Forum Moderators: skibum
I have a site about... widgets, and I want to sell related books from my content pages.
I am thinking of putting direct links to the books and to the amazon category pages straight from my content pages.
This way if a person clicks on my "books on widgets" link they will be sent directly to the related amazon page.
The other option would be to create a "store' inside my site, where I would list the books related to the category that the person clicked on.
If I do the store option, when a user clicks on "books on widgets" link, instead of going straight to amazon.com they would land on my special book store with amazon feeds in the results.
Isin't that just an extra step that is not really useful? If the person browses my store and chooses a book and then clicks, what's the difference?
He's browsing the book titles on my page instead of browsing the books on the amazon site... would that really create an advantage for me?
I'm confused about the advantages of building a store front from amazon feeds
Please help!
This has the added benefit of persistance - a regular visitor to your website may remember seeing the link to a particular book and conciously return to your website at a later date when they want to buy it.
Web services are more appropriate (and great) for a scenario in which less is known; such as complementing the results for a site search for example.
[edited by: dmorison at 8:02 pm (utc) on Feb. 26, 2006]
Could you give me some more advice about how webservices could do wonders?
And another thing, I was talking about promoting amazon.com books on my site using their feed, and not my own books...
So basically I'm wondering wy I should create a custom storefront with their data instead of sending them directly to the amazon.com store...
I guess what I'll do is organize the content manually and insert the best books for every content page manually with a little original description and a hardlink to amazon aff program...
Thanks for the advice!
If you have any other suggestions or advice about this project, feel free to let me know!
Fourchette
What's the use of using amazon data feeds to build a store with their products on your site when you can just hard link to the best products yourself ( and write an original description)
I know incredibill mentionned something somewhere about how good it is to make a custom storefront with the amazon feeds, but my question is,, why?
What are the advantages over making a litte research and hard link to the best sellers?
Fourchette
I tried the simple route first. I put a 'Further reading' text link on my page and pointed it to an Amazon search page on the topic.
Result - lots of clicks, no sales.
Big downside to this method is that if the visitor doesn't buy immediately from the Amazon page, or even goes to add more items to his basket, you don't get credit for the sale.
So then I wrote up a review on each book, linked directly to the product with an image ad.
Result? Nada. no clicks. no sales.
Yeah... Or maybe you should try to SEO on specific queries from people searching for books...
Like, try to rank on "books on widgets" and whem they arrive on your page they see a selection of the best books...
Also you can have a little section on your site when you publish all those reviews you made, and link to it from all the pages with a link 'our site's library'... The people that will click on it will be interested...
Web services only becomes really useful when you have a database driven site and want to use reviews/track listings in your content. A direct link from your page is best in your case I think
You do get credit for orders placed during the session caused by your click through
One thing though, the ROI is so poor that I would rather not 'leak' visitors who mght click on something more valuable (to me!)
I know the Amazon link opens in a new window but I don't like spawning windows like that - I hate popups myself.
Iguana - I had one month that was higher than usual. For some reason I don't think I want to know, someone bought four expensive women's watches, all exactly alike (yes, through a direct link). I've kept hoping for a replay of the generosity, guilty conscience, whatever... but it hasn't happened. My main products are books and DVDs, which take a lot of sales to add up to as much as those watches brought in.
I'm starting to insert those amazon links to my pages now...
I'd like to come back to the suggestion made above to choose the best selling items and to link to those directly...
Is it better to link them directly with the direct link tool which will show a little image and the price, or to build the link yourself and putting the image also yourself beside the link?
I guess it's (a little) more work to do it all by yourself, but isin,t that the only way to BIG it up a little?
Thanks
I was having this debate with my partner about amazon and book selling, I'd like to have your opinion on it...
The idea is to sell books through our site, which would be possible because we have very specific "niche" type traffic looking for info about the subject...
My idea is to make a link on the top of evey article that reads like : Find related books on this subject...
Up to that point we agree...
Where we disagree is where should that link points to.
He says: let's point directly to a relevant amazon.com page directly.
I say: Let's point the link to a page where we show 'selected' books with images and (maybe) a little unique description... Then when someone is interested in a book, he clicks on the book image and then gets to the right amazon page.
He says that this technique is useless because if people are willing to buy a book, they will be happy to be straight to amazon, where they can shop for a book. He also thinks that the extra step taken (two clicks to get to amazon instead of 1) will lower the overall number of clicks we send to amazon (thus reducing the sales)...
What do you think?
But your visitors may react differently. Create five pages of recommended books, and run them for a period of them. Then replace them with Amazon links. See what does better, and whether the extra effort to create your own pages is worth it.
For my sites, general recommendations have never worked well but I found if I just get the user to go to Amazon then they may buy that flamethrower they always wanted even if they don't buy the product they first looked at. Try a few different methods and see how they go.