Danger Brown

Your best friend in affiliate marketing.

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10 Comments

mygif
May 23rd, 2009 @11:55 am  

AWESOME guide. #8 is right on the money. Account history means a lot and can make the difference in getting large amounts of traffic or a mere trickle… and that trickle could end up costing you more than the lion’s share! Once again, great guide.

mygif
May 23rd, 2009 @12:16 pm  

Thanks a lot. I think a lot of people are unaware of how account history affects their campaigns.

mygif
May 29th, 2009 @1:48 pm  

I would also recommend keeping an eye on the Impression Share (IS) metrics which are found in the Google AdWords Reporting Center.:

#1 Impression Share (IS) – How often your ads are displayed when matching keywords are searched. An Impression Share of 90% means that ads are displayed 9 out of 10 times a keyword is matched. This would be good. A low IS would be bad – it means that Google prefers to show ads from other advertisers and the campaign is losing out on an opportunity to reach searchers.

The above metric is further broken down into:

#2 Lost Impression Share – Rank: The percentage of impressions that are being lost due to campaign quality issues. Many factors play into this but I presume that CTR is the primary factor because Google offers a better user experience & makes more money when they serve more better performing ads.

#3 Lost Impression Share – Budget: Impressions lost because the budget ran out for the day.

And, lastly:

#4: Exact Match Impression Share: The percentage of impressions that were generated when keywords matched exactly. The higher this number, the better your keywords are matching. When this value is low, it’s an indicator that keyword matching needs to be improved.

Keep the campaigns rolling & good luck!!

mygif
Oliver Said,
June 8th, 2009 @4:53 pm  

Wow…love your Tweets and Posts!
This is not an easy game you are playing…
I just started working with Clickbank in Germany as a Vendor…at the face of things its really simple:

1) Get traffic
2) Convert
3) Drive Porsche

But the biggest bottleneck to me seems 1)

Cheers & keep plugging away :)

Oliver

http://visionmap.denkzeuge.de/

mygif
Gerri Said,
June 14th, 2009 @1:07 am  

I want to really start working on PPC affiliate marketing. This post has some good stuff in it. I will be back again to see what else you have to say on your blog that will help me succeed.

mygif
hanji Said,
June 14th, 2009 @3:24 pm  

Hello dangerbrown

This is @hanjicode. This is a awesome article. I’ll definitely be referring to this in the future. I’m just starting to get into PPC to offers, and want to start on the right foot and keep my loses in check.

Thanks!
hanji

mygif
Patrick Said,
June 23rd, 2009 @7:44 pm  

Good write up! You are making it easy for the newbies!

mygif
bacorgrp Said,
June 30th, 2009 @9:34 pm  

I am just learning this PPC stuff and Danger has been a great help.

mygif
Derek Said,
July 21st, 2009 @3:46 pm  

Looking forward to learning from your experience. Since you are new at this its kinda cool to follow you. I plan on starting Affiliate Marketing once I get back home from Africa in September.

Looking forward to more of your post!

mygif
Mo Said,
November 10th, 2009 @4:03 pm  

Hi DB,

Found your blog from your comment on PPC.BZ and so far finding the information great – it looks like you’re new to the PPC/CPA game – so this helps me quite a bit. I’m very familiar to internet marketing, and affiliate marketing but really never got into the AdWords thing due to mistakes made early on and following every other “guru” out there who just wanted to sell me stuff without providing any real information.

Last few months I’ve been concentrating on building better blogs so as to not get slapped by Google — but I’m stuck in the “analysis paralysis” phase. I over analyze everything to death – BUT I did like the one comment you made in this post:

“When promoting a CPA (cost per action) offer where 10,000 other affiliates are promoting the same thing, you are competing for the exact same keywords trying to sell the exact same product. You are also competing with people who have been doing it for 10 years and are happy to make 20% profit on high volume. You don’t have their skill, and you need more ROI (return on investment measured as a percentage) than they do.”

For whatever reason, I was “looking” for someone to tell me this … of course, I always knew this to be the case and when I think I’m ready to “push the button” – something holds me back AHA it’s that “analysis paralysis” and perhaps “there has got to be an easier way” — of course, there isn’t.

Congratulations to you – and indeed in the situation you’re in you are correct when you say “homelessness is not an option/answer”. Though I do work and make a decent living, more would be better: to ensure I can put my son through school [university/college] and perhaps when he gets married give the couple enough to put a down payment on their own place and finally be able to spend my retirement in retirement — not worrying about bills to be paid and a gov’t pension to live on.

Sometimes morals and ethics do play a huge part, as you’ve said in promoting some products so I tried looking for alternative products – but you know, there are not many and unfortunately the weight loss and health industry didn’t become a multi-million (or billion) dollar industry without “preying” on individuals…

I wish you the best successes, and will follow your blog and hopefully someday soon try launching a few campaigns and maybe make some real money! I would be thrilled if I could make a few thousand extra every month!

Best,

Mo

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