Amazon Masters--Is It Worth Targeting Items Below $100?

27 replies
This goes out to affiliates who are doing well with Amazon...

Do you think it's worth it to target items that are below $100, even around $20 or below?

I've pretty much gutted Amazon for my niche with items above $100.

I was thinking about moving onto CJ and gutting a site on there in my niche for all their higher priced products.

But I'd love to keep my affiliate income from this site centralized with Amazon.

So I'm thinking it might be profitable to go after the low priced products.

What do you think?
#$100 #amazon #items #mastersis #targeting #worth
  • Profile picture of the author MisterMunch
    You have to remember that people shop when they are on amazon. They are not settling for an order of 20, so they put in a few books, or maybe something different.

    I am not saying that promoting $20 products is the best strategy, but if you can send some traffic volume you sure will get some business out of it.

    Also remember that your affiliate % increase when you make more sales.
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    • Profile picture of the author JasonParker
      Originally Posted by MisterMunch View Post

      You have to remember that people shop when they are on amazon. They are not settling for an order of 20, so they put in a few books, or maybe something different.

      I am not saying that promoting $20 products is the best strategy, but if you can send some traffic volume you sure will get some business out of it.

      Also remember that your affiliate % increase when you make more sales.
      So far it seems the search volume is around the same for the higher priced items as it is lower priced items in my niche, so I'm not seeing how their would be much more volume I can push at them.
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  • Profile picture of the author Rsberg
    Well Im no "master" but I have had good luck with products below $100, even those as low as $3. The reason I went that low is I targeted everyday use products within my niches and have found that I get several sales per day.

    This ofcourse increases my commission percentage which is nice on the higher priced items and honestly, depending on the types of sites your building the little extra time it takes to target those lower cost products is well worth it in increased commissions.

    Other opinions may vary but IMO it's well worth it!
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    • Profile picture of the author JasonParker
      Originally Posted by Rsberg View Post

      Well Im no "master" but I have had good luck with products below $100, even those as low as $3. The reason I went that low is I targeted everyday use products within my niches and have found that I get several sales per day.

      This ofcourse increases my commission percentage which is nice on the higher priced items and honestly, depending on the types of sites your building the little extra time it takes to target those lower cost products is well worth it in increased commissions.

      Other opinions may vary but IMO it's well worth it!
      The only problem I have with doing it just for that reason alone is that the commission rate will go up and then eventually cap off... It's going to go up and cap off anyway no matter what I sell.
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  • Profile picture of the author Rsberg
    If you're not making that many sales then it's not capping off...

    I don't know how many you make or how quickly your sites make them but in my experieince I make my higher percentages quicker by adding these everyday use items to my arsenal.

    Just my opinion and experience, take it or leave it.
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    • Profile picture of the author JohnMcCabe
      There are several ways to profit from selling low-priced items.

      > As mentioned, if you're on the performance plan, selling a handful of cheap items a month can up your commissions on the higher-priced sales.

      > You can promote lower-priced add-ons for the items you currently promote. The classic example is electronics - the gizmo is the main sale, then you promote the cables, batteries, etc. as add-ons.

      > You can promote items people tend to buy in bunches. I once ran a promo for beach towels (~$15 each). People surprised me by buying them 6-10 at a time. That's a $90+ sale. As a bonus, when people ordered 6 towels, I got credit for 6 items sold.
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      • Profile picture of the author JasonParker
        Originally Posted by JohnMcCabe View Post

        There are several ways to profit from selling low-priced items.

        > As mentioned, if you're on the performance plan, selling a handful of cheap items a month can up your commissions on the higher-priced sales.

        > You can promote lower-priced add-ons for the items you currently promote. The classic example is electronics - the gizmo is the main sale, then you promote the cables, batteries, etc. as add-ons.

        > You can promote items people tend to buy in bunches. I once ran a promo for beach towels (~$15 each). People surprised me by buying them 6-10 at a time. That's a $90+ sale. As a bonus, when people ordered 6 towels, I got credit for 6 items sold.
        Nice insights. Thanks. The 3rd one has me thinking.
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        • Profile picture of the author myob
          By targeting specialty products such as in smallpartscom, you earn a flat 15% commission, and these types of buyers do buy in quite large quantitities. It's best to promote these niches directly by building up subscriber lists.
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    • Profile picture of the author christopher s
      Originally Posted by Rsberg View Post

      If you're not making that many sales then it's not capping off...

