performance marketers will benefit from the creative optimisation I’ve highlighted here.

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