 |
| The Profitackology Pipeline moves active affiliate income into passive dividend assets automatically. Every commission that enters the pipeline at the left exits as a permanent dividend-paying share at the right. |
Most bloggers who earn affiliate commissions treat them as operating revenue. The commission clears, the money lands in a PayPal or bank account, and it gets absorbed into the regular spending budget. The commission was real. The asset it could have created does not exist. A $50 commission spent on a monthly subscription is gone at the end of the billing period. A $50 commission invested in SCHD at its current yield pays dividends every quarter from that day forward, indefinitely, with no further action required.
The specific question this post answers is: how do you reinvest affiliate commissions into dividend stocks systematically, so every commission that arrives from a ConvertKit referral or an M1 Finance account open becomes a permanent fractional share that pays quarterly income rather than a one-time revenue event that disappears into general expenses? The answer is a four-stage pipeline with a specific brokerage workflow, a specific allocation rule, and a specific reinvestment mechanism that automates the compounding from the moment the commission clears to the moment the DRIP-purchased shares pay their own dividends years later.
This post covers the complete Profitackology Pipeline: the mathematical case for converting commissions to shares rather than spending them, the commission-to-share calculator that shows exactly how many SCHD and VYM shares each commission level buys at current prices, the 10-year snowball projection that shows what yield on cost looks like after a decade of consistent reinvestment, and the five-step brokerage workflow that moves money from an affiliate dashboard to a funded dividend position in under ten minutes.
Quick Answer To reinvest affiliate commissions into dividend stocks, transfer each commission to a brokerage account as soon as it clears the minimum payout threshold, allocate to SCHD and VYM in a percentage-based pie on M1 Finance, and enable automatic DRIP reinvestment so every quarterly dividend purchases additional fractional shares. A $50 commission invested in SCHD at a 3.6 percent yield generates $1.80 per year in dividends. With 7 percent annual dividend growth, the yield on cost of that $50 investment reaches 6.8 percent after 10 years. The dividend income generated by the original $50 commission compounds indefinitely with zero ongoing action.
Why Spending Commissions Is the Costliest Mistake in Affiliate Income
The Opportunity Cost of a Spent Commission
A $50 commission that gets spent is worth $50. A $50 commission that gets invested in SCHD at the current yield of approximately 3.6 percent is worth $50 plus every dividend it pays for the rest of the time you hold the position. At 7 percent annual dividend growth, a common historical average for SCHD, the dividend income generated by that original $50 investment doubles approximately every 10 years. At Year 10, the $50 investment generates approximately $3.51 per year in dividends. At Year 20, approximately $6.91 per year. The principal ($50) has not changed. The income it generates has grown substantially, and continues growing every year without any additional capital input.
This calculation is not unique to SCHD or to any specific yield rate. It is the mechanical behaviour of any income-generating asset purchased with a finite lump sum. The distinction between spending a commission and investing it is not a matter of frugality or financial discipline. It is a decision about whether the commission generates income once (spend) or generates income permanently (invest). Most beginner bloggers make the spending decision reflexively because the commission feels small, and a small amount does not seem worth the effort of investing. The compounding math does not care about the initial effort. It cares about the initial action.
The Pipeline Mechanism: Four Stages From Commission to Compounding Asset
The Profitackology PipelineFour Stages: Commission to Permanent Dividend Income
Stage 1$Commission Clears
ConvertKit, M1 Finance, or any programme on the approved list pays out at payout threshold ($50 to $100). Money lands in bank account.
Stage 2→Transfer to M1 Finance
Commission is combined with regular $500 monthly contribution and deposited into M1 Finance in a single transfer. One transaction covers both.
Stage 3◆Auto-Allocation
M1 Finance Pie system allocates the deposit across VYM, SCHD, Realty Income, and KO at target percentage weights automatically. No manual decision required.
Stage 4↻DRIP Reinvests
Quarterly dividends from all four holdings are automatically reinvested into fractional shares. Shares purchased via DRIP pay their own dividends in subsequent quarters.
📌
The programmes that generate the commissions entering the pipeline: Every programme that feeds the Profitackology Pipeline is covered in detail in
Post #054: 7 Best Affiliates With No Minimum Traffic Requirements, including commission structures, payout thresholds, and the exact seed capital math showing what each programme's monthly recurring income becomes after reinvestment. The pipeline in this post handles the investment mechanics. Post #054 covers the commission generation side.
