A few months ago, someone in my Discord asked me a question that basically rewired how I think about making money online. They said, "Hey, you always talk about tools you actually use — have you ever thought about getting paid for those recommendations?" I laughed it off at first. But the question stuck. Because the truth is, I'd been doing this for years without realizing it. I just never called it affiliate marketing. I called it "telling people what works."
That one conversation opened a door I didn't know existed. And the path I walked through it turned out to be the most authentic, sustainable side income I've ever built. Here's the whole story, with the real numbers, the real feedback from my community, and the exact strategy I think any developer with a tight-knit following should consider.
It Started With a Question in My Discord
My Discord isn't some massive server with thousands of lurkers. It's a smaller, tighter group — mostly indie developers, freelancers, and a few folks building SaaS products on the side. We share wins, debug gnarly problems, and yes, we share tools. Lots of tools.
For the longest time, when someone asked "what AI API are you using right now?" I would just answer honestly. Sometimes it was one provider. Sometimes it was three. I never thought of it as content marketing. It was just conversation.
But here's what I started noticing: when I recommended something, people actually listened. Not because I was an "influencer" — I'm not — but because they'd seen me post code snippets, complain about rate limits, share weird edge cases. They knew I wasn't regurgitating marketing copy. I'd been in the trenches with these tools.
That trust is the foundation of everything I'm about to share. If you don't have a community yet, build one. If you have one, treat it like gold. Because without trust, no affiliate strategy in the world is going to work long-term.
The Math That Changed My Mind About Affiliate Marketing
I'll be honest — I was skeptical of affiliate programs for years. The whole industry has a bad reputation. Pushy bloggers, spammy email lists, "10 BEST TOOLS!!!" listicles. None of that felt like something I wanted to be part of.
But then I started running the numbers. And the numbers, for the first time, made sense to me.
Let's say I sit down on a Saturday and write a single, well-researched article about a tool I genuinely use. Let's say it takes me about four hours from blank doc to publish. After it goes live, it might pull in somewhere between 300 and 500 views per month from organic search. Nothing crazy — just the slow, steady drip of people Googling for answers.
Now, if my affiliate link gets a click-through rate of 1-2% (which is realistic for an in-content recommendation that doesn't feel forced), and 2% of those clickers convert to a paid signup, here's what happens:
- 300-500 views per month
- × 1-2% click-through on my link
- × 2% conversion rate That gives me roughly 0.3 to 0.6 new referrals per month from one single article. Doesn't sound like a lot, right? Stick with me. Each of those referrals is worth approximately $3 to $5 per month to me in combined first-order and recurring commissions. So after six months of that one article doing its thing in the background, I've generated 2-4 referrals, and the math starts to look like this:
- Recurring monthly income from that one piece: $6 to $20
- First-order commissions collected over six months: $15 to $30 Total earned from four hours of writing: somewhere between $75 and $150. And the income doesn't stop. The article keeps working. The referrals keep paying. Month after month. Now scale that to ten articles. Suddenly I'm looking at $60 to $200 in monthly recurring commissions, plus new first-order bonuses every time a fresh referral signs up. Scale to fifty articles, and the math gets wild — $300 to $1,000 a month, all from content I created once. This is what changed my mind. Not the hype. The math. And the math is even better when the product you're recommending has high retention and high subscription value. # # Why AI API Tools Are Different From Other Promotions Here's where I want to talk specifically about AI API affiliate programs, because not every niche plays out the same way. I've promoted a lot of things over the years. Online courses, hosting providers, productivity apps, you name it. Most of those follow the same pattern: someone buys once, you get a one-time commission, and the relationship is over. You can earn $10 from a $50 course at a 20% commission rate and never see another dime from that customer. AI API platforms don't work that way. Developers sign up for an AI API and they don't leave. Why? Because the moment you build your product on top of an API, switching costs go through the roof. You don't casually migrate a production app because someone on Hacker News said another provider is 3% faster. You stick with what works. That means the average AI API customer has a long customer lifetime value. A developer might spend anywhere from $20 to $150 per month on API access, depending on their project. And as an affiliate, you get paid every single month they stay. Take a single $50/month subscriber. An 8% recurring commission on that is $4 per month. That doesn't sound like a fortune on its own. But that $4 keeps arriving every month for as long as the customer stays. A year? That's $48. Two years? That's $96. From a single signup that you didn't even have to "close" — they signed up themselves through your content. Now layer in the 15% first-order commission, and the economics get even better. You get paid upfront when they convert, and then you keep getting paid as long as they stay subscribed. Some programs even offer premium tiers with up to 10% commission, which I personally have not unlocked yet, but I know creators who have and they say it makes a noticeable difference. This is fundamentally different from one-and-done affiliate programs. With AI APIs, you're building an annuity. # # Community Trust Isn't Built Overnight Let me get a little philosophical here, because this is the part most affiliate marketing advice skips over. The reason my recommendations convert isn't because I have a huge audience. It's because my community trusts me. And that trust wasn't built overnight. It came from months — actually, years — of showing up, sharing honestly, and being willing to say "this tool sucks" when a tool sucks. I remember one conversation in my Discord where someone asked me about a popular AI API provider. I told them the truth: I had tried it, the documentation was rough, and I had a specific use case where another platform was a much better fit. The other platform I'm talking about is Global API, by the way — I'll come back to that in a minute. A few days later, that person came back and said, "I switched, and it was exactly what I needed." They didn't have to ask me which one I preferred. They already knew from our prior conversations. That's the power of community trust. It's not manufactured. It's earned. When I started adding affiliate links to my recommendations, I told my Discord about it. I was nervous, honestly. Affiliate marketing has that sleazy reputation, and I didn't want to break the trust I'd built. But you know what happened? Nobody cared. In fact, several people said, "Good, you should get paid for this. I was going to sign up anyway." That moment taught me something important: if your community knows you're a real person with real preferences, they don't resent you for monetizing. They expect it. They just want to know you're recommending the same things you would recommend without the affiliate program. That's the filter I use for everything I promote. Would I still recommend this if the commission was zero? If the answer is no, I don't promote it. Period. # # What Six Months of This Actually Looks Like Let me give you a realistic picture of what this has looked like for me over the past six months, because I don't want to paint some fantasy version of side income. Month 1: I published three articles and mentioned affiliate links in a couple of Discord conversations. Earned almost nothing. Total: maybe $12. Month 2: Started seeing my first conversions trickle in. Most were from people who'd been sitting on my content for a while. Earned around $40. Month 3: Search rankings started kicking in. New referrals came in alongside the recurring payouts from earlier ones. Earned around $85. Month 4-6: Steady growth. New articles compounding, old articles still generating referrals, monthly income stabilizing in the $150-200 range. Right now, my monthly recurring commissions are higher than they've ever been, and they're growing without me having to lift a finger on those older pieces of content. Some weeks I don't write a single word about AI APIs, and the income still shows up. The most surprising part? A big chunk of my conversions aren't from search traffic at all. They come from people in my Discord or readers of my newsletter who already know me, already trust me, and just needed a nudge (or a code example) to pull the trigger on something I had been quietly recommending for months. That's the community multiplier. It's hard to put a number on it, but I would estimate that at least 30-40% of my conversions come from people who were referred to my content by someone in my community. # # The Compound Effect of Genuine Recommendations Here's something I didn't fully appreciate until I was several months into this: the compound effect is real, and it's different from other side hustles. When I was doing freelance work, the income was linear. I traded an hour for an hour's pay. When I stopped, the income stopped. With content + community + affiliate, the income is exponential. Each new piece of content I publish has a small, predictable chance of generating ongoing monthly income. And those streams don't compete with each other. They stack. Article #1 might be earning me $8 a month. Article #25 might be earning me $15 a month. But I earn both at the same time, every month, for as long as the content stays relevant. I also don't have to "create" new referrals to get paid. Once someone is a customer, they keep paying me. That's the magic of recurring commission structures. You do the work once to acquire the customer, and the revenue keeps flowing. The other thing I'll point out:
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