Big CPA Networks = Not So Big Anymore?

As a CPA network owner myself, I am a member of a lot of CPA networks.  We do business with a lot of them, others we used to business with, and some we mean to but just haven’t gotten around to it yet.  So many offers, so little time…

Anyways, when you are a member of a lot of CPA networks you get a lot of newsletters from said networks.  One thing that they always like to do is put the names and contact info (and sometimes a picture) of all the Affiliate Managers at the bottom of the email.  Over the last year, I’ve noticed an interesting trend: the number of Affiliate Managers per network is shrinking!

This trend is especially evident in large CPA networks such as Affiliate.com and MediaTrust (formerly AdValiant).  So why is this happening? I think it’s simple: the industry is evolving in favor of smaller boutique networks instead of the giants that thrived before.  With margins on offers getting cut razor-thin, it’s the companies with low overhead and lower expenses that are winning the favor of affiliates today.

The new CPA network business model isn’t going anywhere anytime soon, since new affiliates are joining the industry by the day and these boutique networks are better at training and growing the revenue of these newbies.  It’s almost getting to the point where affiliates (especially super affiliates) are becoming like superstar athletes, and CPA networks are like agents.  Can you run an agency with just a couple of key clients?  Absolutely.  That’s why this trend is not going to stop any time soon.

At some point there might be too many networks for the affiliates out there, but I think that day is a long ways away.  As long as new people keep flowing into the industry, and as long as network owners keep innovating new ways to educate and involve the affiliates in their business model, there will be a place for them in the performance economy.

The Hot Offer Chaser

The hot offer chaser is constantly looking for the next big thing.  This affiliate will contact his Affiliate Managers on a weekly or daily basis to ask what the “hot offers” on the network are.  The Affiliate Manager will give him a few arbitrary offers that are performing well on the network, it really doesn’t matter what they are.  The hot offer chaser takes these recommendations, files them away somewhere, then goes along on his day of doing whatever it is the hot offer chaser does (it certainly isn’t marketing).

The hot offer chaser doesn’t create niches and new trends, he borrows, steals, or copies them.  At least that’s what he should be doing.  In all actuality he really doesn’t even do that.  Why spend the time to create a landing page and a content network campaign for the offer he was just recommended when he can ask his Affiliate Manager for the new hot offers tomorrow morning?

In case you haven’t figured by now, the hot offer chaser doesn’t make any money.  The hot offer chaser dreams of the day that he can have a $100 a day campaign.  He is so focused on getting all of the information together so that when he finally launches that magic campaign, it can’t possibly fail.  Problem is, he will never get around to it.

Don’t be a hot offer chaser.  Create those hot niches.  Pioneer those new marketing techniques.  Be creative.  Do some marketing.