Pro-Tip from AlexThe most important behavioural rule for the pipeline is the 48-hour rule: every affiliate commission that clears its payout threshold gets transferred to M1 Finance within 48 hours of landing in the bank account. Not when the amount feels significant. Not when you have time to think about it. Within 48 hours, automatically, as a routine action like paying a scheduled bill. The 48-hour rule exists because the longer a commission sits in a general bank account, the higher the probability that it gets reclassified in your mind from "investment capital" to "available spending money." It never stops being investment capital if it never sits long enough to feel like spending money.
The Commission-to-Share Calculator: What Each Payout Actually Buys
Translating Abstract Commission Numbers Into Concrete Share Purchases
The psychological obstacle that prevents most beginner bloggers from reinvesting small commissions is that $25 or $50 does not feel like an investment. It feels like not enough to bother. The commission-to-share calculator below replaces the abstract dollar amount with a concrete share count and a concrete annual dividend figure, which changes the framing from "a small amount I might invest" to "a specific number of shares that pay a specific amount of income every quarter indefinitely."
The prices and yields in the table below use approximate current market figures for SCHD, VYM, Realty Income, and Coca-Cola. Exact share prices change daily. The structure of the calculation, commission divided by share price equals fractional shares purchased, remains constant at any price level. Recalculate with current prices when applying the table to actual purchases.
Commission-to-Share Calculator: What $25, $50, and $100 Commissions Buy at Current Approximate Prices
| Holding | Approx. Price | Current Yield | $25 Commission Buys | Annual Div. From $25 | $50 Commission Buys | Annual Div. From $50 | $100 Commission Buys | Annual Div. From $100 |
|---|
| SCHD (ETF) | $26.80 | 3.60% | 0.933 shares | $0.90/yr | 1.866 shares | $1.80/yr | 3.731 shares | $3.60/yr |
| VYM (ETF) | $111.40 | 2.95% | 0.224 shares | $0.74/yr | 0.449 shares | $1.48/yr | 0.897 shares | $2.95/yr |
| O (Realty Income) | $54.20 | 5.60% | 0.461 shares | $1.40/yr | 0.922 shares | $2.80/yr | 1.845 shares | $5.60/yr |
| KO (Coca-Cola) | $62.30 | 3.10% | 0.401 shares | $0.78/yr | 0.803 shares | $1.55/yr | 1.605 shares | $3.10/yr |
| Blended (Profitackology allocation) | Weighted avg. | 4.02% blended | Mixed fractional | $1.01/yr | Mixed fractional | $2.01/yr | Mixed fractional | $4.02/yr |
| Key Insight | A $50 commission invested across the Profitackology four-holding blend at 4.02% blended yield generates $2.01 per year in dividends indefinitely from a single one-time commission event. With 7% annual dividend growth, that $2.01 grows to approximately $3.96 per year by Year 10 without any additional capital input. |
The Realty Income row in the table deserves specific attention. At a 5.60 percent yield, a $50 commission buys 0.922 shares of Realty Income and generates $2.80 per year in annual dividends. Realty Income also pays monthly rather than quarterly, which means the $2.80 annual income arrives as approximately $0.23 per month rather than $0.70 per quarter. For a dividend investor who wants to see the pipeline producing visible income as soon as possible after the commission is invested, allocating a higher percentage of each commission to Realty Income during the early stages of the portfolio accelerates the point at which monthly payments become noticeable.
Pro-Tip from AlexUse the commission-to-share calculator before each investment decision to shift your mental framing from "I am depositing $47" to "I am purchasing 1.75 SCHD shares that will pay $1.69 per year forever." These are identical transactions described in different ways. One feels like a small bank transfer. The other feels like acquiring a permanent income-generating asset. The psychological difference between the two framings determines whether the 48-hour rule feels like discipline or feels like a straightforward automated action. Make the share-count framing your default before every deposit.
The Reinvestment Math: A $50 Commission Over 10 Years
The Three Variables That Drive Compounding: Yield, Growth Rate, and Reinvestment
The 10-year snowball projection uses three inputs: the initial investment amount (the $50 commission), the starting dividend yield (3.6 percent for SCHD as the primary example), and the annual dividend growth rate (7 percent, consistent with SCHD's historical average over 10-year periods). The projection assumes no additional capital is added after the initial $50 investment, which isolates the compounding effect of the investment itself rather than blending it with the ongoing $500 monthly contributions. In practice, the monthly contributions are running simultaneously and producing their own compounding effects. This projection shows only what the commission generates on its own.
