Google vs. Affiliate Marketing
Thanks for visiting the Affiliate Tip blog. Subscribe to my RSS feed or enter your e-mail on the top left to get updates by e-mail.
According to some research I conducted for the Affstat 2007 Report, the actual number of affiliate programs based on the per lead or CPA model was just 19%. On the other hand, the per sale or revenue share affiliate programs accounted for 81% of affiliate programs.
Unless Google starts focusing on revenue share, I don’t think they pose a threat to the affiliate marketing industry.
Anyhow, I see Google CPA as more of another component of affiliate marketing that exists in tandem with the affiliate networks.
Just another option for merchants and affiliates, rather than being an “either/or” situation.
That said, just recently at SES, Marissa Mayer, Google’s vice president of search product and user experience, stated that CPA is “the Holy Grail.â€
So obviously, they’ve got confidence in their future and the possibilities in CPA.
On the subject of whether affiliate marketing will be in business down the road, I would say that so long as the Internet is here, affiliate marketing will be here.
After all, affiliate marketers are a commission-based sales force, and that’s a concept that’s been going on for centuries.
In the 1900’s, you had offline examples, which were not called affiliate marketing, but were the same sort of thing – opportunities like being a Fuller Brush man or an Avon lady.
It’s not as it this is a new concept, and I don’t see it going anywhere.
- Posted in Ask Shawn Collins
I think that the race will continue and not sure who will edge ahead if either.
We run a Web Directory and our Google page rank is now 0, down from a very healthy 5, 6 and 7 on 100s of pages.
We have lots of non affiliate links as we try to reflect all websites from Bellringing to Dating to Volleyball. But Google adwords (ironically!) are outperforming any commission based money.
The holy grail for a lot of early webmasters was the company magicbutton which was pay per click. That disappeared and the number of pay per click advertisers also dwindled very quickly. I remember we used to get 20p per click from one recruitement agency but eventually that dried up and we were left with commmissions and leads.
Maybe Google is the new magicbutton but I don’t think the are going to disappear like magic!?
reply to this comment