Build an affiliate landing page for [partner name]. Their recommended products, their discount code [CODE], and their testimonial.
Want more control? See the expanded prompt ›
Build an affiliate landing page at /pages/aff-emma: hero with Emma's introduction and disclosure, her recommended product set, specialized pricing/discount code EMMA15, testimonial from Emma, and a "Used by their audience" social proof block.
- Per-partner template with custom intro, product set, and pricing.
- FTC-compliant disclosure block.
- Auto-applies discount code at checkout.
- Easy to spin up new partner pages in seconds.
Sections this page should include
- Partner hero with intro, photo, and disclosure
- Partner's recommended product set
- Exclusive discount code with reveal
- Testimonial from the partner
- 'Used by their audience' social proof
- Single CTA tied to the partner's code
What you're trying to do
Sending all affiliate traffic to your homepage wastes the partner endorsement. A dedicated affiliate page picks up where the partner's content left off — same voice, recommended products visible, discount applied — and turns endorsement into purchase.
Things to watch out for
- FTC disclosure — required for partner content. Fudge auto-includes it.
- Cookie consent — Fudge handles this: affiliate tracking respects consent regions.
- Discount stacking — Fudge can stop the partner code from stacking with sale codes.
- Page slug — Fudge defaults to
/pages/aff-<partner>is the convention; configurable.
How Fudge does it
Fudge duplicates your live theme into a draft, builds a custom page template with the sections and logic your prompt requires, and populates it with your real products, pricing, and brand styling. Everything starts in draft — you preview before publishing, tweak any section, and your live store stays untouched until you're ready.
Building affiliate landing pages that perform
Affiliate landing pages are 1:1 brand-partner pages where a specific affiliate’s audience can buy with the affiliate’s curation and discount code. Done well, they out-convert flat affiliate links because the affiliate’s voice and curation reduces friction. Done badly, they’re disconnected from the affiliate’s content and feel impersonal.
When this page is worth building
Build affiliate landing pages if you have meaningful affiliate or creator partnerships. Skip the page if your affiliate program is a long-tail of small creators — those don’t justify dedicated pages.
The page works best for affiliates with their own audiences (creators, influencers, publishers) where the affiliate’s voice and selection genuinely curates differently from your default catalog.
What makes one great
- Partner hero with intro and disclosure — photo, quote, FTC-compliant “Sponsored” framing.
- Curated product set — 6–12 products the affiliate genuinely recommends, not your full catalog.
- Exclusive discount code with reveal — code that ties redemption back to this affiliate specifically.
- Partner testimonial — the affiliate’s own words about why these products. Brand voice should support, not dominate.
- ‘Used by their audience’ social proof — customer photos from the affiliate’s network if available.
Common mistakes to avoid
The biggest mistake is generic affiliate pages with the affiliate’s logo bolted on. The page should feel like a collaboration, not a co-branded version of your homepage.
The second mistake is FTC compliance gaps. Disclosure is required on US affiliate content. Fudge adds the disclosure automatically; don’t strip it out.
Pair this with influencer collab pages — same structural pattern, different relationship dynamics.