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A
fairly standard piece of advice you'll find on marketing web sites is that Internet
entrepreneurs must have their own product because "you get to keep most of the
profit".
However with some affiliate
programs offering 20%, 30%, 40% or even 50% commission rates, a lot of web businesses find
themselves wondering if that recommendation still applies. Usually the thinking goes
something like this:
"If the sell a similar product
myself, I have to deal with (a) additional |
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| work, for
example customer service, (b) have increased set up and running costs, and (c) don't have
the economies of scale of "big company X" so actually earn less per sale." |
But while this
reasoning might be true, what it neglects, is the benefits of having your own product go
far beyond the profit per-sale, and include:
Uniqueness: If you have your own
product, you have something that's unique rather than being one of a thousand or ten
thousand similar sites. Use this to your advantage, and it'll be much easier to market to
the public, and get press and media attention.
Control: Affiliate programs
change their terms, companies go out of business, or change their products. Build your
site around somebody else's product, and you're at mercy of somebody else's decision
processes. Wouldn't you feel more comfortable with a great degree of control of over what
is, in the end, your business?
You're the center. If you join an
affiliate program there are probably several thousand other affiliates in the same or
similar programs, all of which are, to a greater or less degree, your competitors, and
none of which will go out of their way to help you. On the other hand if you have you're
own unique offering, provided you give other sites a good incentive to link to you (like
start your own affiliate program), you're going to benefit from other sites marketing
efforts too.
You own the customer. Nearly
every affiliate program says in the small print that the buyer is a customer of the
program operator/merchant and not the affiliate. The reason why is simple: provided a
customer gets a satisfactory product and good service, they'll usually go back direct to
the merchant to buy more later, and usually the program operator gets to keep 100% of the
profits from these sales. So if you're an affiliate you've either got to find an endless
supply of new customers, or cross your fingers and hope that people will bookmark your
site before clicking on the affiliate link. On the other hand if you're the program
operator, you get the benefit of the additional profits from repeat customers, and even if
you only have 1 product, you can still generate a highly profitable back-end by offering
your customers closely related products using affiliate programs or joint marketing. 
Joint marketing. Run an affiliate
web site, and your joint marketing options with other sites are pretty limited - mostly
involving swapping links or ads with other sites, many which of might be your competitors
anyway. Offer your own product, and a whole range of additional options open up, including
allowing other companies to offer your product (or a special version of it), marketing
other companies products to your customer base in return for them doing the same for you,
giving discounts to customers of your preferred marketing partners and more.
Focus. It's a fact of life that
many affiliates flit from program to program as new opportunities present themselves. Far
too often this is done on a whim, but sometimes, good short-term business reasons can be
behind the decision. It's hard to turn down an offer which you know is going to make you
extra profits in the short-run even if it does nothing to build your business. On the
other hand, if you have your own product, it imposes a natural discipline and focus to
your business, this of course being a key step on the road to success.
Sometimes just one or two of these
benefits can be enough to form the foundation of a successful Internet business. Even if
you already have your own Internet store or your own products, it might be worth creating
additional products just to capture a benefit that was previously beyond your reach.
When you analyze things further,
and decide what product to offer, you should concentrate on the benefits that you want
from your product. For example, if your main goal is to acquire customers, provided you
can develop and deliver the product cheaply enough, you may even want to make the product
free to maximize your rate of customer acquisition. All things being equal. a golfing
store that gives away a million free booklets of golfing tips is going to sell a lot more
golf clubs that one that just waits for traffic to arrive.
So to sum up, the marketing gurus
are right after all - although perhaps for different reasons than the main one that is
often put forward - offering your product really does put you in the driving seat.
Copyright, June 2000 S. Tanna. The publisher of EBookCompiler.com: Create your own E-Books
that you can give away free to drive traffic to your web site, or sell for profit. Visit
today EBookCompiler.com

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