Affiliate Marketing General

Your cookie would replace the old one.

sup guys, I posted in a couple affiliate marketing threads in the past. I currently generate 35-50k profit monthly doing mobile advertisements. Anything from promoting new apps or generating leads.

As for my tips, best to read up and spy on competition. Most of the landing pages I used are from other people that made them, I have one outsourced designer that creates different variations to split test. I started in late 2014, was very tough to start off as I had no idea wth I was doing and where to start. Started going to conferences around the globe and networking with top affiliate marketers. Key is to network as much as you can and never give up.

> Anything from promoting new apps or generating leads.
Please elaborate.
Also, how do you do split testing (AB TESTING) online? Got any tools?

Made this and it looks like I had a little luck and after a year my site makes over $100 with Amazon in a month. I know it's beermoney but at least it's something. The truth is that I haven't posted new content on it for months now... if only I wouldn't be so lazy.

Ok, this post motivated me.. I'll work on it tomorrow! And I'll post to social media daily again! Thanks!

So happy to here that! Try to motivate yourself to make a couple articles a week and it'll help your website's overall Google rankings. They don't have to be anything special, hell, they could even just be an article meant to cross promote another article. Just make sure the title and SEO settings are set to hot keywords and you'll see a steady boost in impressions/clicks.

Awesome, thanks!

Hey man! I remember you from the old thread, really appreciate everything you've shared.

A few questions if you have time:

1. Are you mostly on pop traffic or do you run banners/FB/native?

2. What level did you reach before attending a conference? I mean like monthly revenue, is it worthwhile for a complete newbie to attend AWA/AWE or an affiliate summit?

3. I'm currently on STM(pinkcat if you remember) and running a follow-along. What can I do to learn the ropes quickly and get the most out of that experience?

4. When first starting it seems best to target tier 2/3 geos. But these all have different languages which can be costly to translate. How did you initially start testing offers when you were a newbie? Did you translate into 5-10 languages, or did you just stick to a few geos and run many landers?

The toughest part when starting is facing the fact that you know nothing. And it seems like once you reach a certain level you just kinda "get it" and you learn how to test/optimize offers properly. That's how you can do $30-50k monthly consistently because you have the skillset down pat.

And that's where most of my frustration comes from, I just want to "get it" so bad and I'm really putting in the time. Your posts in the previous thread were very insightful and got me started on the right track.

Again really appreciate your time affilanon & if there's anything else you specifically think a newbie should understand I'd value anything you have to say.

Anyone seriously interested in paid traffic should listen to this user If anyone has questions about SEO/website-based affiliate marketing I'll try my best to answer. But I'm glad to see more discussion on this topic.

I'll be sure to bump this thread so it doesn't die too quickly.

With paid traffic it all runs through a tracker. Most newbies use Voluum but there's also AdsBridge, Thrive, CPVLab, and Prosper(although i think that's changed a bit)

Split testing on the web is a bit different. You need to hook that up into a SaaS platform or a custom A/B testing suite like Optimizely.

The goal of both is to test the difference between page(s) and see which perform better.

If my niche search results first page and first 5 results contains amazon, wikipedia and manufacturer for a product I try to push on my site, can I compete with them with SEO?

Generally speaking, yes you can compete with that. Amazon, Quora, Blogspot, and/or forum threads are all easy to outrank even without backlinks.

Wikipedia is another story. It depends on the quality of the Wiki article & how many links it has. For example when I Google "beirut" the first result is Wikipedia, and I do not think that's gonna change easily.

But for lesser-known search terms you definitely stand a chance. The surest way to know is studying backlinks in a tool like Ahrefs to see how old the page is & how many links it has. But if you can write longer/better content and laser-target your onpage SEO for those keyword(s) you can probably outrank the results you listed without needing links.