opinion

Social Marketing - Changing Times

Marketing an adult affiliate program has always had an element of smoke and mirrors about it. We are, after all, in the entertainment industry and affiliate programs have acted much like entertainers. Chasing each other to put on the biggest and baddest show for their audience. The highest payouts, the most elaborate bonus offers, the most attention grabbing reps. It all worked too. It is what got affiliates through the door for the better part of a decade. Which is precisely why all the flash became expectant rather than exception. It is how the West was won but, if we look around now, where did it get us?

It is no great secret that the affiliate marketing model is suffering. The information super highway is littered with affiliate program ghost towns. Program collapses and consolidations have made it increasingly difficult for affiliates to spot the thriving affiliate programs. They do exist and there are still great profits to be had in the relationship between affiliate and affiliate program. However, the time has come for affiliate programs to focus less on the flashy antics and more on ensuring the basics of their program are sound.

Making sure your program looks alive is one of the most important aspects of marketing to a modern affiliate base.

Adult affiliate programs that have managed to keep themselves healthy face the challenge of marketing to an increasingly cynical affiliate base. Old school webmasters remember all too well the early days when risking not getting even your first check was an inherent risk of promoting any affiliate program. With the exception of high profile processor collapses, that was much less of an issue for several years but as programs disappear non-payment is becoming an issue again. Understandably, it has put affiliates on edge. They are becoming skilled at spotting tell tale signs of program decay and pulling out of promotions accordingly. Making sure your program looks alive is one of the most important aspects of marketing to a modern affiliate base.

Start with one of the most basic, yet most overlooked, concepts and have solid and dependable contact information on both the inside and the outside of the affiliate program. As both an affiliate and an affiliate manager looking to do business to business deals, this has become one of my biggest frustrations. Somehow, it has become all too commonplace to not even have an email address on a program tour let alone a phone number or an instant messenger contact.

It isn’t just enough to have contact information on the page either. Make sure all the communication methods you have on your program site are monitored. More than one affiliate program has lost me as a potential affiliate because they never replied to my pre-signup questions and even more have lost out on getting business from me as an affiliate manger because there was simply no way to get in contact with them.

As daunting of a process as it may feel, now is also the time to take a real audit of your affiliate area. Does it serve the needs of your modern day affiliates? Many programs have spent years in a cycle of creating and adding new promotional materials to their affiliate areas. Fewer, have spent the time to go back and cleanup out of date materials. Nobody needs your 2002 Christmas banners for promotion now. If your promo materials look old get rid of them and get new ones. Keeping them around doesn’t make you look established as much as it makes you look like you aren’t maintaining your program.

If your affiliate program has a program news feed on it, make sure it is updated regularly. Going to a program and seeing that the last update to such a feed was months or even years ago is one of the reddest of red flags to an affiliate looking for signs your program is in danger.

Similarly, it is great that your program has been nominated for industry awards but those ‘2009 nominee’ badges need to come down unless you are adding a button for each subsequent year beside it. Just one distant year on its own makes me wonder what happened to you the following years. Either you weren’t nominated or nobody is paying enough attention to the appearance of your program to add the buttons from recent years. It is much better to not have buttons and update feeds at all than to have negligence counteract your marketing efforts by making your program look stale.

The actual mechanics of running an affiliate program may not be the glamorous end of the industry. However, committing to taking even small steps to consistently maintain the appearance of an active program can be one of the most effective marketing investments a company can make today.

Sarah Jayne Anderson is HustlerCash.com’s affiliate manager.

Related:  

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

profile

WIA Profile: Samantha Beatrice

Beatrice credits the sex positivity of Montreal for ultimately inspiring her to pursue work in adult entertainment. She had many friends working in the industry, from sex workers to production teams, so it felt like a natural fit and offered an opportunity to apply her marketing and social media savvy to support people she truly believes in and wants to see succeed.

Women In Adult ·
opinion

Understanding the Latest Server Processors

Over the last decade, we mostly stopped talking about CPU performance. Recently, however, there has been a seismic and exciting change in the CPU landscape, due to innovation by a chip company called Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

Brad Mitchell ·
opinion

User Choice, Privacy and the Importance of Education in AV

As we discussed last month, age verification in the adult sector is critical to ensuring legal compliance with ever-evolving regulations, safeguarding minors from inappropriate content and protecting the privacy of adults wishing to view adult content.

Gavin Worrall ·
opinion

Maintaining Payment Processing Compliance When the Goalpost Keeps Moving

VIRP is the new four-letter word everyone loves to hate. The Visa Integrity Risk Program went into effect last year, and affects several business types — including MCC 5967, which covers adult and anything else with nudity, and MCC 7273, dating services that don’t allow nudity.

Jonathan Corona ·
opinion

Making the Most of Your Sales Opportunities

The compliance road has been full of twists and turns this year. For many, it’s been a companywide effort just to make it across that finish line. Hopefully, most of us can now return our attention to some important things we’ve left on the back burner for months — like driving revenue.

Cathy Beardsley ·
profile

YourPaysitePartner Marks 25-Year Anniversary Amid Indie Content Renaissance

For 25 years, YourPaysitePartner has teamed up with stars and entrepreneurial brands to bring their one-stop-shop adult content dreams to life — and given the indie paysite renaissance of the past few years, the company’s efforts have paid off in spades.

Alejandro Freixes ·
opinion

WIA Profile: B. Wilde

B. Wilde considers herself a strategic, creative, analytical and entertaining person by nature — all useful traits for a “marketing girlie,” a label she happily embraces.

Women In Adult ·
opinion

Proportionality in Age Verification

Ever-evolving age verification (AV) regulations make it critical for companies in the adult sector to ensure legal compliance while protecting the privacy of adults wishing to view adult content. In the past, however, adult sites implementing AV solutions have seen up to a 60% drop in traffic as a result.

Gavin Worrall ·
opinion

Goodbye to Noncompete Agreements in the US?

A noncompetition agreement, also known as a noncompete clause or covenant not to compete, is a contract between an employer and an employee, or between two companies.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

The Search for Perfection in Your Payments Page

There has been a lot of talk about changes to cross sales and checkout pages. You have likely noticed that acquirers are now actively pushing back on allowing merchants to offer a negative option, upsell or any cross sales on payment pages.

Cathy Beardsley ·
Show More