| I have a dumb question, and maybe it's because I don't understand how ebay affiliate stuff works. (Assuming Amazon-esque.) But even if this site sends really low quality traffic, it's still likely sales that wouldn't otherwise happen, even if the ratio of visits to sales is quite low. What does this cost ebay other than a lil more server juice? (to have a fruitless visit). I mean, I know they're paying a cut to MCM, but they would pay that cut with good quality traffic, too. It seems their gamble on false positives would not be as risky with other set-ups (paying out for downloads, trials, etc). (If anybody wants to school me on incorrect ebay assumptions, that would be OK. I'm assuming it's basically like Amazon.) [update: Reread. The author says he gets commission based on a variety of things including "clicks, new accounts, bids, and wins." It seems that this whole dynamic could be clear for both sides if ebay only paid out on things that ended up getting bought.] |
Most people who sell via affiliates have what is called a backend. (BCC does not.). It means, loosely speaking, any way for the company to increase LTV [edit: life time value, total economic value extracted from customer over the entirety of your relationship with them] after the initial sale, which is typically when the affiliate gets compensated. eBay LTVs are dominated by he backend: I bought my first box of Warhammer figures for $20 and earned eBay a buck back in 2000. Over the last ten years, I have been worth north of $2000 to eBay.
It is very difficult to know with certainty that the LTV of the kid buying the Warhammer figures is going to hit four figures because in a few short years he is going to move to Japan then drop off your radar for a few years then sell a hundred thousand dollars of bingo card software using his Paypal account.
So you need to guesstimate LTV for customers, within 30 or 60 or so days of acquisition, to pay your affiliates. If you underpay, they send you less traffic and you lose. You probably pay your affiliates more than the instant revenue. If eBay figured my LTV was $1 and paid the affiliate 50 cents, they would have sent me to another site instead. If Netflix paid only the first month's revenue, they'd lose signups to other sites.
If you overpay, you hemmorage money.
So you get really, really sophisticated about measuring and predicting LTV. You understand your business better than any affiliate can hope to. And when the numbers predict red ink? You drop them like a bad habit.