Commission Junction Sucks
More online marketers are getting on the "I hate CJ" bandwagon,
too.
Commission Junction is the 800 pound gorilla of affiliate
marketing. Commission Junction is the Microsoft, McDonalds,
and Sony of affiliate marketing - and we mean in all the bad ways,
too.
Commission
Junction is a Santa Barbara, CA (U.S.) based company that aggregates
many hundreds of independent affiliate programs into a single
interface. By "aggregates," we mean that you need only log
into one interface -- Commission Junction's Account Manager -- and
apply for and manage various affiliate programs.
You Still Need Approval from the Merchants
That's the good news. And for the new
affiliate marketer,
it seems like a banquet of money-making opportunities.
But the fact is that CJ is just an aggregator. You still have
to apply for each program separately. Some affiliate programs
do have instant approval, but others make you wait for "manual
approval.' While that's hardly the failing of Commission
Junction itself, you do begin to sense the weaknesses of CJ
immediately as soon as you're sitting around and waiting for six
programs to "approve." You begin to think: "Why not just
do this myself directly with the company?"
Many
companies do not have the resources to effectively run their
affiliate programs. Yet CJ does not replace affiliate program
management at all. I look at it as nothing more than a
warehouse of offers -- and an often annoying warehouse, too.
So, many merchants get lazy, thinking that CJ is taking care of
everything. Quite the contrary. CJ takes care of
nothing. Eventually, most online marketers have to bypass CJ
and contact the merchant directly for some reason or other.
Commission Junction Will Drop You
Yet all of that is just part and parcel of Commission Junction.
What isn't cool is when Commission Junction drops you after two
months because of "account inactivity." All of your hard work
at setting up ads: gone in an instant. We can understand
dropping advertisers after some long period of time (one or two
years), but two months is ridiculous.
Infuriating Interface
I am probably alone in this respect, but I find Commission
Junction's interface to be ugly and unwieldy. Since we're here
mainly because it ties together lots of programs in one
interface--we're here for the interface, that is--then why should
the interface be so awful to use?
Ebay Dropped Commission Junction
Even Ebay, one of the bigger names within the Commission Junction
universe, dropped
CJ in March 2008. So if you have anything to do with Ebay
marketing, by definition you will no longer be associated with
Commission Junction.
And good thing for that.