How did I react when I saw Max the student affiliate’s earnings online? I raced into the kitchen to drink some milk just so I could race back to the PC and spurt it out my nose all over the keyboard. Here’s this 18 year old kid pulling in more off one affiliate network than I’m making at nearly twice his age in a fulltime job! (yes, I know it’s only turnover not profit before anyone says)
After I’d calmed down a bit, wiped up the spilt milk and reassured the neighbours that my loud exclamations were nothing to worry about, I read the rest of his posting. Essentially he’s asking why we’re not more open about our affiliate earnings and he signs off by asking other affiliate bloggers for our reasons for either posting or not posting our earnings. That did get me thinking. My immediate reaction is to get defensive and say that I don’t want to show people my earnings and why the hell should I? But the honest answer is that I don’t want people to find my affiliate packet a little limp and inadequate.
I’ve been working seriously on my affiliate business for about six months now on an evenings and weekends basis. I’m not somebody who has an awful lot of patience and the fact that my affiliate earnings are bumping along with no obvious sign of improving is leading me into the “could give it all up now” mindset. I’ve heard many a successful affiliate describe this point in the development of their business.
And this is where the wonder of blogging and community comes into play. Reading about other affiliates’ successes and how they got where they are now keeps me going in these gloomy times. I’m sure Max and Keiron and Shoemoney all took time to learn their craft and build up their business. They didn’t just start one morning then head down the bank that afternoon to collect the wheelbarrow load of cash they’d made. So Max, thanks for posting what you did. I’m not sure I’ll want to do the same when I’m in your position but if I do ever reach that position it’ll be thanks to people like you keeping me inspired.
Well, it’s going to be a long time until I can go fulltime as an affiliate but I took the day off from my “proper” job today to try to get a good chunk of affiliate work done. I started out the way I always imagined working from home would be like by sleeping through the alarm and getting up an hour and a half later than intended.
I moved on to reviewing stats, reading blogs and answering emails over a cup of freshly brewed coffee then settled down to have a long, bitter and swearword-infested fight with PHP and XML. I was trying to convert the XML from Amazon’s web service into a nice CSV file to use with Affilistore. I quickly learned that Amazon provide you with easily enough XML rope to hang yourself with. There’s far more data in their feed than I could ever need and so I spent ages trying just to figure out which bits of it were which. Then my rustiness with PHP paid me a visit and I spent a similar number of ages referring to the manual trying to work out how to manipulate said XML.
In the end I got something not entirely dissimilar to what I was trying to create but was not at all pleased that I’d wasted half the day trying to get it. It’s my intention to create a more general Amazon to CSV tool to put on this website but it’ll have to go sit on the backburner where so many of my other bright ideas are waiting. As much as I love Linux my years spent coding .NET at the day job mean development would be a heck of a lot quicker if I just bit the bullet and switched to hosting my sites on Windows.
By this point it was lunchtime already. In the day job, lunch usually marks the point at which my productivity takes a serious downturn but working at home I’ve actually got more done in the afternoon than the morning. This is a good sign as it kind of suggests that working for myself suits me.
I’ve discovered that one of my old, neglected sites is still seeing a fair bit of traffic and that most of it comes from the US. So I’ve installed openAds to rotate the banners on the site and geo-target them to the visitors. I’m thinking of revitalising and relaunching the whole site since people seem to still like visiting it.
I’ve also set up a PC at home with Fedora Linux so I can do development work, launched some PPC campaigns and done some tweaks to another one of my sites. All in all I feel I’ve been quite productive and I’ve certainly got more done in one day than I would have done in a week of just doing affiliate work in the evenings. Unfortunately you don’t get quick results in affiliate marketing (at least I don’t) so it’ll be a while before I see if my hard work pays off. In the meantime it’s back to the day job tomorrow - only four days until the weekend