Archive for June, 2010

Just recently we were left a comment from a reader wanting to know a little more about how to write product reviews when you don’t actually own the product.  We thought that this was a really good question and impossible to answer in just a few sentences.

We’ve written hundreds (and maybe even thousands) of product reviews over the years and since we aren’t multi-millionaires…yet, we couldn’t possibly buy each of those products to review. What we’ve done however is learned how to write them in a way where we don’t need to own the product.

We don’t have to lie and say we have actually personally reviewed the product or make things up but we can still end up with a top quality review that is helpful to the reader.

So for starters, let’s take a look at the actual question that was asked:

I just like to know how you would write a review of a product which you haven’t owned or used. I have been wondering about it for quite some time now. Rather than just saying… “Most customers who bought this product find it…” how would you structure it.

In another of your post, you mentioned adding your own story as the introduction to make your review more interesting. But that will be quite difficult if you haven’t used the product yourself. Any advice would be most helpful.

Essentially there are two questions being asked here but we will start with the first. The key to writing product reviews when you don’t own the product is to do your research.

Now I can just see some of your switching off already thinking that this is going to mean a bit of work. I won’t lie to you, this will require you to get in there and learn as much as you can about the product. But stay with me here because you need to remember that you only need a handful of pages to make a full time income. Spending a day researching a product and writing a good product review can result in years of recurring income. So for those that still work full time think about a days work in your current job. What do you get from that one day of work in terms of income? Yep that’s right, you get one day of pay…that’s it! You are never going to get any more than that. Which means you have to head back to work the next day to get that same amount of money. With a product review, you only need to spend one day working on it and then if all goes to plan you can potentially receive a recurring income for years to come.

Researching means reading everything you can about the product – read the Amazon product page and the reviews, find the manufacturers website and read about the product there, find any other website that refers to that product and keep reading. This shouldn’t take any more than a couple of hours. While you are researching you should be taking down as many notes as possible.

Once you have this information it becomes a lot easier to write about the product when you don’t own it….it’s almost as if you do own it when you have this level of detail. But that still doesn’t answer the question on how to actually structure the review. Well it’s actually a lot simpler than you might thing. It really comes down to how you word your sentences.

Let’s just go with an example to see how this works. I’ll use the iPad as an example. Now we both own one of these and just love them so we could easily write a review about it. However our review would sound a lot different to what it would sound like if we didn’t own one. Here’s how they might differ:

Version 1: I Own the Product

What I really love about my iPad is that I no longer need to lug a big heavy laptop with all its heavy cords and cables with me when I am traveling.  The iPad measures approximately 10in by 8in and it literally fits into my handbag so I have done away with my laptop bag. It’s small but not too small that I have to squint to see the screen and is light enough and compact enough that it makes traveling a breeze.

Version 2: I Don’t Own the Product

You will no longer need to lug a big heavy laptop with all its heavy cords and cables when traveling. The iPad measures approximately 10in by 8in and will literally fit into your handbag or briefcase. You can finally do away with having to carry around that extra laptop bag. It’s small but not too small that you have to squint to see the screen and is light enough and compact enough that it makes traveling a breeze.

Notice how I am saying pretty much the same thing but in a very different way. Let’s try another example:

Version 1: I Own the Product

I’ve downloaded a multitude of applications since purchasing my iPad. This is what makes the iPad so great – without the apps, the iPad would just be a glorified laptop. I’ve downloaded games, magazines, recipe apps, books, weather apps, to do lists, project planners, office apps, utilities and so much more.

Version 2: I Don’t Own the Product

You can download a multitude of applications for your iPad. This is what makes the iPad so great – without the apps, the iPad would just be a glorified laptop. You can download games, magazines, recipe apps, books, weather apps, to do lists, project planners, office apps, utilities and so much more.

