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Are  Affiliates Getting Fired?

by: Anik Singal


An alarming trend seems to be catching on with popular merchants lately. The trend  is the tendency for some of these companies to begin discriminating against new or inexperienced affiliates and actually FIRE them!

Removing an  unproductive affiliate is understandable; however, having a ridiculous screening process that only allows websites with thousands of visitors to squeeze through  almost seems ridiculous.

Now in defense of merchants and affiliate  programs: If a program finds that one of their affiliates is using their company’s banner and link on “unethical” or completely unrelated websites, then yes, that affiliate should be dropped.

However, for the everyday  work-at-home man or woman hoping to make a stable income through affiliate  marketing -- at least give them a chance! The bottom line is that affiliate  marketing is still a young, but powerful industry with MUCH room for growth. The  only way we can fuel this growth is if we provide the proper training to the new  members.

If we just fire the new members and use the “no experience”  excuse, then how are we ever going to expand the industry?

We at The  Affiliate Classroom have spent the last few weeks getting to know many affiliate  managers and companies on a personal level and have asked them questions about this matter. My conclusion is that every affiliate should be given a chance. If “deleted” from the system, there should be a very good reason.

In some of our research, as we read some of the terms of service, we were surprised to find  some “credible” affiliate programs who were dropping affiliates if they did not earn a certain “minimum” in a given period. In my opinion, that is simply  ridiculous.

Here is our personal opinion and conclusion regarding this matter:

When to remove affiliates?
- Their actions can “hurt” your  company.
- They are strictly violating company policy.
- They have  inaccurate contact information.
- They have been “completely” inactive for a period of 3 months or more.

When it is wrong to remove affiliates?
-  Their website does not get enough traffic.
- They did not meet a “quota” even though they were trying.
- They are new and have questions.

Do not get me wrong, most affiliate programs are still doing it right -- they are treating their affiliates properly. However, I am alarmed with a growing trend of being far too selective. This trend is blocking out the “new affiliates” and is not fair to the industry.

If you are a new affiliate, contact the affiliate  program first and make sure that you will receive the kind of support you  need.

If you are an experienced affiliate, understand that the larger the  industry gets, the better it is for you. Super affiliates will get paid more as the industry becomes more recognized.

If you are an affiliate manager, my question to you is--why does it bother you? It hardly costs a company anything to have an affiliate in their system. So what if the affiliate referred  $300 in sales rather than your minimum $500? By relying so heavily on “super  affiliates” you are placing too many eggs in one basket.

Why not work with the beginners, train and help them -- gain their loyalty and you will truly build a great sales force (a lesson we can learn from network marketing or MLM).

In the end it is the decision of the affiliate manager and the company. However, The Affiliate Classroom is standing firm on our opinion that  new affiliates should be giving a fair chance and never discriminated  against.


About the author:
This article has been authored by Anik Singal, the founder of The Affiliate Classroom. If you want to learn his system that helped him make over $10,466 in 60 days please visit the following link to  enroll into a free course: http://www.AffiliateClassroom.com