Green App Machine

Need assistance in building an affiliate marketing website, using

  • Posted21 hours ago

  • Proposals 8

  • Remote

  • #954248


Description



Experience Level: Intermediate


Estimated Job duration: less than 1 week


Hello,

I require a person with experience in web development (comfortable using WordPress), to assist/tutor me in building a website for affiliate marketing.


I know how to use the WordPress tools, and already have a WordPress site up and running. Require tutelage customizing the site to be optimized for affiliate marketing.





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Clarification Board






  • Kanita A.

    Yesterday

    Hi


    Interesting project,Shall we discuss the requirements in detail?Lets Discuss on PPH or Skype. Will finalize the bid once we discuss in details.


    Looking forward to hear from you soon.


    Regards,
    Kanita Ali.





  • Alan R.

    Yesterday

    Hi John,


    Do you have a particular affiliate management plugin in mind that you want training on?


    Thanks


    Alan





    Hello Alan,


    This is the reason I need training on this, I’m not sure what an affiliate management plugging is.


    Can you elaborate a bit?


    John






  • EdgeTech S.

    Yesterday

    Hello,


    What would be the budget for this job.?





  • Sudhanshu K.

    Yesterday

    Hello John,


    I have been through your requirement, and would like to discuss more with you regarding same.


    Could you please let me know the time convenient to you for further discussion? This would help me to provide you with exact quote and days required for the same.


    Looking forward to hear from you soon.





  • Satwinder S.

    Yesterday

    Hello John,


    Can we discuss this project further in detail as i am having 8 + years of experience in this field.


    Looking forward to hear from you soon.





  • Sufi S.

    Yesterday

    Hi John, Is it possible to have a discussion ?


    Thanks





  • Munish G.

    Yesterday

    Can we discuss this project in detail, to make it successful.


    Please initiate the message board and i will send you the link of my past work in wordpress.


    Looking forward to talk you soon.


    Regards





  • Pallvi G.

    Yesterday

    Hello John


    I already done many websites in past, Please share the link the website, So i can review your website. I am available for discussion.


    Thanks







Need assistance in building an affiliate marketing website, using

eBay Enterprise Marketing Acquires AffiliateTraction, Expands Programmatic

eBay Enterprise Marketing Solutions will announce Monday the acquisition of AffiliateTraction to strengthen its hold on performance marketing and build out programmatic tools to support its affiliate marketing network.


While terms of the deal were not disclosed, eBay Enterprise Marketing Solutions CEO Michael Jones did reveal that the company’s focus is now turning to integrating technologies from AffiliateTraction, and Digital Net Agency, another recent acquisition in the past few months.


Jones says the AffiliateTraction acquisition will increase the “size of the business by more than 30%,” with operating expenses expected to rise “not more than 10%.”


AffiliateTraction’s technology manages affiliate programs through a set of tools — a feature that Jones calls “unique.” The software recommends the affiliates with which a retailer should work, and automates attribution and commissions by calculating the amount they should pay each affiliate.


The platform informs publishers about the best advertising partners by bringing in raw data about the retailer’s site traffic to determine characteristics such as the number of influencers who frequent the site.


The data serves up profiles of the traffic that might alert affiliates when they have better traffic than what they get credit for receiving. Or the merchant could make decisions on attribution that may not line up with what the traffic is worth.


Tom Barr, e-commerce director at MonkeySports, runs its affiliate program through AffiliateTraction on blogger sites to UPS.com. MonkeySports has become one in about 500 new clients to eBay Enterprise through the acquisition. The company, which sells hockey, baseball and lacrosse equipment online and offline, had been shifting some of its business to eBay Enterprise prior.


“The investment in affiliate marketing for us is between 1% and 2% of total sales,” Barr says. “The return is very good because we set the commission and AffiliateTraction has a fixed management fee.”


For each $1 MonkeySports invests the company gets back about $15, Barr says. MonkeySports also runs search advertising on engines, shopping ads, retargeting, and email marketing, 


Aside from the technology and dedicated clients, eBay Enterprise Marketing gains tons of data, about 100 employees, and an easier route to take its affiliate program global. 


While eBay Enterprise Marketing has a small operation in Europe, Greg Shepard, AffiliateTraction founder, who joins the company as chief strategy officer, says it puts “boots on the ground” for eBay Marketing Solutions in London, Toronto, Canada; Sydney Australia; and Santa Cruz, California.


The global position gives it a strong position to compete against affiliate programs rivals such as Conversant’s CJ Affiliate, and Rakuten Marketing’s LinkShare.



eBay Enterprise Marketing Acquires AffiliateTraction, Expands Programmatic

Meet the website Facebook is censoring from your News Feed

The most powerful social network on the planet just exerted its enormous control over the Internet to squash a potential competitor. Facebook, which just announced it averages one billion daily users, is actively censoring any mention of Tsu.co. The social media giant has accused the brash young startup of not complying with its spam policies and now cites every mention of the site made on Facebook, Messenger, or Instagram as spam, censoring any post that includes the site’s URL (Tsu, the popular Chinese name, is still permissible).


