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You are here: Home / Web Publishing / Making Your Affiliate Marketing Business Legit

Making Your Affiliate Marketing Business Legit

By PPC Ian Nov 20 10

Since today’s Sunday, I’m going to blog about affiliate marketing. Affiliate marketing is what I do on weekends and my limited spare time (via IJL Productions LLC) when I’m not enjoying the corporate world of online marketing. Today, I’m thrilled to share three tips on making your affiliate marketing business legit. I’m talking about getting a private mail box, setting up a toll free number, and forming a corporate entity. Once you have reached a little bit of scale (you’re making a few thousand dollars per year in profit), I would highly recommend making your business legit via these tips.

Affiliate Marketing Business Tip 1: Get A Private Mail Box

Strategy Crossword

One of the best moves I made for my business is setting up a private mail box at my local UPS store. For only $275 per year (fees are different per UPS Store location), I get my own physical business address. You heard me right! Private mail boxes, unlike PO Boxes, are considered legitimate business addresses. While it’s just a mail box, it’s considered a physical street address. This is super important as every real business needs a physical location (especially if you want to share your address with customers and also set up a corporate entity). PO Boxes (while useful in their own right) just don’t cut it. Your home address won’t cut it because you want to separate your personal life from your business 100%. Private mail boxes are the affordable solution of choice in my opinion (although you may also want to look into renting co-worker space that offers a physical mail address, as that’s getting popular these days too).

In addition to being a real address for your business (separate from your residence), private mail boxes provide a number of other benefits. For starters, you can list it as your business address when you purchase domain names. I used to register my domain names privately because I did not want to use my home address. When you own hundreds of domain names, private registration can become quite expensive. I’m saving hundreds per year now that I can list my private mail box as my address.

Another major benefit: You can list your private mail box as your business address on your website, especially on your privacy policy, terms and conditions, and contact us. The rules around privacy policies and transparency are getting stricter over time. Personally, I think this is good because it’s making the Internet a better place and raising the bar. Why not stay ahead of the curve and offer your business address? In my opinion, this is a move that can also make you look more legit in the eyes of search engines (meaning better SEO ranking).

Also, the guys at the UPS store are awesome. They’re open long hours and 6 days/week. They will sign for packages that come in and then hold them for me. I even get an email when a package has arrived. It’s like having my own staff.

Affiliate Marketing Business Tip 2: Get A Toll Free Phone Number

This tip really goes together with the first one. These days, it’s super affordable to get your own toll free phone number. I’m paying $10 per month for my toll free phone number. There’s a lot of flexibility in how you set it up, but I’ve decided to just have my calls go to voicemail. Then, I have the voicemails delivered to me via email. A lot of the calls that come thru are junk, but some are not. Now, I have a great way for people to contact my business without giving away my personal cell phone or home phone. Of course, you get all of the benefits just mentioned above with the private mail box: separation from your personal life, a number you can list publicly in your domain name registration and on your website, and of course convenience.

Affiliate Marketing Business Tip 3: Create a Corporate Entity

Tip three is really a continuation of the first two. Now that you have a physical business location and dedicated phone number, you’re ready to completely separate your affiliate marketing business from yourself. Now, it’s time to form a corporate entity. There are many options, but I personally decided to go the LLC route. LLCs are great. They separate my business operations from my personal self. They are relatively affordable (only $800/year fee to own a California LLC and another $100 year to pay for a registered agent service). They are easy when it comes time for taxes (a single member LLC is disregarded as a corporate entity for tax purposes so income flows through to your individual tax return). If my business grows and I hire employees, I’ll need to rethink my strategy. However, from my current vantage point the LLC provides the perfect corporate entity for my situation.

After setting up your private mail box, toll free number, and LLC, you’re not quite done. At this time, don’t forget to open a business checking account and credit card in the name of your LLC. Use the tax id of your LLC when opening the accounts up. Leverage your private mail box and your toll free number as your contact info. The key thing to remember: Your business is no longer part of your self. It’s separate entity so it’s time to make it legit and go all out with this process. Once your business is fully separate from yourself, you have opened up an exciting world of possibilities. You’re now ready to embark on your next round of growth and hit the big leagues of super affiliates!

Disclaimer: I’m not a lawyer nor tax advisor, before forming a corporate entity always make sure to consult with your own legal/tax counsel. The information I provide here is just my personal experience and is not legal nor tax advice.