      I don't know how many you make or how quickly your sites make them but in my experieince I make my higher percentages quicker by adding these everyday use items to my arsenal.

      Just my opinion and experience, take it or leave it.
      This has been my experience as well. Sometimes the lower priced items that sell in higher numbers helps me hit higher commission rates and pushes everything up, so it is more than worth it.

      If you're already at the top commission rate though, you might want to just skip them and focus on the high dollar items.
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  • Profile picture of the author JasonParker
    Anybody who makes 5 or 6 figures per month with Amazon have any insights on this?
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  • Profile picture of the author matt5409
    in my experience, it is MUCH easier to sell lower value items. I mean really.

    I've knocked out sales for spirit glasses, cheap BBQs and cheap clothes with traffic which wasn't even massively well targeted. Yet I've received perfectly matched traffic for higher ticket items and gotten nothing (by perfectly matched, I mean people search for exact model number of electronic goods).

    Give me volume over value any day.
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    • Profile picture of the author LilBlackDress
      Yes it certainly can be profitable to go after low commission items in addition to higher commission ones. I try to offer items at a variety of price points, not only to increase my commissions, but also to fit my customers pocket book.

      Recently, I promoted an item that was around $50. I sold 158 of that item in a few weeks. So that does add up.

      I have items for as little as a couple dollars on my sites. I use a plug in to add photos and text links so it is really simple to add these and does not take a lot of time.

      When consumers go to Amazon they tend to add more to their cart, not just the item they clicked thru on.
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      Pen Name + 8 eBooks + social media sites 4 SALE - PM me (evergreen beauty niche)

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      • Profile picture of the author katied772
        Would you mind sharing which plug-in you use to bring in text links and pictures? Thanks.


        Originally Posted by LilBlackDress View Post

        Yes it certainly can be profitable to go after low commission items in addition to higher commission ones. I try to offer items at a variety of price points, not only to increase my commissions, but also to fit my customers pocket book.

        Recently, I promoted an item that was around $50. I sold 158 of that item in a few weeks. So that does add up.

        I have items for as little as a couple dollars on my sites. I use a plug in to add photos and text links so it is really simple to add these and does not take a lot of time.

        When consumers go to Amazon they tend to add more to their cart, not just the item they clicked thru on.
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  • Profile picture of the author getano
    I think it's worth targeting Amazon products with low prices as long as they are not your primary source. What I mean is if you are promoting products such as laptops or cell phones etc. it would be good to promote accesories for those products such as headphones, covers etc. That way you can have a great number of sales (even with low revenue), but your affilliate commision will be higher overall. And that way you can get more money when selling an expensive product.
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    • Profile picture of the author Tom Ryan
      It definitely is worth it. I get tons of sales on lower priced items. It is a quick way to increase your affiliate commission level too.
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  • Profile picture of the author Gaz Cooper
    As you build your portfolio of Amazon sites you should definatly have some lower priced items as part of your portfolio which will help bump up your monthly commission percentage plus you would be surprised at how quickly those little bits add up to over the month.

    Kickin on Amazon

    Gaz Cooper
    Amz Training Academy
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    Beginners Guide to getting started in CRYPTO, FREE Ebook on a Massive Opportunity as the World shifts to Digital payment http://amzauthorityzone.com

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  • Profile picture of the author Aubaine
    I don't think the dollar amount of a sale really matters, sales are sales, and money is money. You send traffic to amazon using a $20 dollar item, it might not be the only thing they buy. Also, if you're sending a lot of volume, small sales will add up and still make you a pretty penny.
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  • Profile picture of the author JasonParker
    Nice tips everyone. I appreciate all the insights.

    I guess there's no reason NOT to go after the lower priced items as well.

    In all the Amazon trainings I've ever taken, they all say go after the higher dollar items.

    So I gutted over 500 higher dollar items for my review site and there are none left with enough reviews and high enough ratings to convert well.

    Looking forward to trying out the lower dollar stuff.
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    • Profile picture of the author JohnMcCabe
      Originally Posted by JasonParker View Post

      In all the Amazon trainings I've ever taken, they all say go after the higher dollar items.
      One reason for that is that people compare the commissions on physical products to what's listed for digital products, especially Clickbank. Look through some of the long Amazon threads, and count the number of posters who claim Amazon is a waste of time because they don't offer 50-75% commissions.

