Honestly, a few years ago I never thought I'd be writing about affiliate revenue. I was just running a small Discord for developers who liked tinkering with AI tools. We talked about models, shared prompts, complained about downtime — the usual stuff. But somewhere along the way, that little community turned into something that pays me every single month.
I'm not talking about tens of thousands. I'm talking about honest, recurring income that comes from relationships I built by simply recommending things I genuinely use. Today I want to walk you through exactly what I've learned, what the numbers actually look like, and why community-first affiliate marketing beats every other approach I've tried.
How My Discord Accidentally Became an Income Source
It started when one of my regulars asked me, "Hey, where are you actually running your AI workloads?" I screenshared my setup, mentioned the platform I was using, and dropped a link in the channel. Two days later, three other members signed up using my link. I didn't even know the platform had an affiliate program at that point.
That was the moment something clicked for me. In a community built on trust — where people ask questions and wait for honest answers from someone they actually know — a simple recommendation carries more weight than a $5,000 sponsored post. Word-of-mouth has always been the strongest sales channel, and Discord, Slack groups, newsletters, and tight-knit forums are where word-of-mouth actually lives.
So I started paying more attention. I tested different programs, compared what they offered, watched how my community responded, and tracked every dollar that came in. What I'm about to share is the result of about 18 months of that work.
The Three Numbers That Decide Your Earnings
Whatever platform you promote, your income boils down to three variables: clicks, conversions, and commission. But in a community context, those numbers look different than they do on a generic blog or YouTube channel. Let me explain.
Clicks depend on how integrated your recommendation feels. If you drop a link in the middle of a casual Discord conversation,
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