Forum Moderators: skibum
I also noticed that while signing up for certain affiliate programs, I was asked to indicate if some/all of the affiliate proceeds were going to charity. Why do they ask this? Does answering yes invite more scrutiny, or does it mean they will be more likely to accept you?
What about legal issues? Can anyone just *say* they are giving x% to charity 'y' without it being independently verified?
Thanks all
My answers to your questions are in part speculation but I think accurate.
You are less likely to be accepted into programs if you are giving away part of the proceeds to a charity. Especially programs that pay bounties for clicks, leads, or large upfront commissions for items like credit cards. From some merchants point of view,I believe, these look like incentivised clicks. They don't want to encourage people to fill out lead forms or apply for credit cards, that they don't intend to use just to help out a charity.
Other retailers are hopeful getting customers to come directly to thier websites without going through an affiliate link in the future, and don't necessarily want to encourage customers to always go through the customers favorite charity website instead of directly to the retailers website.
But there are lots of merchants who have no problem with strategy and I think that their is real potential in that business model.
Best regards,