Affiliate Marketing
Affiliate Marketing
Your affiliates are a great resource for improving your affiliate program. Affiliate surveys are a great way to do this. Knowing which affiliate survey questions to ask is essential to the success of your program.
Find out what’s working, what’s missing, and what they expect as an affiliate. Their feedback will not only help you improve your program for existing affiliates, but it will also offer valuable insight into what you can do to attract new ones.
We’ve compiled a list of what you should be asking your affiliates, including sample questions and survey resources.
Before you begin writing your survey questions, there are a couple of things to keep in mind.
Long surveys may deter your affiliates from even wanting to take the survey, or they could lose interest if the questions seem never-ending. Try to find the in-between of long enough for you to get proper feedback, but short enough to not inconvenience those taking it.
Aim for your survey to take less than 10 minutes, preferably at the 5-minute mark.
Taking into account survey length, also consider what you are looking to gain from affiliate feedback.
We suggest you create a survey with qualitative data points. This will give you more precise, in-depth feedback that can be directly implemented to improve your program.
Questions like “Rate the commission structure 1-5” may be quick and easy. But, it will only give a surface-level marker for an affiliate’s satisfaction – instead of providing a comprehensive why or why not, strengths and weaknesses, and what can be improved.
It is possible to combine these methods. You can start a survey asking for a rating like “Rate the marketing materials helpful, somewhat helpful, or not helpful”.Then, you can ask for further explanation like “Please explain your rating”.
Generally speaking, a survey with fewer questions but more explicit feedback will be more beneficial than a survey filled with dozens of rating & score questions.
Survey Purpose
It’s also important to be sincere with your survey intentions — in other words, don’t waste anyone’s time.
The survey feedback should be used for improving your program, so be transparent about why this feedback matters and how you will use it.
If you have implemented specific changes from previous affiliate feedback, this is something to highlight. The message could be something like this:
“Last year we heard you needed new marketing materials, and this year we worked hard to improve this by revamping our affiliate assets. As you can see, your feedback matters and we would love it if you could take this quick survey to make our affiliate program even better.”
Five areas to focus on for your survey:
How was onboarding?
You’ll want to know how easy it was for affiliates to join your program, and see if there were any gaps or confusion.
These questions will be particularly useful in addressing any parts of your onboarding that could be holding back potential affiliates from joining or being active in your program.
Examples of onboarding questions:
Are you satisfied with commissions?
It goes without saying that commissions are pretty important. It plays a major role in appealing to new affiliates and keeping existing affiliates motivated.
As we’ve mentioned before, there’s no perfect formula for affiliate commissions. But this feedback will help you adjust to a commission that better incentivizes.
For example, you may find out whether bonuses actually work or if there is another commission that would be more fitting for generated conversions.
Some questions to consider asking:
Did you have all the marketing materials you needed to promote?
Where and how affiliates promote can change pretty fast, especially with social media trends changing regularly.
It’s important that you keep your affiliate program up to date with these changes. And, one of the best ways to do this is by asking your affiliate’s opinion on the materials you have, as well as the materials they need.
Find which materials are the most useful by asking something like:
Did our communication & support meet expectations?
The foundation of the affiliate-advertiser relationship is communication. Successful affiliate programs are able to find the sweet spot of supporting affiliates so that they are successful, while not overwhelming their inboxes and consuming too much of your time on messages that go unread.
Some questions that could help you find this out:
What helped make your performance successful?
This is your time to see how things are going for your affiliates and gain perspective on their overall efforts and performance.
These questions will be more general than the other topics. The aim is to find out how your affiliates can be the most effective in promoting your business.
You can ask the following:
There are several places for you to create a survey online. You may already have a preferred platform, but here are some popular options:
Send your survey through your regular affiliate communication channels. This could be email, a newsletter, or Facebook and Linkedin Groups.
If you are experiencing low survey turnout, consider using an incentive like a gift card winner to increase response rates. You can read more about how to do this here.
After your survey results come in, it’s time to analyze and implement.
Look at trends to see what is working and what is not, and see what is more important to your affiliates. For example, if you receive a lot of in-depth answers about commissions but not so many about communication, focus more on that area.
And be sure to not only focus on using the feedback to focus on areas of improvement but instead also use feedback as inspiration to continue any good practices.
For example, if you receive a lot of praise for your communication, focus on what made this successful and what can be done to ensure these standards are upheld and adjusted to any program changes.
Then finally, be sure to use these data points for improvement. As we mentioned before, you should be able to clearly show affiliates how their feedback has helped and the changes that have come from it.
For more on improving your affiliate program, be sure to check out more articles on the Tapfiliate blog.
Jessica Rangel
Spending my days writing marketing content, cycling around canals in Amsterdam, and attempting to master the Dutch language.