Reinvestment MathHow a $50 Commission Compounds: Three Key Inputs
Starting Investment
$50.00
Single commission reinvested in SCHD at current market price. No additional capital added after this initial purchase.
Starting Yield
3.60%
SCHD current approximate dividend yield. Year 1 dividend income from $50 at 3.60% = $1.80.
Annual Dividend Growth
7.00%
SCHD's approximate historical 10-year dividend growth rate. Each year the per-share dividend increases by this rate regardless of share price movement.
DRIP Reinvestment
Yes
All dividends are reinvested automatically via DRIP. Reinvested dividends purchase additional fractional shares which pay their own dividends in subsequent years.
Year N Dividend = Starting Dividend x (1 + Growth Rate)^N x DRIP Multiplier
Year 10 Dividend from $50 commission = $1.80 x (1.07)^10 x 1.082 = approximately $3.84/year
The 10-Year Snowball Projection Table
10-Year Snowball: What $50 Invested in SCHD (3.6% Yield, 7% Growth, DRIP On) Produces Year by Year
| Year | Portfolio Value | Cum. Dividends Received | Shares Held (DRIP) | Annual Dividend Income | Yield on Cost | DRIP Shares Added |
|---|
| Year 0 | $50.00 | $0 | 1.866 | $1.80 | 3.60% | 0 |
| Year 1 | $53.50 | $1.80 | 1.933 | $1.93 | 3.86% | +0.067 |
| Year 2 | $57.25 | $3.73 | 2.004 | $2.07 | 4.14% | +0.071 |
| Year 3 | $61.27 | $5.80 | 2.078 | $2.21 | 4.42% | +0.074 |
| Year 4 | $65.56 | $8.01 | 2.157 | $2.37 | 4.74% | +0.079 |
| Year 5 | $70.15 | $10.38 | 2.240 | $2.53 | 5.06% | +0.083 |
| Year 6 | $75.06 | $12.91 | 2.328 | $2.71 | 5.42% | +0.088 |
| Year 7 | $80.31 | $15.62 | 2.421 | $2.90 | 5.80% | +0.093 |
| Year 8 | $85.94 | $18.52 | 2.519 | $3.10 | 6.20% | +0.098 |
| Year 9 | $91.95 | $21.62 | 2.622 | $3.32 | 6.64% | +0.103 |
| Year 10 | $98.39 | $24.94 | 2.730 | $3.55 | 7.10% | +0.108 |
The DRIP multiplier effect explains why the Year 10 annual dividend ($3.55) exceeds what the dividend growth rate alone would produce ($1.80 x 1.07^10 = $3.54). DRIP purchases additional fractional shares with each quarterly dividend payment. Those additional shares pay their own dividends, which DRIP reinvests to purchase more fractional shares, which pay more dividends. The compounding effect of DRIP on top of dividend growth is small in Years 1 through 3 and grows progressively more significant in Years 7 through 10. The DRIP multiplier is the reason the 10-year projection shows 0.864 additional shares (from 1.866 to 2.730) purchased entirely from reinvested dividends on a $50 starting investment with no additional capital added.
Pro-Tip from AlexThe yield on cost metric in the projection table is the most important column to track across your actual portfolio, not just in a projection. Your personal yield on cost is the annual dividend income from a position divided by the total amount you originally paid for it (cost basis), not the current market value. As SCHD increases its per-share dividend each year and as DRIP purchases more shares at various price points, your yield on cost grows while the current yield (based on today's price) stays relatively stable. A position showing a 3.6 percent current yield might show a 5 percent yield on cost after five years of consistent contributions and DRIP reinvestment. That 5 percent is what you are actually earning on your invested capital.
The Yield on Cost Table: Comparing Scenarios After 10 Years
The 10-year snowball projection above uses a single scenario: $50 invested in SCHD with a 3.6 percent starting yield and 7 percent annual growth. The yield on cost table below compares four scenarios across three different starting commission amounts and two different dividend growth rate assumptions, showing the range of outcomes from conservative to moderate growth expectations.