You can see how you don’t need to say you own the product to write a good review. It’s simply how you word those sentences. It basically means using ‘You’ instead of ‘I’. But don’t overdo it. You don’t want to have a review full of sentences that start with ‘You’.  So also include the word ‘It’ or the product name itself or other similar words. For example:

  • “It has a load of features including…”
  • “One of the best features is…”
  • “The iPad has a load of features including…”

Just keep wording your sentences using this sort of style and you should find it a lot easier to write reviews even if you don’t own the product.

So now to the second question…. Writing a story to go with your review is a great way to get readers to keep reading so it’s a tip you should all try to learn if you are going to write good product reviews.  Unfortunately however we’ve run out of time and this post is already getting way too long. But stay tuned as we will answer it in our next post.

On one of our blog posts recently a reader left a question wanting to know how many product reviews we had to write before we started to see any measurable success. I started to write a response to him but it became so long that I knew that I had to write a blog post about it. It’s a question that just can’t be answered in a few words and the reason for that is that the number of product reviews made no difference to our level of success at all.

That may be surprising to some but really we could have kept on writing hundreds of reviews without making any substantial difference to our income. And in fact, we did just that sometime back when we added 8 posts a day to our blog. It was a great tactic and brought in traffic and it did increase sales but the amount of effort we had to expend to get that increase just wasn’t worth it in the end. If we had kept at it, we would probably be stressed and strung out by now and still not making the same amount of money we are today.

You really don’t need to create hundreds of reviews to make a good income online – you don’t even need 20 or 10 or even 5. You actually only need one review to make a full-time income. We have a few reviews that are doing just that. However, we’re not advocating that you should only write one review – diversity is the key as you never know what could happen in this business. That page could suddenly disappear from Google for instance.

The problem most people have with affiliate marketing is that they think they need to write hundreds of product reviews or build a multitude of websites in order to be successful. It really isn’t necessary and in fact it can be detrimental. The more you have to work on, the more you spread yourself thin. What this means is that nothing gets the attention it deserves and nothing really works.

We did exactly the same thing when we were working on all our 20 websites at the one time. We never got anywhere and we only started seeing success when we focused on just one website. And then when we focused in even more by working on only a few pages we did even better.

It all comes down to quality vs quantity. Once you grasp this concept,  it’s then and only then that you will start to see real success online.

So this is what we suggest for anyone trying to make money online with Amazon products although this will work with any products really.

1. Choose 5 products from Amazon to promote

Choose products that are getting good reviews and those with a price tag over $150. We recommend choosing 5 products because you never know if one product is going to do better than another.

2. Write a good quality review for each of those products

Your reviews need to be unique and provide a lot of detail. Our best reviews are over 1000 words and we find they convert so much better. Just think about what you would want to see in a review if you were looking to buy a particular product. Don’t spend too much time on writing the review – just do your best and get it up there. You can tweak it later once you start getting traffic. Just keep in mind that it is the quality of the review that converts.

3. Get as much traffic to those reviews as possible

This is the most important step and is often missed by most. If someone says to me that they aren’t making money online, this is usually the reason. The industry average for affiliate sales is thought to be around 1 in 100 clicks through to the merchant. In other words you have to send 100 people through to Amazon in order to achieve 1 sale. Now I know from experience that we get a better conversion rate than that with the way we write up our reviews and Amazon itself converts better than 1 in 100 but  this gives you a general idea.

So if you only receive 100 visitors to your product review page per week and out of those 100 visitors only 10 click through to Amazon then you are only going to achieve about 1 sale every 10 weeks. Doesn’t sound so good does it? This is why getting traffic to your site is absolutely critical.

We recommend spending 80% of your time working on getting traffic.

4. Create content that links back to those product reviews

While you are working on generating traffic, spend some time writing up some articles for your blog. These articles won’t be product reviews but instead short information type articles. They only need to be around 400 words each but in some way related to the product you are promoting. So for instance, say you have written a product review for a gold diamond ring. You then write a 400 word article on how to clean a diamond ring. You upload that article to your site and add a link in that article back to your gold diamond ring product review. This helps to boost that product review and also helps to boost your site.

