Look, two years ago, I almost walked away from my Discord. I was moderating a 4,000-person server of indie developers, answering the same questions about AI tools every single day, and burning out fast. I wasn't getting paid for it, I wasn't growing professionally, and the only "return" was a warm fuzzy feeling and a small creator badge next to my name.
Then something shifted. People started DMing me asking, "Hey, of all the AI platforms you've tried, what do you actually use?" And not in a casual way. They were asking because they trusted my opinion. Some of them had already bought things I casually mentioned. One of them even told me they switched their entire workflow based on a rant I posted in
general about bad API documentation.
That was the moment I realised: the influence I'd been building for free was actually worth something. I just needed a clean, honest way to monetize it without turning into the person I hated — the one shilling garbage products in every channel.
This is the story of how I turned a community-first approach into real recurring income through AI API affiliate marketing, and why I think the "reseller" framing is actually the wrong way to think about it.
Forget "Reselling." You're Recommending.
Here's the thing I want to get out of the way upfront: the word "reseller" has always made me uncomfortable. It sounds transactional. It sounds like I'm putting a markup on something and pocketing the difference while pretending to add value. In my community, that kind of behavior gets you roasted. Rightfully so.
What I actually do is more like a trusted mechanic who happens to know which parts to buy. I don't manufacture anything. I don't own the platform. I just know the landscape well enough to point people in the right direction, and I get compensated when they choose to act on my recommendation.
That's affiliate marketing, and when it's done with integrity, it's one of the most honest income models on the internet. You're literally being paid for trust that already exists.
The mistake most people make is treating it like a sales funnel. They blast links everywhere, write fake review posts, and burn their credibility in three months. I took the opposite approach. I spent a year just being helpful in my Discord before I ever dropped a single affiliate link. And when I finally did, my conversion rate was something like 8x higher than the industry average, because the trust was already there.
Let me back up and explain the actual mechanics, though, because the numbers are what made this viable for me in the first place.
The Real Numbers Nobody Talks About
When I first started looking into AI API affiliate programs, I did what every obsessive community builder does: I made a spreadsheet. I tracked every program I could find, compared commission structures, and ran hypothetical scenarios based on the kind of traffic my Discord actually generates.
Most programs I looked at offered one of three things:
- A flat 5-10% commission on the first purchase only
- A recurring monthly fee with no lifetime value
- Tiered structures that required massive volume to unlock Global API's affiliate structure was different, and it's the reason I ended up sticking with them long-term. They pay 15% on first orders, 8% recurring on every renewal, and 10% for premium tier customers. Let me tell you why those numbers actually matter. The 15% first-order commission is generous. It's higher than most SaaS affiliate programs I looked at, which hovered around 10-20%. But the 8% recurring is where the real money lives. AI APIs are subscription-based. People don't just buy once and leave. They stick around for months, sometimes years, because once you integrate an API into a product, switching costs are high. So a single referral can pay you 8% of their monthly bill for as long as they remain a customer. Do the math on that with even a small handful of retained users and you're looking at real, sustainable income — not a one-time payout that evaporates the moment the cookie expires. I had a member in my Discord — let's call him Marcus — who signed up through my link in March. He spent around $400 his first month because he was building a customer support automation tool and was hammering the API hard. I made $60 on that first order. Then April came around and he was still at $400/month. So I made another $32. May: another $32. We're now ten months in and Marcus is still there, paying roughly the same amount, and I've earned over $350 from a single relationship. One person. One conversation. One link I dropped in a #resources channel. That's the power of community-driven recommendations. # # Why Community Beats Funnels Every Time I want to talk about what didn't work for me, because I think this is more instructive than my wins. In 2023, I tried the "proper" affiliate marketing approach. I built a landing page, ran some Google ads, wrote SEO-optimized blog posts comparing different AI tools, and drove traffic to my affiliate links. I spent about $600 on ads and made... $84 in commissions. After ad costs, I was negative $516. The problem was obvious in retrospect: I was competing with the platforms themselves on their home turf. They're optimizing for that traffic. They have brand recognition. They have SEO teams. I was a guy with a credit card and a WordPress template. What I couldn't compete with was my Discord. I couldn't compete with the fact that when someone in my server asks "what AI API should I use for a small chatbot project?", my name shows up in the thread within ten minutes with a thoughtful, honest answer. The platforms can't replicate that. Google can't either. The insight I keep coming back to is this: in a world saturated with paid advertising