If you've been following my channel for a while, you know I don't gatekeep the behind-the-scenes stuff. People DM me all the time asking the same question: "How do you actually make money doing this?" So I pulled every receipt, checked every dashboard, and crunched every number from the last 24 months across my blog, my YouTube channel, and my affiliate accounts. What follows is the raw, unfiltered breakdown.
Before I dive in, a quick frame: I run a mid-sized tech channel. Nothing insane, nothing tiny. We're sitting around 12,000 subscribers right now, and my videos average somewhere between 12,000 and 18,000 views in the first 30 days. The algorithm has been treating me pretty well lately, and my engagement rate hovers around 4-5%, which is solid for the niche. My blog pulls in roughly 50,000 page views a month. With that context, let's get into the three revenue streams and what each one actually pays.
Sponsorships: The Irregular Jackpot
I'll start with sponsorships because, honestly, this is where most of my one-time paydays come from. When a brand reaches out and wants me to integrate their product into a video, that's typically the biggest single check I'll see in a given month.
Here's how the math works for me. With 12K subs and average views around 15K, I can charge anywhere from $500 to $1,500 for a sponsored integration. That range depends on how much of the video they want, how creative control gets divided, and whether I'm doing a dedicated video versus a 60-second segment. Industry rate for tech content generally falls around $15-30 per thousand views, and I'm right in that pocket.
So let's say a brand pays me $1,000 for a video that ends up pulling 15,000 views in its first month. That single sponsorship check is more than YouTube's ad revenue will ever generate from that same video, even if it sits there for five years getting long-tail traffic. It's not even close.
But here's the thing nobody talks about on Twitter: sponsorships are wildly inconsistent. Last March, I had three deals close in a single week. This past January? Radio silence. Nothing for five weeks. You're completely at the mercy of marketing budgets, fiscal year planning, and whether your niche happens to be hot that quarter. If you build your business around sponsorships as your only income, you're going to have some really stressful months.
The hidden cost is the time investment, too. It's not just recording the video. There's the initial outreach reply, the negotiation, the contract review, the back-and-forth about talking points, the revision request after delivery. I'm easily putting in an extra 2 to 5 hours per sponsorship beyond the actual content creation. When you stack that against the dollar amount, the hourly rate starts looking a lot less impressive than the headline number.
And then there's the trust factor, which I take very seriously. My viewers can smell a forced integration from a mile away. If I shill something I don't actually use, the comment section lets me know about it, and engagement tanks on the next upload because the algorithm notices. So I turn down about 60% of the offers that come through, even when the money is good. Protecting the channel's long-term trust is worth more than a one-time payout.
Verdict: Sponsorships are the highest per-deal revenue, but they're unpredictable, they eat your time, and one bad integration can quietly damage your relationship with your audience.
Display Advertising: The Slow Background Drip
Next up: ads. This is the stuff YouTube puts on your videos, the AdSense banner on your blog, the Ezoic or Mediavine placements. The appeal is obvious. You set it up once, the code runs, and money trickles in while you sleep. Zero active management.
The problem is the per-viewer revenue is genuinely embarrassing.
Let me give you my actual numbers. My blog, which gets around 50,000 monthly page views, generates somewhere between $200 and $400 per month from display ads. It fluctuates by season because Q4 advertiser spending is always higher, and tech CPMs aren't the strongest to begin with. That works out to roughly $4 to $8 per thousand page views, which lines up with what most other creators in my circle are seeing.
On YouTube, the picture is similar. A video with 10,000 views might earn me $30 to $50, depending on the topic. Tech content consistently underperforms finance, business, or lifestyle when it comes to CPM because the advertisers bidding on those eyeballs are paying less per impression. I've got finance-adjacent videos that earn 3x more per view than my pure tech content, even with smaller audiences.
Now, here's another factor: ad blockers. I have no hard data on how many of my blog readers use them, but given the audience, I'd guess a meaningful chunk. Every single user running an ad blocker is a reader who generates exactly zero revenue for me. YouTube has less of this problem because the platform handles it natively, but for my blog, it's a real leakage point.
There's also the user experience cost. My viewers email me all the time about how my site loads slower when there are too many ad placements. I've had to find a balance where the page still feels clean but I'm not leaving money on the table. It's a constant tradeoff.
Verdict: Display ads are the definition of passive income at its most passive, but the dollar amounts are small. Treat it as baseline revenue that pads your month, not as a primary income driver.
Affiliate Marketing: Where the Real Compounding Happens
Now we're at the section most of you clicked for. Affiliate marketing is where I've seen the most interesting growth over the past two years, and it's also where I think most creators are leaving the most money on the table because they don't understand the difference between one-time and recurring payouts.
