Course: Affiliate Marketing Mastery (SkillBridge Institute)
Lesson Objective
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
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Understand the main affiliate commission models (sale, lead, click).
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Explain recurring commissions and why they are powerful.
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Compare high-ticket and low-ticket affiliate products.
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Choose the best affiliate models that work well in Africa.
Introduction
Not all affiliate programs pay the same way. Some pay you only when someone buys. Others pay you when someone signs up. Others pay for clicks. Some pay you every month as long as the customer stays subscribed.
If you don’t understand these models, you may work hard and still earn very little. But when you choose the right affiliate model, you can earn more with less stress and build long-term income.
In this lesson, you will learn the affiliate models that make money in the real world, including the best ones for Africa.
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1) Pay Per Sale (PPS) — The Most Common Model
Pay per sale means you earn a commission only when someone buys the product through your link.
This is the most popular affiliate model because it is simple and clear. It is used in digital products, ecommerce, online courses, and services.
Example:
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Product price: $50
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Commission: 15%
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Your earnings per sale: $20
Advantages of Pay Per Sale
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High commission on digital products
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Easy to understand
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Can pay well with good marketing
Challenges
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You must convince people to buy
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Some audiences need time and trust before buying
This model works very well when you can create strong content like tutorials, reviews, and comparisons.
2) Pay Per Lead (PPL) — Easier Than Sales
Pay per lead means you get paid when someone completes an action such as:
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signing up
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registering
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filling a form
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downloading an app
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joining a free trial
This model is very powerful because people find it easier to sign up than to buy.
Example:
A fintech company pays you $1 to $5 for every person who signs up and verifies their account.
Advantages
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Easier to convert than sales
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Works well with WhatsApp and Facebook traffic
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Can bring faster results for beginners
Challenges
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Payments per lead may be low
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Some companies have strict rules and quality checks
In Africa, pay-per-lead is common in fintech, telecom promotions, mobile apps, and free training registrations.
3) Pay Per Click (PPC) — Not the Best for Beginners
Pay per click means you earn money when someone clicks your affiliate link. The person does not need to buy.
This model is less common today and usually pays small amounts per click.
Advantages
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Easy to earn small money
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Good for high-traffic websites
Challenges
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Requires a lot of traffic
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Some programs ban low-quality traffic
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Earnings are usually small
For most beginners in Africa, pay-per-click is not the best starting point because it requires huge traffic to make meaningful income.
4) Recurring Commissions — The Smart Long-Term Model
Recurring commissions mean you earn money every month (or every year) as long as the customer stays subscribed.
This is common in:
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software tools
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website hosting
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email marketing platforms
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learning subscriptions
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business tools
Example:
A software subscription costs $20/month. The affiliate program pays you 30% monthly.
That means you earn $6/month from one customer. If you refer 50 customers, you earn $300/month repeatedly.
Why recurring is powerful
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Builds stable monthly income
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You don’t start from zero every month
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Good for long-term affiliate business
This model is excellent if your audience includes business owners, content creators, or professionals.
5) High-Ticket vs Low-Ticket Affiliate Products
Affiliate products can also be grouped by price.
Low-Ticket Products
These are products priced between $5 and $50 (or affordable local equivalents).
Advantages
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Easier to sell
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Good for beginners
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Works well with WhatsApp groups
Challenges
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You need many sales to earn big income
High-Ticket Products
These are products priced from $200 to $2000+ (or higher).
Advantages
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One sale can change your income
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Less volume needed
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Often gives big commissions
Challenges
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Requires trust and strong marketing
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Buyers need more convincing
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Works better with follow-up and lead generation
Best Affiliate Models for Africa
Based on African market realities (lower average income, trust issues online, and high WhatsApp usage), the best models are:
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Pay Per Lead (fast conversions, easy for beginners)
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Low-ticket Pay Per Sale (good volume and trust building)
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Recurring Commissions (best long-term income model)
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High-ticket offers (best for advanced affiliates with strong trust)
The best strategy is not choosing only one model. Many successful affiliates combine:
low-ticket for quick wins + recurring for stability + high-ticket for big growth.
Conclusion
Affiliate marketing becomes profitable when you understand how commission models work. Pay per sale is the most common. Pay per lead is easier for beginners. Pay per click is less profitable unless you have huge traffic. Recurring commissions are the smartest for long-term income. High-ticket products can bring big money, while low-ticket products are easier to sell.
In Africa, the best affiliate models are those that match the audience’s buying power and trust level — especially pay-per-lead, low-ticket sales, and recurring commissions.
Course: Affiliate Marketing Mastery (SkillBridge Institute)
Lesson Objective
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
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Understand the 3 filters for picking a profitable affiliate niche: Demand, Money, and Advantage.
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Avoid common mistakes when choosing a niche.
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Select a niche that aligns with your lifestyle, skills, and interests.
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Build a strong foundation for your affiliate marketing business.
Introduction
Many beginners fail in affiliate marketing because they start promoting random products in random niches. They choose a niche they think is “hot” or “trending” without thinking about whether it fits them or their audience.
A profitable niche is not just about money—it’s about matching demand, income potential, and your personal advantage. When you pick the right niche, everything becomes easier: finding products, creating content, attracting traffic, and making sales.
In this lesson, we will explore a practical way to pick a niche without guessing, using the 3-filter system.
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1) The 3 Filters for Picking a Niche
Filter 1: Demand
A niche must have people actively looking for solutions. You need an audience who wants help, advice, or products in that niche.
How to check demand:
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Search for questions on Google, YouTube, or Quora.
