A close look at tax forms marked with scam, highlighting financial fraud risks.

Why I Still Chose Affiliate Marketing Despite All the Scams (An Honest Look)

Yesterday, I took a big risk: I talked to my wife about my online journey.😉

It wasn’t the first time. But this time, I thought I’d explain it better.

Within minutes, I heard the familiar words:

Scam. 🙄

Then came the concern — the well‑intentioned warning about pyramid schemes, flashy gurus with perfect teeth, and people whose main talent is separating others from their money.

She wasn’t wrong to be cautious. She just didn’t understand the business model.

So I tried again. Slowly. Calmly. With diagrams (bad ones).

Surprisingly, this time it landed.

Encouraged, I pushed my luck and introduced funnels and email lists.

That’s when things went sideways.

From her perspective, I had just confessed to luring innocent people onto an email list so I could spam them with offers and content nobody wants to read.

Even after explaining — very calmly — that people choose to subscribe, that the offers solve real problems, and that some people even willingly open and read my emails… I hit a nerve.

And honestly? I get it.

Affiliate marketing has a reputation problem.

If you’ve ever asked yourself, “Is affiliate marketing a scam?”, you’re not wrong for being skeptical. I asked myself the exact same question before committing to this path.

Mention it online and you’ll often get the same reactions:

“It’s a scam.”
“Only gurus make money.”
“Everyone’s just trying to sell you something.”

And this might surprise you but, I don’t think those reactions are completely wrong.

A lot of what passes for “affiliate marketing” online today deserves skepticism. Too many screenshots. Too many rented Lamborghinis. Too many people promising certainty in a world where none exists.

So the real question isn’t:

Is affiliate marketing a scam?

The better question is:

Why would anyone still choose affiliate marketing, knowing all of that?

That’s what this post is about — and why it fits into my broader journey toward building $250/day or more in recurring online income.

I Didn’t Start With Blind Optimism

When I started documenting this journey publicly, I didn’t do it because I had everything figured out.

I did it because I was tired of noise.

I wanted to understand what actually works, what doesn’t, and why so many people end up frustrated, broke, or disillusioned after chasing online business promises.

Affiliate marketing kept showing up in my research — not as a miracle solution, but as a model.

And that distinction mattered.

The Model Isn’t the Problem (How Affiliate Marketing Actually Works)

Affiliate marketing, stripped of hype, is simple:

You help someone make a buying decision. If they buy, you earn a commission.

That’s it.

No recruiting required.
No downlines.
No mandatory buy-ins.
No guaranteed income.

Affiliate marketing isn’t a pyramid scheme. There’s no hierarchy beneath you, no one you need to sign up, and no money flowing upward just for participating.

If you don’t help someone make a good buying decision, you don’t earn anything.

That’s actually why I paid attention.

Scams usually remove accountability. Affiliate marketing doesn’t. If nobody buys, you don’t get paid. There’s nowhere to hide.

That alone filters out a lot of nonsense.

Why Affiliate Marketing Attracts So Many Scams

Here’s the uncomfortable part.

Affiliate marketing attracts scammers because it’s accessible.

You don’t need a warehouse. You don’t need a product. You don’t even need much technical skill to get started.

That’s a feature — and a vulnerability.

So what happens?

People shortcut the hard parts.
They sell the dream instead of the work.
They promise speed instead of skill.

And when it collapses, the model gets blamed.

That’s like blaming books because some people sell bad advice.

Why I Still Chose It Anyway

I didn’t choose affiliate marketing because it was easy.

I chose it because it was honest.

It forces you to learn real skills:

  • communication
  • persuasion
  • positioning
  • patience

It doesn’t reward wishful thinking.

And most importantly for me, it allowed me to build in public.

That’s why I’m documenting a very specific, very unsexy goal: $250/day in recurring income — not overnight, not guaranteed, and not promised.

Just earned, with the help of the Internet Profit Academy.

What This Journey Is (and Isn’t)

This isn’t a victory lap.

It’s a learning process.

Some weeks move the needle. Some don’t.
Some ideas work. Some flop.

And that’s the point.

I’d rather show the real process than sell a polished illusion.

Affiliate marketing gives me the framework to do that — without pretending it’s something it’s not.

A Quiet Advantage Most People Miss

Here’s something rarely said out loud:

Most people fail at affiliate marketing not because it’s fake… but because it’s slower than advertised.

And I’m okay with that.

Slow forces clarity.
Slow exposes bad assumptions.
Slow builds something you’re not embarrassed to explain.

That’s how I want to reach $250/day — not by sprinting toward hype, but by stacking small, boring wins.



In the next post, I’ll break down how I personally evaluate any online opportunity before promoting it, so I don’t become part of the problem — and how that fits into this journey.

Affiliate marketing isn’t a shortcut.

It’s a skill set wrapped in a business model.

Used poorly, it deserves criticism.
Used honestly, it rewards consistency, thinking, and restraint.

That’s why I chose it — eyes open, expectations grounded, and progress documented.

If you’re following this journey, you’re not here for promises.

You’re here to see what actually happens.

And so am I.

— Martin

This post is part of my ongoing $250/day journey, where I document the real process behind building income online. If you’re researching affiliate marketing scams or wondering whether affiliate marketing is legitimate, this blog shows what actually happens. $250/day journey, where I document the process, not just the outcome.

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