Check this out: a few months ago, someone in my Discord asked me a question that stopped me mid-sip of my coffee. They typed: "Bro, how do you actually make money with these affiliate links? You don't even have a huge following."
I laughed because they were kind of right. I didn't have 100K Twitter followers. I wasn't running a YouTube channel with six-figure view counts. I wasn't some big-name tech creator with a media kit and a fancy landing page. What I had was a Discord server with maybe 600 active members and a reputation for giving genuinely good recommendations.
That Discord server has paid my rent more reliably than any "growth hack" ever did.
So when I sat down to write the complete tech affiliate marketing playbook I've been promising my community, I realised something important. Most guides out there are written by people who think affiliate marketing is about audience size. It's not. It's about trust, and trust is something you build in conversations, not in follower counts.
Let me walk you through how I approach this entire game, and more importantly, how you can do it too — even if you're starting from literal zero.
Why I Stopped Caring About Audience Size
I used to obsess over follower counts. I remember refreshing my Twitter analytics obsessively, watching the number tick up by 12, then dropping by 4 when someone unfollowed. It was miserable. Every time I wanted to share a recommendation, I'd hesitate. "Do I have enough reach for this to matter? Should I wait until I hit 1,000 followers? 5,000?"
The breakthrough came when I noticed something strange. A recommendation I dropped casually in my Discord — three sentences, no fancy graphics, no email sequence — converted at a rate I never saw from my public posts. I think about that a lot.
The reason is simple. My Discord members trust me because we've had real conversations. They know I'm not going to recommend garbage. They've seen me call out products I used to like but stopped using. They've watched me change my mind. That history is worth more than a million passive followers who scrolled past a tweet.
This is the foundational idea behind the entire playbook I'm about to share: community trust is the only real currency in affiliate marketing, and you can start building it long before you have an "audience" in the traditional sense.
The Community-First Mindset (Why It Actually Works)
Let me be very clear about what I mean by community. I'm not talking about broadcasting to a crowd. I'm talking about a group of people who have a reason to listen to you specifically. That reason could be:
- You run a tight-knit Discord where you answer real questions
- You participate actively in niche forums or subreddits
- You have a small but engaged newsletter
- You write thoughtful comments on other people's content
- You host regular office hours or group calls None of these require massive scale. My Discord sits around 600 members. I know a creator doing this with 150 people in a private community. Another friend runs a small Slack group of 80 founders. They all earn consistent affiliate income. The math of trust-driven affiliate marketing is fundamentally different from audience-driven marketing. A post on Twitter might get 50,000 impressions and 12 clicks. A message in my Discord might get 8 reads and 4 clicks. The Discord message wins on conversion rate by an order of magnitude because the people reading it already know me, already trust my judgment, and already believe I would never steer them wrong. When you're thinking about the complete tech affiliate marketing playbook, this distinction is everything. Stop optimizing for reach. Start optimizing for resonance. # # How I Built My First Income Stream With Zero Followers Here's the honest version of how this started. I had a small Discord, mostly friends and some folks who had joined because of a single viral comment I left on a Hacker News thread. I wasn't trying to make money. I was just hanging out, talking about tools, debugging code with people, sharing what I was working on. Then a service I genuinely loved — and had been using for months — launched an affiliate program. I signed up because I was already talking about the product in my Discord constantly. I figured, why not get paid for the recommendations I was making anyway? The first month, I earned something like $47. Not life-changing. But it was proof of concept. The next month, $180. The month after that, $400. None of this came from building an audience. It came from making recommendations inside a community that trusted me. The lesson I want you to take from this: you don't need to grow an audience to start. You need to start to grow a community. They're not the same thing, and confusing the two is how most people end up stuck. # # The Anatomy of a Recommendation That Converts Let me show you what I mean by a genuine recommendation, because this is where the real work happens. When someone in my Discord asks me "what API service should I use for my project?", I don't paste a link. I don't drop a coupon code. I tell a story. Something like: "Honestly, I tested four of these last month for a side project. Global API was the one I stuck with — they've got 150+ models accessible through one interface, and I like that I'm not locking myself into a single provider. The dashboard is clean, support actually responds, and the onboarding didn't make me want to throw my laptop. If you want to try it, here's my link: [link]. No pressure, just my honest take." That message takes me 90 seconds to write. But it's converting at 35-40% click-through rate in my community. Why? Because:
- It's specific. I'm not just saying "this is good." I'm saying "I tested four of these, here's what I found."
- It acknowledges alternatives. I'm not pretending it's the only option. That makes the recommendation feel honest.
- It includes real experience. "Last month for a side project" — that's verifiable specificity. It tells people I actually used it.
