
Published In The March Issue Of Target
Marketing Magazine
Written By NETexponent CEO, Peter Figueredo
10 Steps to Reduce Risk in Online Affiliate and Pay-for-Performance Relationships.
For the past few years, there's been an ongoing battle
over which path marketers should take when seeking
to acquire customers online. In the beginning, marketing
departments told CEOs that online advertising was
the golden goose, citing the millions of eyeballs
ready and waiting for their company's message. That
goose never laid a golden egg, and those eyeballs
certainly weren't always translating into open wallets.
In the late 1990s, a new generation of online marketing that "made sense" emerged: Direct marketers took hold of the power of the Internet, and "affiliate marketing" and "pay-for-performance" deal structures were born. How perfect: Pay only for marketing units that led to an actiona click, an order, a subscription, a lead, etc.and share the bounty with the publisher who allowed an advertiser to market to its readers. The real golden goose! But trouble came quickly to paradise as certain risks became evident.
Often, online marketers are too focused on acquiring customers as cheaply as possible. They fail to realize this mentality leaves them open to the risk of damaging their brand as a result of the behind-the-scenes marketing improprieties of unscrupulous Web site publishers and affiliates. This is more prevalent than one would think. There are many hidden risks, obstacles and safety issues endemic in the implementation of pay-for-performance online advertising and affiliate marketing campaigns.
Watch Out
The top three types of risk for this marketing channel are:
> Fraudulent activity delivered to
boost the performance-based income of publishers.
Suppose an advertiser is looking to pay $5 per lead.
Disingenuous publishers working with this advertiser
can write a devious little program that automatically
will fill in these lead forms to get the $5 commission.
They even can go so far as to spread out volume so
that no spikes occur, and mix in real leads so that
not all the orders are fraudulent. Before the advertiser
realizes what is going on, he may have paid out several
thousand dollars ... or more.
> Damage to your brand through misrepresentation
of products/services and/or exposure on inappropriate
or illegal Web sites.
I have seen an example where publishers, working on
a pay-for-performance basis, were marketing credit
cards for a major card issuer. Unfortunately, they
were using a lower APR rate in their marketing materials
than the advertiser had authorized. These publishers
even went so far as to modify creative copy. Luckily
this advertiser had a team devoted to monitoring what
sites were doing and caught these infractions early.
Otherwise, it may only have found out when its customer
service phone started ringing off the hook.
> Legal risk through violations of privacy, Can
Spam, etc.
With the release of Can Spam, marketers working in
the online arena are either ignoring their responsibilities,
or panicking because they fear they cannot effectively
police what their hundreds or thousands of publishers
are doing with regard to sending e-mail on their behalf.
(This topic has recently come up in a New York case
against two Internet marketing companies. These companies
have been accused of sending spam. In their defense,
they claim it was not them but their affiliates who
violated the act, and without their knowledge. It
will be interesting to see how this case pans out,
as it will set a precedent for future lawsuits.)
Unfortunately, an advertiser would not know if its
publishers violated this act until it was too late
(until after the e-mail was sent and reported as spam).
If steps are not taken to fully protect advertisers,
then they either leave themselves open to legal risk
or they shut down this channel completely.
Protect Your Program
An affiliate/pay-for-performance marketing team can minimize exposure to these types of risk and improve the safety of this channel by following 10 principles:
1. Know your publishers. Establish guidelines for
acceptable publishers, and be selective when choosing
working relationships. Manually review all sites from
publishers that apply to participate in the affiliate
program.
2. Cover yourself. Establish terms and conditions
(T&Cs) for publishers. These should address fraud,
site content, marketing practices, creative, etc.
Mandatory T&Cs set a precedent requiring sites
to abide by the terms; a signature by the publisher
may be warranted. This can take the form of an affiliate
agreement or an insertion order.
3. Control your message. Require sites to use only
approved creative ad units. This includes text links
and e-mail copy. Since publishers frequently look
to develop their own, it's also important to require
prior approval of these custom ad units. Monitoring
is crucial if your messaging is sensitive to your
brand integrity.
4. Monitor placements. Monitor ad placements on publisher
sites. Regularly check where ads are being displayed
and how. Prioritize monitoring of publishers and frequency
based on impressions, clicks and order volume. Even
if you can't monitor every site, at least check the
ones driving traffic.
5. Check the user path. Monitor referring URLs. Check
to see where traffic to the advertiser's site originates.
This will identify publishers running ads on sites
not approved by the advertiser. Referring URL data
should be available on your own site or through your
tracking technology provider (if you use one).
6. Verify performance. Manually review sale and transaction
data. This helps identify fraudulent orders, frequent
returns, duplicate orders, etc. If your affiliate
agreement or insertion order allows you to cancel
invalid transactions (and it should) then doing this
can be critical in hitting your target cost-per-acquisition
for valid performance.
7. Deter spam. To protect your company from spam violations
through this channel, you must do everything in your
power (and be able to prove it through documentation)
to ensure you comply with Can Spam and any other spam
laws. Steps include:
- ensuring Can Spam is addressed in your T&Cs,
- contacting every publisher and informing them of
their obligations under the law and your T&Cs,
- seeking confirmation from publishers that they will
comply,
- establishing an opt-out database, cleaning system,
etc.
(NOTE: This is not an attempt to explain the law,
nor do these guidelines include all of the Can Spam
Act requirements)
8. Protect user privacy. Require publishers to have
a clearly stated privacy policy. This will allow you
a peek into the marketing practices of the publishers;
it also ensures that end users are informed of the
use of their data.
9. Pick up the phone. Keep in regular contact with
publishers. Keep the lines of communication open for
maximum effect. The best way to know what is going
on with your publishers is to maintain an ongoing
dialogue. While they may not always reveal what they
are doing, you will learn to detect red flags.
10. Take action quickly. React quickly and decisively
when violators are identified. Address violations
with firmness, and be prepared to take legal actioneven
though it may never be necessary.
In the past, marketers entering the realm of pay-for-performance
and affiliate programs typically did not devote the
appropriate management resources. All too common was
the scenario where only part of a person's time was
dedicated to managing thousands or even tens of thousands
of these types of deals. Advertisers learned they
cannot rely on technology companies to address this
concern. The concept of a fully automated sales channel
is only wishful thinking. An appropriate team must
be put in place to handle these initiatives.
For most direct marketers, affiliate programs and pay-for-performance deals truly are the golden geese of online marketing. If the right resourcesinternal or outsourcedare allocated properly, then these geese will be more likely to lay only golden eggs.
PETER FIGUEREDO is co-founder
and CEO of NYC-based NETexponent (www.NETexponent.com),
an online direct marketing agency for companies looking
to maximize their online customer acquisitions.