Managing an affiliate program at scale is a totally different beast to launching one. Most brands hit a wall at 30 â 50 affiliates because the tools and habits they relied on from day #1 start breaking down. But it doesnât have to be like that. Read on and Iâll dig into what effective affiliate program management actually looks like, including step-by-step guidance on how to do it yourself.
â ïž Disclosure: Iâm not an affiliate marketer, Iâm a writer. So for parts of this article, Iâve leaned heavily on two legit experts, namely:
- Gabija JankauskÄ, Affiliate Marketing Manager at PartnerGap and former Influencer and Affiliate Marketing Manager at Son de Flor
- Robert Polonski, Media Partnerships Manager at Deeper
What affiliate program management actually involves
Recruitment and onboarding vs. ongoing management: Where most brands underinvest
Most brands treat affiliate program management as a recruitment problem. They focus all their energy on finding, signing up, and onboarding new affiliates â then run out of steam when it comes to managing the creators theyâve already got đ€Šââïž
I get it: itâs hard to resist a shiny new thing (in this case, a potential new affiliate partner). But lots of brands have more than enough affiliates already. They just aren't putting enough effort into ongoing comms post-onboarding, so they inevitably struggle with retention. Which explains why 60% of marketers we surveyed said their biggest challenge is âkeeping affiliates happyâ.

The operational shift that happens at 30 â 50 affiliates
As I noted in the intro, the 30 â 50 affiliate mark is often the tipping point where all those manual processes that were so essential to getting a program off the ground start to become a serious burden. Iâm talking about stuff like:
- Measuring results in spreadsheets
- Communicating through individual emails
- Tracking discount codes manually
And trust me, if those processes are slowing things down at ~50 affiliates, theyâll be positively glacial when you scale to three figures or more.
Fact is, if youâre doing everything manually, youâre not really running a program at all â youâre doing a whole heap of admin. So if youâve reached this point, itâs time to start automating.
đ€ Further reading: Find out more in Affiliate Marketing Automation: The Complete Guide to Scaling Your Program.
What "good" program management looks like in practice
While different brands have different reasons for starting an affiliate program, the specific practices that contribute to solid affiliate program management are pretty transferable. Here are some key considerations, as recommended by Gabija and Robert:
- Accurate tracking and fair payments: Simply put, Gabija says these are the two most important elements of a strong affiliate program. Robert adds that the best way to succeed in any campaign is to always know which affiliates are active, which are dormant, and which are your top performers.
â
â
- Clear upfront communication: Share all the necessary information when a creator first signs up for your program, including clear instructions on how to get started.
- Consistent management: An underrated element of effective management is simply investing enough time in your program, as Gabija explains:
â
â
- Creator segmentation: Different types of partners require different levels of management and communication (e.g. you might run one offer for social media creators and another for online publishers), so be sure to segment your affiliates accordingly.
- Relationship building: Like any type of creator marketing, running an affiliate program is ultimately a relationship game. Robert says there are serious benefits to getting it right.
â
â
- Regular updates: Sending updates, news, and promotional information can help motivate your affiliate partners to share content, especially if their audience responds to discounts.
- Balanced tone of voice: Striking the right balance between friendly and professional is another key element of affiliate program management. Too friendly and the creator might relax and become unreliable; too strict (and unempathetic) and they wonât feel motivated to continue the partnership.
- Celebrate early milestones: Finally, Robert recommends taking the time to congratulate creators for strong results â especially when theyâve been tough to achieve.
â
Types of affiliate program management structures
Unless youâve outsourced everything to an agency, there are three main ways to manage an affiliate program:
- Centralized: One person or a small team owns the program end to end.
- Decentralized: Marketing manages affiliate recruitment and relationships, finance handles payouts, with no single person (or team) accountable for everything.
- Tool-led: An influencer marketing platform automates the bulk of operations with light human oversight.
As always, there are strong and weak points to eachâŠ
đ€ Further reading: For more on this, check out Influencer Marketing In-House vs. Agencies: Which Is the Right Choice for You? and read my recommendations for the 19 Best Influencer Marketing Platforms.
Step-by-step: How to manage an affiliate program
Step 1: Build and maintain a clean affiliate rosterÂ
While scaling an affiliate program doesnât have to mean recruiting hundreds of creators, it definitely does require building a go-to list of active high-performing affiliates.
As with most parts of affiliate program management, doing this manually means spending long enough in spreadsheets to become a serious contender for the Excel World Championship (yes, itâs a real thing). For each creator, youâll want to add their:
- Status (including when they last posted)
- Personalized notes â did they just have a baby? Get a dog? Buy a hibachi?
- Specialisms and types of campaigns theyâve worked on
Even if you only work with a half-dozen-or-so affiliates, maintaining this spreadsheet is gonna require some serious effort. At 10 or more creators itâs pretty much unworkable. And 30+? Fuhgeddaboudit đ€
Save yourself the headache with a dedicated affiliate management platform like Modash, which automatically tracks how much content your affiliates are posting and when their most recent post went live.

