How Does
Affiliate Marketing Work?
Because affiliate marketing
works by spreading the responsibilities of product marketing and creation
across parties, it manages to leverage the abilities of a variety of
individuals for a more effective marketing
strategy while providing contributors with a share of the profit. To make
this work, three different parties must be involved:
- Seller and product creators.
- The affiliate or advertiser.
- The consumer.
Let’s delve
into the complex relationship these three parties share to ensure affiliate
marketing is a success.
1. Seller
and product creators.
The seller,
whether a solo entrepreneur or large enterprise, is a vendor, merchant, product
creator, or retailer with a product to market. The product can be a physical
object, like household
goods, or a service, like makeup tutorials.
Also known
as the brand, the seller does not need to be actively involved in the
marketing, but they may also be the advertiser
and profit from the revenue sharing associated with affiliate marketing.
For
example, the seller could be an eCommerce merchant that started a
dropshipping business and wants to reach a new audience by paying
affiliate websites to promote their products. Or the seller could be a SaaS
company that leverages affiliates to help sell their marketing software.
2. The
affiliate or publisher.
Also known
as a publisher, the
affiliate can be either an individual or a company that markets the
seller’s product in an appealing way to potential consumers. In other words,
the affiliate promotes the product to persuade consumers that it is valuable or
beneficial to them and convince them to purchase the product. If the consumer
does end up buying the product, the affiliate receives a portion of the revenue
made.
Affiliates
often have a very
specific audience to whom they market, generally adhering to that
audience’s interests. This creates a defined niche or personal brand that helps
the affiliate attract consumers who will be most likely to act on the
promotion.
3. The consumer.
Whether the
consumer knows it or not, they (and their purchases) are the drivers of affiliate marketing.
Affiliates share these products with them on social media, blogs, and websites.
When
consumers buy the product, the seller and the affiliate share the profits.
Sometimes the affiliate will choose to be upfront with the consumer by
disclosing that they are receiving commission
for the sales they make. Other times the consumer may be completely oblivious
to the affiliate marketing infrastructure behind their purchase.
Either way,
they will rarely pay more for the product purchased through affiliate
marketing; the affiliate’s share of the profit is included in the retail price.
The consumer will complete the purchase process and receive the product as
normal, unaffected by the affiliate marketing
system in which they are a significant part.
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