Thursday, December 16, 2010

The Most Important Factor In Getting Affiliate Success


From time to time I've come up with a number of what I consider essential statements to help you succeed as a lottery affiliate. For example, there's RFA... Relentless Focused Action. 

And "Volume" is another big one. Doing more of whatever works is essential for growing your sales.

These are both important in their own way, but another essential power phrase for getting things done is "Single-mindedness."

The most important part of Single-Mindedness is the way you need to concentrate on one single action that leads to success.

You'll notice that my Lotto Affiliate Center has a multiple number of ways to promote Silver Lotto products. When they are faced with these many options, affiliates try the ones I recommend first. But if after a while it doesn't seem to be working for them, they move onto the next one. And so on.

You'll never get real affiliate success this way.

It's more important to find the promotion or action that works best for you, and concentrate ONLY on that - to the exclusion of the other methods.

Now, as a main strategy I recommend article writing. There are a number of reasons, but the main one is that useful articles on any topic are valuable because they last for years. If you go back through any of the article directories, you'll see many old articles still pulling in readership.

On the best article directories, like Ezine Articles, the older an article is, the higher the readership numbers.

I only have about 65 Ezine Articles articles at the time of writing this, but over the last 3 months I've watched my reader figures climb to nearly 40,000. One article has 12,000 views alone.

And they continue to grow.

So it's a question of get writing as soon as possible so you can build the number of articles up. As they naturally age, they'll attract a growing number of readers from search engines and viral promotion without any more work from you.

You must understand that using this form of promotion means that you'll do quite a bit of work at the beginning before you see results. 

I often liken it to a number of barges floating down a river. At the loading dock you put in your payload on each one in turn as it berths. That's when you write an article.

Then it goes on its way, and you follow it up with another. Before long, a little way down the river each barge will arrive at its destination and be unloaded to the reader.

The important part of this strategy is to keep writing, even when you don't see immediate results. That's because the barges are still in transit and haven't reached port. 

But when they reach their destination - your readers - then it becomes a relentless flow of information that never stops.








Happy Selling!
Ken Silver