Howdy.
Firstly, I know the general consensus here for what is classed as a "newbie" is not someone who is new to affiliate marketing, but more so someone who just hasn't made bank from their marketing yet. So from that perspective, yes, I'm a newbie. But in reality, I've been doing this for coming up two years (I'm now 18) and I'm yet to accomplish anything profitable.
For the record though, this is not a sob story, I'm not being a standard newbie and coming crying to the successful for pity. I'm just giving you the full picture and an outline of a campaign with some good ingredients, but a foul end result.
Before you jump to the conclusion that I must just be lazy and not out there in the trenches actually getting shit done like everyone else, I'll just gesture toward the project in question -> right here.
I don't see what harm giving you my URL will do. If you're looking to spend a month driving 100mph toward a dead end, be my guest and use this idea. This was more of a test site anyway (he says), but here is my story. (Man, this is already TL;DR so I'll bullet point it... :/)
Oh and all the time I was doing this, I was also writing content for other users on WickedFire to actually pay for this shocker.
So, after all that, what are my results?
The visitor count isn't actually all that bad, especially since it's all from referral. There's about 20% search, 80% referral.
But yeah, conversion wise - painful.
So there we have it, yet another flop courtesy of Dorifto. A word of warning to any "newbies" - don't start an Amazon affiliate store. Unless you're a wizard.
Firstly, I know the general consensus here for what is classed as a "newbie" is not someone who is new to affiliate marketing, but more so someone who just hasn't made bank from their marketing yet. So from that perspective, yes, I'm a newbie. But in reality, I've been doing this for coming up two years (I'm now 18) and I'm yet to accomplish anything profitable.
For the record though, this is not a sob story, I'm not being a standard newbie and coming crying to the successful for pity. I'm just giving you the full picture and an outline of a campaign with some good ingredients, but a foul end result.
Before you jump to the conclusion that I must just be lazy and not out there in the trenches actually getting shit done like everyone else, I'll just gesture toward the project in question -> right here.
I don't see what harm giving you my URL will do. If you're looking to spend a month driving 100mph toward a dead end, be my guest and use this idea. This was more of a test site anyway (he says), but here is my story. (Man, this is already TL;DR so I'll bullet point it... :/)
- After failing hard in the past, I once again regain that excitable motivation to get productive, especially given the amount of free time you get with a law degree.
- Reading WickedFire, every newbie thread asking for ways to get started always ends with members shouting "just get involved and stop wasting time - do anything!", so I did just that.
- Somehow, I come to the conclusion that building an Amazon affiliate site is a good plan.
- Cue the purchase of both the Flexishop theme ($35) and Shopperpress theme ($97), a domain (£7), hosting ($10 per month) etcetc. Why two themes? Because I was falsely told that the Flexishop could handle Amazon affiliates by the creator. Needless to say, it can't. Just a head up, it's e-commerce only.
- Anyhow, I had my theme connected to Amazon and I was raring to go. Shit, I was on a roll, just a few steps away from making the monies, right!
- I'm alright with Photoshop, so I did all the graphics and logo myself to reduce costs.
- Signed up to Mailchimp, awesome free mailing service. Incorporated it into my home page.
- Kept reading all over the SEO section that high quantity and quality content is necessary on your site for search rankings - cue the typing out of over 100 unique 400 word product synopsis' for every item I uploaded through Shopperpress. No outsourcing.
- Naturally, at this point I needed backlinks, and being completely burnt out after working on this for 14+ hours a day, I decided to outsource...
- ...but then quickly change mind because I can't bear to part with cash for something I could do myself, so I simply save a link wheel service image from the Buy & Sell area and set to work replicating it and SEOing the shit out of the site.
- This meant 3 long Squidoo articles - 1, 2, 3.
- About 30 600+ word articles on Ezine, GoArticles and Articlesbase.
- Setting up a Twitter account, a Facebook account and a Stumbleupon account and continuing to add a shit tonne of people.
- Posted Tweets and Stumbles errday, posted on related groups with hundreds of thousands of members on Facebook with links to my articles, Squidoos etc. Also went around liking everyone's status's, since people seem to follow that up with an add.
- Signed up to a few forums, starting some epic 2,000+ view threads with my links discretely in the initial post mixed in with legit posts too so it wasn't a giveaway promo account. Also got told off for having my site in my sig, wat.
- Set iGoogle as my homepage, subscribed to 20 iPad blogs, commented on each of them every day with the link back to my site (although they ended up hating on this because of the obvious-backlink-is-obvious and my comment content growing more and more vague and disinterested in these lame blog topics..)
- I even made a quiz on Quizilla that actually got taken 60 times.
- Still being motivated and working on the assumption that I'd hit that first sale sometime soon, I then purchased £100 worth of domains with my keyphrases in the title and uploaded them to Wordpress with spun articles linking back to the main site. .CO mostly.
- Used exdeus's URL submission service to blitz some link building to 1200 sites with each of my keywords.
Oh and all the time I was doing this, I was also writing content for other users on WickedFire to actually pay for this shocker.
So, after all that, what are my results?
The visitor count isn't actually all that bad, especially since it's all from referral. There's about 20% search, 80% referral.
But yeah, conversion wise - painful.
So there we have it, yet another flop courtesy of Dorifto. A word of warning to any "newbies" - don't start an Amazon affiliate store. Unless you're a wizard.