Yield on Cost at Year 10: Four Scenarios Across Commission Levels and Growth Rates
| Scenario | Starting Commission | Starting Yield | Div. Growth Rate | Year 1 Annual Div. | Year 5 Annual Div. | Year 10 Annual Div. | Year 10 Yield on Cost | Cum. Dividends Y1-Y10 |
|---|
| Conservative SCHD | $50 | 3.60% | 5.0% growth | $1.80 | $2.30 | $2.93 | 5.86% | $21.40 |
| Moderate SCHD | $50 | 3.60% | 7.0% growth | $1.80 | $2.53 | $3.55 | 7.10% | $24.94 |
| Conservative VYM | $50 | 2.95% | 5.0% growth | $1.48 | $1.89 | $2.41 | 4.82% | $17.57 |
| Moderate VYM | $50 | 2.95% | 7.0% growth | $1.48 | $2.07 | $2.91 | 5.82% | $20.47 |
| SCHD (moderate) with $100 commission | $100 | 3.60% | 7.0% growth | $3.60 | $5.05 | $7.09 | 7.09% | $49.87 |
The $100 commission row in the yield on cost table shows the most important number in the full table: at Year 10, a single $100 commission invested in SCHD with moderate 7 percent dividend growth is generating $7.09 per year in annual dividends, and the cumulative dividends received across 10 years ($49.87) are almost exactly equal to the original commission amount. The asset has paid back its entire purchase price in cash dividends alone, and it continues paying at $7.09 per year going forward. The $100 commission that felt small in Month 3 of a new blog is a self-amortising income asset by Year 10.
📌
The live portfolio that demonstrates this at real scale: Every share count, DRIP total, and annual dividend rate in the
Month 10 Dividend Income Report reflects the actual operation of this pipeline across 10 months of combined contributions and commission reinvestment. The report documents the portfolio at $8,641, the annualised monthly income equivalent at $29.10, and the DRIP cumulative total at 2.411 shares, all produced by the same mechanism the yield on cost table models: consistent investment, automatic allocation, and DRIP reinvestment compounding across multiple quarters.
Pro-Tip from AlexThe yield on cost table shows annual dividend income at Year 10, not portfolio value. These are not the same metric and they are not correlated in any predictable way, because portfolio value changes with market prices while dividend income changes with per-share dividend rates and share count. A portfolio that falls 20 percent in price during a market correction does not have a 20 percent lower yield on cost unless the companies cut their dividends. The yield on cost grows from dividend growth and DRIP regardless of what share prices do in any given year. This is the structural property that makes dividend growth investing psychologically manageable during down markets: the income keeps growing even when the prices do not.
The 5-Step Brokerage Workflow: Commission to Funded Position in Under Ten Minutes
The Setup That Makes the Pipeline Automatic
The pipeline works reliably only if the transfer mechanics are simple enough to execute without friction each time a commission clears. A workflow with too many steps, too many logins, or too much manual decision-making at each step will be delayed or skipped when time is limited. The five-step workflow below is optimised for minimum friction: each step is a single discrete action with no ambiguous decisions required.
5-Step Brokerage Workflow: From Affiliate Dashboard to Funded Dividend Position
STEP 1
Log into your affiliate programme dashboard and confirm payout threshold is crossed
Check the affiliate dashboard (Impact, ConvertKit dashboard, M1 Finance affiliate portal) to confirm the current balance has cleared the minimum payout threshold. ConvertKit and M1 Finance both have $50 minimum payout requirements. Fiverr requires $100. Canva's minimum is $10. Do not initiate a withdrawal before the threshold is met, as partial withdrawals are not available in most programmes and the request will be rejected.
Payout thresholds: ConvertKit $50, M1 Finance $50, Canva $10, Fiverr $100, ShareASale $50
STEP 2
Request a payout to your linked bank account
In the affiliate dashboard, navigate to the Payouts section and request a withdrawal to your linked bank account. Most programmes process payouts on a monthly schedule or within 5 to 10 business days of a manual request. Set up the bank account link before you need it: programmes require a bank account or PayPal to be verified before any payout can be initiated, and the verification process typically takes 2 to 3 business days. Do this at programme sign-up, not when the first payout is ready.
Set up automatic monthly payouts where the programme allows it. ConvertKit allows automatic monthly payouts to a connected PayPal or bank account. Automatic payouts remove the manual action from the pipeline entirely, which reduces the risk that a commission sits uncollected in the dashboard for multiple months.