If you can do one of these articles per week for each product review (ie. 5 articles in total per week if you have written 5 product reviews) then that is excellent. But if you are strapped for time then even one or two articles per month per product review is still good. If you’d rather not write the articles yourself and have a bit of cash to spare then you should be able to get a well written 400 word article written up by writers in Elance for around $5 each.

So what is the answer to making a decent living from Affiliate Marketing?…in our opinion it is definitely quality content and high traffic volumes.

Lately we’ve been working on new ways to generate traffic to our blogs and are starting to try online services that can generate backlinks through placing articles on other sites. You’ve probably seen some of these sites or even tried them – sites like 1WayLinks, Unique Article Wizard, Free Traffic System and so on. We will do a blog post on the various backlinking services available at a later date..

As part of these services you can submit what is called a donor blog to the system. What this means is that you create a blog (or use one you already have), submit it to the backlinking site and once it has been approved, content is automatically submitted to your blog on a regular basis. In some cases you can receive up to 10 articles a day on your blog. The articles are just drip fed to your blog and you often don’t need to do anything but watch the content go up.

This was the case with us and we now, after a couple of months, already have a blog with close to 400 articles on all sorts of subjects ranging from dog training right through to insurance, ps3 gaming, crafts, hobbies and more…with more coming in on a regular basis. So what do you do with a blog like this with such a diverse range of topics? We could just as easily leave it as is since it’s not like we need to do anything to maintain it.

But then we had a thought that maybe we could turn it into an article directory. Nice idea in theory but in practice it really looked like a lot of hard work. I could just imagine the time it would take to find an article directory script and set it all up and then somehow transfer 400 articles over. It just seemed like too much to do on top of our already full schedule.

But then a thought came to me…I wonder if there is a WordPress plugin that can turn a WordPress blog into an article directory. It only took me a few minutes of searching and I came up with a couple of possibilities…and both of them free! And in fact, I never got around to trying the second one because the first one did the job beautifully….and by the time I was done, I had turned that blog into a professional looking article directory in well under 30 minutes.

So if you have a blog with lots of diverse topics then this might work for you too.

Steps to Creating Your Own Article Directory

Step 1: Download the following files – these are all free by the way:

1. Article Directory Plugin – More info for this plugin can be found here
2. Article Directory Theme – More info for this theme can be found here
3. Role Manager Plugin – More info for this plugin can be found here
4. Post Corrector WordPress Plugin – this one is optional – it allows you to add categories quickly and easily and this is the sample file of categories which you can use with this plugin. More info for this plugin can be found here

Step 2: Upload the Article Directory Plugin and Activate It

The plugin is easy to upload and activate and it includes various options which you can change in the WordPress dashboard such as excluding certain categories from displaying and whether or not to show empty categories.

Step 3: Upload the Article Directory Theme and Activate It

Note that you don’t have to use this theme. You can use your own but I can’t provide instructions on what to do if you use your own. I just know that when using their theme it all works perfectly and the theme is quite clean and ready to use. If you need more info on using the Article Directory plugin with your own theme then check out the creators website  – Articlesss.com

Step 4: Add Categories

If you already have an existing blog then you won’t need to add any categories as you will have most likely added categories in the past. But if your blog is new then you can either manually add categories or use the Post Corrector WordPress plugin from Step 1 above. This will allow you to quickly add categories and subcategories especially if you use it in conjunction with the sample file of categories. This will create categories similar to EzineArticles.com.

Step 5: Upload the Role Manager Plugin and Activate It

To be quite honest we never got around to uploading this one. The articles we receive come straight from 1WayLinks and are automatically added to the one user account in WordPress. I think however that if you are wanting to get serious with your Article Directory then you really need to use this type of plugin so that you can better manage users wanting to submit articles to your directory.

Step 6: Your Done!

Your Article Directory should be up and running at this point. Your only job now is to adjust the sidebar widgets, header and footer to make it suit your blog.