| Let's face
the facts!
Almost everyone
online today is looking to make or save a
buck any way
they can. In the past, most of the people who
clicked on
your affiliate links used to purchase without a
second thought...
but, as times get tougher online, it seems
a growing
number won't!
As money gets
tighter and product prices rise, people who
know how to
manipulate the system will sometimes replace
your affiliate
ID with theirs and "hijack" your commissions.
Here's an example:
Let's say your
affiliate link is
www.ebookaboutcats.com/?live-well.
Say the highjacker
uses the affiliate ID of captain-hook.
What he would
do is replace your ID with his, and buy from
the URL www.ebookaboutcats.com/?captain-hook.
The bottom
line: the hijacker puts your money in his pocket.
In other cases,
they can't stand the thought of you "making
money off
them" so they bypass you by simply chopping off
the end of
your affiliate link that contains your ID.
Instead of
buying from www.ebookaboutcats.com/?live-well,
the bypasser
will simply "chop off" the affiliate ID at the
end and simply
buy from the plain URL www.ebookaboutcats.com
--without
your affiliate ID attached!
Either way,
you get cheated out of your rightful commission.
To help you
fight these affiliate link hijackers I offer a
couple of
my best (proven and battle tested) tips, which
will at least
confuse these "hijackers" and, in many cases,
often defeat
and disarm them completely.
Side Note:
If someone really, really wants to steal your
affiliate
commission, they will find a way; however, most
hijackers
are just opportunists who will only act if they
see an easy
buck.
The first and
cheapest way to hide your affiliate links is
using a javascript
redirect page. This is where you hide
your affiliate
link in a page on your site using a simple
javascript
that redirects people to your affiliate link.
It works great
not to expose your "naked" affiliate link in
your actual
email messages and ezine ads, but, once people
get redirected
to the true affiliate link, many affiliate
programs expose
the affiliate link along with your ID in the
browser address
bar.
Here's an example
of a redirect script in action.
Click => http://www.ebookfire.com/esejs.html
Notice how
the link takes you to a page where you can see my
affiliate
ID, ebookfire, in your web browser's address bar.
Like it or
not, someone can replace my ID with theirs and
"hijack" the
commission... but at least the redirect script
keeps them
from immediately seeing my "naked" affiliate link
(http://hop.clickbank.net/?ebookfire/ebksecrets)
when I
publish it
in my newsletter, email, or on my website.
You can get
free redirect scripts just about anywhere you
find free
javascripts. Here is the script I use
http://www.ebookfire.com/jrs.shtml.
A better way
to hide your affiliate links is using a zero-
frame or "invisible"
frame that masks the affiliate link by
making it
appear you are sending people to a page on your
website. In
reality, you are actually sending them to your
affiliate
link.
This is the
technique used by those "sub-domain" redirect
services that
provide you with urls like
http://ese.ebookfire.net.
While giving
someone a link like that is much better than
using a "naked"
affiliate link such as
http://hop.clickbank.net/?ebookfire/ebksecrets,
there is a
problem. As
soon as someone does a "view >> source" in their
web browser
they'll see your naked affiliate link plain as
day... which
instantly blows your cover!
Currently the
best way to protect your affiliate commissions
from ruthless
hijackers is to use a combination of a zero-
frame page
along with URL encryption. This involves sending
someone to
URL that looks like a page on your site, but
actually pulls
in your affiliate link like those "sub-
domain" services.
However, there's one critical
difference...
If someone
does a "view >> source" in their browser, you
have added
protection in that all they will see is a jumble
of computer
code instead of your naked affiliate link.
Check out this
example of a zero-frame with URL encryption
in action.
Click => http://www.ebookfire.com/ese.html
Side Note:
Beware of cloaking scripts that use javascript to
mask your
affiliate link because they could malfunction in
some web browsers.
Here's the
bottom line: if you are going to sell through
other people's
affiliate programs, never send a "naked"
affiliate
link... you're just asking for people to hijack or
bypass you
if you do.
If you want
to get paid more often through your affiliate
links, make
sure it's not obvious you're referring people to
an affiliate
link. If they can't easily see how to hijack or
bypass your
link, a lot more people who would have taken the
money out
of your pocket will just go ahead and buy through
your link
- which is, after all, the whole point! :-)
Jim Edwards,
author of numerous best-selling ebooks, earns
thousands
in affiliate commissions every month! Jim has
developed
"Affiliate Link Cloaker," the easy, FAST, safe way
to STOP affiliate
link "hijackers"... Dead in their tracks!
Click
Here
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