STEP 3
Wait for the commission to clear into your bank account (2 to 7 business days)
ACH bank transfers from affiliate programme payouts typically clear in 2 to 5 business days. PayPal transfers are typically immediate but may take 1 to 3 business days to transfer from PayPal to a linked bank account depending on the bank. During this wait period, note the commission amount in your investment tracking spreadsheet so the deposit is expected when it arrives rather than being absorbed into the general account balance without a record.
Tracking note format: Date | Programme | Amount | Transfer Date | M1 Finance Deposit Date
STEP 4
Transfer to M1 Finance as an additional deposit on top of the scheduled monthly contribution
Log into M1 Finance and initiate a deposit for the commission amount. If the regular monthly $500 contribution has not yet been made this month, add the commission to it in a single transaction. If the regular contribution has already been made, deposit the commission as a separate additional investment. M1 Finance processes additional deposits through the same Pie allocation system as regular contributions, meaning the commission is automatically distributed across all four holdings at the target percentage weights with no manual allocation decision required.
Apply the 48-hour rule: initiate the M1 Finance deposit within 48 hours of the commission clearing the bank account. This single habit is responsible for the compounding discipline that the pipeline depends on.
STEP 5
Confirm DRIP is enabled and log the new share purchase in your tracking record
After the M1 Finance deposit settles and the fractional shares appear in the account, confirm that DRIP reinvestment is active on all four holdings. In M1 Finance, DRIP is enabled by default and applies to all cash dividends from all holdings in the Pie. You do not need to enable it per-holding or per-dividend. Check the DRIP status in the account settings once per quarter rather than per deposit. Then record the commission amount, the approximate shares purchased across each holding, and the expected quarterly dividend contribution from the new shares in your tracking spreadsheet.
Update tracking: Commission $X invested = +Y SCHD shares + Z VYM shares + additional annual income of $W
📌
How to generate the commissions that enter this workflow: The content writing strategy that produces affiliate commissions from organic search traffic without social media is covered in
Post #056: High-Converting Affiliate Content: How to Sell Without Traffic, including the VS post template, the anchor text CTR table, and the affiliate bridge paragraph that converts readers into commission-generating clicks at under 1,000 monthly organic visits.
Pro-Tip from AlexKeep the tracking spreadsheet for this workflow as a single shared document with the Profitackology income reports. The column structure should match the income report data: commission source, amount, date deposited, M1 Finance allocation, fractional shares added, and quarterly dividend contribution from the new shares. When you sit down to write the next income report, the tracking spreadsheet has already captured every transaction in the reporting period. The report writing takes thirty minutes instead of three hours because the data collection happened automatically as each commission was processed through the pipeline.
The Private Strategy: Why This Works Without Social Media
The Organic Search Compounding Effect on Both Income Streams
The Profitackology Pipeline is explicitly designed to operate without social media traffic. The dividend portfolio compounds automatically through DRIP with no social media required. The affiliate income that feeds the pipeline comes from organic search readers who arrived through Google because a specific post answered a specific question they searched. No Instagram account, no TikTok following, no Twitter presence, and no LinkedIn network was involved in any step of the process from post publication to affiliate commission to dividend share purchase.
The absence of social media is not a limitation. It is a design feature. Social media affiliate income is correlated with platform algorithm changes, account follower counts, and engagement metrics that are outside the blogger's control. Organic search affiliate income is correlated with keyword relevance, content depth, and internal link structure, all of which are within the blogger's complete control and all of which compound over time rather than resetting with each algorithm update.
The Private StrategyThree Reasons This Works Without Any Social Media Presence
🔎Organic Search is Intent-Driven
A reader who found your post through Google searched for the exact problem your post solves. That intent-match produces higher conversion rates than passive social media scrolling at any follower count.
📈Content Compounds Over Time
A post published in Month 4 is still generating search impressions in Month 24. Social media posts from Month 4 generated engagement for 72 hours and then disappeared from the feed. The SEO investment compounds. The social investment does not.
🔒No Platform Dependency
Google's search algorithm changes affect rankings gradually and are addressable through content quality improvements. A social platform account suspension eliminates the audience overnight with no recourse. The organic search channel is resilient. Social channels are fragile.
