How to Recruit Affiliates for Your B2B SaaS: Strategies That Actually Work
B2B SaaS affiliate recruitment isn’t about signing thousands of random publishers—it’s about finding a few dozen high-fit partners who already influence your ideal customers. Learn where to find them, how to pitch them, and how to activate them so they actually drive revenue.
How to Recruit Affiliates for Your B2B SaaS: Strategies That Actually Work
Finding quality affiliates is one of the hardest parts of running an affiliate program.
Posting in an affiliate marketplace gets you volume, but a lot of that volume is low-quality. And reaching out to potential partners manually takes forever.
B2B SaaS affiliate recruitment is different from B2C. Your affiliates aren't mega-influencers with millions of followers; they're consultants, complementary SaaS founders, micro-influencers, and niche content creators who have real relationships with your ideal customer.
This guide walks through where to find them, how to evaluate them, how to pitch them, and how to activate them so they actually promote your product.
Why B2B SaaS Affiliate Recruitment Is Different
The B2C Playbook Doesn't Work
In B2C (ecommerce, apps), you can recruit affiliates through marketplaces and agency networks. They're incentivized by commission volume and less concerned about deep product knowledge.
B2B SaaS affiliates operate differently. They're often:
- Consultants and agencies who recommend tools to clients.
- SaaS founders (often bootstrapped, lean, high trust within their network).
- Industry bloggers and newsletters with smaller but highly engaged audiences.
- Community leaders (Slack communities, Discord servers, Reddit moderators).
- Micro-influencers (5K–50K followers, niche expertise).
They're recruited by opportunity (not just commission), alignment (your product solves a problem they care about), and trust.
The Quality Bar Is Higher
One B2B affiliate with a 30,000-person newsletter focused on your target customer is worth 50 random affiliates from a general marketplace. Your recruitment strategy should reflect that — prioritize quality, not quantity.
Your Audience Is Niche
73% of B2B SaaS affiliate-sourced customers are early-stage founders and lean teams. Your affiliates need to have access to that audience. A macro influencer with 1M followers might not have 1,000 early-stage founders in their audience.
This means your ideal affiliates are also early-stage, niche, and trusted within their communities.
Where to Find B2B SaaS Affiliates
Strategy #1: Affiliate Marketplaces
Affiliate marketplaces like Impact, ShareASale, Awin, and CJ Affiliate list thousands of potential partners. They're organized by industry and niche.
Pros:
- Volume (thousands of potential affiliates in one place)
- Vetting (marketplace vets publishers to some degree)
- Infrastructure (the platform handles tracking, payouts, contracts)
Cons:
- Quality varies wildly
- Competition for top affiliates (everyone in your space is recruiting there)
- Platform fees (15–30% of affiliate payouts go to the platform)
- Less personal (applicants get generic onboarding)
How to maximize marketplace recruitment:
- Get your profile right. Write a compelling program description. Be specific about who you're looking for. "B2B SaaS affiliate program" is vague; "Recruiting consultants who advise early-stage founders on operations tools" is compelling.
- Set attractive commission. If competitors are paying 20% and you're offering 10%, good affiliates will ignore you. Research your market and be competitive.
- Provide assets. Successful marketplace affiliates have existing traffic or audiences; make it easy for them to promote. Provide email swipes, graphics, demo videos, product facts.
- Engage with applicants. Many affiliates apply and never hear back. Respond quickly (within 24 hours), regardless of whether you approve them. It signals professionalism.
- Track performance. Monitor who's driving conversions and who's sitting idle. Reach out to top performers with special perks or higher commission tiers.
B2B SaaS-specific tip: In marketplaces, filter for publisher categories like "B2B," "SaaS," "Business Services," "Consulting," and "Technology." These are more likely to have your target audience.
Strategy #2: Direct Outbound Recruitment
Identify high-value potential affiliates and reach out directly. This is more work than marketplaces but yields better quality.
Who to target:
- Complementary software founders. If you have a project management tool, reach out to time-tracking or budget software founders. Products that integrate or complement each other can co-promote.
- Consultants and agencies. Especially those who specialize in the area your product solves. If you're a compliance tool, reach out to compliance consultants. They recommend tools to clients and can be lucrative affiliates.
- Niche bloggers and newsletter writers. Use tools like Substack search, ConvertKit directory, or Beehiiv discovery to find newsletters in your space. Email the creator.
- Community leaders. Slack communities, Discord servers, subreddits, or Facebook groups related to your target customer. Community leaders are trusted advisors and can be incentivized to recommend your product.
- Influencers in your vertical. LinkedIn, Twitter, or YouTube creators who speak about your problem area. They usually have DMs open.
How to find them:
- Search by keywords. Use Google, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Substack to search for content related to your product category. Who's writing, posting, and building an audience around your space?
- Mine your customers. Ask your sales or customer success team: "Who do our customers follow? Who do they mention as experts?" Your customers' trusted sources are excellent recruit targets.
- Audit competitors' affiliates. If a competitor has an affiliate program, find out who's in it. Visit their affiliate page or search for competitors + "affiliate." You can then recruit those same partners.
- Use AI tools. Tools like Reditus's AI Discovery scan the internet for people discussing your product category and flag high-fit affiliate candidates. This automates the research phase and identifies people you might not find via Google.
- LinkedIn research. Search for job titles like "consultant," "advisor," or "freelancer" with industry keywords. Use the Sales Navigator filter to find people in your space.
Outreach template for direct recruitment:
Subject: Partner with [Product] as an affiliate?
>
Hi [Name],

Meet the author
Back in 2020 I was an affiliate for 80+ SaaS tools and I was generating an average of 30k in organic visits each month with my site. Due to the issues I experienced with the current affiliate management software tools, it never resulted in the passive income I was hoping for. Many clunky affiliate management tools lost me probably more than $20,000+ in affiliate revenue. So I decided to build my own software with a high focus on the affiliates, as in the end, they generate more money for SaaS companies.

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