Issue #15 — What to Track When You’re Not Making Sales Yet

Not making sales yet?

That doesn’t mean nothing is working.

One of the biggest mistakes affiliate marketers make early on is tracking the wrong things — or worse, tracking nothing at all.

When sales aren’t coming in yet, your job isn’t to panic. It’s to measure progress correctly.


Why “No Sales” Doesn’t Mean “No Progress”

Sales are a lagging indicator.

They show up after several smaller actions happen consistently:

  • Someone sees your content
  • Someone clicks
  • Someone opts in
  • Someone opens emails
  • Someone starts to trust you

If you only track sales, you miss the signals that tell you you’re actually moving in the right direction.


What You Should Track Instead (Early On)

Here are the metrics that matter before sales show up:


1. Clicks

Clicks tell you one thing: Is anyone interested enough to take action?

Track:

  • Link clicks from blog posts
  • Clicks from emails
  • Clicks from social platforms

No clicks = messaging problem
Clicks but no opt-ins = page or offer mismatch

Clicks are your first proof of momentum.


2. Opt-Ins

Your email list is your long-term asset.

Track:

  • How many visitors become subscribers
  • Which pages convert best
  • Which offers attract the right people

Even one opt-in per day adds up fast — especially when traffic is free or low-cost.


3. Email Opens

Opens show attention and curiosity.

Track:

  • Average open rate
  • Which subject lines perform best
  • Whether people are opening more than once

If people open your emails, trust is forming — even before money shows up.


4. Replies and Engagement

This one is underrated.

Track:

  • Email replies
  • Comments
  • Messages
  • Questions people ask

Engagement means your content is resonating. And resonance always comes before revenue.


5. Consistency (Yes, Really)

This isn’t a metric in your dashboard — but it matters.

Track:

  • How often you publish
  • How often you email
  • Whether you’re showing up weekly

Most people quit before the numbers ever get a chance to compound.


What NOT to Obsess Over Yet

Early on, avoid obsessing over:

  • Conversion percentages to the second decimal
  • Advanced funnel stats
  • Revenue comparisons with others

Those metrics matter later — after the foundation is built.


The Real Question to Ask Yourself

Instead of:

“Why am I not making sales yet?”

Ask:

“Are more people finding me, clicking, and sticking around than last week?”

If the answer is yes — you’re on track.


Final Thought

Progress isn’t invisible — it’s just quiet at first.

Track the small wins. They’re the breadcrumbs that lead to sales.

Keep stacking them.

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