Your affiliate program has hundreds of approved publishers, but only a handful are actively promoting you. Sound familiar? Stuart Miles, founder of Squirrel and former owner of Pocket-lint (which he grew to 12.5 million monthly readers before exiting), reveals why most affiliate managers are accidentally destroying publisher relationships before they even begin. Lee-Ann and Stuart discuss why product feeds matter more than commission rates, and the six tactical shifts that separate transactional affiliate programs from genuine partnerships that drive consistent revenue.
The coffee shop approach to publisher relationships – why the best partnerships happen outside of product launches and promotional cycles, and what real-life relationship building looks like in 2026
Most affiliate managers assume higher commission percentages automatically attract better publishers. Stuart learned from running Pocket-lint for two decades that publishers choose partners based on trust and audience relevance, not payout structures. At Pocket-lint, every story had to pass the “Matt test” – would their 34-year-old iPhone user who drives a German car and vacations in France actually care about this content? If not, they didn't publish it.
This ruthless focus on audience relevance meant Pocket-lint wrote fewer stories but invested more depth in the ones that mattered. The result? Explosive growth to 12.5 million monthly readers. For affiliate managers, this principle translates directly: stop carpet bombing your entire publisher list with every promotion. Instead, segment by audience fit and send targeted outreach that demonstrates you understand who their readers are and why your product matters to them specifically.
Stuart built Squirrel after watching journalists waste 15 minutes per article hunting for correct affiliate links, checking stock availability, and wrestling with different network wrappers. The solution wasn't better training or more detailed guidelines – it was automation through standardised product feeds that update every 2-4 hours.
Here's what affiliate managers miss: when a journalist finds your product link easily, shows accurate pricing, and updates automatically across international markets, you're not just convenient. You're trustworthy. Readers who click expecting one price and find another don't just abandon that purchase – they lose trust in the publication itself. Smart publishers prioritise merchants who make them look good to their audience, which means product feeds aren't a technical nice-to-have. They're table stakes for serious partnerships.
Lee-Ann captured these insights mid-conversation, and they deserve your immediate attention:
1. Trust and Relevance First – Understand your target customer profile before contacting publishers. Give affiliates context about who you're serving so they know exactly what to write and why it matters to their audience.
2. Get Clear on Who You're Serving – Stop trying to be everywhere at once. This year demands focus. Choose publishers strategically based on audience alignment, not vanity metrics like domain authority.
3. Less Is More – ChatGPT can answer simple questions now. What unique value are you providing that AI can't? Focus on differentiation, depth, and genuine expertise rather than volume.
4. Don't Leave Money on the Table – Tools like Squirrel help publishers monetise evergreen content long after publication. If your partners aren't using automation to keep links accurate and prices current, you're both losing revenue.
5. Think Long-Term, Not Just Short-Term – Create content and partnerships that compound over time. Stuart shared an example where a competitor copied Pocket-lint's affiliate links, resulting in 3,000 unexpected conversions. Your content lives beyond your immediate control – make it work for you.
6. Position Creative Ideas, Not Just Products – Instead of “here's our new lawnmower,” try “I noticed you don't have a guide on staying warm in garden offices – here are six products across different categories that could anchor that story.” Do half the work, leave room for editorial independence, and watch engagement soar.
What happened when Stuart's team spent more time finding affiliate links than writing stories, and the efficiency breakthrough that led to Squirrel's creation
[01:20] Stuart's journey from covering Google's launch in the late 90s through the dot-com boom and bust to building Pocket-lint into a 12.5 million reader powerhouse
[15:30] The product feed problem that costs both publishers and merchants thousands in lost revenue, and why automation isn't optional anymore
[28:30] Lee-Ann's breakdown of the six tactical shifts every affiliate manager needs to implement this year to build genuine publisher partnerships
Ready to transform how you work with publisher partners? The strategies Stuart shared didn't come from theory – they came from two decades in the trenches building one of the world's most successful consumer technology publications. If you're serious about moving beyond transactional affiliate relationships into genuine partnerships that drive consistent revenue, subscribe to Affiverse's Affiliate Marketing newsletter for weekly insights that help you stay ahead of industry shifts. Our team translates complex partnership strategies into actionable frameworks you can implement immediately.
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