Posted by AC Editorial Team in Affiliate Marketing, Web 2.0 Marketing Wednesday, 15 April 2009 08:00 2 Comments
In the second part of this blog, we will look at the last five tips for socializing your affiliate site.
Tip #6: Embrace Social Search
After bookmarks, networking, and shopping, search has become social! New custom search engines can be built on top of the big engine’s indexes. Anyone can handpick sites relevant to a certain topic and have their own specialized Google engine. What does that mean to you, the webmaster?
In order to be picked as a “social search worthy” site by those building custom engines, or to be rated well in a user-tweaked search engine, there is a golden rule: build a quality site. Explore custom search engines relevant to your business and niche and submit your site to them.
Adapt tagging if you haven’t done so until now. (See Tip #5 on Tuesday’s blog.) Social search sites are frequently bundled with social bookmarking and aggregate tagged websites from similar services. By being present in social bookmarking sites and having your content properly tagged, you increase your chances of being picked up by these search engines and their users.
Build your own search engine to enhance your site.
Tip #7: Build a Wiki
Building a community of users around your chosen niche brings many benefits, and it has never been easier to accomplish – at least on the technical side of things. In a thriving community, your users will generate quality content that the search engines will gladly index, helping your SEO efforts.
In addition, your loyal users will refer others to your site if they find it noteworthy.
Tip #8: Datafeed 2.0: Try a Mashup
It has never been a better time to get into datafeeds. Affiliate networks have launched APIs that allow easier, continuous, and more customized access to product data. Not only that, but you can complement your merchants’ product feeds with free data from other services to build up a content-rich site. (See Tip #3 on Tuesday’s blog.)
Think of your niche. What kinds of data are useful for your customers? How can you combine this data with affiliate feeds to make it even more useful for them? How can you twist the data and combine it with affiliate links to convert more visitors into shoppers?
Tip #9: Redesign with Web 2.0 in Mind
Clear design is good design, and it is now the standard, literally. Building sites using current web standards (using XHTML and CSS) brings many benefits, and fewer headaches about cross-platform compliance and accessibility.
Clever uses of new techniques (e.g., AJAX) make websites more responsive, easier to use, faster, and sleeker than their Web 1.0 predecessors. The clean and polished look of current web design trends accentuates the things that create the real value of a website: the content or service it offers. That results in a better user experience. Learn more about web standards and use them to speed up your site and make it more accessible to wide variety of browsers and platforms. Take advantage of the many available AJAX scripts (see Lightbox link below) to enhance your site.
Tip #10: Research Expected Trends
Finally, use the new social web as your market research playground. User-generated content is, by definition, a gold mine for researching what your audience is interested in and what they say about those topics.
Watch for tags that begin to pick up a larger volume of content, tags that appear on the “popular” pages of social sites. Find your next niche by browsing “related” tags on social bookmarking sites for unique combinations. See what’s most popular on the “popular” pages of sites like Digg.com, or Technorati.
Research international markets by exploring local social bookmarking and networking sites. See if there is a rising search interest for your topic in a different market. You can get ahead of local competitors by being the first to localize your established niche site in new markets where that niche is only just gaining ground.
Implement one or all of these tips, and you will be well equipped for the socializing your site.


Ahhh, there’s nothing I enjoy more than recycled material…
Research the Expected Trends of [b]2007[/b]
I’d recommend researching future trends, not ones from several years ago
Excellent tips, I’m actually intrigued by the “Build a Wiki” idea, I’m assuming it relates to constructing a forum. I think that’d be an excellent idea for any site, Google prioritises sites based on the amount of pages it has of that domain indexed in its engine. so a forum would give your domain sonority.