September 16, 2010 @ 12:34 pm - posted by HCJimG

Cason Van Langen gives the Health Converter team the inside scoop on their latest merger.

September 15, 2010 @ 12:31 pm - posted by HCJimG

Our next interview we spoke to Rick Del Rio of Limelight CRM regarding his direct response marketing crm. Our team has taken an indepth look at the Limelight CRM and highly recommend the system. It makes creating, tracking and fulfilling campaigns a breeze and is compatible with many third party vendors. Rick is also a veteran publisher and gives his clients great tips and tricks to maximize their campaigns.

September 9, 2010 @ 1:28 pm - posted by Josh Todd

Every once in a while a tool comes along that revolutionizes the way you do business. Prosper202 did that for PPC users when it hit the scene.

PPV marketers (including myself) have been using P202 for a long time because there wasn’t anything better made just for us. Now there is. It’s called CPV Lab, and it has just been publicly released by a good friend of mine, Robert Matthew.

See what the hype is about, watch the video now!

I have been using CPV Lab on my personal campaigns, and it has literally blown my mind. It can do so many things that I’ve always wanted my tracking software to do. For example, with P202, there was no way to split test a landing page versus a direct linked campaign. They were 2 separate campaign types. In CPV lab, you can split test multiple LP’s against multiple direct link offers at the same time. And you never have to update your link at the PPV network, so no more waiting for approval every time you make a change.

That’s just one example of what this thing does, but really there is too much to list here. Just watch the video and see for yourself!

To be honest, I’m kinda bummed that he is releasing this product to the public. If I had created it, I definitely would be keeping it to myself. It’s just a completely unfair advantage against the competition…

This is no guru BS program, this is a tool created by a PPV marketer for PPV marketers. Don’t get left behind.

September 7, 2010 @ 12:32 pm - posted by HCJimG

We took a few moments to interview one of the HasOffers’ twin brother founders: Lucas Brown on their affiliate network software. HasOffers has a low cost to entry and allows networks and even individual companies to effectively run their own affiliate programs. Lucas talks about how and why they formed HasOffers and were they are heading in the near future.

September 3, 2010 @ 10:31 am - posted by HCJimG

(Illustrations courtesy of Louis Gray and Jeannine Schafer)

The FTC revised its guidelines regarding truth in advertising practices. Specifically targeting Internet Marketers and social media. The main focus of the revised guidelines are on stating your relationship with the product/advertiser and not using any deceptive marketing practices.

The FTC wants bloggers to disclose the relationship with the product they are promoting on each entry. One broad disclaimer is not enough in their eyes – whether it is in your terms and conditions, on a FTC Disclosures link on the home page (or all your pages).

This even applies to tweets and facebook status updates. The FTC recommends using hash tags on twitter for example: #ad or #paidreview. Even videos, such as those posted on youtube channels, must also adhere to the same disclosures.

While the FTC will not likely go after individual affiliates, it is putting the burden of regulating affiliates on the advertisers and networks. Most advertisers and offers have stipulations that you can not use fake testimonials and must follow applicable laws, however until now they haven’t really been monitored or enforced by most companies. The new FTC focus will force advertisers and networks to more closely monitor affiliates and stop any questionable marketing tactics.

Here is a FAQ the FTC put together regarding the new guidelines:

http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/business/adv/bus71.shtm

@ 9:30 am - posted by HCJimG

The Health Converter team interviewed Wes Mahler of Tracking202. In addition to giving insight on the free open source conversion tracking software, Wes provided some clever tips on how to be successful and target your marketing.

August 31, 2010 @ 1:14 pm - posted by RainMaker

In his last post, Calculating Success – Figuring out ROI’s – Part 1 we covered a couple of things.

  1. Established a click cost as our basis for figuring out profitability
  2. Discussed the formula involved in calculating a EPC.

Now that we have an EPC we’re going to move on to figuring out how to get a CPC from a CPM cost. We know that CPM is the cost per 1000 people that see your ad. Typical CPM rates can range from 10 cents to 10-20$ CPM. Just depends on the site and how they value their traffic.

In order to do this we need to get things in terms of clicks. To get things in terms of clicks we need to add another metric and that’s CTR. As discussed in the previous post CTR stands for Click Thru Rate. This is the % of people that click on an ad. Pretty simple right? I get asked a lot what a good CTR is. Of course there is about 100 factors that go into making that determination like placement on the page, how focused the site is to the ad, etc etc. If I’m just doing a Run of Network buy I typically like to get a .1-.2% at a minimum.

Read The Full Article Here

@ 1:06 pm - posted by RainMaker

Remember those word problems we used to have in school and how much you hated them?

If you’re in marketing whether that’s affiliate marketing or offline marketing, you’re involved in one big word problem all day long.  Lots of algebra and figuring out what the numbers need to be to make things work. I know most of you just throw campaigns up and see what happens with some basic targets to hit. But what if you had a good idea  before you started. You can test how different things would tweak your profitability. Have you ever done the math on a 10% conversion rate improvement? Or what about a 5% ctr improvement on one of you ads? How does that effect profitability?

In this series of posts I’m going to talk about the formula’s we use to figure out the math of marketing. I know it’s not something fun to most but it’s really interesting to see what little improvements can do in every step of the process. I’m coding up some calculators which I hope I’ll have done by the end of the weekend. Then you can just plug in your metrics and come up with some insightful answers without doing all this math.

Terms we’ll be working with:

  • Impressions = Number of times your add is shown
  • Click = vistor to your website
  • CPM = Cost per thousand impressions
  • CTR = Click Thru Rate, how many people click through and and or page
  • CPC = Cost per Click, how much you pay for each click
  • Conversion = takes some action like buying something, generating a lead. Basically something you make money one.
  • Conversion Rate = the percentage of people that come to a particular offer that turn into conversion
  • Payout = value of the conversion. I’m an internet marketer so payout is my lingo.
  • EPC = Earnings Per Click, how much you make for each click that comes to the offer page

I know for our advanced readers you already know all that crap but we have all types here. :)

Read The Full Article Here

August 26, 2010 @ 12:26 pm - posted by HCJimG

The Health Converter team made a big splash at the Affiliate Summit East this year and leveraged our relationships with industry insiders to give you some tips and news. In this first interview, Justin interviews Tom Cohn from Venable – the leading law firm for FTC compliance.  Tom gives advice to both advertisers, networks and affiliates on staying compliant. Affiliates should take heed as the FTC is now starting to look at blogs and review web sites.

August 24, 2010 @ 5:25 pm - posted by Josh Todd

I know what you are thinking. A measly 2% increase? What’s the point? Ask anybody that is making six figures a month with Affiliate Marketing if they’d like an extra 2%. Of course they would! That’s an extra $2,000 in their pocket every month. Sometimes in life it’s the little things that add up.

wordplay

Read more at Josh Todd’s blog InsideAffiliate