I’m about to leave for Las Vegas for Affiliate Summit, probably the best conference and trade show for performance marketing. On Sunday you will able to meet me at the Sponsormob table at the Meet Market. On Monday and Tuesday I will be around too. Get in touch if you want to meet up.
Category Archives: Events
a4uexpo Europe 2010
Just about one week until a4uexpo kicks off. I will be in Munich for Europe’s top affiliate marketing conference from May 17 to 19.
a4uexpo will start with the usual Ignite Party the night before the conference starts. Then there will be two days of sessions and exhibit hall with a big party on the second day and a calmer fade-out event on the third day.
I will be attending a few sessions. However, most of the time you will be able to find me at the Sponsormob booth during the day. Mobile affiliate marketing is no longer a niche but becoming mainstream so we are taking our business to the main events.
ad:tech San Francisco 2010
I’m going to be at ad:tech San Francisco on April 20-21, 2010. You can find me at the Sponsormob booth #5578. Entrance to the exhibition floor is free, so be sure to stop by.
Affiliate Summit West 2010
Just a quick note: I’m going to be at Affiliate Summit West in Las Vegas from January 17 to 19. My company will have a table at the Meet Market on Sunday. You can catch me at table no. 27. I’m going to be around on the other two days as well. If you want to meet up just get in touch via email or Twitter. Hope to see you soon.
“That sale is mine” or The Need To Abolish the Last-Cookie-Counts Principle
As online marketers we often preach that online and mobile are so much better than traditional/offline marketing because we can track everything and measure all marketing activities correctly. The truth is that most companies base their decisions on invalid data about their online activities. Some of them are aware of it, most of them are not.
Back in the dark ages of online marketing it was alright to associate an online transaction with the last traffic source previous to that purchase. Having some data was better than having nothing. But customer behavior and online marketing techniques have evolved. Also, online marketing budgets are significantly higher these days, so we need to be a lot more acurate now. All this lets the principle of “last cookie wins†look antiquated.
Here are some facts I picked up at the latest a4uexpo affiliate marketing conference in London. During the “Affiliate Apocalypse Panel†Julia Stent of Vodafone UK shared some insightful data with us:
- In general there is a 20% overlap between affiliate and paid search traffic.
- In only 21% of all affiliate sales, the affiliate is the only person involved in generating that sale.
- For 72% of online sales in the travel industry where a user has visited an affiliate site at some point, affiliates were not rewarded due to the last-cookie-principle.
Currently we attribute a transaction (lead or sale) to one traffic source only. But given the previous facts, that actually ignores valuable data and leads us to miss the bigger picture completely. All marketing activities are inter-related. That goes for offline vs. online and also for within the online sphere.
However, today’s world, especially in online marketing, is still driven by the old principle of “that sale is mine.†In numerous companies I’ve seen internal fights about this, display vs. search vs. affiliate managers. Instead of cooperating they often work against each other, accusing each other of stealing sales. It’s usually the affiliate marketing people that have to defend their affiliates and themselves.
“That sale is mine†can no longer be our mindset. Instead we need to find ways to distribute commissions among all parties involved in the decision-making and buying process in a fair manner. We need to measure the true influence of an advertising channel and the parties involved instead of relying on the last-cookie-counts principle.
This would also remove the issue of chasing the last click, something that affiliates have become extremely good at through coupon sites or cookie spamming in the form of layer ads, pop-up windows, adware and other forms of forced clicks.
What we need is cross-channel tracking on the side of merchants and affiliate networks turning more into technical solution providers. We need to be able to split commissions for the same transaction among several traffic sources. Something we probably won’t see anytime soon, but this is where it needs to go.
Postview Panel Discussion at Affiliate NetworkxX
I’ll be part of a panel discussion on the good and evil sides of post-view tracking in affiliate marketing at the Affiliate NetworkxX in Munich on tomorrow evening. More details on the organizer’s blog. Here is a summary of the points that I’ll be trying to make there:
1. visibility of creatives
The current technical set-up for post-view tracking doesn’t ensure that cookies are set only if a banner is actually seen by a user. I don’t think it’s fair to give an affiliate credit for a post-view sale triggered by a banner that was placed at the very bottom of the screen. Most likely this banner didn’t have anything to do with the sale. A multitude of banners below the fold of the screen is simply cookie spamming.
2. cookie switches
Merchants working with more than one affiliate network or tracking tool must expand their cookie switch from clicks to impressions. Otherwise the same post-view transaction will be tracked by more than one network.
This essentially means that merchants need to have their own post-view tracking running. For most companies that’s quite unrealistic though because they either don’t have the skills to make it happen or don’t want to bear the extra cost of counting every single banner impression.
3. lack of transparency
Currently there is no transparency in the use of post-view tracking. There are networks that simply turned for it on for certain programs without approval by the merchants. About a year ago most networks proclaimed to kick cookie-spamming affiliates out of their networks. Now they seem to re-introduce cookie spamming again through the back door by the use of post-view tracking.
4. lack scientific proof
I am not aware of any independent study proving an increase of profits for merchants by the use of post-view tracking. Yes, of course more sales are being tracked, but in most cases they are just “stolen” elsewhere. There is a significant number of transactions that would have taken place with or without postview.
Mobile Expert Surgery at a4uexpo London 2009
If you happen to be around at the a4uexpo affiliate marketing conference in London next week, this one might be of interest for you:
On Tuesday between 2pm and 4pm you’ll have the opportunity to get some free one-to-one consulting on mobile marketing and mobile advertising. You will be able to find me in the expert surgery zone. Details can be found on the a4uexpo blog.
dmexco 2009: Bad Timing, Not Going
dmexco is the new major conference for online marketing in Germany. It’s supposed to be the continuation of the former OMD.
While planning this event, the organizers apparently forgot that another great trade show is taking place at the same time: ad:tech London.
I will be exhibiting with a booth in London, so I’ll have to give the German show a miss. Sorry, maybe next time.
Affiliate Stammtisch Leipzig 2009
I’ve just returned from Leipzig where I attented the Affiliate Stammtisch. This networking event took place at the Moritzbastei in the city center, a medieval fortress-like building which looks like it was part of the ancient city wall. Wardrobe and restrooms probably used to be dungeons. At least they’ve kept the metal doors from back then. Nice location, perfect for the size of the event.
Affiliate Stammtisch was organized by Martin Dorst’s online marketing agency. They’re based in Leipzig and serve not only national retailers but also work for regional and local clients which I find great. Many agencies compete over the same clients, usually the large enterprises. But I believe the small and medium-sized companies are a huge market too.
I liked that they didn’t have a formal agenda for the evening. People go to networking events because they want to talk and not because they want to listen to lengthy presentations. Some of the sponsors didn’t even show up, probably because it was a Friday evening.
But most importantly, I really liked the fact that Martin wasn’t trying to turn the evening into a self-promotion show for his company. You know, at similar events organized by agencies they’re just using this for hardcore selling. Some companies don’t realize that they need to build reputation by action and not words. Martin understands this concept very well and I’m sure he and his team got something out of their work without having to push hard.
So thanks to Martin, Alexander and the rest of the team. I’m looking forward to next year’s event.
See you at the Mobile World Congress 2009
I’m going to attend this year’s GSM Mobile World Congress, formerly known as the 3GSM World Congress. It’s the largest conference and trade show around the mobile industry. It’s taking place from February 16 to 19 in Barcelona, Spain. If you happen to be around or somewhere nearby I’d be happy to meet you.