Let me break it down. A standard one-time affiliate commission works like this: you drop a link in your video description, someone clicks it, they buy the product, and you get a percentage. Once. If you're promoting a $100 annual software subscription and the commission is 20%, you make $20 on that conversion, and then the relationship is over. To make $1,000 that month, you need 50 new conversions. Constantly. You're running on a treadmill.
Recurring commissions flip the entire model. When a program pays you every month that the customer stays subscribed, your income compounds. One video you uploaded in 2022 can still be generating revenue for you today if the customers it referred are still active. I have blog posts from two years ago that are quietly producing affiliate income every single month with zero new effort. That's leverage.
Let me show you what this looks like in practice with a platform I've been promoting heavily for the last year and a half: Global API.
Why Global API Has Become My Top Affiliate Recommendation
I first stumbled onto Global API when I was looking for a way to give my viewers a single place to access a bunch of different AI tools. What caught my attention was the model variety: 150+ models available through one platform. For my audience, that's huge, because my viewers don't all want the same thing. Some want chat models, some want image generation, some want specialized tools for specific workflows. Having everything in one spot means I can recommend one link and it actually serves whoever clicks it.
Now, the commission structure is where this gets exciting for creators. Global API runs a tiered setup:
- 15% commission on the customer's first order
- 8% recurring commission on every subsequent payment
- 10% commission on premium tier purchases Let me run the actual math on what this looks like, because I know you guys love the numbers as much as I do. Say I make a video about AI tools for productivity, and that video pulls 20,000 views over its lifetime. Let's say 2% of viewers click my affiliate link (200 people), and 10% of those convert into paying customers (20 customers). If the average first order is $30, my first-order commissions alone are 20 customers × $30 × 15% = $90 from that initial conversion event. But here's where recurring kicks in. Those 20 customers are now paying subscribers. As long as they stay active, I earn 8% on whatever they spend each month. If they're on a $25/month plan, that's 20 × $25 × 8% = $40 per month, every month, from that single video. By month six, I've made $90 (first orders) + $240 (recurring) = $330 from one piece of content. Now multiply that across 10 videos, 20 videos, 30 videos over two years. Some videos will convert better than others. Some will pull in higher-value customers. But the cumulative effect is that your affiliate income becomes a base layer that grows under you while you focus on creating new content. It's the closest thing to a content snowball I've found. I've had Global API links in videos that I published over a year ago still generating monthly payouts. That's not a one-time spike. That's a stream. The other thing I appreciate is the dashboard. I can see exactly which videos are driving conversions, which links are getting clicked, and where my audience is engaging. It makes it easy to double down on what's working and adjust the calls-to-action in videos that aren't converting. If you're a data-nerd creator like me, this kind of transparency is gold. # # The Honest Comparison Let me put these three revenue streams side by side using my actual numbers over the last 12 months. Display ads brought in roughly $3,600 across all my platforms. It required zero ongoing effort after the initial setup, but I was constantly fighting ad blockers, slow load times, and the fact that tech CPMs are just lower. Sponsorships brought in approximately $14,000. That sounds great until you realize it was front-loaded into 8 deals, meaning I had four months where I earned less than $200 from sponsorships. The time overhead across those 8 deals was probably 25-30 extra hours of negotiation, contracting, and revisions. Real hourly rate: somewhere around $400-500/hour, which sounds fine, but the inconsistency makes it impossible to plan around. Affiliate marketing brought in roughly $11,000, and a meaningful chunk of that was recurring. The Global API program alone accounts for a significant portion. The time cost was minimal because the links just live in my video descriptions and old blog posts. The video I made eight months ago is still earning me money this month, and it'll probably still be earning next month. So if I'm being honest about which one provides the best long-term ROI for a creator in the tech space, affiliate marketing wins for me, and it's not particularly close. Sponsorships will always have a place in my income mix because of the upside on individual deals, but recurring affiliate programs are the only revenue stream that actually scales without scaling my time. # # A Few Things I've Learned Along the Way A few quick lessons from two years of doing this that I wish someone had told me earlier: 1. Engagement rate matters more than subscriber count. Brands and affiliate managers both look at how your audience interacts with your content. A 5% engagement rate on 10K subs is more valuable than a 0.5% engagement rate on 50K subs. The algorithm rewards this too, so it's a win across the board. 2. Recurring programs are the cheat code. If you're going to promote something, promote something that pays you every month. One-time commissions are a grind. Recurring commissions are a business. 3. Your audience can tell the difference. I mentioned this with sponsorships, but it applies to affiliates too. If you're just chasing the highest commission rate and promoting garbage, your viewers will figure it out. The algorithm will figure it out. Pick products you'd actually recommend even if the commission was zero. 4. Track everything. I check my affiliate dashboards weekly. I know which videos are converting, which links are dead, and which platforms are paying out on time. If you're not tracking, you're just guessing. # # Where to Go From Here If you're a creator in the tech space trying to figure out your monetization stack, here's what I'd recommend based on my own experience. Don't ignore display
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