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Advertisers React to Commission Junction Link Management Initiative


by Jeff Molander
jeff-at-thoughtshapers.com

I’m excited to release a audio program and FULL transcripts (appearing below) as part of the ongoing Best Practices In Affiliate Marketing series. 

I’m very interested in making certain programs available for professional education purposes and will continue to do so on topics that are of critical importance.

What is Commission Junction’s Link Management Initiative all about? What does it mean for advertisers and publishers/affiliates?  Industry veteran advertisers discuss the situation as it unfolds.

“Anybody who thinks this isn’t a response to Google and the technology that Google offers to their advertiser base isn’t looking at this from a far enough perspective… Advertisers are in droves in Adwords spending billions... Adwords is making an assault on rich media, video now… you have to respond; if they don’t respond they’ve got 2 or 3 years left before their entire affiliate base migrates anyway.”
Jeff Nienaber
Allstar Directories

Affiliate manager Nate Griffin suggests affiliates have innovated in past and this is becoming more about who should control innovation—a critical part of affiliate marketing’s strength.

“There’s a lot of questions in my mind of weather or not it (this change) makes it closed to that innovation now and if CJ (itself) wants to control that innovation.”
Nate Griffin

Does CJ want to shake loose the low-value affiliates by frustrating them… thereby improving network quality?

“At the least it’s a fringe benefit… if it’s not the actual goal.”
Patrice Colancecco-Milligan

“They decided that this is what they want to do, and where they want to move, which I can understand them making that decision, I just think they did a lousy job of putting it out. It just seems they’re not affiliate centric, which to me is part of the game. You have to try to keep them halfway happy, or explain to them; they just put it out there like the affiliates have no say in what goes on, and that’s offensive to me.”
Chuck Hamrick
Backcountry.com (and all associated ecommerce sites)

Program Length: 37 minutes

Click PLAY button below to stream.

Download MP3 file here

PROGRAM GUIDE
00:00 Introductions of guests
02:23 Strategic shift for affiliate marketing?
04:00 Backcountry.com reacts to announcement (Hamrick)
06:41 Operational concerns: Affiliate categorization (Molander, Griffin, Colancecco)
10:08 Google vs. CJ (Nienaber)
10:19 CJ losing track of affiliate/publisher needs? (Hamrick)
12:02 CJ “holds all the cards” how will they use them? (Colancecco)
13:32 Advertisers or CJ - who gains from the change?
15:32 Advertiser being given illusion of power (Colancecco)
16:48 What might this mean tactically for advertisers? (Griffin)
18:35 Departure of CJ’s Todd Crawford (Hamrick)
19:57 A Valueclick mandated change driven by Google (Nienaber)
20:54 Is Google going to innovate around Adsense a la Japan’s Ichiba?
22:40 Subtext: Google, Yahoo, MSN competing direct for advertisers
23:10 Could CJ be handling this better? (Colancecco, Nienaber)
23:45 How long will links remain intact? (Hamrick)
24:46 Valueclick’s motivations (Nienaber)
25:23 CJ has opportunity to enhance network quality… will they? (Hamrick)
26:55 CJ’s ace in the hole - advertisers aren’t going anywhere; what about affiliates? (Nienaber)
28:39 Does CJ want low value affiliates to go away? (Nienaber, Colancecco)
31:48 Who’s leaving; are threats valid? (Griffin)
34:52 CJ must do right thing w/ right affiliates (Nienaber)
35:35 Wrap-up: this is all about Google & “media” (Nienaber)


Subscribe to future updates (CJ Link Management Initiative program) via email.





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AUDIO TRANSCRIPT
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Jeff Molander:  Thanks to all of you guys for taking the time out of your day and joining me in this interesting discussion with regard to Commission Junction’s recent announcement where they’re going to change their links, and the way that they do linking. On the call, I have Nate Griffin, Chuck Hamrick of Backcountry.com, Jeff Nienaber, formerly of Birthday Express, now involved with Allstar Directories, primarily in the lead generation business; and Patrice Colancecco Milligan. Everybody on the line here are very experienced affiliate managers, to say the least. Patrice goes all the way back to CDNow. Jeff goes way back; when did you start Jeff? Was it 1999ish, something like that?

