How To Make Super Affiliate Commissions How_To_Make_Super_Affiliate_Commissions | Page 44

Luckily for you, I have a few of those strategies laid out below that will help you not only start thinking about how to get outside the proverbial box, but how to develop your own blue ocean strategies for marketing. In reality, if you do everything in this guide and don’t take shortcuts while staying persistent, you can be very successful. But, in some niches, you need an edge and when it comes to an edge, blue ocean thinking will almost always get you ahead. The US Market and Beyond First up, there’s the US market. Everyone and their mother tries to get in on the US market – whether you’re marketing in the US, Canada, the UK, New Zealand, Australia, or a dozen other countries from around the globe. It’s the granddaddy of big affiliate profits. But, for those that are tired finding their pages on page 12 after three months of hard work, consider the option of moving your sites to UK, CA, or AU search engines instead. If you do a quick search for any major niche in the US market, you’ll usually find a good chunk of high ranking sites that sit atop the listings. But, if you go to another Google site, like Google.co.uk, you’ll find far fewer sites from that region on the list. Google likes to place sites from the region the search engine is serving, but if not enough sites are available, it will start going down the list to the .coms and other options. So, if you find that optimization for “get rid of acne” in the United States is very competitive but rather lax in the UK market, you can buy a site like www.getridofacnenow.co.uk and market that site instead. The actual market of buyers in the UK is about 25% of the US market, but if you’re on the front page and it takes less time to get there, the profitability from that niche spikes considerably. The same can be said for all non-US English markets, including .CA, .AU, and .NZ. Alternate PPC Marketing Platforms Since it was launched in 2002, Google AdWords has been the king of all Internet advertising, grossing more than $6 billion a year in revenue for the big ‘G’. But, while Google has 65% of the search traffic in the world, there are other search engines out there that can offer quality paid traffic for a fraction of the cost and a lot less headaches trying to decipher complicated quality scoring. There is Yahoo!, Bing, and even YouTube, where PPC advertising is much less expensive than it is for Google. The bids are usually less, because of less competition, the interface is simpler and while you’ll always get less impressions and clicks, you very well may make more of a profit from those sites based solely on the smaller upfront investment required to get going. 44 Find out How to Stop Hemorrhaging Money and Start Making Bank with AffiloJetpack: http://onlinearnings.com/go/ajetpack