In affiliate marketing, as in any complex system, there are sometimes too many conditions and uncertainties. We decided to reject the linear approach and add a little chaos. The material turned out a little, um, chaotic.
Here are the very offers we talked about. Use them wisely:
Calendar.com (WW) – payments service – 26.92% CPS
Upwork (US) – work marketplace – 53.83% CPS
Advance Auto Parts (US,PR) – automotive aftermarket – 11.535% CPS
Qatar Airways (WW) – national airline – 1.538% CPS
Avast (Multigeo) – Mac and PC security – 23% CPS
Condor (DE) – German airline – 9.22 CPS
Thumbtack (US) – American home services – 23% CPS
Easeus (WW) – software developer – 38.45% CPS
Please let our manager know if you are interested in these offers – khl@moonrover.pro
And fourthly, but not least, it should be noted that sometimes offers simply behave unpredictably, and despite all the bottomless depth of analytics and other counter-intuitive statistical tools, sometimes it is simply not clear why one offer brings profit and another does not. When discussing so-called successful cases, we fall into a retrospective error. Because usually at conferences speakers do not give presentations, – “125 examples from my practice, where I seemed to have done everything right, but nothing worked and I do not know why.”
Chaos isn’t the chaos that feeds on Warp energy and endlessly plots against humanity across the universe. Nor is it the mess on a table (though that’s part of it), but rather the normal state of matter. But since our brains have evolved to see patterns in everything, especially where there aren’t any, chaos somehow scares us and serves as an antagonist to order, and not just in fantasy universes. That doesn’t seem entirely fair.
Returning to the question of systems versus chaos, let’s think about what the offers we presented have in common. Apart from the obvious category – “they are all affiliate offers”, at first glance there is no system. They belong to different categories and niches, they have different payments, and nothing formally unites them. Apart from one subtle and at first glance difficult to catch detail – they are all good. These are offers that work and on which they earn. You see, sometimes chaos is not so bad.
The chaotic approach does not imply anything destructive or wrong. It is rather a call to try something new in a random way. Sometimes, it may work. Or not. Or quite often, it works. Almost always. Although rarely. Okay, okay, there is no system to it, but if you think about it like that, it turns out that all affiliate marketing consists of probabilities, possibilities and a little bit of selective statistics, which is also chaos expressed as a percentage.