I create Wikipedia pages for clients on popular freelance websites and have been quite successful with nearly 100 5-star feedback reviews as well as an overall 5 star rating... these freelance websites charge me 10-20% of the revenue depending on each site (I can pay a similar or even a higher amount to affiliates should they be able to bring me eligible clients). My target market is notable individuals or companies (perhaps celebrities or tech startups in silicon valley but not limited to a single niche) that do not yet have a Wikipedia page but do have some media coverage so that I can create new Wikipedia pages for them. I would like to reach out to them via affiliates marketers - any tangentially related suggestions would be appreciated too. As this is a service, not a pre-made product, the affiliate networks I am aware of (such as clickbank) do not fit this model. I can leave it upto affiliates how to find clients; to use email lists or personal marketing, however, most affiliate networks I have searched up on the internet are not reliable or are based on online products rather than services.
Why not outsource it? An easy search on upwork or fiver could find you the people you need to get your wikipedia campaign done. In the end it will only cost a fraction compared to an entire affiliate program.
Answered 9 years ago
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