The other day, I thanked Jason Calacanis for hitting the Affiliate Summit attendees, and therefore the affiliate marketing community, in the face with a big fish of a keynote address. It was a “wake the hell up” message that I believe strongly that we needed to hear.
I’ll also give Wayne Porter a long overdue public thank you for his own eye opening commentary. Wayne and I go way back and I think he knows he has my utmost respect. I implore you to take the time to read Wayne’s essays. Especially those in response to Jason’s recent spotlight on affiliates. It is true that some of them read like they were designed for the Dr.Awkward MIT Puzzle solving team, but if you can extract only 10% of Wayne’s meaning, you’ll come out ahead.
In this one, Wayne begs us to stop referring to ourselves as “affiliates”. I’ve been in this space for a long time, and that term is burned in my brain as much as my own name. It’s hard to drop it. I even refused the change over to “publisher” when my employment changed over to Commission Junction (who uses the term publisher instead of affiliate) for a short time due to an acquisition. Not all affiliates are publishers.
I’ve since moved on to be a so called “affiliate”. The stigma and confusion that term carries along as baggage is such that maybe I should shed that label. Is “affiliate” really synonymous to “spammer” in the Valley? I thought even Google had the smarts to differentiate and write a document to define he term “thin affiliate”. But if I’m going to get lumped in with the spammers, call me something else.
Actually, I am a publisher. We develop websites that are useful to people. Our largest website has more visitors than most of the merchants that we promote. I just so happen to monetize with affiliate marketing relationships.
During Jason’s keynote address, after he talked to us about affiliate spam for an hour almost as if that’s all we did, someone asked, and I can only paraphrase, “What do we have to do to not be spam?” Jason’s answer was, “Label your links. Disclosure.”
And since then, he’s gone so far as to ask the question, “Should we ban unlabeled affiliate links from Mahalo?” In it he shows a screenshot of very polite rejections from a Mahalo editor to a coupon site that they have been rejected due to hidden or misleading affiliate links.
That reply, with no elaboration, implies that they’re something sneaky going on at the site they declined. And maybe there was. I just think they didn’t like the site, maybe cast a “thin affiliate” label on it, and gave that response as a PC cop-out instead of saying that they thought the site was crap. As if that website owner put some disclosure on the links that it would make it onto that Mahalo page. NFW.
But from there, Jason asks the extreme question, should all unlabeled links be banned? If his own answer to that question is yes, maybe they should start with Mahalo’s darling ThisNext, whose board Jason is on, which has monetized links all over the place with no (obvious anyway) disclosure that the links are monetized.
Personally, I see nothing wrong with the way ThisNext links out. The content is fantastic, and it’s an engaging community. They have monetized links. So clearly Jason’s own answer to his question is “no”, at least based on his current behavior. ThisNext is an example of an affiliate site that has somehow risen above what Jason is calling “affiliates” where the links out don’t matter.
Why? They add value. Link to sites that you think are “good” and don’t link to sites that you think are tricky or misleading or spammy. But clearly by Jason’s own example (he’s on the board of ThisNext), unlabeled monetized links are not always bad. Perfect. Base your judgement on whether a website is good or not, not whether they’re disclosing their business model.
Happy users don’t care.
Let me close with an example of my own. I have a post here on this blog which has been held up a few times in public as a great example of “good affiliate marketing”.
This post about repairing a television has an affiliate link for a place to buy the part required in the repair. There are nearly 1000 happy people who have taken the time to comment on it’s worth, making this page pretty undeniably valuable. I don’t say that I get a couple bucks each time someone buys through that link. If I did, it certainly wouldn’t hurt. It might even make these elated people more careful to click the link. The point is, it’s really not important as long as I’m not taking advantage or misleading the consumer.
That is the real measure of linkworthyness. I would hope that the most relevant page on the Internet for replacing the broken color wheel on your television would not get rejected just because it’s got an unlabeled affiliate link in it.
What’s ironic is that the power of Mahalo’s human editors is such that they can actually make that evaluation of useful vs. misleading at a mere glance.
Should Mahalo impose a global ban due to an “affiliate” fingerprint that could blindly dispose of the best page on the Net on any given search?
That is thinking like a search engine algorithm.
Is that as good as you can do, Jason?