It only takes a couple clicks to create new lists, add relevant affiliates, and set their status (plus you can customize all your status options to match the needs of your program). Plus you can write notes for individual creators to help with the all-important task of building stronger relationships đȘ
Step 2: Set up a reliable tracking system before you scaleÂ
Remember: both Gabija JankauskÄ and Robert Polonski say that reliable tracking is one of the most important elements to running a successful affiliate program.Â
You definitely want to figure this out before you start scaling or youâll have no way of knowing if anythingâs working. Should you hire more affiliates? Double down on a specific campaign or angle? Reach out to that underperforming creator? Who knows đ€·ââïž
There are two main tools at your disposal for tracking performance:
đïž Promo codes (AKA discount codes): Unique to each affiliate. When a customer submits a code at checkout, they receive a discount, and the transaction is tied back to the relevant creator. Best for tracking sales.
đ UTM links: Custom URLs that tell analytics tools where a click came from. Again, theyâre unique to individual affiliates, so they can tell you whoâs sending the most visitors to your store. Best for tracking clicks and traffic from affiliate content.
Setting up tracking is only a tiny battle in a much larger war, because you also need a way to reconcile clicks and code redemptions to specific creators and transactions.
You can do it manually in a spreadsheet â in fact, you can even find a free template in our article 5 Spreadsheets for Influencer Marketers. But itâs a serious heavy lift for any program with more than a handful of affiliates.
For your own sanity, youâre much better off with an affiliate marketing platform like Modash, which automatically matches codes and links to sales in Shopify, giving you a clear picture of revenue and clicks per affiliate.

If youâre not on Shopify, you can still track results through Modash â you just wonât get the same end-to-end view of performance.
đ€ Further reading: For more on tracking sales, check out 12 Best Affiliate Tracking Software Tools.
Step 3: Establish a communication cadence: Broadcast vs. 1:1
In the early days of your program, you can afford to rely on one-to-one and bulk emailing for all your affiliate communication needs.Â
But once you reach 10+ affiliate partners, youâll need a more scalable solution: broadcast channels like Discord, Slack, and WhatsApp. Just over half of marketers we surveyed already use them to communicate with affiliates â and you should too.

However, you donât want to rely on âone-to-manyâ platforms for all your comms. Some interactions need the personal touch that only comes from 1:1 messaging.Â
So whatâs the ideal split between 1:1 and broadcast? TBH if you asked 50 marketers youâd probably get 50 different answers. For his part, Robert says that at Deeper, they send roughly nine broadcasts for every 1:1 message.
Gabija adds that while 1:1 is âalways the best optionâ, in practice there often isnât enough time for it â so it makes sense to share repetitive and/or generic messages more broadly.
While speaking to your affiliate partners mano-a-mano is always gonna take time, you can claw some of it back by using Modashâs dedicated influencer marketing inbox. From a single view, you can write your email and find a ton of essential info about the creator youâre messaging:

That way, youâll never have to waste valuable time clicking through different spreadsheets and email threads to track down details about previous collabs, performance metrics, or conversations đźđš
Step 4: Track affiliate content without relying on creators to self-report
Capturing live affiliate content is another serious time sink. If youâre gonna do it manually, youâve basically got two options:
đ Ask creators to submit their own content
đ Screenshot live content and/or capture links yourself
Neither is ideal. Your affiliate partners are busy and might simply forget to self-report. And while rounding up 10 â 15 posts a month yourself isnât too arduous a task, itâs clearly not an option at scale.
Thatâs why, sooner or later, most brands start using an influencer tracking tool like Modash. Weâll collect all that live influencer content for you, including Stories.

