Affiliate Marketing? Here’s where I got it wrong—again.
I thought I was being smart. You know that feeling? When you realize one thing isn’t working, so you double down by adding another thing on top? That was me.
Print-on-demand wasn’t delivering. So I thought, “What if I add affiliate marketing? Together, they’ll hit $1000 a month.”
In the Philippines, that’s my entire BPO salary. That’s my exit ticket.
So I applied to CJ Affiliates. And ShareASale. And Amazon Associates. And whatever else I could find. I stuffed my blog with links. I bombarded my Instagram with promo codes. Every post became a sales pitch.
You know what happened?
People unfollowed. My engagement tanked. And the commissions? A few dollars here and there. Nothing close to freedom.
Let me be real with you. Affiliate marketing is not the fastlane way out of your toxic BPO job. I’m writing this to warn you before you make the same mistake I did. This is another prison.
Here’s why this doesn’t work:
5 Reasons Why Affiliate Marketing Is another Prison
1. You have zero control.
The product owner can change your commission to 0% tomorrow.
They can shut down the entire program.
They can decide not to pay you.
You don’t own the product, the customer, or the transaction.
2. Entry is ridiculously easy.
Anyone can sign up for Amazon Associates in five minutes.
That means millions of other affiliates competing for the same click.
Low barriers create a race to the bottom.
3. It’s not predictably passive.
A link might earn for years. Or it might die next week.
You’re at the mercy of algorithm changes and product availability.
To maintain income, you constantly create new content.
4. Your growth is capped by someone else.
You can’t change the offer or improve the product.
You can’t lower the price to increase sales.
Their business decisions control your ceiling.
5. Solving a need isn’t enough.
Yes, good affiliates recommend useful products.
But that alone won’t get you to $1000 a month.
You’re still renting your audience to someone else’s asset.
I’m not saying affiliate marketing is evil. For extra cash? Fine. But for leaving your BPO job? No. It’s a job proxy. Your “boss” is the product owner. Your “paycheck” can vanish anytime.
Here’s what I’m learning instead: own the asset.
Create your own digital product. A course. A membership. A simple tool. Then recruit affiliates to sell it for you. Now you have control.
Or build your own brand. Your own website. Use POD only as a silent fulfillment partner. Collect emails. Build relationships. Sell higher-margin products you actually own.
I’m not there yet. I’m still figuring it out. But at least now I’m building something that can’t be taken from me overnight.
Are you still stuck in the affiliate-POD cycle, or are you starting to question it?