Jeff Nienaber:  Yes, ‘98.

Jeff Molander:  Okay. ‘98? Geez, I think that’s even earlier than me; I thought I was an old man. Chuck, how long have you been in the business? How long have you been in the business?

Chuck Hamrick:  As a full time affiliate manager, only for the last year. Although I used to just launch programs, back from 2000 on, both in Commission Junction and Linkshare. I’ve had an interesting online marketing experience; I started in 1999, in the days of doorway pages and worked through SEO through 2004, then broke out into consulting, and started with Backcountry last year in October. In that time, we did a lot of mini-sites, and whenever a client would leave, I would back-fill them with affiliate links to news and traffic before I found a new home for them, so I have been playing in the affiliate space since 2000.

Jeff Molander:  Nate, I don’t even know if I know your background. Where were you before where you are at now?

Nate Griffin:  I’ve actually been an Internet marketing manager, not exclusively affiliate, but I actually started with doing email and some project management about two years ago. I’ve been a full time affiliate manager for about a year now, and prior to that I worked on the agency side as a project manager and account manager for a small agency in Florida for two years.

Jeff Molander:  So, we’ve got people who are definitely not new to online marketing, but fairly new to the affiliate game, as well as people who are affiliates marketing veterans. Let’s cut right to the chase. With regard to the link management initiative that Commission Junction just announced, I came out and - I received an email from Commission Junction - started talking to people, putting pieces together… talked to somebody who works at a different affiliate network, who is a CTO type person, and started thinking about this, and ended up with this blog. People have been fairly critical about it in regard to - I don’t know - I just looked at it as reporting the news from fifty thousand feet; I see this as a big strategic shift for affiliate marketing. Would anybody else agree with that? Or am I way out in left field?

Chuck Hamrick:  No, you’re absolutely right. I actually talked to the vice president of advertiser development, who was my old account manager at CJ. We’re legacy; Backcountry has been with them since 1999. I spoke with him yesterday, first I wrote an email kind of complaining and protesting that we were a bit blindsided. We have a weekly meeting with them, just the account manager and his assistant, and it was announced to us first on Tuesday. We have an SEO engineer that’s pretty savvy, and works closely with Matt Cutts from Google, he recommended that we suggest our affiliates use the “no follow” tag because there is a lot of evidence, or buzz, that Google is devaluating affiliate links, or possibly penalizing them. We had a prior discussion about that, then Tuesday we heard from CJ that they were going to do this change to Java script. I didn’t realize it was all or nothing, so we got the email Wednesday morning and it starting a huge buzz on our forum we have a couple forums on ABestWeb. We had posted our “no follow” at the same time, so this thing all merged together.

May 31, 2006

Resources

Emerging Technologies

Interactive Business



Affiliates & Advertisers Converge to Discuss Trends, Woes, Challenges & Tips


by Jeff Molander
jeff-at-thoughtshapers.com

What works for affiliate managers and what doesn’t?  How can you work more creatively with super affiliates to tap into their true selling power?  I convened around 10 advertisers and 2 respected affiliates to find out.  What we learned may surprise you.

As part of an effort to deliver quality professional education materials to online advertising professionals, I’m releasing (below) a free, partial transcript of the audio program, “Best Practices in Affiliate Marketing: What Affiliates Want”.  A full transcript and audio CD copies of the program are available at the Molanderassoc.com Web site.

The entire program may be streamed or downloaded below.

Best Practices in Affiliate Marketing: “What Affiliates Want” (Part ONE)
Moderated by: Jeff Molander

Twelve small, medium and large brands discuss the ins-and-outs of affiliate marketing in 2006.  Discussants range widely from marketers in financial services to commodity marketers, lifestyle fashion brands, housewares and sporting goods marketers.  Two “super affiliates” join in to discuss how marketers should be working with affiliates to drive increased sales and leads. 