All you have to do is tell us which hashtags, mentions, and/or keywords to track. Best of all, your creators donât even have to sign up for anything.
đ€ Pro tip: Worried your affiliates might forget a mention or misspell a hashtag? Switch on Modashâs Event mode to automatically track every piece of content shared by selected creators. Easy!
Step 5: Monitor performance regularly and segment affiliates by tier
Whether youâve got five affiliates or 500, chances are that just a small proportion are driving the majority of clicks and sales. And if youâre serious about managing a successful program, you wanna keep a tighter hold on these precious âsuper affiliatesâ than Gollum clutching the One Ring đ
Of course, to keep hold of them, first you need to know who they are â which requires regular performance monitoring.
Doing this manually is all about matching promo codes to transactions to understand where your revenueâs coming from. Once again, this is fine when youâre just starting out. But it pretty much becomes a full-time job once youâre managing dozens of creators.
The alternative is to use an affiliate tracking tool. If youâre on Shopify, Modash is the obvious choice â we track clicks, code redemptions, sales, and payouts for all affiliatesâŠ

âŠso you can instantly spot your top performers.
Now youâve identified those over-achievers, you can set about retaining them. Communication plays a part â maybe you wanna save most of your 1:1 messaging for your highest sellers? â but you should also reward them where it really counts: their bank đ°
To do this, segment your top ~20% of partners by revenue generated and add them to an exclusive VIP tier with special perks like:
- Higher commission rates
- Custom campaigns and promotions
- Event invitations
Because the more love you show them, the more likely they are to stay.
Step 6: Run activation campaigns for dormant affiliates
However much time and effort you dedicate to onboarding and retention, some of your affiliates are still gonna ghost you đ» Itâs unavoidable. In fact, over one-third of marketers we surveyed admitted that <20% of their brandâs affiliates are active.
As a general rule, more active affiliates = more good đ
So youâll want to spend some time reactivating dormant partners. In a nutshell, that means sliding into their DMs or email inbox to remind them why they joined your program in the first place and (hopefully) encourage them to start posting again.
đ€ Pro tip: Sick of manually chasing creators who donât reply to your emails? Use Modash to create personalized, multi-step sequences with custom delays between each message â youâll never forget a follow-up again!

đ€ Further reading: For more on re-engagement sequences (including what to say in each message), check out How to Increase Affiliate Sales (Without Recruiting More Creators).Â
One final point on thisâŠ
While activation campaigns are important, bear in mind that your goal shouldnât be to re-engage every single lapsed creator in your program. As Jessica Simpson and Nick Lachey would tell you, some relationships just arenât meant to be, so donât be afraid to cut and run if it isnât working (more on this later in the article đđđ).
Step 7: Manage payouts on a clear schedule without manual reconciliationÂ
Even if you nail every other element of affiliate program management, youâre doomed to failure if your payments are a mess. After all, why would creators stick around if they canât trust you to hand over their hard-earned commissions?
While there are few universal truths in the affiliate marketing world, itâs pretty much standard practice to pay affiliate partners monthly (albeit you might want to build in a minimum commission threshold so youâre not wasting time and money on constant micro-payments). As Robert explainsâŠ
For early-stage programs, itâs fine to handle these monthly payments via bank transfer or a third-party platform like PayPal. But if you donât fancy all that manual reconciliation, your best bet is Modash Pay. With Modash Pay, you can:Â
â Pay creators in 36 currencies across 180+ countries (with zero invoicing required)
â View your full payout history per affiliate
â Offload all your tax and regulatory compliance to us!