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Check Facebook groups for active discussions.
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Look at competitors: Are people engaging with their content?
Example:
If you choose “banana grafting techniques,” and many farmers are asking questions online, the demand is real. If nobody is talking about a topic, it may be too small.
Filter 2: Money
A niche is profitable if people can afford the products or services you promote. You want a niche where buying power exists.
How to check money potential:
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Look at product prices in the niche.
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Check affiliate commissions.
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Assess the audience’s willingness to pay.
Example:
Digital courses, solar products, or mobile apps often pay commissions of $5–$50 for low-ticket sales, and $100+ for high-ticket sales. Choosing a niche with zero money potential will make your work useless.
Filter 3: Advantage
Your advantage is what makes you credible and unique. It can be:
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Your knowledge or experience
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Your connections in the niche
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Your ability to create content
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Your passion or interest
Example:
If you have experience in vegetable seedling production, promoting agricultural tools or fertilizers is easier than promoting software you don’t understand.
2) Common Mistakes When Choosing a Niche
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Following trends blindly – Just because something is “hot” doesn’t mean it fits you or your audience.
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Choosing niches with no money – If your audience can’t afford products, you won’t earn commissions.
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Trying to appeal to everyone – Niches that are too broad make it hard to stand out.
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Ignoring personal interest or skills – You will struggle if you have no knowledge or interest in the topic.
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Copying others blindly – Competition is fine, but copying without a unique angle is risky.
3) Choosing a Niche That Fits Your Lifestyle
Your niche should match your time, resources, and abilities.
Questions to ask yourself:
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Can I create content in this niche consistently?
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Do I enjoy talking about this topic or teaching others?
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Can I target an audience I can access (WhatsApp, Facebook, TikTok)?
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Does this niche align with my long-term goals?
Example:
If you work full-time but have 1–2 hours per day for marketing, choose a niche that allows small, consistent efforts, like low-ticket digital products or small agriculture tips, rather than complex high-ticket software.
Conclusion
Picking the right niche is the foundation of affiliate marketing success. Use the 3 filters—Demand, Money, Advantage—to avoid guessing and wasted effort. Avoid common mistakes like following trends blindly or ignoring your own skills.
Finally, choose a niche that fits your lifestyle, interests, and abilities. When your niche aligns with your skills and audience, creating content, building trust, and making sales becomes much easier.
Remember: Your niche is not just a market—it’s your business focus for months or years. Pick wisely.
Course: Affiliate Marketing Mastery (SkillBridge Institute)
Lesson Objective
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
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Identify affiliate products that are likely to sell (“winner” products).
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Evaluate the balance between product price and commission.
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Assess refund risk and avoid products that harm your reputation.
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Choose products with strong credibility that build trust with your audience.
Introduction
Selecting the right product is one of the most important steps in affiliate marketing. Many beginners fail not because they don’t understand marketing but because they pick the wrong products.
A “good” affiliate product is one that sells easily, earns you a fair commission, and keeps your audience satisfied. If the product is too expensive, low quality, or unreliable, you risk losing trust and wasting effort.
In this lesson, you will learn practical ways to choose products that convert, so your affiliate efforts lead to real results.
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1) How to Identify a “Winner” Product
A “winner” product is one that people want, will buy, and is easy for you to promote. Here’s what to look for:
a) Demand:
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Are people searching for it online or asking questions about it?
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Check social media groups, forums, or YouTube comments.
b) Popularity:
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Does the product have good sales reviews or ratings?
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High-demand products are more likely to convert.
c) Ease of Promotion:
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Can you explain it simply to your audience?
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Can you create useful content around it (tutorials, reviews, tips)?
Example:
A mobile solar charger selling for $25 with positive reviews is easier to promote to farmers who need electricity solutions than a complex software they don’t understand.
2) Price vs Commission
The product price and your commission must make sense together.
Low-Priced Products ($5–$50):
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Easier to sell
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You need more sales to earn big money
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Works well for beginners using WhatsApp or social media
High-Priced Products ($200+):
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Fewer sales needed to earn good money
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Requires more trust and follow-up
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Often needs email sequences or personal guidance
Rule of Thumb:
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Start with products you can sell easily (low-ticket or mid-ticket)
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Include at least one recurring or high-ticket product for long-term income
Example:
A $25 digital course with 40% commission earns you $10 per sale. Selling 50 courses earns $500, which is easier to reach than one $500 sale for beginners.
3) Refund Risk
Refunds hurt your income and can damage your reputation. Always check:
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Refund policy: How long can people request a refund?
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Product quality: Does it deliver what it promises?
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Seller reliability: Do customers complain online?
Tip: Avoid products with a very high refund rate. Selling unreliable products will make people stop trusting your recommendations.
4) Product Credibility
People buy from trusted sources. Credibility matters more than hype.
Ways to check credibility:
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Look for positive reviews and testimonials
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Research the seller or company
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Check if the product has been on the market for a while
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Avoid products that promise “get rich quick” or unrealistic results
Example:
A SkillBridge course with real certificates, QR codes, and verified reviews is more credible than an unknown course with no proof of results.
Conclusion
Product selection is a critical skill for affiliate marketing. Focus on:
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Winning products — high demand, easy to promote
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Price vs commission — balanced for effort and reward
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Refund risk — low-risk products keep your income stable
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Credibility — trusted products build long-term trust with your audience
If you choose the right products, your marketing efforts will convert faster, your audience will trust you, and your income will grow steadily.
Remember: A great product makes your marketing easier; a bad product makes it nearly impossible. Always pick wisely.
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