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The Halloween season is looking pretty good for retailers. The Washington post has released a story about a recent study from the National Retail Federation indicating, among other things, that nearly 2/3 of American’s plan to celebrate Halloween this year, up from 1/2 last year! The average person plans on increase spending by over 21% this year with an average spend of $59.06 on Halloween, weather on Halloween candy, Halloween costumes, or Halloween Decorations according to the NEF, this is up from $48.48 last year. As far as decorations go, Halloween is the 2nd largest decorating day after Christmas. 67% of American's plan to purchase Halloween Decorations this year. 60^ plan to buy costumes this year, up from 53% last year. Look forward to a good Halloween Season! Trick or Treat! Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Affiliate Marketing September 18, 2006CJ Webservices - One Step in the Right Direction
At Commission Junction University (CJU) in Santa Barbara today, CJ announced the launch of their new web services initiative. Web Services is CJ's availability of APIs that will enable publishers and advertisers to access product catalog information and create web applications. As part of the rollout they have announced a contest for the best application developed with Adobe Dreamweaver, the winner will get Adobe Studio 8. Also with the launch comes a developers forum where the community can interact and discuss applications. The API availability is a great step in the right direction, but falls short by stopping at product catalog and link searching. Publishers looking to automate their businesses will be disappointed in the lack of access to financial and sales data. Hopefully this will come in 2007. For more information about CJ Webservices, visit http://webservices.cj.com Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Affiliate Marketing September 13, 2006Cookie Deleting - Should Merchants up their Payouts to Compensate Affiliates for Non-Tracked Sales?
Vinny's company, Clicks2Customers, sponsored Ben Edleman to research the effects of anti-spam and anti-virus protection software on affiliate network cookies that are used to track customers who return and buy from the merchants after the initial click. As you may know, many merchants offer 30, 60, 180, or more return days in their programs so that affiliates who generate the click to the merchant can still be compensated when that customer returns at a later date and completes a transaction. Vinny wanted some independent research to determine just how many commissions his company was potentially losing out on by these programs who automatically delete cookies. The answer is a shocking 30%! Ben Edleman has put up a web calculator program that can help companies determine the payouts the intend to pay their affiliates and show them exactly how much more they should pay to take into consideration these non-tracked sales. Beyond merchants paying more to compensate for the evitable washing of these network cookies what else can be done? Vinny suggests allowing affiliates to use their own sub domains and CNAME them to the networks rather than the generic network domains that are being employed today. I have heard other potential solutions about having the merchants actually deliver 1st party cookies. I believe linkconnector does this today. The report actually points out this kind of private labeling could be a good solution: "Private labeling offers another alternative tracking model. Suppose a merchant allocated a third-level host name to its ad system, e.g. linkshare.dell.com. Then the ad system could set cookies within the merchant's second-level domain name, and the merchant could retrieve such cookies later, as needed. This approach is used by DirectTrack (among others). " Clearly this is a big issue that the networks and merchants should look at closely. The report clearly shows that the larger the network the bigger the issue, with Linkshare being in the worst position. (see chart below) Where will all this lead? Personally, I might take a harder look at DirectTrack merchants and the Kolimbo network and maybe Linkconnector as well. Perhaps merchants who are not legally bound to stay with one network (linkshare often ads this to their contract) should consider setting up a directtrack solution as well to test the differences and offer affilaites who are conserned about the 3rd party cookie washing issue an alternative. What do you think? Additional Links: Affiliate Networks Most affected: Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Affiliate Marketing September 5, 2006Tradedoubler UK & MSN AdCenter Partnership
Amazing, MSN is the first major search engine to devote time to working with an affiliate network, such as Tradedoubler. I received this mail a few days ago:
This is the first time I've seen such a collaboration - and it's about time! With MSN playing catchup with Google & Yahoo, I think they're more willing (*desperate*) to focus on opportunities that the other players have ignore - ahh...the beauty of competition... Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: ! Hot Topics
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