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| Hey, it's Andy 👋🏼
Imagine walking past your front door and there's an envelope on the mat.
No stamp or return address, just your name on the front.
You open it and there's cash inside. Not a fortune, but a very nice surprise for a Wednesday morning.
That's what it felt like when a commission notification landed yesterday.
I hadn't done anything to trigger it. I hadn't sent an email or run a campaign. Someone bought a product I'd recommended through my link, and a slice of that dropped into my account while I was off doing something else.
It happens a few times a month and it never gets old.
And it's simpler than you'd think... |
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The money you're already leaving on the table
Every time someone asks what tool you use for X, what platform you'd recommend, what theme makes a Kajabi course look premium, you give them your honest take.
Then they go and buy it, and you see none of it.
Setting up an affiliate account with the products you already recommend takes about twenty minutes.
After that, you share your link instead of the generic URL, and the commission takes care of itself. No funnel. No launch. No content plan. Just the recommendation you were already making.
A colleague of mine builds beautiful Kajabi themes, and I've been pointing clients her way for years. The moment I set up the affiliate, nothing changed about the recommendation, except a percentage showing up in my account. Yesterday was one of those days.
The important caveat: this only works with things you genuinely rate.
Sign up for everything with an affiliate link and you turn your newsletter into a cashback site. That's a fast way to burn the trust that made the recommendation worth anything.
Keep the list short, keep it honest, and only recommend what you'd send your best client to. |
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Last year, our Kajabi affiliate commission alone was in the thousands. |
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If you're on Kajabi, you've already got this for your own products. |
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Your Partner Programme is sitting in your account right now.
Your happy clients are already talking about you, they just aren't doing it with a link.
Set up a campaign, give them a reason to share it, and let Kajabi handle the tracking. The infrastructure is there, it just needs switching on.
One more thing while I'm at it.
If you're not yet on Kajabi and you've been considering it, Friday is the last day of the spring promo - 50% off for six months. There's also a bonus entry into a 1:1 with my old mentor, Justin Welsh for anyone who signs up before the deadline.
Get Kajabi at 50% off - the offer ends Friday →
These are small streams, and they're not particularly glamorous. But they add up, and they cost you almost nothing to set up.
Worth twenty minutes of your week? |
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Our Kajabi Life:Â The bigger the money, the bigger the problems. |
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Saturday was mostly spent mooching around on a superyacht
A friend of ours happened to be moored in the Bay of Cadiz and asked if we wanted to come aboard. I can't show you the actual pics out of respect for his privacy, but suffice to say, it was a bit nice.
As he showed me the digital control panel, I asked about the two red flashing messages.
"One of the bilge pumps is blocked, and the number three engine is playing up. It's a pain in the ass."
Then, with a forced grin:
"You know how it is. The bigger the money, the bigger the problems."
He wasn't wrong.
He was stood on a multi-million pound yacht in the Bay of Cadiz on a Saturday afternoon, soon to be up to his elbows in the sticky stuff.
Jules and I cycled home.
We have surfboards and e-bikes and zero bilge pumps to worry about. We also have a business that funds exactly the life we want, without the Saturday maintenance schedule that comes with wanting more than that.
So how much is enough?
It's worth actually answering that question before you build something you can't switch off. |
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