Like Atlas holding up the sky, affiliate programs rely on a layer of infrastructure that stops everything collapsing in on itself â and if you donât take the time to rebuild that layer before you scale, itâs all gonna come tumbling down đ« With that in mind, in this guide Iâll share effective strategies for brands that already know affiliate marketing works for them, and are ready to systematize.
â ïž Full disclosure: Iâve never actually scaled an affiliate program myself. So for a lot of the more technical and strategic stuff in this article, Iâve leaned heavily on three people with a ton of hands-on affiliate marketing experience, namely:
- Gabija JankauskÄ, former Influencer and Affiliate Marketing Manager at Son de Flor
- Melissa Sorby, former Influencer Marketing & Advocacy Manager at ALLIES OF SKIN
- Robert Polonski, Media Partnerships Manager at Deeper
The real reason affiliate programs stop growing
The manual ceiling: What breaks first when you try to scale without systems
First, letâs look at what happens when you donât get the right systems in place before you scale. In a nutshell: stuff starts to break.
Recruitment and tracking are the two biggies.Â
Gabija notes that sometimes, affiliate tracking just âpoofsâ and disappears đšó ź Plus mistakes happen while copying affiliate links, which throws everything out â and without an effective review process, it might take you days or weeks to notice.
Similarly, she says validating commissions can be a real headache.
Then thereâs recruitment. Melissa explains that if youâre doing everything manually and/or without robust systems, itâs seriously tough to recruit new affiliates while also maintaining strong relationships with the creators who made your program a success.
Another piece of the recruitment puzzle is onboarding new affiliates. Robert says that teaching new recruits how everything works can be tricky at the best of times, but itâs a real problem when youâre trying to scale.
đ€ Further reading: Sick of manual recruitment? Check out our roundup of the 10 Best Affiliate Recruitment Software Tools.Â
The 80/20 problem: Most revenue comes from a small fraction of affiliates, and most brands don't act on it
The Pareto principle (AKA the 80:20 rule) claims that roughly 80% of outcomes come from 20% of causes.
In other words: however successful your recruitment and onboarding efforts, chances are that just a handful of creators will generate the vast majority of program revenue.
This is a problem, because you donât want to pin all your scale-up plans on a small group of âsuper affiliatesâ (even if theyâve delivered exceptional results in the past), as Melissa explains:
This issue is exacerbated at scale because, as I (well, Melissa) noted in the previous section, itâs hard to find the time for both relationship-building and recruitment when youâre growing an affiliate program.
What "scaled" actually looks like vs. just having more affiliates
Scaling an affiliate program isnât necessarily the same as hiring a bunch more affiliates.
Sure, if youâre gonna expand, you probably need to spend some time on recruiting the right creators. But thereâs no point having 1,000 affiliates on your books if only 100 of them ever post.
Fact is, 60% of affiliate marketers told us that their biggest challenge is âkeeping affiliates activeâ.

And no wonder, given that over one-third admitted <20% of their brandâs affiliates are active (and by âactiveâ, most mean any creator who posts just once a month).
So remember: your goal here isnât to recruit as many affiliates as possible, as quickly as possible. Scaling effectively is about growing your pool of active affiliates who are actually sharing quality content and generating sales.
8 strategies to scale your affiliate programÂ
Build a repeatable outreach system instead of recruiting one-by-one
If youâre a household name brand, you can maybe rely on quality affiliates coming to you.Â
If not, youâre gonna have to get proactive about recruitment to scale your program â and doing this manually is a serious heavy lift. You have to:
- Find relevant creators using Google / ChatGPT / native social search tools (or all three)
- Vet their content and audiences, including their fake follower percentage
- Track down their email addresses (or spend even more time on one-to-one DMs)
- Write them a persuasive, personalized outreach message that convinces them to join your program
Realistically, this way, it might take you an hour or more to find and outreach a single affiliate. So what if your boss says you need 100+ new affiliates onboarded by the end of the month? đ€Ż
Thatâs why most brands switch to dedicated creator marketing software before scaling.Â
With a tool like Modash, you can discover new affiliates in bulk from our database of 380M+ creators (thatâs every public profile on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube with at least 1,000 followers).

Then you can unlock their email addresses and add them to a personalized outreach campaign with automated follow-ups â so you never have to worry about manually chasing up non-responders.

