After the key affiliates are migrated and you’ve walked them through all the new reports, payment structures, affiliate agreement and whatever else you may have changed next you can start migrating over your top 20-25. Still big revenue drivers, you want to still give your personal attention to their moves. Keep in mind any one-off special (read:manual) report extract you may have done for them - the devil is in those details.
Next you’ll want to email the entire affiliate base to notify them that the program will close and migrate to the new platform. Giving them 8 weeks is a good guideline. After 3-4 weeks, you’ll identify some stragglers of course. Some may have never actually received your email but others have and will just get to it when they get to it. For those affiliates, I recommend something that the ebay affiliate team did back in 2003 (if memory serves). They sent a second email to this segment stating that if they moved over within the next X days, their new accounts will be credited X dollars. After this stage, you can’t forget that you actually have to go through the rest of the process of closing your program! Send that last email to any remaining affiliates actually telling them that the program is closed and all commissions are now forfeit. I don’t want to get into the discussion here but ask me why you wouldn’t want to send out commission checks for amounts under your payment threshold….
Anyway, the worst thing that you can do typically is not keep both your old and new programs running for 3-4 months during this migration. I’ve been through several instant “cut-overs” as they’re called where contractually the advertiser is forbidden to operate a second program by their existing provider (read: Linkshare). Therefore, you contact the new provider, build the second program in secret, send the termination notice in the dead of night to their existing affiliate provider and literally later that day emails are flying out to affiliates notifying them that their existing links no longer work and to pick up new links (& agree to a different affiliate agreement, etc). Can you imagine the frustration here? It’s not pretty and it’s one of the reasons why affiliate program managers get the big bucks.
I created this site because I have managed or advised some of the largest online affiliate marketing programs in existence (no b.s.) and I wanted to share some of the secrets of my trade. Since Affiliate Marketing has emerged from being a cottage industry (I think it happened all at once at 1:05am, Sunday May 5, 2005 if anyone is paying attention), there is certainly no shortage of incredulously bad advice.
You can see some of my advice still at work in the affiliate programs at www.HomeDepot.com, www.Staples.com, www.Lids.com, www.CircuitCity.com, www.SonyStyle.com, www.Alienware.com, and most recently at EverestPoker.com (or .net in the states —long story).
I hope you enjoy the free information and story-telling on this site. What is a successful affiliate program without stories anyway?
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