sanfora
Level 1
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As everybody knows , Linkedin sold to Microsoft. How will this affect affiliate promotion on LinkedIn, for affiliates, marketers or any kind of business owner?
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TommyCarey
Microsoft is an enormous company and since they bought Linkedin, where all the business owners are, how will they capitalized?
As for affiliate marketing, I didn't see many people doing it on Linkedin for a while now. I see a few here and there, but it's not prime real estate for affiliate marketers since most of the business owners there are just trying to pitch their own services I know that the only reason I made a linkedin account was to push my services at users who were higher up in their company or they owned the company. I was trying to cut out the middle men and secretaries lol
For me, I don't think anything will change in terms of marketing on Linkedin. I do hope they reduce the marketing costs so everyone can have a chance to push a link or banner to the masses. Right now the cost per click is king of ridiculous and the conversions are even worse. Well that's just from my experience with Linkedins advertising in the past
How would someone push an affiliate link through linkedin? Would you just send your connections a private message or would you post in groups and add affiliate links within your content? I'm kind of curious about this because I would assume that Linkedin would be pretty quick to delete any posts or comments with affiliate links within them.
Thanks,
Razzy I wonder if they will switch over to the same search algorithm as Bing. Microsoft is an enormous company and since they bought Linkedin, where all the business owners are, how will they capitalized? As for affiliate marketing, I didn't see many people doing it on Linkedin for a while now. I see a few here and there, but it's not prime real estate for affiliate marketers since most of the business owners there are just trying to pitch their own services :D I know that the only reason I made a linkedin account was to push my services at users who were higher up in their company or they owned the company. I was trying to cut out the middle men and secretaries lol :D For me, I don't think anything will change in terms of marketing on Linkedin. I do hope they reduce the marketing costs so everyone can have a chance to push a link or banner to the masses. Right now the cost per click is king of ridiculous and the conversions are even worse. Well that's just from my experience with Linkedins advertising in the past :D How would someone push an affiliate link through linkedin? Would you just send your connections a private message or would you post in groups and add affiliate links within your content? I'm kind of curious about this because I would assume that Linkedin would be pretty quick to delete any posts or comments with affiliate links within them. Thanks, Razzy
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