Twitter is the talk of town these days. Actually, it has been for some time now. I remember the first time I saw Twitter. I thought to myself, “this is one useless service.” There, I said it. I was wrong, and there is nothing with being wrong. It’s so easy to make judgments based on a first impression. But now seeing folks who are driving thousands of visitors to their sites using Twitter, I realize that perhaps I should have jumped on the Twitter bandwagon sooner. I guess you can say it’s never too late.
But Twitter is not just about talking about what you are cooking right now, or how you are feeling (depressed, happy, …). You can actually have a profitable affiliate business with the help of Twitter. I guess if you have paid attention to the Twitter community, you have seen guys such as Joel Comm trying to encourage their affiliates to promote products on Twitter. What most marketers don’t understand about Twitter is that it’s different from the traditional channels that we are used to working with. Twitter is not Adwords, and it’s definitely not your newsletter. Twitter is an alive community that is very judgmental and always on the look out for real value. So, it’s essential to know your environment before actually jumping in and playing with the sharks.
Twitter is a goldmine but comes with numerous pitfalls. If you go in with a closed mind, trying to do what you have been doing for the past 5 years, you are going to mess up. And when you do, Twitter will be useless to you. Here are a few things that I have personally learned the hard way:
Twitter has the potential to be a huge commission driver for affiliates. But you need to take an indirect approach with it. It’s not Adwords, it’s not your newsletter, and it’s certainly not a forum you can spam. So just do it right!
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Social media and Web 2.0 caught fire a couple of years ago, and folks have been jumping on the bandwagon since then. Using Twitter a year go would have made you an early adopter, but nowadays using Twitter is more of a necessity than anything else. Twitter used to be just a micro-blogging platform that folks hated just a year ago, but you can’t imagine how much traffic Internet marketing geniuses are driving to their sites by staying active on Twitter.
If you have not been using Twitter so far, the least you can do is create a Twitter profile for yourself or your business. If you have no idea how to create a good Twitter profile, you can just learn from the top Twitter users. But if you look at guys like Ed Dale in the top 20, you’ll see that they don’t try to spam Twitter by continuously posting affiliate offers. They link to useful sites, and they engage with their followers.
Affiliate marketing on Twitter really can’t be done in a direct kind of way. Folks are too smart to fall for someone who’s just trying to make a quick buck. You can easily get ignored by the Twitter community if you are too pushy. But if you show the community that you are there to provide value and not just spam the community, you can generate lots of traffic and even make a greater number of sales.
Your take: are you using Twitter to promote affiliate offers? Have you had success linking directly to affiliate offers?