
There are a lot of conversations right now about the ‘SaaSpocalypse,’ and with good reason. Companies are already replacing software vendors and IT services with AI-enabled vibe coding versions. As AI lowers the barriers to building custom tools and the per-seat SaaS model starts to show its limits, marketers are reassessing which platforms earn their place in the stack.
Unfortunately, there’s one area where the instinct to treat technology as a self-running solution always backfires: affiliate. Despite an average return of 12 to 15 times spend, many companies still treat affiliate marketing as a set-and-forget channel.
According to Gartner, companies use less than half of their martech stack capabilities on average. Marketing teams that run affiliate programs purely as technology platforms risk this fate.
The reason?
Affiliate isn’t a channel. It’s a portfolio of strategic partnerships that requires constant calibration, expert strategy, and hands-on management to capitalize on fast-moving market opportunities. Software alone can’t do this, and SaaS-reliant programs will lose in the AI race while the platforms adding value will be those that enable faster decision-making and more efficient execution in the hands of experts.
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Affiliate programs are complex operations. They span the entire customer journey, from awareness to sale, and require simultaneous optimization across loyalty partners, coupon and deals sites, content publishers, review sites, influencer relationships, technology partners, and shopping search engines.
Each publisher type works differently, performs differently across campaigns and audiences, needing a unique approach to negotiation, activation, and optimization. A commission structure that works for a big-name review site falls flat for a niche editorial content site. A promotion timed perfectly for one publisher fails for another.
That’s why partner analysts, or affiliate platforms and customer service teams, matter so much. They have deep, cross-functional knowledge of each publisher and can use it in real time, giving brands a competitive edge. That isn’t something an affiliate technology stack can surface on its own. It’s the result of decades of experience and relationship building, and it increasingly spans in-house affiliate managers, agency partners, and platform specialists working together.
Publishers aren’t just names in a dashboard
Publishers power the affiliate ecosystem, and many are genuine innovators. They’re the first to explore new models, technology, and traffic-driving strategies. Their content is among the first to show up in LLM-driven commerce and AI-powered product discovery. They also have invaluable first-party consumer data for negotiating mutually beneficial strategies with brands.
Whether a discount site that drives bigger than usual volume during the holidays or a review site that converts differently on mobile — these are strategic partners with their own audiences, strengths, and ways of doing business. That knowledge lives with the people managing the relationships.
The same AI wave putting the brakes on SaaS is also making human expertise in affiliate strategies more valuable. You can’t commoditize ingenuity and discernment.
AI tools can identify which publishers show up in a search query. They can’t judge whether that placement is worth the spend, counter competitor playbooks, or activate partnerships and engage with campaign performance data to drive meaningful impact.
The bottom line
The SaaSpocalypse is a vital moment of reflection and reckoning. For affiliate, the takeaway isn’t to ditch the platform. It’s recognizing that the platform was never the complete answer in the first place. Success depends on combining human expertise with technology that effectively scales it.
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