STOP Trying to Send People to Your Site

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Traffic makes online marketing work. Traffic really makes affiliate marketing work.

We all have paid for traffic and most of us have a firm idea of what sorts of traffic and how much of that traffic makes a site or program profitable.

But we’re all wrong.

Well, most of us are wrong. Let’s think about what “traffic” means in the particular context of online marketing. I think we’re missing out on current and future trends if we keep a static definition of traffic without pondering how we arrive at that definition.

When we start to think about what traffic means, some powerful things can start happening in our heads that we can easily translate into bottom line numbers.

Traffic should be easy to describe and picture in our minds. People go to a specific website hoping or interested in finding information or purchasing possibilities concerning a certain product, good, program or service. How can we think any differently than that about traffic?

Easy. It’s an eight lane superhighway with commuters on both sides… it is not a one lane golden brick road leading to the Oz of your website.

There is something to see behind the curtain, so if you’re stuck in the black and white worldview of throwing money at publishers and affiliates in order to receive “traffic” to you site, you’re going to realize that the man behind the curtain is not what he seems.

But no worries. You had the power to leave that worldview all along, Dorthy.

Let’s take traffic into technicolor and think about how to partner with affiliates and publishers in a way that allows traffic to flourish.

The blog A VC sums it up the best with this prophetic oracle…

Here is the future of media:

1 – Microchunk it – Reduce the content to its simplest form. Thanks Umair.
2 – Free it – Put it out there without walls around it or strings on it. Thanks Stewart.
3 – Syndicate it – Let anyone take it and run with it. Thanks Dave.
4 – Monetize it – Put the monetization and tracking systems into the microchunk. Thanks Feedburner.

wldmustard.jpgFor one, you have to give up trying to garden-wall your content. Content is a mustard seed that starts small but quickly matures into a seed bearing bush.

That bush is pretty, but it attracts unwanted guests like ravenous birds and insects who quickly take over your garden and start moving from the mustard bush to other plants that you’d like to protect.

But mustard bushes are hard to get rid of, so you end up spending more time trying to find a way to keep the birds and insects out of the garden than you do on the actual tending and care of the garden itself.

So what do you do?

Allow your content to be completely gleaned by the birds and insects? Put up a protective barrier around the mustard bush in order to keep the birds and insects away? Rip the mustard bush out of your garden and throw it away in order to protect your other flowers?

It’s a tough decision.

But if you have that mustard bush of content already in your garden, you’re hopefully not going to rip it from the ground to keep the predators away. So, wall off or embrace the predators?

Stop walling off.

Let the birds and insects come and pick your content and do with it what they will. Put devices in place so that other parts of your garden may be secure, but allow those with interest in the content you are providing to glean and consume as they like.

Why?

Because you are allowing for the consumption of your content (or product or service) to be determined by the consumer. Instead of trying to force feed interested individuals a certain amount or type of content, you’re allowing the interested individual to make their own decision about the type of content consumption they will make.

As Steve Rubel points out

Marketers must recognize that people increasingly will consume content in small bites, not large. Brands have an opportunity to introduce consumers to this content by creating platforms where people can aggregate the niche content they care about. In addition, they should move now to make sure existing online investments are ready to be chunked down so people can integrate it into other platforms.

It’s called microchunking. You’ll be hearing a good deal of that word in 2007, so get comfortable with it. Not only does this sort of content consumption enabling allow users to make their own decisions about the amount of content they want from you, it enables our illustration of an 8 lane super highway above to be created.

Micro-transactions have been an option since the turn of the century and were made famous in online marketing (and the movie business) by Brian Clark…

Sometimes, you want to charge just a little bit — such a small amount of money that traditional credit card processing services start to eat up the whole thing with fees. Enter micro transactions or micro-payments, an interesting option for people looking to sell digital content goods for between a dime and a few bucks.

Micro-transactions have caught on with many players in the online marketing world and are an acceptable way to offer payment in today’s market. Microchunking is also undergoing a similar path to adoption and will change the way we do business in online and affiliate marketing because getting people to visit a specific site will no longer be necessary.