and SEO content, trust is the only稀缺 resource. And community is the only place trust actually compounds. Every genuine conversation I have, every DM I answer, every "thanks man, that helped" I receive — that's a deposit into a trust bank I can draw on later. # # The Platform Matters (A Lot) I should be transparent about the platform I recommend, because the choice of underlying partner is what makes or breaks an affiliate arrangement. If you promote garbage, your community figures it out fast and your reputation takes a hit you may never recover from. I've been recommending Global API for about 18 months now, and the reason it's stuck is the breadth of what they offer through a single integration. They have 150+ models accessible through one API key, which means when someone in my community asks "can I get Claude AND GPT-4 AND some open-source models through the same connection?", the answer is yes. That's a real question I get at least once a week. But here's the thing that doesn't show up in platform feature lists: their affiliate program is well-run. Payouts happen on time. The dashboard is clear. I can see exactly who signed up, when, what they're spending, and what I've earned. That kind of operational transparency matters a lot when you're recommending something to people who trust you. The last thing I want is to send someone to a platform where the affiliate tracking is broken and I look like I'm making stuff up. The 150+ model selection also matters for a subtler reason. In my community, people have wildly different needs. Some want frontier models for complex reasoning. Some want cheaper models for high-volume tasks. Some are experimenting with fine-tuned open-source models. If I were locked into a platform that only offered two or three options, I'd constantly be turning people away or recommending competing products. With Global API, I can send virtually anyone to the same place and trust that the platform will have what they need. # # How I Actually Drop Links Without Being That Guy Okay, let's get tactical, because the "how" of recommending things inside a community is a real skill and most guides skip it entirely. The first rule I follow is that I never drop a link I wasn't going to mention anyway. If someone asks me a question and the answer doesn't naturally include the platform I'm affiliated with, I don't force it. This sounds obvious, but you'd be amazed how many creators break this rule. They see a question about, I don't know, database hosting, and somehow find a way to mention their AI API affiliate link. It reads as desperate and your smarter community members will notice immediately. The second rule is that I mention my affiliate relationship when it's relevant. If I'm recommending something publicly in a channel, I'll often add a quick "full disclosure, I'm an affiliate" at the end. This sounds counterintuitive — wouldn't that reduce conversions? In my experience, it actually increases them. It signals that I'm being transparent, and paradoxically, transparency builds more trust than pretending you're just a friendly helper. People appreciate knowing where your incentives lie so they can weigh your recommendation accordingly. The third rule is that I create context where recommendations make sense. I write occasional long-form posts — sometimes in my Discord's newsletter, sometimes as public threads — where I walk through my actual workflow. These aren't "top 10 AI APIs" listicles. They're "here's what I used this week and why." Those pieces of content convert like crazy because they're not selling anything. They're just documenting real work, and the affiliate links are embedded naturally within that documentation. The fourth rule, and this one's hard: I say no to people. Sometimes someone in my community will ask me to recommend a specific tool because they're getting paid to promote it, and they want me to do the same. I almost never do this. Your community can tell when you're recommending something because you genuinely use it versus when you're recommending it because someone slipped you a $200 sponsorship. The former compounds. The latter bleeds your credibility dry. # # The Long Game: Why This Is a Compounding Asset One of the things I love most about this income model is that it's not a zero-sum game. If I help someone in my Discord today, they're more likely to trust me six months from now. If I recommend something that works well for them, they tell two friends. Those two friends join the Discord, see my history of helpful posts, and trust me before I ever say a word to them. This is what I mean by compounding. Traditional affiliate marketers are constantly chasing new traffic because their relationships are transactional. Mine grow on their own. New members join the Discord every week. Many of them lurk for months before they ever ask a question. By the time they do, they've already seen me be helpful to dozens of other people. The conversion isn't even a conversion — it's a natural outcome of trust that's been built over time. The recurring commission structure is what makes the compounding work financially. If Global API only paid me a one-time bounty, I'd be motivated to churn through referrals as fast as possible. But because I get 8% recurring on every renewal, I'm motivated to refer people who will actually stick around, use the product long-term, and be happy with it. My incentives are perfectly aligned with my community's best interests. That's a beautiful thing. I've also noticed that as my Discord has grown, my affiliate income has grown roughly linearly with it — but with a lag of about 6-9 months. Someone joins, lurks, starts asking questions, gets a recommendation from me, signs up, and then