      By targeting high-dollar items, you can still point to it and say "I make $xx per sale", while it's hard to get excited over the nickel you make off a cheap Kindle download. They don't talk about the 50% increase in commission just from selling six items per month of any price. Yeah, the Kindle downloads may only pay you $0.30 by themselves, but they make that $20 commission into a $30 commission. Multiply that by the number of high-dollar items you sell, and the results can be impressive.
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      • Profile picture of the author mrdomains
        Value of a item is less interesting than the total value of sales. You need to test the niche and focus on the value-group of items that are producing the most income. In some cases this may be high ticket items but in many cases it may be cheap items that sell in bulk.

        What matters is the bottom line.. how much did the niche shop make at the end of the month.

        Tweak and measure. It is often easier to squeeze out more from a existing niche/shop than it is to develop a new one.
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    • Profile picture of the author LilBlackDress
      Originally Posted by JasonParker View Post

      Nice tips everyone. I appreciate all the insights.

      I guess there's no reason NOT to go after the lower priced items as well.

      In all the Amazon trainings I've ever taken, they all say go after the higher dollar items.

      So I gutted over 500 higher dollar items for my review site and there are none left with enough reviews and high enough ratings to convert well.

      Looking forward to trying out the lower dollar stuff.

      Recently, I sold 98 items at Amazon in one day. It was a mix of high and low ticket items. Many of the items were just add ons, that caught someones fancy and they just happened to be at Amazon on my cookie

      Why leave money on the table? Go after both!
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      Pen Name + 8 eBooks + social media sites 4 SALE - PM me (evergreen beauty niche)

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  • Profile picture of the author Charles Evans
    Sure... in this economy you are better off selling low price point items at volume rather than the other way around... PLUS you will get much less refunds with lower price points... Cheers!
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    • Profile picture of the author sachasird
      I believe that Amazon is the perfect selling machine. You personally can't do a better job of recommending multiple and interesting items to your clients like Amazon does.

      My strategy has always been to quickly send my site visitors over to Amazon tagged with my Associate ID and then let Amazon do what it does best. They know exactly what to show your customers and make them buy multiple items by the time they are through.

      I have multiple niche Amazon stores and I know that my customers will click on the lower price tag items more than the more costly price tags. Which is fine by me. Once they click the low price items and land on Amazon, Amazon will help me sell that item and additionally push related items and more to my customers for me.

      Many times my site visitor clicks on a $4 item and go to Amazon and end up checking out with over $200 worth of items.

      So I believe that targeting lower end items also can really help increase your overall Amazon income.
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      Nezie.com - Online Affiliate Store Builder - Build Affiliate Stores with products from Amazon, ShareASale, AllPosters, CafePress and Zazzle
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      • Profile picture of the author Enfusia
        No, there's no benefit to selling any low priced items on Amazon. So, move on stop reading this thread and go back to your sites and get busy.


        ____

        Ok, now for real. Look, when you send people over to Amazon they shop. Over 50% of my sales this Holiday season came from extra items.

        I would much rather move 2,000 items and get a $3 commission on them than move 200 and get a $30 commission on them.

        When you sell things people are going to buy anyway and actually need (good economy or bad) then your chances of keeping your income in rough times is much better.

        Patrick
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  • Profile picture of the author tonio79
    As always it great to have a balance of products, the low end items to bring people in and get some sales started for you and then the higher end ticket prices to boost the actual value sales even higher. As mentioned above the more slaes you get teh higher the % yo earn goes, so its worth having a few, almost guranteed sales in there to ensure you hit the higher numbers.

    Good luck and keep going!

    Tonio
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    • Profile picture of the author MoneySavingLisa
      My blog is aimed around saving money and that also includes buying items on Amazon that are discounted. I haven't had a problem with posting deals on Amazon that are under $100 because initially I didn't believe that I'd actually have people buy through my affiliate links. I was pleasantly surprised. About 90% or more of the items purchased through my affiliate link were items that I did not post about and they paid full price for. So, I'm happy either way.

      My first sale from Amazon was actually the first post I had written on for an Amazon product. It was a discount on a flat screen TV which earned me a $10 commission. All I had typed was a quick blurb on the reduction in price, and a picture.
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  • Profile picture of the author cyrilchua
    Haha. Cheaper products are simply easier to convert. Maybe that's something to think about
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