That way, recruitment goes from a labor-intensive 1:1 exercise to a highly scalable and repeatable process.
đ€ Further reading: For more on writing engaging outreach messages, check out How To Do Influencer Outreach: A Guide For Brands.
Recruit competitor affiliates, they already convert in your category
A cheat code to scalable affiliate recruitment is to hire creators who are already working with other brands in your niche.Â
Theyâve already demonstrated interest in your category, they have an audience that buys similar products, and theyâre clearly open to brand partnerships. Plus if theyâve been posting about the same brand over an extended period (say, 2-3+ months) you can safely assume theyâre generating sales, too. Otherwise, why are they still doing it?
Fortunately, there are lots of ways to track them down.Â
(FYI I go into seven effective methods in How to Find Your Competitors' Affiliates, so if youâre looking for an in-depth guide, check it out đ)
Manual, software-free tactics include:
- Googling your competitorâs brand name with search operators targeting common affiliate phrases, like â[brand name]â + âmy codeâ or â[brand name]â + âlink in bioâÂ
- Prompting gen AI tools like ChatGPT to find affiliates who work with your competitors
- Searching directly on social media platforms for competitor-branded content
Each of those approaches is totally viable, albeit a little clunky at scale.
For a more efficient option, use a creator search tool like Modash, which lets you filter by brand mentions and previous collaborations for a quick-and-definitive list of your competitorsâ affiliates.

đ Try all of our affiliate search tools by creating your free Modash account!
Build an inbound recruitment engine, affiliate landing page + post-purchase flows
While you donât want to just sit back and wait for high-quality affiliates to join your program, there are ways to make inbound recruitment a little less passive.
One method is to ask people whoâve just bought a product to join your affiliate program. After all, they clearly like you, so why not invite them to make some walking around money by promoting your brand?
Unless you have a super low sales volume, thereâs no way to do this manually â youâd be constantly sending emails to new customers. So youâll need to automate the process by creating a post-purchase email flow including the invite and key program terms (like your commission rate and any other bonuses you offer), then directing your would-be affiliates to sign up on a dedicated landing page.
Realistically, only a small proportion of customers will have a large enough online audience to make them worth recruiting.
But the beauty of this tactic is that once youâve built your landing page and set up the initial automations, everything happens on autopilot â zero manual effort.
Create an affiliate tier structure that rewards your best performers automatically
While you donât want to rely on a half-dozen-or-so high-performing creators to bring in the lionâs share of sales and revenue, you definitely want to make sure that your best affiliate partners are feeling the love.
And one of the most effective ways to do this is by paying tiered commissions, with higher rewards for your top sellers. Modash research reveals that brands with three-tier programs have active affiliate rates close to 50%, compared to 37% for those with flat commission structures.
Okay, so tiers = good đ But how much should you pay at each tier?
Well, our research also reveals that the average tiered affiliate program pays the following commissions:
- Tier #1: 10%
- Tier #2: 14%
- Tier #3: 19%
Still, ultimately, you donât want to rely on benchmarks â you need to customize your own commission tiers based on various factors specific to your brand, including your margins, AOV, and customer lifetime value.
As for working out qualification requirements for each tier, again, thatâs kinda up to you. But as a general guide, you want your top tier to be highly attractive yet achievable enough to motivate lower performers.Â
Because if only your top 0.1% of affiliates are ever going to reach your highest commission tier, you risk intimidating new recruits before theyâve even gotten started.
đ€ Further reading: We go into more depth on commissions and tiers in The Complete Influencer Marketer's Playbook to Affiliate Marketing.
Automate onboarding so every new affiliate gets the same strong start
As Robert Polonski pointed out back at the start of this article, onboarding new affiliates can require a bunch of work (and, sometimes, a lot of hand-holding). And while you can afford to manually onboard super high-value creators with big audiences, you definitely donât want this to be the norm for every new affiliate who joins your program.
In an ideal world, youâd automate the entire onboarding process. That way, you save a bunch of time, while ensuring that every new affiliate starts out on the right foot.
Modash gives you a bunch of tools to streamline onboarding, like automatically assigning connected promo codes at the same time you share tracking links with new affiliates:

Plus they can find a ton of essentials in the Modash affiliate portal, including commission rates, pending payments, discount codes, and tracking links.

