You’re Being Lied To - Anatomy of an Affiliate Marketer
Lincoln Adams | January 26, 2008 @ 2:42 pmThis post is part of the series titled, "Affiliate Spams and Scams." The table of contents for this series is listed below in chronological order:
- You’re Being Lied To - Anatomy of an Affiliate Marketer
- How to Spot A Fake - A Case Study of Affiliate Related Spam
A while back I wrote an in-depth post on how an online scammer was promoting cures for ulcers, shingles, warts and whatnot, all packaged in eBooks you download for a fee.
It’s time to take that a little further and dissect how these scumbags run their games online, especially when they’re working as affiliate marketers.
One particular affiliate marketer recently clued his audience in on how he might typically run his campaigns, and what he reveals is pretty telling. It starts out by picking out what affiliate programs they want to join, which is often accomplished by joining a major affiliate network like Commission Junction, and then performing a search for affiliate programs that offer the highest payouts in the niches they’re interested in.
In this case, diet pills were chosen. The marketer then set out to build what’s called a landing page (in this case a landing page is a website that’s designed to encourage the visitor to click on affiliate links and eventually buy the products mentioned, resulting in commission profits for the marketer.) Look at what he writes:
…I used a review page. I included those offers in a list, and picked an order I wanted. Based on the EPCs my affiliate managers told me, I put the highest offer as the #1 and called it the “Top Rated”, and then the lowest EPC I put at the bottom and rated “Good Choice”. They each were rated 1 to 5 stars. The top rated was 5 stars, and the bottom of the list was 3 stars. You don’t want to rate everything five stars or else it looks fake, and people can tell.
He built a fake review page with a ratings system that had nothing to do with the quality of the products in question. They were actually rated in terms of what would generate the most profits for him!
I sold myself as a legit review site that was there to help the visitor find the best diet pill for them.
In truth he had no interest in helping the visitor make an informed decision at all, but every interest in getting their money. Virtually no effort was made to research the quality of the products he was marketing, or provide original content that weren’t merely borrowed advertising slogans. The only thing that mattered was the bottom line: converting visits to profits. That he would lie and provide misleading information to do so bothers him, not at all.
It’s disconcerting to see a 19 year old punk exhibit such moral ineptness so early in his life, perfectly content in sacrificing his integrity and promoting low quality goods that pollute the Internet, just so he can churn a good profit. And why not? After all, he has already raked in close to a million dollars already with his “marketing” efforts. But then again, drug dealers do pretty good for themselves as well. So do scumbag lawyers. And spammers. And the Russian mob.
This post is already a bit long, so in another post I’ll analyze how these “landing pages” operate, and provide a live example so readers can learn how to successfully detect whether a website was built by an affiliate spammer or not. Stay tuned!
Related Posts:
- How to Spot A Fake - A Case Study of Affiliate Related Spam (8)
- Adsense Nonsense: Dropping an Ad Service That Has Succumbed to Spams and Splogs (5)
- Natural Cure For Shingles - Or Not (0)
- How Akismet Hosed My WordPress Blog (8)
- Becoming an affiliate whore (0)
Tags: affiliate managers, affiliate marketing, affiliate network, affiliate programs, commission junction, diet pills, expose, fake reviews, landing pages, niches, scammers, scams, spam, spammers
Categories: Tangled Webs
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9 Responses to “You’re Being Lied To - Anatomy of an Affiliate Marketer”
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I really can’t belive this article.
Its called advertising is been around for hundreds of years.
Get a life.
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If you wanna see REAL scumbags look at people like john reese and stompernet.
There are tons of people who get rich by selling fake systems on how to get rich. Now thats a different ballgame.
But hey as long as Americans are dumb enough to fall for it, so be it.
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No, it’s called “false advertising” and if it’s not already illegal, it’s certainly despicable.
Clearly you’re one of the people who failed their IQ tests, so to help you out, here’s what GOOD advertising looks like.
Oh and by the way, suck it you foreign spam happy twit.
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This is done everyday for nearly everything. The marketer is presenting a review of the product. The product that is being reviewed is an actual existing product. Weather or not it’s an accurate review of the product is irrelavent. Since when is opinion a crime? No one forces the buyer to buy it. But if someone is actually dumb enough to buy the product based on that one review, then good to go. Objective achieved. It’s a harsh world out there. But thats marketing.
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The marketer isn’t presenting a review, he’s presenting a completely made up fabrication. That’s not marketing, that’s shill marketing, and yes it can be illegal.
If you’re willing to sacrifice your ethics and integrity just to make money, you might as well pursue a career in organized crime. The pay there is just as good.
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Ah yes. Shill Marketing. We’re going to start witnessing a whole lot of that during the Presidential Campaign race when it ramps up even more later on this year. Ironic how it’s being used everywhere eh?
BTW, ethics and integrity comes at many levels. In the marketing line of work, most of it is checked at the door if you really want to be extremely successful. I’m sure lawyers would agree
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Well being that political campaigns are noncommercial, they can lie as much as they want. In fact, it’s expected of them.
I just don’t know how people, politicians or not, who lie so freely can sleep well at night.
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Ultimately, people need to be smart enough to avoid these scams … there will always be liers and cheaters out there. Thanks for the post, good to expose underhanded people anytime.
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