Very well down and interesting! Thanks for sharing with the community. Here's a challenge if you're up for it... Perhaps somewhat controversial I think... How about conducting a similar analysis of the top affiliate sites promoting those 10 publishers?
I don't see how anyone except the affiliates themselves would know for sure what their conversion rates are like which would make it a bit of a guess as far as saying which affiliate sites were the "top" ...
OUTSTANDING! Thank you so much! I look forward to RE-DOING every single one of my pitch pages. It's okay because I'm quite board of my sites.
the question is though how to get affiliates to market your product... ANSWER THAT ONE NEXT and you will be a clickbank god in my eyes...
Great info...I agree. Hey Zibblu I tried fatloss4idiots and had a ton of clicks but 0 (goose egg) in sales. I thought it was odd that I hadn't received any sales in 1 months time of having it up on MSN, Yahoo and Google. Any reasoning of why this might be so?
No surprise there. Everyone wants to believe that high gravity products sell well. It would be so convenient, wouldn't it, to have an indication of what sells? As we see in this thread, everyone's interested in looking at information and analysis that rests for its significance on the assumption that high gravity products sell well. The truth that there's absolutely zero correlation between either gravity and conversion-rates, or gravity and sales numbers, is a kind of "dirty little reality" that makes people pretty uncomfortable, and can even lead to arguments/challenges (from the ill-informed) when you state it. The reality is that many high gravity products have particularly low conversion-rates and low numbers of sales, too.