When you donât have to spend valuable time answering basic questions like âhow do I find my affiliate link?â, you can focus on those urgent and/or irregular onboarding queries that actually require your expert attention.
Move from manual tracking to platform-level attribution
In the early days of running an affiliate program, many brands rely on manual tracking. It goes something like this:Â
- Pull discount code reports from Shopify
- Cross-reference against a spreadsheet of which code belongs to which affiliate
- Calculate commissions individually
It works for ~5 affiliates. It might even work for 10. But if youâre scaling to 50+ affiliates, fuhgeddaboudit. Honestly, youâll spend your entire life staring at Excel or Google Sheets, and thatâs no way to live.
Far better to let a tool like Modash do all the hard work. If your store is on Shopify, our native integration lets you view per-affiliate orders, revenue, commissions, and more:

And best of all, it happens within Modash, so youâll never need to look at another spreadsheet full of promo codes đ
Systematize performance reviews, monthly or quarterly, not just when something breaks
Running an affiliate program manually takes so much effort that itâs easy to forget about reviewing performance until something goes wrong and you have to dive into the data. But if youâre serious about scaling, you need a consistent review process to help you make smarter strategic decisions.
So what does that look like in practice?
To find out, I asked Gabija, Melissa, and Robert how they run performance reviews. All three recommended running reviews monthly â although Melissa said this should be a minimum expectation, and that in reality, reviews are âpretty much a constant taskâ. That way, if a creator is on a strong run of content and sales, thereâs an opportunity to proactively offer additional incentives or increased commission to keep the momentum going.Â
As for what these reviews should cover, well, that depends on your internal reporting needs.Â
For her part, Gabija focuses on key performance metrics such as:Â
- Revenue
- Conversions
- Click-through rate
- Traffic
- Average order value
Melissa says she analyzes MoM / YoY performance and key campaign launches to understand which creators, products, and content types are driving the strongest results.Â
Primarily, sheâs looking at the overall success of the program, but with an eye on creator and product trends â are certain products consistently selling well? Are there any surprise bestsellers? Are particular products resonating more than others?
For Robert, things are a little more complicated, because Deeper works with two distinct types of creators â paid influencers and ambassadors (AKA âHeroesâ) â on an affiliate basis. So heâs not just reviewing overall program performance, but also how each category of creator is contributing.
Heâs also a big fan of comparing results to discover âhiddenâ trends. For instance, comparing revenue vs units sold helps Robert identify affiliates who consistently sell higher-value products.
Automate payouts on a fixed cycle to remove the manual bottleneck
Paying creators manually is another common barrier to scaling an affiliate program.Â
Requesting invoices, cross-referencing them against your own sales figures, and chasing your finance team about late payments can quickly become a full-time job. And while youâre bogged down in all that low-value admin, your creator relationships are suffering and your program is stagnating.Â
The smart move here is to remove that big old bottleneck by automating payouts. For example, with Modash Pay, all you have to do is send payment links and we do everything else, like:Â
- Collecting invoices
- Paying creators in their currency
- Handling tax and regulatory compliance

đ€ Further reading: For more on handling payouts, check out How to Pay Affiliates: Methods, Tools, and Best Practices.
How to know when you're ready to scale, and when you're not
What to have in place before scaling
Hopefully, after making it this deep into the article, youâre already clear that affiliate programs need the right systems in place to scale effectively. But there are a bunch of other practical measures you need to address before scaling.Â
I asked Gabija and Melissa to walk through all their âmust-havesâ for a ready-to-scale program.
For Gabija, itâs a matter of technical essentials + existing performance.
Getting more granular, sheâd also want to see the following stuff in place:
- Clear program terms and conditions
- Defined commission structures or groups
- All key program information that affiliates need to get started
- A bonus system, if applicable
Melissa agrees that you shouldnât look to scale until youâre generating consistent sales and have started using a reliable affiliate platform.
Beyond that, sheâd want to ensure that tracking, reporting, and onboarding processes are working as intended â after all, there's no point scaling if you can't properly support new affiliates or maintain relationships with top performers â and that the program has a good mix of creators in place generating organic views across a variety of products.
One more thing: Melissa would also want to firm up future growth plans.
Signs youâre not ready to scale
On the flip side, there are a few red flags that indicate itâs not the time to scale your program đ©đ©đ©
For Melissa, one of the biggest tell-tale signs is a low rate of active affiliates.
Team capacity is another key factor. If there arenât at least one or two people who can properly own and nurture the affiliate program, it can quickly become ineffective â and, at worst, even damage the brand.Â
Meanwhile, Gabija says technical issues are a key sign a program isnât ready to scale, especially if tracking hasnât been properly tested and validated. And she also warns against poorly configured commission structures that overly benefit lower-value affiliates.
Final thoughts
Ultimately, scaling affiliate marketing is about shifting away from all those time-intensive manual processes that helped get your program off the ground, and toward automation.
Once your program runs on autopilot, you can be confident that your affiliate partners are being onboarded effectively, everythingâs tracking accurately, and everyoneâs being paid the correct commissions (and on time).
All of which frees you up to concentrate on the higher-value actions that are so crucial to driving continued growth đ
đ See how Modash can help scale your affiliate program by creating your free account today!



