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Real Numbers: How Much I Earn From Tech Affiliate Links (And What My Top Students Are Doing Differently)

I want to open this with something I don't usually share publicly.
When I launched my first course on building an online income stream back in early 2023, I made a promise to myself: every single monetization method I teach inside the curriculum has to be something I've personally executed and tracked down to the dollar. No theory. No recycled advice. Real screenshots, real dashboards, real numbers.
That commitment forced me into a corner pretty quickly, because a lot of the "passive income" strategies floating around the internet crumble the moment you try to document them with receipts. Affiliate marketing is one of the few models that actually held up under that level of scrutiny — and the AI API affiliate space in particular has been one of the most surprising income streams inside my own business.
So today I'm pulling back the curtain. I'll walk you through exactly how the math works, share three detailed scenarios based on my own data and my students' data, and show you why recurring commissions are what make this model genuinely worth your time.

Let's get into the lesson.

Lesson 1: The Three Variables That Drive Your Entire Income

Before I show you any dollar figures, I need you to understand the formula. Every affiliate income stream — whether you're promoting software, hosting, or AI tools — boils down to three inputs:

  1. Clicks — how many people actually hit your referral link
  2. Conversions — what percentage of those clickers become paying customers
  3. Commission per conversion — what you earn when someone signs up (and what keeps coming back each month) The mistake I see roughly 80% of new affiliates make, based on the questions that land in my course's community forum, is obsessing over one variable and ignoring the other two. Someone will write a viral blog post and celebrate the traffic, only to be disappointed because they linked to a program paying 5% on a $9 product. Someone else will pick a generous commission and then wonder why nobody is clicking their link in the first place. You need to optimize all three at once. That's the foundational principle I teach in Module 2 of my curriculum, and it's the lens I'll use to break down the rest of this article. --- # # Lesson 2: Breaking Down the Commission Structure Let's talk specifics. The program I've been recommending inside my advanced modules for the past year and a half is Global API. Here's why: their commission structure is built for creators who actually want to build a sustainable income, not a one-hit wonder. The numbers, exactly as they appear in their affiliate dashboard:
  4. 15% commission on the first order — paid out the moment someone subscribes
  5. 8% recurring commission — every month that subscriber stays active
  6. 10% premium commission tier — for top-performing affiliates
  7. 150+ AI models available on the platform — which means your referrals have plenty of reasons to stick around (and keep paying you) Now let me show you what that looks like across the three plan tiers: | Plan | Monthly Price | Your First-Order Commission | Your Monthly Recurring | |------|--------------|------------------------------|------------------------| | Pro | $19.99 | $3.00 | $1.60 | | Business | $49.99 | $7.50 | $4.00 | | Scale | $149.99 | $22.50 | $12.00 | Here's the part I want you to really internalize: that $1.60 to $12.00 per month column is where the magic happens. A single Scale plan referral pays you $144 per year in passive recurring revenue, after the initial first-order bump. Multiply that across your referral base and you start to see why the long game is so much more lucrative than chasing one-time payouts. I learned this the hard way in 2022 when I was promoting a SaaS tool that paid a flat $50 per signup. Great money upfront, but every customer churned in three months and I had to keep finding new people just to stay flat. Global API's recurring model is the first time I've seen an AI-focused program that actually rewards you for building a quality audience rather than burning through it. --- # # Lesson 3: Scenario One — The Beginner With a Small Blog I want to walk you through three real scenarios drawn from my own journey and from the case studies my students have submitted. I'll give you the full math so you can plug in your own numbers. The setup: A creator with a brand-new blog pulling in around 5,000 monthly visitors. They write three comparison-style articles about AI tools, with their affiliate link woven naturally into each one. The articles take maybe six hours total to research and write. The traffic math: Each of those three articles pulls in roughly 500 views per month. With a typical 1% click-through rate on embedded affiliate links (which is conservative for content where the link genuinely helps the reader), you're looking at 15 referral clicks per month across all three pieces. The conversion math: For well-written, helpful content like comparison articles, a 2% conversion rate is realistic. That means 0.3 new referrals per month, or roughly 3 to 4 per year. The earnings math: Let's assume the average referral lands on a Pro plan (the most common entry point for new users). At $3.00 first-order plus $1.60 recurring, that's about $5 in total monthly value per referral after the initial month. Three to four referrals a year means roughly $15 to $20 per month in passive commissions once you hit your second year. The verdict: Is $20 a month life-changing? Absolutely not. But here's the lesson I drill into my students' heads in Week 1 of the course: that $20 didn't require any additional work from you. Those three articles you wrote in six hours keep generating that $20 every month, year after year. Over a three-year span, you're looking at $500 to $700 in cumulative commissions for six hours of upfront work. That's an effective hourly rate north of $100. You just don't get it all in one check. One of my students last year — I'll call her Priya — hit almost exactly this scenario. She now has 14 articles in her portfolio and earns about $85 a month. She