Affiliate marketing is commonly confused with referral marketing, as
both forms of marketing use third parties to drive sales to the
retailer. However, both are distinct forms of marketing and the main
difference between them is that affiliate marketing relies purely on
financial motivations to drive sales while referral marketing relies on
trust and personal relationships to drive sales.
Perhaps the simplest way to explain affiliate marketing is that it is a
way of making money online whereby you as a publisher are rewarded for
helping a business by promoting their product, service or site.
There are a number of forms of these types of promotions but in most
cases they involve you as a publisher earning a commission when someone
follows a link on your blog to another site where they then buy
something.
Other variations on this are where you earn an amount for referring a
visitor who takes some kind of action – for example when they sign up
for something and give an email address, where they complete a survey,
where they leave a name and address etc.
Commissions are often a percentage of a sale but can also be a fixed amount per conversion.
Conversions are generally tracked when the publisher (you) uses a link
with a code only being used by you embedded into it that enables the
advertiser to track where conversions come from (usually by cookies).
Other times an advertiser might give a publisher a ‘coupon code’ for
their readers to use that helps to track conversions.
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