The program’s participants include:
A major beauty and a major lifestyles clothing brand.
Figleaves.com
Batteries.com
Lamps Plus
Golfsmith International
Factory Card & Party Outlet
VF Imagewear, Inc.
Batteries.com
Team Express, Inc.
Kitchen Collection
Rugman.com
iGive.com
Vesdia Corporation (BabyMint.com, Schoolpop.com and others)

Press PLAY button to listen now or download as MP3.



Best Practices in Affiliate Marketing: “What Affiliates Want” (Part TWO)
Moderated by: Jeff Molander

In this segment 12 small, medium and large brands (and 2 affiliates) focus on discussing how to best work with cranky affiliates who can often be un-communicative and how to work with affiliate networks that sometimes don’t go beyond handing a list of URL’s to marketers (affiliate recruitment assistance).

Press PLAY button to listen now or download as MP3.



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AUDIO TRANSCRIPT SAMPLE
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Announcer:  The following presentation is brought to you by The Partner Maker, connecting you with super affiliates and taking the work out of affiliate marketing. Learn more at ThePartnerMaker.com.

Molander:  Hello everyone, Welcome to our discussion on to collaborate more closely with Web affiliate partners. My name is Jeff Molander and I’ll be facilitating our discussion today.

Joining us on our call I’ll just run down real quick we have, of course, Vintage Tub & Baths’ Allan Dick, who is one of our industry’s greatest networkers in my opinion. Thanks, Allan, for the opportunity to commandeer your group. And I’ll do my best to keep us focused and productive.

Joining Allan is Christine Richmond from Vintage Tub as well. Julie is on the line from a major name beauty brand. Jamon Heller, I believe is on, from Factory, Card and Party Outlet Center. Jamey Maki from Golfsmith International joining us and if I mispronounce anyone’s name, I apologize ahead of time, please correct me. Bobbie Zucker Bryson, is on the line. Trish Tickle, of Kitchen Collection, joins us. Rachel, who is with a major lifestyle brand in the clothing and accessories sector. John Bankroft of VF Corporation is here. Richard of Baseball Express. Patrice Colancecco Milligan is here, a long time affiliate manager and currently in the financial services space. Kristin Collier and Dale Petruzzi of Batteries.com. I think Shane Wagg of Rugman is with us. And I’m told that we also have, yes, Heidi Chu, is also with us from Lamps Plus. Did I miss anybody first of all?

Robert Grosshandler:  I’m here.

Molander:  Oh, yes I’m coming to you next… And Robert Grosshandler also joining us. Yes. CEO of iGive and Todd Jirousek of Vesdia Corporation (Schoolpop.com, Babymint.com).

Molander:  Some of you on the call, may or may not be partnered with one, one or both of these companies that are affiliates. So for the sake of discussion, each maintains, I’ll just give you a quick update here.

Each of these gentlemen maintain shopping portals that cater to a specific kind of interest group. Rob’s company caters to philanthropic cause, cause minded type of individuals, and Todd’s company is kind of taking a major life events approach to shoppers, helping them to save money and achieve lifestyle milestones such as building a college and retirement savings.

So, without any further delay, I’ll stop talking and we’ll get some discussion going around how marketers might work in more creative ways with affiliates. That’s our subject for today and hopefully, perhaps, we’ll find out some ways in which they have not considered before working with affiliates.

Rob I’d like to come to you first if you don’t mind and then back over to Todd regarding your thoughts on, in particular, data feeds. Before we had the call, I heard from people via email that they were very interested in this aspect of distributing their products and services. Maybe you can start by telling us how I give works with marketers using data feeds and how this is somewhat unique.

May 29, 2006

Resources



Affiliate Network Stats Revealed: Project Black Book


by Jeff Molander
jeff-at-thoughtshapers.com

Let’s compare high level statistics on Commission Junction versus Linkshare versus MyAffiliateProgram (Kowabunga).