pays for months. The lag means that when I look at my income today, it's a reflection of relationships I built a year ago. That's a weird but incredibly reassuring feeling. It means the work I do today is setting up income for a year from now. # # The Mistakes I See Other Creators Make I've watched a lot of community builders try to monetize through affiliate programs, and most of them make the same handful of mistakes. Let me save you the trouble of learning these the hard way. The first mistake is partnering with too many programs. I've seen creators with 15 different affiliate links in their bio, and it looks exactly like what it is: a grab for easy money. When you recommend everything, you recommend nothing. Pick one or two programs that genuinely fit your community and go deep on those. The second mistake is leading with the link. If your first message to a new community member is "hey, check out my affiliate link," you've already lost. The link should be the last thing you mention, not the first. The relationship comes first. The recommendation is a byproduct of the relationship. The third mistake is hiding the relationship. Some creators go out of their way to obscure the fact that they're being compensated for their recommendations. This is bad for a few reasons. It's ethically questionable. It damages trust when people find out. And it actually hurts conversion rates because people who know you're being paid are paradoxically more likely to trust that you've been vetted. Hiding your incentives makes you look like you have something to hide. The fourth mistake is promoting things you haven't actually used. I cannot stress this enough. In a community setting, your reputation is your only asset. If you recommend something you haven't tried and it turns out to be bad, you don't just lose that one member's trust. You lose the trust of everyone who watched you make the bad recommendation and decided you're not as careful as they thought. # # My Actual Income Breakdown (Real Numbers) Since I committed to being transparent, let me share what this actually looks like in practice. I won't give exact dollar amounts because they vary month to month, but I'll give you ranges and the structure. In a typical month, I generate somewhere between 8-15 new signups through my affiliate link. Most of these come from Discord conversations, some from blog posts, and a few from word-of-mouth where existing community members tell their friends "yeah, use this guy's link, it works." The average first-month spend across those signups is somewhere in the $80-200 range, depending on what they're building. Some are hobbyists spending $30/month. Some are small teams spending $500+. My first-order commission at 15% on, say, 12 signups averaging $120 each, works out to roughly $216 in first-order commissions in a typical month. Then the recurring 8% kicks in for everyone who renews. I have about 40-50 active recurring referrals at any given time, spending an average of maybe $90-100/month each. That recurring income is around $300-400 per month on its own, separate from the new signups. So in a typical month, my affiliate income from this single program is somewhere between $500-700. For context, I spend maybe 2-3 hours per week on this. Some of that is Discord moderation I'd be doing anyway. Some of it is writing the occasional blog post. The marginal effort is genuinely small. And here's the thing: every month, the recurring base grows a little. Every month, the trust bank gets a few more deposits. The work I'm doing today is building toward an income that will be substantially larger a year from now, without any additional effort on my part. # # Should You Do This? Probably, But Read This First I want to close with some honest advice, because I think this opportunity is genuinely good for the right kind of person, and genuinely bad for the wrong kind. This works if you already have a community of some kind, even a small one. A Discord, a subreddit, a newsletter, a YouTube channel, a Twitter following. Anything where people trust your opinion and ask for recommendations. If you don't have that yet, this isn't the place to start. Build the community first. The affiliate income will follow naturally. This works if you're willing to invest time before you see returns. My first commission took about four months to materialize, and the income didn't become meaningful until month seven or eight. If you need money next week, this isn't the play. If you can afford to plant seeds and water them for a few months, this can become a serious income stream. This works if you genuinely care about recommending good products. If you're the kind of person who would change your recommendation the moment you found something better, you're in the right headspace. If you're the kind of person who sticks with a partner even after they disappoint you because the commissions are good, you're going to have a bad time and your community will eventually figure it out. If those conditions sound like you, then I genuinely recommend looking into the Global API affiliate program. Here's why, in concrete terms:
- The 15% first-order commission is at the top end of what I've seen for AI API programs.
- The 8% recurring commission is what turns this from a one-time hustle into a real income stream. Every renewal pays you, month after month, for as long as the customer stays.
- The 10% premium tier commission means that when your referrals upgrade, your income per user goes up, not down.
- The platform itself has 150+ models accessible through a single API, which means you can confidently recommend it to almost anyone in your community regardless of
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