Recurring SaaS commissions - why do I keep losing money?

Recurring SaaS commissions - why do I keep losing money?

Quanta

New member
Jumping in late here but I gotta say, I think most SaaS affiliate programs with recurring commissions are overrated. I tried a few recently, expecting that steady passive income and all. Turns out most of them have super short cookie durations and churn like crazy. And when you finally do get a customer, the retention rates are shockingly bad, so the recurring income is more like a mirage. It's like chasing a ghost. I honestly think a lot of affiliates get sold on the idea without really checking the nitty gritty of how long they'll actually get paid for.
 
I see what you're saying but I think the data tells a different story some programs have solid lifetime values if you dig into the retention metrics and focus on quality micros not just the quick wins sometimes it's about finding the right SaaS with true stickiness and long-term value that can pay off more than chasing short cookie durations hope that vibe check makes sense
 
I see what you're saying but I think the data tells a different story some programs have solid lifetime values if you dig into the retention metrics and focus on quality micros not just the quick wins sometimes it's about finding the right SaaS with true stickiness and long-term value that can pay off more than chasing short cookie durations hope that vibe check makes sense.
trust me on this most SaaS offers have their hooks set real short, and digging for the deep long-term ones is a waste of time unless you're really good at filtering. seen enough of these programs promise long-term value but never deliver past the first few months. i get the idea of finding a sticky SaaS but most of that info is fake or overstated, you need to test and see for yourself. how many of those "long-term" programs are actually still paying after a year? most are gone or broke.
 
Honestly I think most SaaS offers hype up the recurring model but forget about the real world. Short cookie durations and high churn are just part of the game rn. If you chasing those long term numbers without solid retention, you're pretty much chasing shadows.
 
Honestly I think most SaaS offers hype up the
Yeah, Drift nailed it about the hype, I mean back in the day some of these SaaS programs actually delivered on that promise but now it seems like everyone's chasing the shiny recurring badge without really checking if the actual numbers add up the cookie durations are short, churn is high and the retention numbers are just not there anymore it's like chasing a ghost for most affiliates unless you hit that rare long-term customer base which honestly feels more luck than strategy nowadays.
 
Recurring SaaS commissions - why do I keep losing money.
so, you're basically stuck watching your recurring commissions bleed out and you're asking why. it might be the classic case of churn eating your profits, or maybe the commissions are structured in a way that the payout isn't enough to cover your ad spend or time. sometimes the SaaS company changes their billing cycle or rules, and if you're not on top of that, it can mess with your cash flow. also, keep an eye on your retention rates and your audience's lifetime value, because if those dip, your commission stays the same but your profitability tanks. we're all just guessing until google or the SaaS company gives us the real scoop but staying sharp on those metrics helps spot the leaks.
 
But here's what I gotta ask - do you really think churn is the only reason or are you maybe just assuming the commissions are dying out on their own? I mean, have you looked into whether your onboarding process or the customer engagement side is actually keeping folks around? Sometimes the real killer is not churn but a lack of ongoing value that keeps people subscribed, ya know? Just my two cents but maybe it's not just the SaaS but how you're positioning and nurturing those customers long term.
 
So you're watching your SaaS commissions fade away and wondering why. The truth is, churn gets all the blame but there's usually more to it. Maybe your traffic source is flaky, or your follow-up game is weak. I've seen guys rely on a single LP or email sequence and wonder why conversions die off after a month. And that's the rub - if you're not continuously testing and rotating your creatives, your offers, even your angles, you're basically swimming upstream with a broken paddle. The other thing is, some SaaS programs have sneaky fine print or strict cookies rules that kill your tracking, making it look like commissions vanish. And don't forget, some of these programs get banned or cleaned out when regulators or their own QA teams catch on. Bottom line, it's usually not just churn, more like neglect or bad setup.
 
Let me tell you a story I once saw a guy blame churn for his SaaS losses but it turned out his email follow-up was dead. Are you sure the issue isn't in your touchpoints or traffic quality instead of just chalking it up to the usual churn?
 
Let me tell you a story I once saw a guy blame churn for his SaaS losses but it turned out his email follow-up was dead
That story hits close to home. People love to blame churn but forget email is the only asset you really own. If your follow-up sequence is dead or not optimized for conversions, your LTV takes a hit. I've seen guys throw cash at new traffic but ignore the nurture game - that's the real squeeze play. If your emails aren't getting opened or clicked, it's like leaving money on the table while blaming the traffic.
 
lol nah I think y'all are overcomplicating it. losing money on SaaS commissions is usually just bad offer selection or traffic that's too weak to convert long term. churn is real but it's the easy excuse. if your traffic is crap or your offer doesn't convert well, it's always gonna eat your ROI. stop chasing ghosts and fix the basics first
 
so you're saying churn isn't the main issue, but what if your tracking is off? numbers don't lie but they can lie if your data is clunky. you sure your attribution window and tracking pixels are tight or are you just chasing ghost traffic?
 
Recurring SaaS commissions - why do I keep losing money.
Yeah, losing money on SaaS commissions is a common grind, imo. Most times it's not just churn, it's bad offer fit, weak traffic, or even bad tracking. People get obsessed with the churn but forget that poor site structure or thin content can make the same damage. It's a marathon, not a sprint, so check ur basics before blaming the usual suspects
 
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