1) How many advertiser clients does Commission Junction have?  Around 66,930 or so versus 4,590 at Linkshare and 930 at MyAP.

2) Unique affiliate ID’s?  34,718 versus 21,336 at Linkshare and 2,072 at MyAP’s Kolimbo.

3) Number of affiliate domains?  51,625 versus 28,613 at Linkshare and 5,905 at MyAP’s Kolimbo.

4) Number of raw links floating around out there pointing at its network?  On the high end, CJ has 1,461,655 versus 41,414 pointing at Kolimbo.

So says Project Black Book, a “monthly print journal focused on interactive marketing and the affiliate space.”

Oh no… not again!  But wait… not so fast.  This publication promises DATA and hard-hitting commentary and so far they’re holding true (case in point its article on marketers “shaving” numbers—cheating affiliates).

The company claims it can us its proprietary data (which it harvests) to infer things like marketers’ footprint based on the popularity of its domain among affiliates—raw “affiliate count.”

Surprised to learn that Azoogle’s biggest link and domain king is Smileycentral.com?  How about CJ’s big advertisers? 

Here we see #10 ranked Zappos and #12 ranked Shoes.com.  Hmm… seems as if Zappos has put a hurt on Shoes in terms of active affiliate base AND distribution of raw product data feeds.  Then again, Shoes.com might just suggest it’s fine with having Zappos in this position since managing (controlling affiliates within) that kind of size and scale of an affiliate program can be costly and burdensome.

Not to rain on this publication’s parade (who me?) but, in the end, do marketers care enough about affiliate programs to Project Black Book publication like this for $350 to $500 (starting August 1) per year?  Is this kind of data combined with the type of content they’re showcasing enough to compete with the likes of Revenue Magazine?

April 26, 2006

Resources

Interactive Business



Recommended Reading


by Marty Fahncke
jeff-at-thoughtshapers.com

If you are a business owner, manager, speaker, author, or just plain into cool stuff, and you are not reading Guy Kawasaki’s new blog, you should be.  Enough said. 

January 26, 2006

Resources



Affiliate Summit 2006 Review


by Marty Fahncke
jeff-at-thoughtshapers.com

Just got home from Affiliate Summit 2006 in Las Vegas.  Great event put on by Shawn Collins and Missy Ward.  Congratulations to them for their success in hosting a growing conference.  (Unlike many of the declining conferences I’ve attended that past few years)

The networking allowed me to catch up with many old friends and business acquaintances, and to make some new friends.  In addition, there were some great educational sessions as well.  I was particularly interested in this part of the conference, as I’m in the process of launching my own educational services company, Conference Call University

Some things that came out of the conference:

Fredrick Marckini from iProspect gave a very enlightening presentation on the presence of search in our lives.  Not just on the Internet, but on our mobile phones, cable programming guides and more.  If you missed this one, I highly recommend you download the PDF HERE

Anne Holland from MarketingSherpa was also great (as usual).  She discussed “Top 5 Affiliate Marketing Opportunities for 2006” You can check out her PDF HERE.  Pay close attention to the part about landing pages.  Simple idea, a lot of power.  And yes, it’s something most of us KNOW, it’s just that most of us don’t DO IT!

January 12, 2006

Resources

Emerging Technologies

Interactive Business



The Perception Crutch


by Jeff Molander
jeff-at-thoughtshapers.com

Busy executives get paid to move the needle leaving very little time for experimentation… yet researching new innovations (new tools that can help us innovate) is required in order to compete.  Often, e-commerce and e-marketing teams make large investments in essential tools such as e-mail delivery systems yet only use 1/3 of their total functionality.  Why? 

Jeanniey Mullen reveals that perception is at the core… in that busy professionals choose (I suggest) to see but a handful of a tool’s total options.  These are the functions that, they believe, are essential in moving the needle (generating consideration, sales, leads); the rest are “bells and whistles.”

Is this a dangerous practice?  I suggest it may be considering the rapid pace of innovation and young, “e-savvy” entrepreneurs.

December 12, 2005

Resources



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