Instead, smart merchants or producers looking for traffic will begin to recognize that by partnering with smart affiliates and publishers who are using microchunking techniques and allowing the content to be split up and made mashable, they gain much more in long term, quality and sustainable traffic.

It really isn’t that hard to do, and you can always get there by clicking your heels three times and saying “There’s no place like the feed reader… there’s no place like the feed reader… there’s no place like the feed reader…”

Try it. You’ll be surprised.

MyBlogLog Jumps the Shark

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Yahoo gobbles up MyBlogLog for over 10 million.

This is not good news for those of us who have readily enjoyed the service over the last 8 months because the incubation period of this project has not had long enough to develop unlike del.icio.us or Flickr. Even though MyBlogLog has been a darling of bloggers everywhere (including myself), I think this might be the jumping the shark moment.

Expect lots of attempts at user spam and an end to innocence. Don’t be surprised if I remove the widgets here soon as the amount of spam has already been increasing on a daily basis.

Congrats to the MyBlogLog team, but I hope the integration goes well (unlike some other Yahoo services).

Affiliate Marketing On the Periphery

Affiliate marketing has a unique position within the world of online marketing.

The greatest world changers, whether in terms of religion, science, sociology, anthropology, or any other discipline have always been those pushed to the edges and marginalized.

There are two main types of marginalization:
1. Marginalization that is assigned
2. Marginalization that is embraced.

Marginalization is not accidental. Marginalization is a willful act that tries to maintain the status quo or protects the interest of those that hold the power or the money and attempt to maintain a grip on power by pushing those who disagree or attempt to push reform by marginalizing the trouble makers.

In many ways, I see affiliate marketers as the trouble makers in the general scheme of online marketing. It is a slippery channel, full of individuals not willing to easily slide into one monetized or easily defined column. That is dangerous, that is revolutionary, and that is important.

Because a group, such as affiliate marketers, are marginalized doesn’t mean that they don’t have power. Rather, they have even more power through their own imaginations, efforts, stories, convictions and forums.

Being on the periphery, or margins, and being pushed out by the power hungry center enables the potential for radical possibilities. As affiliate marketers, we are able to see things from the edges that online marketers and those in the center of power online cannot see. We are able to spot trends, such as social media and tagging, that those insulated and buffered within cannot see.

So, let’s embrace our position on the periphery in affiliate marketing. If “traditional online marketers” want to push us out to the edges of the marketing world, let’s embrace our position and enjoy the worldview which this affords.

Second Life Goes Open Source – Affiliate Life Coming?

secondlife.jpgWow.

Now this is something to get excited about.

I’ve been a big fan of Second Life for a while in terms of its ramifications for studying sociology and metanarratives. However, it’s hard to translate such interests beyond just describing the coolness factor.

How to relate a platform such as Second Life to online marketing is not an easy task, especially when you are trying to convince the uninitiated. Sure, there’s already an audience of 2.5 million users there, but what does it mean for online marketing, and can you (or should you) really attempt to market to the users? I’d argue yes, but it takes a certain brand of marketing with a good handle of finesse and flexibility and a base knowledge of the pre-existing community.

Now, Linden Labs has announced it is opening up Second Life to coders and hackers everywhere (a la Firefox or Linux)…

Aiming to take advantage of its already-impressive momentum, San Francisco’s Linden Lab, developer of the Second Life virtual online world, will announce Monday that it is taking the first major step toward opening up its software for the contributions of any interested programmer.

The company will immediately release open source versions of its client software for Windows, Mac OS, and Linux. In order to enter and move around the Second Life service, users must download and run this software on their computer desktop. But now, says Linden CEO Philip Rosedale, independent programmers will be able to “modify it, fire it up and sign on with it.” The company gave Fortune exclusive access to executives in advance of the change.

This is just the step that was needed to make the platform more accessible, more friendly and potentially easier to grok in terms of how to do marketing on a platform such as this.

Of course, this will take some time to roll out, but expect quick and numerous alterations, split-offs and eventually different “flavors” of Second Life within the coming years (such as how there are different flavors of Linux from Ubuntu to Fedora to Red Hat).

