Shade Station Should Be Shamed

Lazy? Ignorant? Funny? How else can I describe an affiliate account manager that has declined a commission for a valid sale, with a reason that I can back up not to be true.

Now please forgive me about my rage on a £1.65 commission that wouldn’t buy me a pint on the streets of Leeds but this is just utter rubbish.

Whilst doing my accounts tonight I was doing a running total when over at Affiliate Future I saw that there was one cancelled transaction. Curious, I clicked the link to be shocked to read “no brand name bidding” as given as the reason for a Shade Station cancellation.

Shade Station Cancelled Commission

Brand bid? For shades in January!!!??? Come on!

Well Lazy Shade Station Account Manager (… hang on I don’t know who that person is, so I shouldn’t be rude. So I’ll just do a search within my emails for “shade station” and “shadestation” and there’s not one single email.)

I DO NOT BRAND BID!!

And do you want to know why?

I DO NOT PARTAKE IN PAY-PER-CLICK!!!

All my £1.25m worth of annual sales (which should be £30 higher) are obtained by organic search traffic and Shop Codes loyal visitors.

I have long documented and said to those who’ll listen that it’s not profitable for me to PPC as I earn 26p per site visitor but PPC costs over 25p.

Just so you have some proof, here’s a screengrab of my Google Adwords account for the past week. I’ve spent zilch mate.

Adwords £0 Spend

Below is a screen grab of a small section of my site that proves I promote you directly using both an 88×31 micro bar creative and a text link.

Shade Station on Shop Codes

As you are lazy to research your facts properly, I shall give you a hint that the page within the Shop Codes sitemap begins with an “S”.

That link won’t be there no more once the dust on this blog post has settled.

The only blessing in this sorry tale is that there was a reason given for the declined sale.

Shop Codes Top Merchant Leaves CJ

My best performing merchant ever is leaving the Commission Junction network this month.

I started promoting JD Williams from 2nd October 2006. It is no coincidence that my Shop Codes traffic and commissions subsequently grew exponentially from this time.

Promoting the JD Williams brand, which is an umbrella network of approximately 25 mail order catalogue sites, was a masterstroke, with its combination of new customer discounts and free gift promotional codes.

JD Williams split those brands across two affiliate networks, CJ and DGM. They include websites such as Simply Be, Crazy Clearance, VivaLaDiva, Christmas Gifts Direct, Autumn Clearance, PremierMan, House of Bath, Summer Clearance, …

With budget restraints JD Williams have now had to consolidate their affiliate programs down to one network. It’s not been reported which, if any, will transfer over. Assuming DGM will remain their one network.

I found an email I sent just 6 weeks after signing-up, dated 17th November 2006, to the then affiliate manager. It began:

“My promotion of JD Williams this Christmas on both the CJ network and DGM has been very successful this November.

“I have generated £14,800 sales on the CJ network with a further £9,134 on the DGM network, totalling £24,000.”

Now, looking back, that is remarkable. I have to stress all of these sales were from organic SEO traffic and not Pay-Per-Click. I know because my site was appearing as the number one result for key search phrases.

In fact my initial email was to ask if I could brand bid on PPC because I knew if I were to lose that good organic ranking, I’d lose nice commissions overnight. We didn’t follow that up as the sales continued right up to Christmas.

In the first 5 months of promoting JD Williams, I generated £95,000 worth of sales on the CJ network alone. With that I surpassed a JD Williams set target and in early 2007 received a £1,250 cash bonus as a performance incentive.

2007 and this Christmas was just as strong.

JD Williams on CJ, you shall be missed. This will leave a big big hole in my CJ statistics. There are only a couple of merchants exclusively on that network now that are still worth promoting.

What Price to Promote RedSave?

30th December, 2007 Comments Off

I have aggressively promoted RedSave in the run up to Christmas and have been rewarded with £400 in commission from the gifts and gadgets retailer. I have been running an Exclusive 10% voucher code that has obviously converted very well.

I was then considering if I should remove the banner that has sat across the top of all my pages.

I’ve just took a detailed look at my statistics and it looks like RedSave stopped performing for me on 18th December. So, it is a no brainer for me. I shall have to remove the banner from the top of all my pages because the site hasn’t converted at all for me in over 10 days.

‘Mega Monday’ was Mega!

The Independent reported that the first day following the first weekend of December, nicknamed ‘Mega Monday’, was going to see millions of shoppers online. The day was hyped to replace the last Saturday before Christmas as the vital day for gift shopping.

Over at the back-bedroom of Shop Codes towers I suspected that Monday was going to be a good profitable day. The signs were there. I’d spent the weekend not only removing all of November’s expired codes but adding a further 45 new ones to the mix. So the site was full of valid promotional codes and fresh content.

Sunday’s traffic was high too with an extra 266 unique visitors compared to Saturday.

So did ‘Mega Monday’ live up to the hype? Oh yes!

  • RECORD NUMBER OF UNIQUE VISITORS: An extra 158 visitors arrived on the site compared to Sunday. There were also an extra 296 more visitors than the previous Monday, which itself was a good day as it was many people’s pay day.

  • RECORD NUMBER OF REPEAT VISITORS: I take a lot of joy knowing that my repeat visitor numbers are climbing. I try to ensure that every code that is published on Shop Codes is valid and I test the majority myself. I also don’t imply that there is a code, if there isn’t. I believe users will trust the site more. On Monday I had more repeat visitors than I had total unique visitors during 11th August 2007.

  • RECORD NUMBER OF PAGE VIEWS: An extra 727 pages were viewed from the previous day and this was an increase on 599 from the previous Monday. With Shop Codes converting at 37% for some merchants, the more pages viewed the better.

  • RECORD NUMBER OF DAILY SALES FOR ONE MERCHANT. My most visited merchant’s page converts at a staggering 37%. With a high commission of £32.99 and a low of £0.48.

  • RECORD TOTAL OF COMMISSION: So with more unique visitors, repeat visitors, page views and a high conversion rate, how MEGA was ‘MEGA’? Well, I can confirm it was the highest commission day ever for Shop Codes. I was impressed with Sunday’s total and I received £240 more commission.

  • COME ON! HOW MEGA? For those that know me, or those who just want to guess, I received 8 times more commission in one day than what I receive for a days work in my full time employment. (And no, I’m not on minimum wage.) Considering that I only spent one hour updating the site on the Monday, that’s one fantastic hourly rate. Mega even!

Question is, so what do we call the Tuesday following ‘Mega Monday’. ‘Teasing…’, ‘Tiny…’, ‘Tortuous’?

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