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Some interesting bits…. and a broken toe March 8, 2010

Posted by journojack in Affiliate Marketing, Hyperlocal, Online marketing, Social media.
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From Gray's Anatomy.
Image via Wikipedia

At the weekend I managed to brake and dislocated my little toe on my size 11 left foot….. By walking into a door frame…..

Very frustrating as cannot move, had to cancel all my meetings and had to endure a terrible experience at the Kings College Hospital A&E.

Anyway as a result I’ve been able to find a few interesting bits to share:

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Leaving Affilinet and the world of affiliate marketing February 4, 2010

Posted by journojack in Affiliate Marketing, Blogs, News, Online marketing.
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Today is my final day working here at affilinet. It’s been a great three years and I wanted to thank all the friends I have made and people i have come into contact with.

I’m having a break for a little bit then looking to get back into the work of paid employment in the summer. I’m particularly interested in local media (after my work with Kingsroad.co.uk),  mobile, video or social media. The last three are all greowth markets in online currently I am keen to expand my knowledge base.

If you think their are opportunties then feel free to get in touch: jack.rutter@yahoo.co.uk

Image: Tim Beach / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Lead Generation – The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly October 30, 2009

Posted by journojack in Affiliate Marketing, Lead generation, Online marketing.
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Guest post by James Atherton, Search and Affiliates Manager from Online Media Agency Vizeum.

Whilst it never quite descends into the levels of violence seen throughout Ennio Morricone’s film, using the term ‘lead generation’ today in front of advertisers, agency workers or even your average Joe on the street can lead to questioning looks.

How has this happened? Too many times lead generation campaigns have pushed a huge volume of leads of questionable quality, leaving a bad taste in advertisers’ mouths that is only recently beginning to be turned around. Campaigns were based around heavily incentivised creative and featured on poor quality sites resulting in data that bore little or no relevance to the target demographics of the advertiser.

However, as so often happens in online advertising, the landscape has changed. Publishers are placing the emphasis on quality leads, achieved through transparency, accountability and technological developments. Leads can be dependent upon the fulfilment upon a number of criteria, whittling down the number of accepted leads to include only those of real value for the advertiser. Remnant inventory is also leveraged to enable leads to be captured from IASH accredited websites that fit with the target demographic – any incentive to opt in purely for a prize or free offer is also removed. For a mobile phone operator, the content could sit on an established technical review site, with criteria as follows (criteria of up to 20 questions in length is not uncommon):

Are you currently nearing the end of your contract: Yes

Would you be willing to consider a shift to a different operator/network: Yes

Postal/ZIP codes and email addresses are verified, phone numbers qualified by number of digits and names scanned for a set list of false identities – Mickey Mouse etc. Only after these criteria have been met will the lead then by cross-checked against the advertiser’s database in real time to determine if that contact is already in their system. Once the lead is verified, most publishers will then send a solus email to the confirmed lead, instantly targeting them at their warmest. Companies with the capacity to do so can also feed these leads directly through to their call centres, vastly increasing conversion rates for products with a high order value or long-term commitment.

Through the development of tracking technologies, the value of leads can also be made highly accountable – in a world where ROI is pushed increasingly to the fore, this is invaluable. To give an automotive example, an individual lead’s journey can be tracked from its inception through to a test drive, and then through to final sale. A cruise brochure sent as PDF can be tracked back to the booking of the actual cruise. What this allows is for the advertiser to see the actual ROI of the leads that are being generated, based upon the price of the lead itself, any additional efforts needed to complete the process through to final sale, and the value of the sale.

As an affirmation of the work that has been carried out by publishers to rebuild the reputation of lead generation, these changes have been reiterated by guiding voices such as the IAB, who in November 2008 launched a lead generation taskforce to educate advertisers on the benefits of the channel. The recent result of this is a series of white papers aiming at illustrating its benefits to the very marketers who have been questioning its value until so recently.

Despite all of this, those involved in lead generation cannot afford to become complacent – even now, just by Googling the term ‘lead generation’ you are greeted with a sea of companies offering their services, not all of whom seem to be of a sufficient quality to aid in the channel’s renaissance. By adhering to the core values that have seen lead generation move from a misconceived specialism to a regular presence on media plans, we can continue the move from ‘The Good, The Bad And The Ugly’ and move towards another Spaghetti Western, where we can all clutch ‘A Fistfull Of Dollars’.

Affiliate Window finally tell us what Darwin is! July 27, 2009

Posted by journojack in Affiliate Marketing.
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Charles Darwin
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After a very well run marketing campaign Affiliate Window have

told the world what their new Darwin products is. From early feedback I understand that they have tried to make their affiliate interface a bit more like a social network, meaning (in theory) that affiliates and advertisers can get in touch more effectively.

http://blog.affiliatewindow.com/?p=450

Feedback on the affiliates4u forum has been mixed so far, check it out:

http://www.affiliates4u.com/forums/affiliate-window/113387-darwin-5.html#post519259

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John Lewis stops using voucher codes June 30, 2009

Posted by journojack in Affiliate Marketing, Online marketing, Voucher Codes.
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According to the Affiliates4u Forum John Lewis have stopped using voucher codes affiliates. This is a blow to the affiliate community as the John Lewis affiliate program is one of the largest and best converting. Last year they decided to exclude affiliates that offered cashback from the program in order to uphold their tradition of treating all customers equally.

Both voucher code sites and cashback sites can provide up to 50% plus of sales volume for many online retailers’ affiliate program. Although some affiliates will be hit by this news it creates an opportunity for them to make up the commission they would have got from John Lewis with other retailers.

Affiliate and online marketing consultant Peter Anderson did a study of voucher code sites and found there to be well over 100. This growth is down to consumer demand and the fact that in times of financial pressure people have been using the internet as a place where they can find bargains. in many cases this has been at the expense of the High Street.

Robin Goad of Hitwise showed the increased use of these sites in a Hitwise blog in December last last year.

“A whole online sector has emerged to feed British consumers’ hunger for discount vouchers for everything from supermarket shopping and pizzas to discounts at high end department stores. One in every 200 visits to an online retail website now comes from voucher sites such as Hot UK Deals or My Voucher Codes, while ‘consumer revenge’ website MoneySavingExpert has become the first port of call for many consumers before heading out to the high street or shopping centre.

(Between 2007 and 2008) UK Internet searches for discount vouchers have increased by 133 per cent over the last 12 months, while visits to voucher websites have gone up by 45 per cent.”

This growth in the voucher code sector has also lead to some of the industries leading figure evangalising on television, for example Duncan Jennings of eConversionss, owner of vouchercodes.co.uk was on the BBC’s Working Lunch recently.

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