Image of strategy crossword © iStockPhoto – 3DStock

Tags: affiliate marketing Categories: Web Publishing

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Comments

  1. Veron says

    November 20, 2011 at 11:48 pm

    Thank you so so so much for this kind of information. Would you mind sharing with us your favorite company to work with when comes to business entity formation? Thank you very much! (Don’t worry as I will take your words as educational information, not advice.)

  2. Eric | My 4-Hour Workweek says

    November 21, 2011 at 6:06 am

    Love this post Ian! I’ve been meaning to make my business legit, but it’s one thing I’ve procrastinated with quite a bit. I plan on using Legal Zoom to set up my LLC, which is supposedly easy and relatively inexpensive through them.

    I’m not sure how I feel about the toll free number, at least not in the beginning. Once I begin providing real services to people (vs. just building niche sites), I can definitely see how having the # would be very helpful.

    – Eric

  3. Ian says

    November 21, 2011 at 11:16 am

    Hi Veron,
    Thanks so much, and great question. ๐Ÿ™‚ In forming my own LLC, I decided to use IncFile. At the time, the service they provided was very simple and affordable. They made everything really easy, including setting up my registered agent. I’m sure there are other options as well, but this is the one that looked the best to me at that time. In terms of my toll free number, I signed up for a service called My1Voice which is now called eVoice. Again, friendly disclaimer that is is not legal advice and I’m not a lawyer, just speaking from my personal experience. Always make sure to consult with you legal counsel regarding such decisions.
    All the best,
    Ian

  4. Ian says

    November 21, 2011 at 11:20 am

    Hi Eric,
    Thanks for the comment and positive feedback, I very much appreciate it! That is awesome that you’re looking at Legal Zoom to form a business entity. I have heard good things about Legal Zoom from other bloggers. In terms of the toll free number, my main use for it is on privacy policies and also in my domain registrations. I don’t want to use my personal phone number in these use cases so the toll free number comes in extremely handy.
    All the best,
    Ian

  5. Jean says

    November 23, 2011 at 12:15 am

    Excellent tips Ian. Impressions count for so much. Having a private mail box and toll-free number is definitely a must. You leave a far bigger impression by having those two things. I’ve always found that a company having a proper business address and toll-free number creates a far bigger impression of their importance to me than if they had a residential address and residential or cellphone number.

    -Jean

  6. Ian says

    November 23, 2011 at 10:37 am

    Thanks so much, Jean!

  7. Donald says

    November 25, 2011 at 1:39 pm

    Ian,

    Nice article! There is one other means to achieve something similar to Step 3; that is, filing a fictitious business name at your local county registrar. A fictitious business name does not provide the personal liability protection that a corporation or LLC provides but, it does allow you to open a business checking account, rent a mail box, establish a merchant credit card account, take business tax deductions and virtually all of the other things you mentioned. A fictitious filing typically costs something in the range of $25-$50 for five years plus the cost of publicly announcing the filing which, depending on the publisher, could be done for as little as $25. If youโ€™re not sure that you want to form a corp or LLC, a fictitious business name is a great way to test the waters.

  8. Ian says

    November 27, 2011 at 10:44 pm

    Thanks so much, Don! Great point, that is another good option for those not quite ready to form a corporation or LLC.
    All the best,
    Ian

  9. ERP says

    December 21, 2011 at 6:53 pm

    Good tips.

    I’m a big fan of #3 — getting the LLC set up to keep everything separate, and at least have a bit of liability protection.

    It boggles my mind on how/why the cost of an LLC varies so much from state to state — $800/year for you in California, a similar amount when I looked into it in Illinois, yet only around $75 to set up an LLC in Colorado, with only $10/year in fees afterwards.

  10. Ian says

    December 21, 2011 at 8:46 pm

    ERP,
    Thanks so much for the comment! I sure wish I had set up my LLC in Colorado, would be a lot cheaper than $800/year in California. ๐Ÿ™‚ That boggles my mind too!
    All the best,
    Ian

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About PPC Ian

Ian Lopuch (PPC Ian)Hi, I'm Ian Lopuch, also known as PPC Ian. I'm an Idaho-based real estate developer and investor, with an incredible passion for dividend stocks (and investments that provide true passive income for the long-term). In fact, I have built a portfolio of 37 positions that will one day pay for all of my living expenses. I enjoy blogging here about my passion for cash flow investing, while also sharing some other business and digital marketing insights from time-to-time.

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