Monetizing Your Affiliate Footprints – Make Every Site Count

We spend so much time, as affiliates, searching for the recipe for success. I can count endless hours of optimizing campaigns and ditching the sites that don’t meet my ROI expectations.

I was taking a look at my stats package this evening. It bundles together site statistics for every single website that I have in my inventory. Except this time I wasn’t paying attention to the sites that are handling active PPC campaigns.

I decided to collaborate some traffic analytics from the various sites that I’ve stopped running PPC traffic to. I’ve gotta say, I was pretty surprised. I’ve been totally underestimating the ability for even the flimsiest of one page landers to accrue some natural long term search rankings over time.

My domain portfolio is way beyond what I ever imagined it would grow to. Three figures and counting. Most of them are shitty .info domains that I’ve snapped up in the past to test an offer. It helps to have an idea of what converts before committing to a long term project.

Anyway, just counting the hits from natural search listings – I was pretty surprised to find that I’m driving just under 30% of the traffic I’d usually buy in PPC on a daily basis. Admittedly a lot of the search terms are long tail non-converters that I wouldn’t waste a cent on if you held a gun to my balls.

That’s a lot of clicks that I’m getting for free every day. And as you’re probably aware, free traffic makes Baby Jesus smile.

So I checked back over my old sites and whilst laughing at how bad my sales copy used to be, I noticed something pretty alarming. A fair old number of these defunct landing pages are linking to offers that no longer exist.

It’s the way we work in the CPA world. An offer is here today and gone tomorrow. If you’re not switching your links, and your network isn’t redirecting your offers, your profits are gonna pull an Air France 447 real quickly. I consider myself to be pretty well trained when it comes to the affiliate marketing basics, but this is a blatant newbie mistake that I’ve since gone and corrected.

The thing is, I don’t WANT to have to go back and re-route my offers across xxx number of inactive sites. If I have to start spending my work day redirecting offers from all around the web, I’m going to end up wasting as much time as the average reader of this blog does on image searching for porn on Bing (Michael Arrington, where is the coverage?).

So anyway, going forward, I’m hosting all of my offer redirects on a single generic domain. Instead of having a separate subfolder redirect under every new site that I create, I’m going to point them all at one singular index.php.

By doing this, you can make one small change to one file – and it’ll sweep across your entire back catalogue of websites. So any freebie traffic that comes your way, you stand the best possible chance of converting. Don’t forget the golden rule of Internet Marketing as you grow your campaigns. Every site has to pay for itself.

Keep your neglected scambait in mind if you’re one of those guys who recycles domains per Google QS slap.

About the author

Finch
Finch

A 29 year old high school dropout (slash academic failure) who sold his soul to make money from the Internet. This blog follows the successes, fuck-ups and ball gags of my career in affiliate marketing.

7 Comments

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  • phrench is right… This isn’t a really good idea. Try something like this instead.

    Create the index.php file for all of your redirects on one of your domains, say finchsells.com/redirects/index.php

    Then on other domains include the file. SO create http://www.yoursite.com/offer.php . Inside offer.php

    This’ll give you access to it but still makes the link look more ‘natural’. Obviously you’ll need to pass parameters to the file and what not to know where to redirect too.

  • Haha… and again… Just put this inside php tags…

    include(‘https://finchsells.com/redirects/index.php’);

  • I had to ditch the one domain idea. I wasn’t so worried about SEO footprinting. The SEO value of the pages was already pretty horrific and they were mainly ranking on the URL itself.

    But I also ran in to difficulty with Prosper and external redirects. Don’t think it’s a match made in heaven.

    I might give the include method above a try, although it could throw up the same problem getting the bitch to track properly.

  • Hey finch – somewhat offtopic, but you mentioned using prosper. I have it on a vpn and running some traffic out there – not a ton but enough and have been seeing click discrepancies. Talked it over w/ another pretty high-volume guy using p202 also – he agreed it was probably our p202 & not the network. Just seeing if anyone else who doesn’t have it on dedi is having issues handling loads.

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