Its a real chicken and egg problem to be sure. I guess the answer is, it all comes down to clear communication of the risk. I also think networks need to force their merchants to be more lenient when their offer is asking you to collect X, Y and Z data points and they are judging your quality on A, B, X, Y and Z.
Kind of like the EPN system right now...they have their quality score which is based on a lot of factors that you have some vague insights around, but no solid metrics of way of measuring it, so you go blindly flailing around hoping you do well. Its lose lose for everybody in the long run as it pisses off the affiliates who actually know what they are doing and would likely adapt if you actually gave them the metrics to do so.
In my day job, I do lead-gen for a b2b software company and right now I'm all into content distribution networks that charge on a CPL basis. If you pick the right ones, you can determine usually up to three or so qualifiers that someone needs to fill out to download your content.
At that point the onus is on you to be smart about how you are qualifying your leads. Sure you might get one or two junk leads which the CPL networks typically refund, but at the end of the day, its not their fault if we are pulling in leads for mom and pop shops when we need to be getting leads for $50mm+ companies. It means we fucked up the qualifiers and need to address that.
So coming from that side of things, I feel like the merchants are fucking over the affiliates because they don't want to take responsibility for the shitty design of their affiliate offer/program.
If I'm an affiliate on a lead-gen program, it is NOT my fault if:
- You can't figure out how to convert them on your site once you have the lead
- Your email marketing sucks balls and you don't segment your list
- You fail to collect the proper data through your lead-gen campaign that would facilitate either the above
- You have a shitty/scammy product and are surprised when you see a high level of chargebacks from the leads you do manage to convert
Frankly I'm sick of being held responsible for that shit as an affiliate which is why I no longer do those progams. If merchants want highly qualified leads, they need to start paying for that shit.
There's a reason why the highly-qualified b2b leads I get from various CPL content distribution programs cost $40-$50 a pop.