đ Try all our affiliate program management tools for yourself when you create your free Modash account!
How to keep affiliates active and engaged long-term
Broadcast channels: What to send and how often
Iâve already spoken about how broadcast channels (Slack, Discord, etc) are an essential tool for reducing your reliance on 1:1 emails and DMs. But how, exactly, should you be using them?
For Gabija, the goal is to keep affiliates in the loop without being intrusive, which generally involves sending multiple messages per month via broadcast channels.
Robert also suggests using these channels to share details about new campaigns and product releases. In other words, anything that has wide relevance and requires little or no personalization.
đ€ Further reading: For in-depth guidance, check out How to Use One-to-Many Broadcast Channels in Influencer Marketing (Without Erasing the Personal Touch).Â
Commission bumps, flash bonuses, and leaderboards as engagement tools
Gamification can have a big impact on engagement by giving creators a little extra incentive to post. There are various ways to gamify your affiliate program, but three popular options include:
- Commission bumps: Short-term boosts to your standard commission rate(s), either across the board or limited to specific affiliate tiers/products.
- Flash bonuses: Fixed cash payouts for creators, often tied to specific actions (like selling a certain product or hitting a defined sales target).
- Leaderboards: A ranking of your highest-selling affiliates over the past week, month, year-to-date, etc. Often tied to a flash bonus for one or more top performers.
For best results, donât bombard affiliates with these gamified elements â instead, use them around key events like product launches or major promotions. For example, you might run a Black Friday/Cyber Monday leaderboard with a commission bump across the weekend, plus a flash bonus for the outright top performer.
Sharing content examples, hooks, and trending product roundups
Naturally, you donât want to be too prescriptive about the content your affiliates create â after all, theyâre the experts. But, at the same time, most creators appreciate a little market intelligence.
Dive into your analytics, look at your top-performing affiliate posts, and share your favs via broadcast channels. Not only will it offer invaluable inspiration to most of your affiliates, but itâs also a nice pat on the back for the creators whose content you chose to spotlight.
At the same time, ask yourself why those posts performed so well. Do they focus on particular products or feature particularly effective hooks? Again, your affiliates will love to receive these sorts of insights â because, unlike you, they donât have a clear view of what types of content are generating the most sales.
Early milestone bonuses to retain new affiliates past month one
Offering bonuses for early success gives new affiliates an extra incentive to start promoting your products.Â
For plenty of brands, this means rewarding creators for their first sale with a higher commission rate or a flash bonus. But instead of (or as well as) this, it makes sense for these early rewards to extend beyond the first month. For instance, you could:
- Pay higher commissions for a new affiliateâs first 60 days in your program
- Offer a cash bonus for affiliates who generate $XX in sales in their first three months
- Share free products with creators who post at least twice a month for three consecutive months
All those incentives encourage affiliates to stick with you into month #2 (and hopefully beyond).
Tiered commissions as a long-term motivation structure
Modash research found that 55%+ of marketers rely on a flat, single-tier commission structure to attract and retain affiliates.

Iâm sure some brands with flat commission rates are seeing superb results. But, as a general rule, offering multiple commission tiers helps your retention efforts.
(In fact, the same research I shared above revealed that brands with 3+ tiers see ~35% higher rates of active affiliates than those with only one tier.)
When to cut an affiliate vs. when to re-engage
Ahhh, the thorny issue of when to show lapsed affiliates the door⊠đȘ
Thereâs no universal rule for this. Gabija prefers to put the ball in the creatorâs court.
Meanwhile, Robert says Deeper usually retains affiliates even after long periods of inactivity, simply because thereâs little or no cost to keeping them around. At times, this approach has seriously paid off.
In short, if a creator has delivered results in the past, itâs probably worth sticking with them (even if theyâre not posting ATM). Whereas if theyâve never shared a single post, you can likely live without them đ
FAQs
How many affiliates can one person realistically manage?
That depends. If theyâre doing everything manually, one person will struggle to manage more than 5 â 10 affiliates (if that). Itâs just too much admin. Whereas if theyâre using a creator marketing platform like Modash with built-in automation, they could easily handle 10x as many.
What's the biggest mistake brands make when managing affiliates at scale?
Treating their affiliate roster as a set-and-forget list â AKA recruiting lots of affiliates but only checking in when there's a payout issue or a brand complaint. At scale, that means a large chunk of your partners are technically "active" but not posting.
How do you manage affiliates across multiple markets and currencies?
If you only have a handful of affiliates, you can manage them all manually â communicate via Slack + email, get creators to share their live content, and pay them through PayPal or Wise (or similar). But at scale youâre going to need a dedicated tool like Modash for managing affiliate relationships and handling payments in 36 currencies across 180+ countries.
When should you move from manual management to a dedicated tool?
When you hit 10+ affiliates, the financial cost of a dedicated affiliate management tool starts to be outweighed by the opportunity cost of all those hours spent in spreadsheets manually tracking content and assigning discount codes to transactions. At 30+ affiliates, itâs no longer a question of if you should move â itâs imperative.
How do you handle underperforming affiliates without burning the relationship?
Share best practices, top-performing angles/formats, and trending products â essentially, anything that makes it easier for underperforming affiliates to post better content thatâs more likely to deliver results. Otherwise theyâll likely lose motivation and eventually ghost you.





