Your program is running. Creators are posting. Content is going live across Instagram, and some of it is genuinely good — high engagement, real comments, audiences that look like your target customer.
But when leadership asks what's working, you can't answer cleanly.
Some creators show zero conversions, despite posting consistently and driving traffic. Others show revenue numbers that feel inflated. Certainly big enough to celebrate, but maybe…not quite trustworthy enough to base serious strategy decisions on? 😬
You open your dashboard expecting clarity and clear answers, but you’re finding noise instead.
The instinct to question whether your platform reporting is broken–or whether the creators just aren't converting–usually sends influencer marketers looking in the wrong direction.
But most creator attribution problems aren't analytics problems. They're infrastructure gaps in how codes are distributed, how different content formats enable tracking (or rather, don’t) and how that data flows into reporting.
The tricky part is that these gaps don't loudly announce themselves. They corrupt your data silently, and by the time you notice something's off, the damage has likely been compounding for months.
Here are the three most common attribution gaps in creator programs, what each one does to your data, and the exact protocol to close them:
1. Your codes are escaping the channels they were meant for
The creators have their codes, the audience has the discount, and every redemption should trace back to the creator who drove it.
Well, that’s the theory at least.
But codes have a habit of showing up in places where they were never intended. And every time this happens, a conversion gets attributed to the wrong source—or to no source at all. The data doesn't look obviously corrupted, but it stops being trustworthy.
Code leakage isn't an edge case. It's the default outcome when code distribution policies aren't communicated explicitly at onboarding or actively policed once a creator is in the program. This usually happens through two distinct ways, and they affect attribution differently:
Coupon sites. Codes surface on aggregators like Honey or RetailMeNot—sometimes scraped automatically, sometimes posted by someone chasing affiliate commission. Every redemption from a coupon site inflates a creator's attributed revenue with purchases they didn't influence. This means you can't distinguish genuine organic performance from leaked-code noise.
Brand-owned spaces. Creators post codes in your Facebook groups or Instagram comments. These aren't always bad actors; sometimes, they're enthusiastic partners who don't realize they're claiming credit for customers who were already in-funnel through your owned channels.
Lauren Maxwell, Director of Influencer Marketing, treats both cases as inevitabilities. Her approach is to set explicit rules at onboarding, and act fast when code leakage happens (because make no mistake: it will!)
The solution: Make sure you set code distribution rules in writing before the creator's first post
If your code policy lives in a welcome email that nobody reads, it's not a policy. It needs to be a standalone document the creator acknowledges before they start sharing. For example: “Personal channels only, no coupon sites, no brand-owned groups.” Include the consequences (code deactivation and replacement, or program removal in extreme cases) so creators understand the stakes. When leakage happens, deactivate the compromised code immediately, issue a replacement, and document the incident.
Remember: Every day a leaked code stays active is another day of corrupted data!
2. Content formats are creating attribution blind spots
You have great creators who are posting consistently and get great engagement, maybe quality comments full of purchase intent. But when you check their attributed conversions…almost nothing.
The pattern is confusing enough to make you wonder whether engagement just doesn't translate to sales for your brand. The more likely explanation? The format those creators like using doesn't carry a clear attribution mechanism.
Not every format supports link or code-based tracking equally. Here's how each major Instagram format maps to its attribution capability:
Instagram Reels are Instagram's most-promoted format. High reach, strong engagement—but sadly, not linkable, meaning that revenue driven by Reels is invisible to link-based attribution. The fallback is a promo code, and that requires the code to be visible on screen, memorable, and simple enough to type in at checkout.
Stories are linkable via the link sticker, making them the most attribution-friendly format on Instagram. However, reach has declined over time, and creators who post Stories only may not be reaching enough people to drive meaningful volume.
Feed posts aren't directly linkable. Codes can be included in captions, but the format is optimized for engagement and saves, not immediate conversion. Like Reels, attribution really depends on whether someone remembers the code long enough to use it.
In other words, your creators may be driving real purchase intent through their content that never shows up in your dashboard. The format itself can't carry a link, or the promo code may not survive the journey from a fifteen-second video to the checkout page.
The answer isn't to mandate placement, which is a fast way to get generic, forced content. But leaving it entirely to creators means your attribution is at the mercy of whatever format they default to.
Solution: Educate on which formats are most attribution-friendly
Suggest placement and why pairing a Reel with a Story swipe-up, or including a pinned comment with a code, captures the intent that a standalone Reel misses. Also make sure every creator has a clean, short, memorable promo code that works even when a link isn't possible. If you're relying on link tracking alone, every Reel and every feed post in your program is an attribution blind spot.
3. Your data can't separate acquisition from retention
Your attribution dashboard shows strong revenue from the affiliate program and leadership is pleased. But something nags—some of the "top performing" creators seem to be driving repeat purchases from customers who would have bought anyway.
If you can't separate genuine acquisition from subsidized retention, then a program looks more productive than it is. This isn't just a margin problem; it's a measurement problem that makes every downstream optimization decision unreliable.
When codes aren't restricted to new customers, every repeat purchase inflates creator-attributed revenue. So, which creators should you tier up? Which ones deserve a higher commission? Which content formats are driving real growth?
Solution: Restrict code usage to new customers only
Once codes are restricted, the data tells a fundamentally different story. You can see which creators are genuine acquisition drivers, versus which ones are subsidizing repeat behavior. You can identify which content types attract new audiences versus which ones activate existing fans.
And any tier advancement decisions, like which creators should earn higher commission or be eligible for flat-fee opportunities, are based on the metric that actually matters: net-new customer acquisition.
Yes, the total attributed number will drop. But the number that remains is the one you can defend to leadership—and the one you can actually build and scale a program on.
These are infrastructure problems, not analytics problems
Code leakage, blind spots driven by content format, and the inability to separate acquisition from retention are the three most common reasons creator programs are harder to measure than they should be. None of them require a new creator platform; they require specific policy and configuration changes that you can implement quickly.
When link and code management, and attribution tracking live in one place that connects creator data directly to commerce data — these gaps become visible before they compound.
That's the difference between a program you have to defend and a program that reports for itself.

Beth Owens is Superfiliate's Head of Content and GTM storyteller. On the weekends, you'll find her on the yoga mat or searching out the perfect flat white in whichever city she is currently inhabiting ☕️












