by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Although I don’t make a fortune as an affiliate with Amazon and Apple, so far it’s proven to be reliable income. And it’s fairly passive income.
The only problem is that it’s something of a hassle. You run your links through the retailer’s affiliate URL link-maker, it assigns your affiliate code for credit, and then if someone clicks on your link, you make a commission from whatever they buy on the site during that shopping session. I do keep my affiliate links in a document so that I can just copy/paste them without having to run through the link-maker again, but it’s still a bit of a time suck. We also have to be careful to follow the retailers’ terms and conditions for use and be sure to put a disclosure on our site when we use these links.
Apple doesn’t ordinarily make my business dealings with them easy. I’m definitely not an Apple fan girl. I find their site difficult to use as an author and am dismayed at the number of readers who have written me telling me they’ve had a hard time locating my books on their site. This spurred me to change my website, create dedicated pages for each of my books, and include a direct link to Apple. I also find Apple the most difficult retailer to upload to. And their royalty reporting reminds me of the reports I get from trad-publishers–inscrutable.
However! A pleasant surprise from Apple recently. I discovered that we can embed code in our blog/site’s footer section to have all Apple links automatically convert to Apple Affiliate links.
The link-maker is here: https://autolinkmaker.itunes.apple.com/ . And a detailed walk-through of how to add the code in our footer for WordPress, Blogger, and Tumblr is here.
Another cool thing Apple has that Amazon doesn’t offer is the ability to attach a geo-prefix to our links so that readers are automatically redirected to their country’s Apple retail site. With Amazon, we have to go through a 3rd-party to have our links automatically open in the correct country (and the 3rd party services I’ve looked into charge a commission).
The service was briefly explained in my Apple Affiliate newsletter that I recently received (I’m starting to benefit from the fact that I’m now opening these newsletters):
“Affiliate Tip
Ensure your link works globally by adding a geo prefix to the beginning of your link as shown in the example below. You can add this geo prefix manually to your links, or it will be added automatically when you use Link Maker. Having links geo ready ensures links work globally; this is especially important for music where songs and albums may have different iTunes URLs by geo.
Example link: https://geo.itunes.
My question is….can we get this cool geo feature to work with the auto-link-maker? I haven’t fiddled around with it to see, but it would certainly be convenient.
Have you checked into being an affiliate for your retailers? Any cool tips to share?
Apple's tool automatically changes Apple links to Apple Affiliate Links: Share on X
This is really interesting, Elizabeth, for which thanks. I know several authors who are affiliates with one site or another. They say a similar thing to what you’ve said (being affiliated is a solid and passive income, but Apple is a pain). It’s good to hear that Apple’s making at least some things easier.
Margot–Yes, this is a ‘set it and forget it’ thing, which is something of a relief. :)
I didn’t know that was an option. But it’s a good one.
I’m glad I’ve never dealt directly with Apple if they are that difficult. I heard they are very picky about directly uploaded ePubs, too.
Diane–You have to have an Apple device in order to upload. The only book that I directly uploaded there (without going through a distributor like Smashwords or Draft2Digital) I had to hire someone a fee to upload the file for me. It was sort of nutty.
My head’s spinning bit! Haven’t gone through this yet so I’m bookmarking you yet again! :)
Jemi–Bookmarks are good! I do a lot of that, too. :)
Elizabeth, interesting post. I’m Tweeting and Bookmarking it to follow up later this week when I have more time to investigate.
Stephen Tremp
http://www.stephentremp.com
Stephen–Hope it helps!
My hubby is a techie and he abhors Apple. I mean, you think the site is messy, just imagine what a tech expert faces when they delve into an Apple mess. We steer clear of Apple for now, but I imagine we won’t be able to forever.
Crystal–Same with my hubby!
What baffles me is how they’ve managed to brand themselves as so user-friendly. Their interface is impossible to navigate.
I tried the Amazon affiliate thing for a while, but it didn’t seem to get me anywhere. I am just not nearly diligent enough or organized enough for this sort of thing. Adding a “harder to use” layer for Apple… hmmmm… all these things I need to think about doing that I just don’t want to do…
Hart–For a lot of the affiliate stuff, you can just set it up and forget it. It’s a pain to go through and change all the links to affiliate links (which is why Apple’s solution is so great), but once it’s done it’s not really a continuing chore.
I think you’re doing the right thing by focusing on your writing now. You’re got so much going on in your life that keeping it more basic if possible is a smart idea!
Hi Elizabeth – great photo! However what an interesting post … I learn from you and your commenters – with their snippets of information … all grist to the mill – cheers Hilary
Hilary–Thanks! And hope the info helps. :)