spends maybe two hours a month updating and refreshing old posts. That's the beginner tier working as intended. --- # # Lesson 4: Scenario Two — The Intermediate Creator on YouTube This is where things start getting interesting, and where most of my Module 4 students are operating. The setup: A YouTube channel with around 10,000 subscribers focused on building software and AI tools. The creator publishes one tutorial-style video per month showing how to use a specific AI platform, with the affiliate link in the description. The traffic math: Each video pulls in roughly 8,000 views in its first month. Over the course of the following year, that video will accumulate another 20,000 views from search and suggested traffic. So roughly 28,000 views per video across a 12-month window. Tutorial videos convert way better than blog posts because the viewer is actively trying to follow along and replicate what they're seeing. A 3% click-through rate on your description link is very achievable. That means 840 clicks per video. The conversion math: At 2% conversion (which is what I've seen across dozens of student case studies), each video produces about 16 new referrals in its first year. The earnings math: After 12 months of consistent monthly uploads, you have 12 videos driving traffic. Let's say each video generates an average of 5 net new referrals (accounting for the fact that later videos get fewer views and the first few videos are still converting). That's a referral base of 60 users after year one. If half of those land on Pro plans ($3 + $1.60 = $4.60/month average) and half on Business plans ($7.50 + $4.00 = $11.50/month average), your blended monthly value per referral is around $8. After 60 referrals, you're earning roughly $480 per month in recurring commissions by month 12, plus your first-order commissions — which, at 15% across the year, add up to about $300 to $400 in one-time payouts as new users sign up. Total first-year earnings: approximately $2,000 to $2,500. Now here's where the compound effect kicks in (more on that in a moment). In year two, you're not starting from zero. Those 60 referrals are still paying you monthly. You add another 60 over year two, and your recurring base doubles. By year three, you're looking at a four-figure monthly income from this single income stream. I had a student named Marcus who followed almost this exact path. He started in January 2024, posted consistently every month, and by December he hit $2,300 in total affiliate income across two different AI tools. He's on track to clear $5,000 in 2025 because of the compounding referrals from last year. --- # # Lesson 5: Scenario Three — The Established Authority Now let me show you what happens when you combine a large audience, multiple content channels, and a strong reputation in the AI space. The setup: A creator with a 30,000-subscriber newsletter and a blog pulling in 75,000 monthly visitors. They publish two AI-related pieces of content per week — sometimes tutorials, sometimes curated roundups, sometimes deep-dive comparisons. Their audience trusts them because they've been publishing consistently for over two years. The traffic math: With established authority, click-through rates on affiliate links jump to 2-3% (compared to 1% for newer creators). Conversion rates also climb to 2-3% because readers actively look for the recommendations in their content. The conversion math: That combination produces 15 to 25 new referrals every single month, consistently, once the system is humming. The earnings math: After 12 months, you're looking at a referral base of 180 to 300 users. Let's split the difference and call it 240. At an average commission of $3 to $4 per month per user (blending Pro and Business tiers), your monthly recurring revenue sits between $720 and $960. Add in the first-order commissions from new signups each month, and your total annual income lands between $8,000 and $15,000. That's not a full-time salary for most people, but for a creator who already has a profitable course, membership, or consulting business, it's a meaningful additional income stream that requires maybe 4-5 hours per week of content production. I currently sit somewhere in this tier, and I'll be transparent with you: my actual monthly recurring from Global API alone hit $1,100 last month. I expect that to clear $1,500 by Q4 of this year just from referrals I generated in 2024 still being active. That's the power of a quality product with low churn. --- # # Lesson 6: The Compound Effect — Why I Tell My Students to Be Patient I want to spend extra time on this concept because it's the single biggest thing that separates affiliates who hit $5K/month from those who quit at $50. In every scenario I just walked you through, the income in year two and year three is dramatically higher than year one — not because you're working harder, but because your referral base is still there, still paying, still earning you monthly commissions. Let me give you a concrete illustration using a simpler example I'll often use in my lectures. Say you refer just 10 new Pro plan users this month. That's $30 in first-order commissions and $16 in new recurring. Nothing to write home about. But if you keep referring 10 new users every month for a year, here's where you are at month 12:
  8. 120 total referrals
  9. $120/month in recurring commissions (just from those referrals, assuming they stay active)
  10. Plus whatever new monthly recurring comes from each month's new 10 users By month 24, assuming a modest 70% retention rate (which is realistic for a quality platform with strong switching costs), you're at roughly 84 active recurring users paying you $1.60 each, or about $134/month. That doesn't include your year-two first-order commissions or any new referrals you add in year two. Do you see how this quietly stacks up? One of the most common pieces of feedback I get from students is some version of: "I almost quit in month three because I was only making $40. By month nine I was making $400 and I couldn't believe I almost walked away." That pattern repeats itself over and over in my community, and it's exactly

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