People have all kinds of questions about beginning their own affiliate program and it’s always a good idea to be prepared. Beginning and handling your own affiliate program isn’t something that can be done on the fly. It takes cautiously preparation and planning, but the results are well worth it. Here are 3 commonly asked questions:
Question 1: How much commission should I offer in my affiliate program?
How much you offer will depend upon the amount you can afford, taking into consideration the lifetime value of a client, what your competition is doing and how attractive you are able to make your offer.
As a general statement, information products usually have a higher commission rate – often between 25-50% with the higher end being more common. Consumer products with lower profit margins can be as low as 5%, but don’t often go above 20%.
But what you charge should be based on your own unique business. Here are a few more things to help you come to a decision:
Occasionally it’s okay to pay a little more for a first-time customer who will buy from you over and over again.
All of the time see what your competition is offering. You don’t have to get into a commission war, just make sure to make your program very attractive through good conversion rates, unique and useful promotional tools and other attractions.
Question 2: What kind of affiliate tools should I provide to my affiliates?
The simplest answer is: Give them what they want.
Talk to your affiliates and see what they require to serve their unique audience needs, and wherever possible, provide it to them.
For hard-hitting promotions, you are able to craft email copy, conduct live teleseminars with content and sales pitch, special reports, etc.
For the content-starved webmaster (and there are plenty out there), give them things like articles, free ebooks and additional informational content.
The important thing is to listen to your affiliates and look on which tools convert best.
Question 3: Q: Can I have an affiliate program with a service-based business?
Sure you can. If you have a profit margin or a lifetime customer value that allows you to pay commissions, certainly.
If you have services available that are at a set price, it’s easy to automatise everything and run your program, just like a product-based one.
If you charge hourly or have to give project estimates, it’s a little tougher to automate completely.
Here are a few options:
- Have a script that can track who referred your potential client to you. Ex. Affiliate recommends your service through a tracking link. Potential client clicks the link, checks your website and fills out a form for more information. Your system tells you who referred the client and if they purchase your services, you can give the affiliate a commission.
- You could do it as a pay-per-lead opportunity where the affiliate is paid a smaller fee for every person that fills out the form for more information. This would be easy to automatise in most affiliate systems that can handle pay-per-lead transactions.
- Don’t want to go with a full-blown affiliate program? You can establish a client referral program where you simply allow your clients to recommend your service, in return for credit for services. When a new client comes to you, you ask where they heard about you and you add a credit to your referring client’s account
An affiliate force is an unbelievably powerful thing and when you consider you do not have to pay affiliates anything until they produce results for you, it’s one of the best deals going in Internet marketing today. Plan your program well and you will soon have your own active force of affiliates bringing you new customers every day.
Related posts:
- Affiliate Marketing is One of the Most efficient methods to Advertise your Business
- Affiliate Marketing Question-Is it Important to Cloak My Affiliate Link?
- Affiliate Marketing-Different Types Of It!
- 3 Ways To Boost Your Affiliate Commissions Overnight
- How to choose the right affiliate programs
Tags: affiliate management, Affiliate Marketing, affiliate programs, commission, Information products, tools

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