The Compounding Interaction Between Two Independent Income Streams
The interaction between affiliate income and dividend income in the Profitackology model is not additive. It is multiplicative. Affiliate commissions invested in dividend shares increase the share count. A higher share count produces higher quarterly dividends. Higher quarterly dividends produce more DRIP-purchased shares. More DRIP-purchased shares produce higher quarterly dividends. The affiliate income does not run parallel to the dividend income. It enters the dividend system and becomes dividend income that compounds independently from the point of entry.
At Month 10, the Profitackology portfolio held 104.2 total shares. Of those, 2.411 were purchased entirely by DRIP reinvestment of dividends received on previous shares. Some fraction of those 2.411 DRIP shares were purchased from dividends on shares that were originally funded by affiliate commissions from Months 7 through 9. The affiliate commissions did not generate a second income stream. They generated more dividend income by increasing the asset that the dividend income stream runs on. The two streams are not separate. They are the same stream, with affiliate commissions as one of the tributaries feeding it.
Pro-Tip from AlexThe most motivating metric to track in this dual-income model is not the portfolio value or the monthly affiliate commission. It is the annual dividend run rate: the total annual dividend income the portfolio would generate if you stopped all contributions today and let the existing shares pay indefinitely. At Month 10 the Profitackology annual dividend run rate was $301.73. A portion of that $301.73 exists because affiliate commissions purchased additional shares in Months 7 through 10. The affiliate income did not end at the payment date. It became part of a run rate that pays every year forever.
Starting the Pipeline: The Right Order of Operations
The Sequence That Gets the Pipeline Running in the Fewest Steps
The pipeline has four components: an approved affiliate programme, a published post that generates affiliate conversions, a funded brokerage account with DRIP enabled, and the 48-hour transfer rule that connects the affiliate payout to the brokerage deposit. All four must be in place before the first commission can enter the system and become a dividend share. The correct order of operations for a blog that has none of them yet is to set them up in parallel rather than in sequence, because the brokerage account setup does not depend on the affiliate approval, and the affiliate approval does not depend on the post content.
Week one: apply to ConvertKit and M1 Finance affiliate programmes (Post #055 covers the 10-point checklist that maximises approval speed) and open an M1 Finance investment account with an initial $500 deposit. Week two: publish the first VS post or income report post with the single contextual affiliate link. Week three: verify that DRIP is enabled in the M1 Finance account settings. The three tasks take approximately six hours total across the first week. From that point, every commission that arrives from any approved programme converts automatically into a dividend share through the five-step workflow, and every dividend that arrives from any holding reinvests automatically through DRIP. The system runs.
The pipeline in one sentence: Every affiliate commission converts to shares. Every share pays dividends. Every dividend buys more shares. Every additional share pays more dividends. The loop runs automatically on M1 Finance with DRIP enabled, requiring no active management after the initial deposit, no social media, and no ongoing decisions beyond the monthly contribution and the 48-hour transfer rule for each incoming commission.
📌
The approval process for the programmes that feed the pipeline: Post #055: Affiliate Approval Secrets covers the 10-point technical checklist, the zero-traffic email template, the intent-match table for choosing which programmes fit which post types, and the staged application sequence that gets five programmes approved within the first two weeks of applying. The pipeline starts producing commissions only after the programmes are approved. The approval process is the prerequisite, and Post #055 is the manual for completing it.
Pro-Tip from AlexThe pipeline does not require large commissions to be worth running. A $7.50 ConvertKit recurring commission invested in SCHD purchases 0.28 fractional shares and generates $0.27 per year in annual dividends. At Year 10, that $0.27 has grown to approximately $0.53 per year through dividend growth and DRIP compounding. A single referral from a single post generates perpetual income growth. A blog with ten posts in a coherent niche, all with contextual affiliate links at the single-placement decision point, generates ten referrals per month at modest organic traffic. Ten referrals per month at $7.50 each is $75 per month entering the pipeline. Over 12 months, $900 in seed capital. At 4 percent blended yield, $900 generates $36 per year in annual dividends. Forever. From content that was written once and continues attracting organic readers through search.
Start the Pipeline at Stage One: Open M1 Finance and Apply to ConvertKit Affiliate Today
The M1 Finance account is where the commissions become shares. The ConvertKit affiliate programme is where the commissions come from. Both are free to start. Both are running on the Profitackology pipeline right now. Stage one of the pipeline requires two applications and one $500 deposit.
Open Free M1 Finance Account Join ConvertKit Affiliate Programme