Why
every Internet business should have its own
product!
Teacher:
Sunil Tanna
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 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 the
in 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.
About
the teacher:
S.
Tanna. The publisher of EBookCompiler. Create your
own E-Books that you can give away free to drive
traffic to your web site, or sell for profit. Visit
EBookCompiler and download a FREE copy from:
http://www.smart-web-promotion.com/ebookcompiler.htm