
John Chow today posted a post outlining 
why he’s not an Amazon Affiliate.  It’s a good post in that it gives an insight into his approach to  affiliate marketing. The best point John alludes to is that Amazon  doesn’t ‘fit’ with his blog. He makes more from other better targeted  affiliate programs than Amazon.
However the 
Amazon Associates Program  is well worth considering for some bloggers. I use it and this month  it’ll earn me over $2500 USD – not my biggest income stream, but not the  ‘pennies and dimes’ that some say it has the potential to earn.
To  bring a little balance to the debate over the Amazon Affiliate program I  thought I’d give a few reasons that I am an Amazon Affiliate:
1.  Amazon is a trusted Brand – I surveyed some of my readers a year back  and asked them to give me a list of online stores that they had made  purchases from in the last 12 months. Amazon came up number 1 as the  most popular shopping destination mentioned. Readers know Amazon and are  familiar with it – they trust it and do spend significant money there.
2.  Commissions – John writes that he’s not satisfied with a 4% commission.  He’s right in some ways, 4% isn’t that much when you’re selling a $10  book – however when you’re selling a Get a Price on the 
$5000 Camera or a 
$25,000 Tractor  (I know someone who does quite well out of ride on mowers and tractors)  it certainly adds up. Not only that, the 4% rate that John talks about  is the base rate. Unfortunately it is as high as it goes on consumer  electronics – however on most other products there is a sliding scale  where the more you sell the higher your commission goes to. Sell more  than 6 items in a month and your commission goes to 6% – sell over 630  and you’re up to 8% (the rate I’m on). The 
4-Hour work Week that John uses as an example earned me around $1 a book. Still not a lot – but I did sell 100 or so of them (after my
 interview with it’s author)  which not only earned me $100 but also helped push the numbers of sales  up for the month, moving me into the next earning bracket

3.  People Buy More than One Item – the great thing about Amazon is that  you don’t just earn a commission on the product that you people to, but  anything that they buy once they’re at Amazon. I did an experiment  earlier in the year where I published a review of a digital photography  book on my blog and placed a tracking code in the link to see how much  the review earned me specifically. What I found was that the product in  the review did quite well – but the sales of other products that people  made once they got to Amazon was actually much greater than the sales of  the actual book. People went on to buy all manner of products (other  books, electronics, cosmetics etc) – I earned a commission on each one  of them – now that’s passive income. You earn a commission on anything  that a person buys within 24 hours of you sending them to Amazon.
4.  Easily Integrated – There are more and more plugins and tools that have  Amazon Affiliate integration built into them to help you easily place  links in your blog posts. I use ecto for Mac which has a tool that  searches for products and links them in in just a couple of clicks. WP  has plugins also. The affiliate links already mentioned in this post  took seconds to integrate in.
5. Payment Options – Amazon pays their  affiliates in a number of ways. One of the things that I like is that  they give you the option to be paid in products instead of cash. I don’t  do this every month (I couldn’t spend that $20,000+ a year at Amazon…  well maybe I could) but occasionally do and use it as prizes for blog  readers. I recently offered DPS readers $500 of Amazon products in a  forum signup competition. The prize is paid for out of my affiliate  earnings.
6. Small Payments Add Up – In my early days of making money  from blogs I didn’t have the luxury of picking and choosing my income  streams as much as I (and other full time bloggers) now do. I needed to  earn money somewhere and even the small amounts that Amazon brought in  were better than nothing. Over time these payments began to add up. In  the early days I didn’t even earn enough for a minimum payment amount  and had to wait a few months before they’d pay me – but those pay outs  were milestones that I celebrated. If I’d not gone with Amazon because  they didn’t earn me a lot I might not have gone with any ad networks or  affiliate programs – sometimes you have to take what you can get.
7.  It’s an Investment that Matures Over Time – My approach with Amazon is  to treat it a little like a savings account or an investment that you  put a little into each week and which matures in it’s earnings over  time. What do I mean by this? I add links to Amazon over time and find  that in doing so I’m creating more and more doorways into the Amazon  store. Each time I do I increase the chances of sending someone to  Amazon and seeing returns on those visits.
8. The Holidays are Boom  Time – While I’m really happy with the way my Amazon Affiliate income is  growing ($2500 a month is so far beyond what I’d ever expected from it  in the early days) it’s worth noting that things really fire up in the  lead up to Christmas and the holiday season. Over the last few years  I’ve noticed significant jumps in Amazon earnings in December (as much  as 100%). The key is to plan ahead (make sure your links are all up to  date a couple of months out) and run a few Christmas specific posts in  the lead up to the Holiday rush (start to prepare as early as  October/November).
9. Wide Array of ProductsWhat initially attracted  me to using Amazon’s Affiliate program was the breadth of products that  they had in their system. This is a great thing if you’re niche is  narrow or quite obscure as many bloggers find it difficult to find  affiliate programs to match their blog’s focus. Blogs like John’s and  mine here at ProBlogger do have an array of options for affiliate  programs (which is why I don’t use it a lot on this blog and make most  of my earnings from Amazon from product related blogs) but many bloggers  don’t have the luxury of being able to choose high paying affiliate  programs because they simply don’t relate to our topics. Amazon then  becomes one of the more attractive options.
So is the Amazon Affiliate Program for you?
I  can’t answer that question for everyone – I won’t pretend that it works  brilliantly on every blog but I know quite a few bloggers making  significant earnings each month from the program. Blogs with a strong  product focus can do quite well through the program if links to Amazon  are well integrated into posts (see some of the links below for tips). I  would advise moderation in using the program – don’t place them in  every post you write unless they are relevant. Links placed in genuinely  helpful reviews do better than links and banners in sidebars.
The best way to see if it converts is to give it a go.
How to Make Money from Amazon Affiliate Program
I’ve written numerous tips on how to optimize a blog for earning money from the 
Amazon Associates Program. I hope that some of these posts help you increase your earnings from the program: