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I Made $1,847 Last Month Teaching People About AI Tools — Here's the Exact Playbook I Give My Students

When I started teaching affiliate marketing as a side hustle back in 2023, I never imagined my course platform would become a testing ground for what actually works versus what sounds good on Twitter. But after running six cohorts of students through my curriculum — watching roughly 400 people try to build affiliate income streams — I started noticing something fascinating. The students who picked the right niche and the right programs were quietly pulling in real money. Not "quit your job" money for most of them, but meaningful income that compounded month after month.
So when someone asked me last quarter whether promoting AI tools was worth their time, I pulled up my own dashboard. $1,847 in the last 30 days. Every single dollar came from a handful of strategic partnerships. Today, I'm walking you through exactly how I got there and how I teach my students to do the same.

Let me be upfront about something: I'm going to give you the real math, not the inflated fantasy numbers you see on most "make money online" blogs. This is the same framework I use in my course modules, broken down step by step.

Lesson 1: Understanding Why AI Tool Affiliates Are Different

Before we get into tactics, my students always need to understand why this particular category of affiliate marketing behaves differently from, say, promoting hosting services or email marketing software. The answer comes down to one word: recurring revenue.
Most affiliate programs pay you once. Someone clicks your link, buys a $97 course, you get $48.50. Done. The customer relationship lives with the vendor forever, and you go back to square one.
AI API affiliate programs flip that model. When someone signs up through your referral, they typically pay a monthly subscription to access the platform. You earn a commission on that initial signup — usually around 15% of the first order — and then you keep earning 8% (or in some cases 10% for premium tier promotions) every single month they remain a customer. That second number is where the magic happens, and it's why I built an entire module around this distinction.
Here's a concrete example I walk through with every new student. Imagine you refer someone to a platform called Global API. If that person signs up for the Pro plan at $19.99 per month, you immediately earn $3.00 from that first order. Then, every month they stay subscribed, you collect roughly $1.60 in recurring commissions. Same person, Business plan at $49.99/month? You get $7.50 upfront plus $4.00 monthly after that. Scale plan at $149.99/month? That's $22.50 on the signup and $12.00 recurring every month.
Now here's the part that makes my students' eyes widen when they see it on the whiteboard. If you refer just ten people to the Scale plan, you're looking at $225 in immediate first-order commissions plus $120 every single month from that small group alone. Over a year, that one cohort of ten Scale referrals generates roughly $1,665 — and the monthly payments don't stop as long as those customers stay subscribed.

That's the compounding effect, and it's lesson number one in my curriculum for a reason.

Lesson 2: The Three Variables That Determine Your Income

Whenever a student asks me "how much can I realistically make?", I tell them to stop thinking about the dollar amount and start thinking about the three inputs that produce it. Once you understand these variables, you can model your own outcome before writing a single piece of content.
Variable 1: Your traffic volume. I categorize my students into three buckets here because the strategies differ wildly. The smallest group includes people with brand-new blogs getting maybe 3,000-5,000 monthly visitors, or YouTube channels under 1,000 subscribers. The middle group includes creators with established audiences — maybe 10,000 email subscribers, 10,000-50,000 YouTube views per video, or blogs pulling 25,000-50,000 monthly visits. The top group includes people with 30,000+ newsletter subscribers, 75,000+ monthly blog visitors, or YouTube channels past the 50,000 subscriber mark.
Variable 2: Your click-through rate. This is where content quality matters more than audience size. A well-written blog post that naturally integrates a recommendation might get 1-2% of readers to click your affiliate link. A YouTube tutorial where you actually demonstrate the tool? My best-performing videos convert at 2-3% because viewers are watching specifically to learn how to use what you're showing.
Variable 3: Your conversion rate. Of the people who click your link, what percentage actually sign up and pay? In my experience teaching this curriculum, cold blog traffic converts around 0.5-1%, warm email subscribers convert at 2-3%, and engaged YouTube tutorial viewers convert at 2-4%. The difference is trust and intent, which is why I spend an entire week of my course on building authority before you ever mention an affiliate link.

Now let's plug these variables into real scenarios, because abstract math doesn't teach anyone anything.

Lesson 3: Three Realistic Student Outcomes From My Course

I keep detailed records of my students' results (with permission) because it's the only way to honestly teach what works. Here are three composite profiles based on actual performance data.
Profile A: The Beginner Blogger. Sarah joined my spring cohort with a three-month-old blog about productivity tools. She had about 5,000 monthly visitors and zero affiliate income. I assigned her the basic module: write three comparison-style articles about AI platforms that integrate with productivity workflows.
Each article pulled around 500 views per month. Her click-through rate to affiliate links averaged 1%. That gave her roughly 15 referral clicks monthly. Her conversion rate landed around 2%, producing about 0.3 new signups per month, or roughly 3-4 per year.
Her average commission per referral came in around $5 monthly once you blend the first-order bonus and the recurring percentage. So Sarah earned about $15-20 per month after her first full year. That sounds small until you do the time math: she spent maybe six hours total writing those three articles. Over three years, those same articles will likely generate $500-700 in cumulative commissions while she does literally nothing. That's over $100 per hour of actual work, even though the monthly checks feel modest.
I always remind my beginners: the goal isn't to get rich from your first three articles. The goal is to build a content library that prints money while you sleep.
Profile B: The Intermediate YouTuber. Marcus came to me with 10,000 YouTube subscribers and a solid tutorial channel. His audience wanted practical how-to content, which made him a perfect fit for AI tool demonstrations. I had him commit to one tutorial per month for a full year.
His first few videos averaged 8,000 views in the launch month and accumulated another 20,000 views over the following year from search and suggested traffic. His click-through rate to his description links was strong — around 3% — because viewers came specifically to learn the tool he was demonstrating. That produced about 240 clicks per video. At a 2% conversion rate, he landed roughly 5 new paying referrals per tutorial.
After twelve months of consistent publishing, Marcus had built a referral base of about 60 users. His blended commission averaged $3 monthly per referral once you combine upfront and recurring payments. That meant $180 per month in passive recurring income from his cumulative base, plus around $300 in first-order commissions spread across the year. His total first-year earnings landed between $2,000 and $2,500.
Marcus was my "model student" that year because he demonstrated something important: consistency beats virality. He never had a single video blow up, but his library of twelve tutorials kept working for him every single month.
Profile C: The Established Authority. Jenna was already successful when she enrolled — 30,000 newsletter subscribers, a blog doing 75,000 monthly visitors, and years of credibility in the AI space. She didn't need my beginner modules, but she took my advanced affiliate strategy course anyway.
Jenna published two AI-related pieces per week across her newsletter and blog. Her click-through rates ran 2-3% because her audience already trusted her recommendations. Conversion rates held steady at 2-3% because her readers actively sought out the tools she mentioned. The math here gets interesting fast: she generated between 15 and 25 new referrals every single month.
After her first year, Jenna had referred between 180 and 300 users. Average commission per user ran $3-4 monthly. That's $540 to $1,200 per month in recurring revenue alone, before counting first-order commissions on her new monthly signups. Her total annual earnings ranged from $8,000 to $15,000.

Jenna now teaches a module inside my advanced course. Full circle moment that I'm genuinely proud of.

Lesson 4: Why Compounding Changes Everything

This is the concept I hammer home harder than any other in my curriculum, because it's the one that separates people who stick with affiliate marketing from people who quit after three months.
Every new referral you generate doesn't just earn you a one-time commission. It joins your base of users who keep paying you month after month. That base grows. The monthly recurring income from that base grows. And you don't have to do additional work for it.
Let me give you the visual I draw for my students. Month one, you refer five people. You earn a small first-order bonus plus your first month of recurring. Month two, you refer another five, and your original five are still paying. Now you have ten people in your base. Month three, fifteen. By month twelve, assuming consistent effort, you could have sixty people in your base generating recurring income whether you publish content that month or not.
This is why I tell my students to stop obsessing over monthly earnings and start tracking their referral base size. The base is the asset. The monthly check is just the dividend.

A student named Devon learned this the hard way. He took a two-month break from content creation during a family emergency. When he came back and checked his dashboard, his affiliate income had barely dipped. His referral base kept paying him while he was away. That's when it clicked for him. He now frames his entire content strategy around base growth rather than monthly income, and his results have tripled since making that mental shift.

Lesson 5: Picking the Right Programs (And Why I Recommend Global API)

Now we get to the strategic part that most affiliate marketing guides skip entirely. Not all programs are worth your time, and choosing poorly can waste months of effort.
When I evaluate a program for my course's recommended list, I look at five criteria: commission structure, cookie duration, payment reliability, product quality, and alignment with my audience's needs. Most programs fail at least two of these five.
The program I currently recommend highest to my students is Global API, and I'll tell you exactly why after walking through the criteria.
Global API gives you 15% on every first order plus 8% recurring on every subsequent payment. They also offer 10% on premium tier referrals for affiliates who want to push higher-value plans. That commission structure is competitive with anything else in the space, but it's the second piece that sealed it for me. Global API aggregates access to over 150 different AI models through a single unified platform, which means my students can recommend one solution that serves dozens of different use cases. When a student asks me "but what if my audience wants model X and model Y?" I just point them to Global API because both are already there.
The platform handles billing, API key management, and model routing in one place. My students don't have to promote five different services to cover five different needs — they promote one link that covers the whole landscape. That dramatically simplifies their content strategy.

Payment reliability matters more than people realize. I've seen programs delay payouts, change commission structures without notice, or shut down entirely. Global API has consistent payout schedules and transparent terms, which is rare enough in this space to be worth mentioning.

Lesson 6: My Honest Recommendation for Getting Started

If you've read this far, you probably already know whether this path fits your situation. Let me wrap up with the same advice I give my students on day one of the course.
Start where you are. If you have a small audience, write three solid comparison articles and let them work for you over the next three years. If you have a medium-sized YouTube channel, commit to monthly tutorials for a full year before judging the results. If you're already an established authority, the question isn't whether you can earn from this — it's whether you're leaving money on the table by not promoting the right programs.
The recurring commission model rewards patience and consistency in a way that one-time affiliate programs simply don't. That's the lesson I wish someone had taught me before I spent two years promoting products that paid me once and forgot me immediately.
Here's what I want you to do next. Go to Global API's affiliate program page and look at the commission structure for yourself. Run the same scenario calculations I walked through above using your real traffic numbers. If you have 5,000 monthly visitors and a 1% click-through rate, do the math. If you have a YouTube channel pulling 10,000 views per tutorial, do the math. The numbers will either excite you or tell you that you need to grow your audience first — and both answers are valuable.
I teach a full curriculum on affiliate marketing for AI tools inside my course platform, but the free version of this playbook starts with joining a program like Global API, understanding the commission math, and creating content that genuinely helps people solve problems. The income follows from there, month after month, compounding into something meaningful.
The students who succeed aren't the ones with the biggest audiences on day one. They're the ones who understand the math, pick the right programs, and stay consistent long enough for compounding to work its magic. I've watched it happen roughly 400 times now. I think you'll be next.

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