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Build A Profitable Business on Warrior Plus Part 1 – Getting Started

Build A Profitable Business On Warrior Plus

Whenever someone new attempts to earn money on Warrior Plus, there’s often a lot of confusion about why they’re not seeing any success after signing up. They’ve heard that this is the place to be a successful online entrepreneur, but what they don’t realize is, it’s a platform – not a business model.

The business model is something you have to create, and that’s where most individuals run into obstacles. Warrior Plus supports both affiliate marketers and vendors who want to launch their own products.

If you’d like to create a business that soars on this site, you ideally want to become both, maximizing your earning potential and watching it grow over time from both angles.

Start with Transparency That Builds Trust

As someone who has drive to succeed and a desire to make something of themselves, you might only look at things from your perspective. But if you want others to spend money with you, you have to consider how they see you.

Signing up for Warrior Plus, or most platforms for that matter, and getting an audience to use your links to buy something is easier when you are transparent with who you are. Although the site gives you the ability to use a random username in your dealings, that often creates a sense of doubt with the customer, vendor or affiliate.

Vendors have to be very careful with who they approve to promote their products. If they approve someone who sends junk traffic (blind, untargeted traffic), who lowers their EPC or causes lots of refunds and chargebacks, then it ruins their launch because affiliates don’t want to bother with low converting offers or ones with a large numbers of refunds. There are simply too many other offers to promote it’s not worth the risk.

If you have no record of conversions on the site, they won’t know whether or not you’re trustworthy. So often, the vendors go looking for information about you. If you’re BBQMan1972 that doesn’t tell them as much as your actual name does.

With your real name, they can do things like Google you to see if you have a website, and if so, how spammy or valid is it? They can also look you up on Facebook and see if you have any mutual friends or see how your posts look and whether or not they get engagement or are spammy as well.

They can head to YouTube to see if you have a channel and watch your review videos to see what they’re like. Of course, you can also add some of that to a note, but transparency is good all the way around.

Customers like knowing who they’re buying from, so as a vendor, it’s always a good idea to use your name and a real photo in your bio. This gives the consumer confidence about who you are – and it also helps affiliates feel comfortable sending their subscribers to you.

Take Time to Develop Connections for Approval

Getting approved isn’t just for affiliates. While vendors can launch a product with Warrior Plus approval, affiliates will also be sizing them up to see if they want to promote for them.

From an affiliate standpoint, if you have no track record, you have to prove to vendors that you’re worthy of approval. Of course, some will approve you with no stats required. If you want to get approved, make a plan to connect with the vendor before you apply.

Start by getting on their affiliate list, if they have one. You may also want to get on their subscriber list to see what talking points they emphasize with their customers. You can see what they will approve of in terms of promotions by watching how they promote others.

Next, friend them on Facebook – because that’s where many marketers network on posts, in groups and in private messages. You want to begin engaging with their posts at first.

Private message them and ask if they have a group for their affiliates. You might want to mention your plans for reviewing and promoting their upcoming launch. This might help them put you on a short list to send a review copy to whenever it’s ready.

If you want to, make a post about the upcoming product and tag the vendor in it. You might say something like, “Creating an awesome bonus for people who grab John Doe’s (product name) through my link next Thursday. Can’t wait to tell you about it!”

One thing that happens with public connections is that others watch to see who is promoting products like the ones they’re launching. So if John Doe’s marketing friends see your post, they might approach you to promote for them, too.

Right before you apply for approval, shoot a quick message to the vendor and let them know you have your bonus or promo ready and that you’re going to apply under your username (and let them know what that is).

If you’ve made friends with them, then the fact that you have no stats to stand on won’t work as much against you. Being friends on Facebook, they can see that you’re a real person, with friends and family – not someone trying to hide who they are so they can make some scam sales in a hurry.

As a vendor, you’ll want to take the same approach, only you’ll be targeting people who promote the same kinds of products as the one you’re launching. Network with those affiliates, and do it in a friendly way.

Whenever your JV page is ready for your launch, post it publicly. Don’t tag everyone. Save that for a leaderboard, if you run a contest. If you have a good rapport with some of the affiliates, send them a short, quick message letting them know the launch is coming up – and be sure to send the link to the JV page, along with a review copy.

Just don’t stay silent and fail to engage with them and then spring the request on them. That feels more spammy to the affiliates, and you want genuine communication and networking.

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