The burning question is when will Wayne Porter and his band of merry men create Affiliate Life (deliberate bait since Wayne doesn’t like the term “affiliate”) for all of us to enjoy??

How the (SEO) Virus Spread

virus.gifHere’s the lineage of the infamous “5 Things Blog Meme” in terms of the SEO crowd. I had no idea I could be grouped with SEO’ers.

http://www.soloseo.com/blog-tag-tree.html

I’ve said the whole practice of SEO is almost meaningless in the current market and have been yelled at by a few, so I guess this is guilt by association!

Hasn’t blogging and blogging platforms such as WordPress, Typepad, Vox, Blogger LiveJournal and even MySpace done away with the need for professional SEO’ers? Forget affiliate marketing, Jeff… it’s SEO that needs a serious reconsideration and wake-up call. It seems the entire base of that profession is running off of four year old momentum.

If you do practice SEO, please convince me that it is not completely worthless.

Otherwise, I’ll go on following the data I have and producing good content… which seems to do more for Google or organic rank than any (needlessly expensive) attempt at manipulation of the system.

Twitter Affiliate Network

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I’m putting out a call to all forward thinking marketers in the affiliate and online spaces…

USE TWITTER!

Why?  It’s not just vanity blogging, it’s instant communication with power and community.  I’m seeing what other segments are doing with the service, and it’s pretty impressive for networking.

With the Affiliate Summit just a few weeks away, this would be a great tool to keep in touch with co-workers and people you want to meet while on the floor as you can send and check twitter messages from your phone/pda/crackberry.

Seriously… just give it a try.

Here’s mine.  Do with yours what you will, but let’s start a little ecosystem of marketers in our space.

5 Good Things About CostPerNews

I don’t put a great deal of emphasis or attention on metrics such as page views or feed subscribers. There are much more effective measurements of attention and readership that I’ve developed and use.

However, during this time of blog introspection, some stats are encouraging:

1. Vlad points out in the comments that the site has grown from a Google Ranking of 0 at the end of October (when it was created) to a probable 6 in the next update. Thanks for sharing, Vlad. I wouldn’t have noticed and that made my day. Explaining my excitement to my wife was tricky, however. Keep up the great work on your blog, Vlad… it’s a daily destination for me.

2. Feedburner shows that for first time CostPerNews had 100 active users of the feed in a 24 hour period yesterday. That’s no where near TechCrunch, Robert Scoble or Steve Rubel… but this blog will never see those numbers due to the niche aspect. Having 100 active feed users (along with the other site readers not using the feed) put a smile on my face this morning. Online (especially affiliate) marketing is a small industry, so seeing triple digits in the feed count gave me a definite boost.

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3. CostPerNews has had readers from every continent in the last month. Who ever is in Lebanon, TN seems to be a big fan, as well. Thank you Lebanon, TN! Beautiful city. Auckland, New Zealand and Reykjavik, Iceland are two places I’ve always wanted to see (my ancestors were Icelandic Vikings). Thanks for visiting. Can I come visit you?

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4. About 57% of you are spending 8 minutes or more on the site. That’s a neat stat because it shows that you’re actually reading the articles and even commenting.

5. Cost Per News’ Technorati rank has been steadily increasing and we’ve been able to maintain a solid position inside the top 100,000 which was my 6 month benchmark. We’re closing in on 75,000 so my new benchmark for the 6 month mark (June ’07) is to be within the top 50,000. Doesn’t sound impressive, but again… this is a niche blog that has a glass ceiling of “page views” and “rank.”

So, thank you for continued visits and input. The last 24 hours have been filled with positive and encouraging emails and phone calls, and I do appreciate those. Stats are fun to review, but rarely tell you much about the actual nature of a blog or a site.

Online marketing is slowly realizing the old paradigms of quantitative numbers don’t equate with the actual quality of a site’s readership or the responsiveness a community may have to certain marketing techniques. For instance, Ze Frank’s community is relatively small by traditional metrics, but incredibly loyal and devoted. I’d rather have that community than a million faceless impressions if I were building a program.

By the way, I’m still searching the job offers and would love to make an announcement at Affiliate Summit later this month. Contact me if you’re in need of someone with lots of experience in this space!