While the harsh blacklisting of the site might seem like Facebook using its power over online traffic to crush a newcomer, Tsu.co is no ordinary social media site. While Tsu, like Facebook, is supported by ad revenue, the website promises to give 90 percent of that money back to users who generate original content on the site. What this means is Tsu users have a financial incentive to promote their content more than the average Facebook or Instagram user, which can lead to spam or spam-like tactics for building traffic.


The social media giant has accused the brash young startup of not complying with its spam policies and now cites every mention of the site made on Facebook, Messenger, or Instagram as spam.



“We do not allow developers to incentivize content sharing on our platform because it encourages spammy sharing,” a Facebook spokesperson told CNNMoney. In fact, Facebook has promised to allow Tsu posts and mentions of the site if Tsu disables an app that allows users of Tsu (Tsusers?) to post content simultaneously to Tsu and Facebook.


This would make sense if Tsu were the only site working this way. For one, many social networks—like Bubblews, 3Tags, and even big players like YouTube—practice some level of content sharing with users. Second, Tsu works the way the Internet works. While most sites might not function in the paid-per-click model of Tsu, every content creator on any major site is at least in part being funded by ad revenue.


And there’s a very good chance that ad revenue is owed in part to a sophisticated marketing campaign through Facebook. Data analytics firm Parse.ly found an astonishing 43 percent of the traffic sent to its network of news sites came from Facebook, while Google only netted 38 percent. Similarly, a Pew Research Center report found 63 percent of Americans get their news from Facebook. Indeed, according to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, one out of every five minutes an American spends on a smartphone is spent within Facebook.


This impressive level of control over what content people see means any creator of anything online is highly dependent on Facebook for traffic. Note the mass freakout in the blogosphere when traffic driven by Facebook shares began to slump earlier this year and distinctly dive in August. Sites that rely quite heavily on Facebook shares—like Thought Catalog, BuzzFeed, or the Huffington Post—saw massive drops in Facebook shares starting this past summer, according to the Awl’s John Herman.


This fragile dependency, however, hasn’t stopped such sites from embracing Facebook wholesale, with big name brands like the one fourth of all referral traffic? Ignoring it means you’ll lose out on a large chunk of ad revenue—and being censored from it might even ruin you. As David Fagin wrote on the Huffington Post, “being blocked from Facebook in this day and age is the equivalent of being kicked off AT&T in the mid 70s.”


This is the dilemma Tsu users find themselves today, and precisely why Tsu’s CEO and founder Sebastian Sobczak and his users have taken such umbrage to Facebook’s decision to banish the company from its sites. CNN spoke to one user who posted 25 drawings of dogs every day on Tsu then advertised them for sale on Facebook—an estimated 7,500 dog drawings—before they were pulled for being malicious.


According to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, one out of every five minutes an American spends on a smartphone is spent within Facebook.



What such an onslaught of content can look a lot like is spam, defined by Facebook as “sending bulk messages, excessively posting links or images to people’s Timelines and sending friend requests to people you don’t know personally.” Much of that is implicit in the design of a site like Tsu. Because the site is both invite only and relatively unheard of, it makes sense that a segment of Tsu’s users would continually attempt to lure people on Facebook to engage with their content, as well as produce as much content as possible.


But Tsu hasn’t done anything evil by doing so. All the site has done is offer a “trickle down” version of the same business model that pays for much of the Internet. If Facebook users aren’t happy about Tsu, they likely aren’t happy about any from a long list of websites that purely exist to drive ad revenue. By blocking Tsu, Facebook is challenging the notion that users and platforms can do what publishers have been doing for a generation.


One reason for that is the editorial control publications have over their social media behavior. This isn’t just about making sure the site doesn’t post anything offensive, but also managing when and how often content is pushed through sites like Facebook. An individual Tsu user, tantalized by the promise of real money as they are, might not hold the same restraint and cross the thin line between marketing and spam.


Tsu can work. A single mother from South Carolina posted a series of videos singing her daughter to sleep each night, which went viral and earned her hundreds of dollars of spending money—later netting her a record deal. The website has also found popularity with several celebrities, such as rapper 50 Cent, who has over 131,000 followers on Tsu.


But this shouldn’t be surprising. The individuals on Tsu are attracted to the service because it streamlines the money-making scheme that has built the modern Internet—the more eyeballs, the more money. Facebook knows this story well, frequently topping lists of earners from digital ad revenue. All Tsu is doing is taking the same model that made Facebook—and many, many others—famously rich and trying to spread it out among millions of users. 


Ben Branstetter is a social commentator with a focus on the intersection of technology, security, and politics. His work has appeared in the Washington Post, Business Insider, Salon, the Week, and xoJane. He attended Pennsylvania State University.


Illustration by Max Fleishman



Meet the website Facebook is censoring from your News Feed