- You have to sign up and login to many different portals
- Find the right affiliates
- Figure out if these affiliates are not frauds (it’s more common than you think)
What problems are you solving for your customers and audience?
I started the company out of pure frustration. I’ve been an affiliate marketer myself where I recommended B2B selling SaaS companies to others. I created this website which was called sales.marketing.co and at one point had like 25,000 organic visitors per month. The idea of affiliate marketing is to monetize all these listings on the site by adding affiliate links… But it didn’t really work out that way. I had to log into all these portals separately, figure out how each affiliate program works, and then for the bigger networks It just didn’t work as it should. I started Reditus to help B2B SaaS companies set up, manage and grow an affiliate program. We help them to set up the affiliate program, list it on our marketplace to increase its reach immediately, and manage their affiliates to they know exactly what they’re doing. On the other side of the business, affiliate marketers will see exactly what each B2B SaaS affiliate program has to offer:- The percentage (how much they pay)
- Average revenue per account
- Attribution period
- When you get paid
- Etc.
📈 Affiliate marketing fraud is projected to costs advertisers $3 billion+ by 2024, according to a recent study by cybersecurity firm Cheq
We enable SaaS companies to see the affiliate marketers within Reditus network and what they have been doing – what numbers they REALLY have (total sold, referrals generated, etc. ), which platforms they use to market, where they put the affiliate links etc. Then we’re going to connect the companies listed with their Google and social profiles to help you verify if they have the traffic they say they have.
By paying commissions only after a sale is completed and making all the info about our affiliates metrics accessible, we avoid frauds and allow SaaS companies to search, filter and contact affiliates that are truly relevant to them.
So that’s how Reditus is more cost-effective to set up, as you don’t have any upfront cost, and reliable, because you can trust the data.
Which types of companies benefit the most from what you offer?
On our marketplace we list B2B SaaS companies that have a product led growth approach. Let’s take the example from Expandi – They have the subscriptions often within Stripe and then from there we’re able to automate the entire funnel which also means there can’t be any fraud because the process is fully automated and we are able to check if they are doing any weird things. We list B2B SaaS companies that are already generating revenue in the marketing and sales space, just because that is my background and because it’s the best way to benefit both our affiliates and to our users referring them. Here’s why:- The tools in our marketplace can be often recommended to a lot of companies (higher revenue potential for those promoting them)
- Having a lot of platforms with a similar use case allows our affiliates to help each other. For example, when a user applies to the CallPage program, they will see Algomo, which also helps sales teams but in a different way than a meeting scheduler, so they can actually start recommending both.
What makes them eventually choose you over your competitors?
The biggest difference between us and our competitors is the marketplace, which makes us a more scalable option. Our competitors work all in a silo, so they help you set up an affiliate program, but you have to pay right from the beginning and then you have to invite all the affiliates yourself, who oftentimes don’t have enough money, a network, or anything else which actually helps them grow. That approach might work at the beginning when you can invite your own clients, which are always the best investors, but if you want to really start growing the program that’s not ideal because you have to do all the work yourself and there’s nothing within the program or the platform you’re using that is really helping them and you scale up. We have the most competitive prices and we’re the only one offering a freemium model where we charge based on the value you’re getting – if you’re just starting out, you can do everything yourself using our free plan, and after that you can get listed on Reditus for as low as $59/month (when you pay annually). Other companies with a network usually start at around $750. Our UI and support are a lot better than most of the competitors and then especially on the affiliate side where our competitors focus on mostly the SaaS side and disregard the affiliate side. I come from the affiliate side and I know how important it is to get the right insights and support, so I made sure that we provided chat support (and we are the only ones doing that). In the end, if the affiliates do well and generate money, then the SaaS company makes money, and their pricing increases – So it’s in our best interest to help the affiliates make money because that will make us more money too. So that’s why our pricing works that way and why we value feedback from our affiliates a lot.Since you started, what helped you grow and retain your audience?
At the moment we have not run any paid ads so far to attract new SaaS companies, and we did try it with affiliates but didn’t really work. What we purely do is organic channels. A lot of content – When you look at our resources you can already see we have a blog with customer stories, a podcast, videos, we have a help center, a glossary, and more, to really help our affiliates and users become successful with affiliate marketing in a scalable way. It’s in our best interest, and here’s why: The more helpful content we provide > the more we help them be successful > the higher their pricing increases > the less support we have to provide. We run a podcast which is now ranked Top 10% worldwide, where since a year we started interviewing industry experts like Sean Ellis (the author of Growth Hacking), Kevin Dorsey (115,000 followers on LinkedIn), Emorek who bootstrapped his SaaS to 20 million, West Bush (who wrote the book Product-led Growth), and a lot of famous guests within SaaS which is helping us to get eyeballs. We are targeting B2B SaaS companies, so we’re looking for influencers in the industry to come out onto our podcast and thanks to that we can leverage their network. It works like this:- They come on a podcast
- They tag me and the podcast, and add the video
- That gets us eyeballs from his audience