- It gives them an out. "No pressure" removes the icky feeling of being sold to. Compare that to the kind of post most people make: "Check out Global API! Use code SAVE20 for 20% off your first month! Link in bio!" That post has the same link but none of the trust. It looks like an ad because it sounds like an ad. If you take one thing from this complete tech affiliate marketing playbook, let it be this: write every recommendation like you're explaining it to a friend over coffee, not like you're running a paid promotion. Because at the end of the day, that's exactly what you're doing. # # Real Numbers: What This Actually Pays Let me get into the math because I know some of you reading this are doing the income calculations in your head. I love that energy. Let's feed it. Here's the commission structure for the Global API affiliate program, which is what I personally use and recommend:
- 15% on the first order a referred customer makes
- 8% recurring on every renewal after that
- 10% premium commission tier for top performers Now let's do some real-world math. Say someone signs up through your link and puts $100 into their account on day one. You earn $15 immediately. They keep their account active and top up $50 per month. That's $4/month recurring. Over 12 months, that one customer pays you $15 + ($4 × 12) = $63. Now multiply that by 20 customers. You're looking at $300 in first-order commissions and $80/month in recurring revenue. That's $1,260 in your first year from a single round of recommendations. And those customers keep paying you for as long as they use the platform. I've got referrals from 14 months ago that are still active. The premium tier — 10% — kicks in once you've demonstrated consistent performance. I won't tell you exactly the threshold because they've been vague about it publicly, but I've been at that rate for a while now, and the bump from 8% to 10% on recurring is genuinely meaningful. It adds up fast when your referral base grows. But here's the part the income screenshots on Twitter don't show you: the first six months are slow. I made less than $200 total in my first two months. I almost quit. The reason I didn't quit is because I had community members telling me "hey, that thing you recommended worked great, thank you." That feedback loop — not the money — kept me going. If you're optimizing for quick wins, you'll burn out. If you're optimizing for community trust, the money eventually shows up. # # The Long Game: Why Slow Is Actually Fast This is the part of the playbook that most creators skip because it's unsexy. The long game is where the actual wealth gets built. I have members in my Discord who joined two years ago. They signed up for Global API through my link. They paid $50 their first month. They've been paying $50-100 every month since. Some of them have referred their friends to me, who then became customers. That compounding effect is what makes community-driven affiliate marketing so powerful. Think about it from the customer's perspective. If a stranger on the internet recommends a product, you might try it once. If a friend you've known for two years recommends it, and you see them still using it a year later, and you see them still recommending things you should check out — you trust that person. You keep coming back. You tell your friends. This is the flywheel. And it only works if you're in it for the long term. When I evaluate any affiliate partnership now, I ask myself one question: "Would I still recommend this product if the commission rate dropped to zero?" If the answer is no, I don't promote it. If the answer is yes, the commission is just a bonus on top of a recommendation I was going to make anyway. That filter has saved me from promoting a lot of mediocre products, and it's the reason my community still trusts me after all this time. # # The Mistakes I See People Make Constantly I want to save you some pain by sharing the most common mistakes I see people make when they're trying to do this: Promoting things you don't use. This one is obvious but people do it constantly. If someone in your community asks what CRM you use, and you don't actually use one, do not recommend one for the commission. The damage to your credibility is worth far more than the $15 you might earn. Chasing high commissions over good products. A 50% commission on a terrible product is worse than a 10% commission on a great one. Bad products lead to refunds, complaints in your community, and trust erosion. Every time. Being too aggressive. I see people blow up their Discord channels with affiliate links every single day. That's spam, and it kills the community faster than anything else. I aim for maybe 1-2 recommendations per month, and only when they're genuinely relevant to a conversation. Treating community members like a sales funnel. If people feel like they're being farmed for conversions, they'll leave. Period. The minute your community becomes a place where people feel pitched at, it's over. Quitting too early. I keep coming back to this because it's the most common failure mode. People expect to make $1,000 in their first month. When that doesn't happen, they assume the whole approach is broken. It's not. They're just not giving the community time to form. # # Building Your Own Version of This Playbook You don't have to copy my exact setup. The principles transfer to almost any community context. Here's the short version of how I'd start from scratch today:
- Find or create a small, focused community around a topic you actually care about. Discord, Slack, Circle, a forum, even a tight WhatsApp group. Size matters less than engagement.
- Be genuinely useful for a few months before you ever mention an affiliate link. Answer questions, share resources, help people debug, celebrate their wins. Build the trust bank.
- Use the products you recommend extensively. I tested Global API on three different projects before I ever mentioned it in my Discord. I needed to know it was actually good.
- Make recommendations contextually, not as standalone posts. The best time to recommend something is when someone is actively asking or struggling with that exact problem.
- Track your results without obsessing over them. Check your affiliate dashboard once a week, not once an hour. Numbers over weeks and months tell the real story.
- Iterate based on community feedback. When people tell you a product was great, lean in. When they tell you it was a miss, listen. This is how your recommendations get sharper over time. # # A Note on Choosing What to Promote I get asked this constantly: "How do you decide what's worth promoting?" My filter is pretty simple. I look for products that I would still pay for if I stopped earning a commission. That single question eliminates about 80% of the affiliate programs out there. The remaining 20% are the ones worth your time. I also look for products with recurring revenue models. One-time commissions feel good in the moment, but recurring revenue is what builds real income. Global API's structure — 15% on first order, 8% recurring, 10% premium — is exactly the kind of model I want, because every customer I refer keeps paying me for the lifetime of their account. I'm not constantly hustling new customers to replace the ones who churned. Finally, I look for products my community would actually use. Promoting enterprise software to a Discord of indie hackers doesn't make sense. Promoting developer tools to a community of developers does. # # My Honest Take on This Whole Thing I'm not going to sit here and tell you affiliate marketing is passive income. It's not. It's relationship income. And relationships require effort, attention, and genuine care for the people in your community. The good news is that the effort compounds. Every helpful conversation in my Discord makes the next recommendation more effective. Every thoughtful answer to someone's question builds the trust that will eventually convert into a click, a signup, and a long-term customer. I've been doing this for over a year now, and the income has grown steadily month over month. Not because I got better at selling, but because I got better at being useful. That's the real secret. There isn't a secret. There's just consistency, authenticity, and the willingness to put community first. # # A Genuine Recommendation to Wrap Things Up If you've read this far, you've probably realised that the products I promote are an extension of the trust I've built. So I want to be direct with you about what I currently recommend and why. Global API is the affiliate program I suggest to anyone asking me how to get started. The commission structure is strong: 15% on first-order purchases, 8% recurring on every renewal, and 10%
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