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The creator leaderboard isn't mean. It's motivating.

Stop pushing creators to post. Start building a program worth posting for.

by
Beth Owens
xmin read
Table of contents
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  • Your creators aren't disengaged — they're flying blind. When performance is managed 1:1, nobody in the program can see what "good" looks like, so inconsistent posting is a rational response, not a motivation problem.
  • Commission tiers aren't enough. The programs that compound pull three levers systematically: fame (amplifying top creators' work), love (being personally reachable), and exclusivity (offering something at the top that can't be accessed any other way).
  • Start with visibility, then build up. A top-performers callout in your monthly email takes ten minutes and immediately changes what your program communicates. From there, add specific celebration, a community container, and a top tier worth working toward.
  • You updated the welcome email. You started a monthly newsletter. You check in with creators personally when posting drops off. And for a week or two after each of those things, something picks up, then settles back to whatever the baseline was before.

    Your top performers are already doing the work. They're posting consistently, driving clicks, earning commission. But that activity is invisible at the program level. Everyone else has no idea what “good” looks like, no target to aim at, and no evidence that the program is producing anything worth competing for. 

    In that environment, inconsistent posting isn't a motivation failure. It's a rational response to a program that gives creators nothing to orient around.

    The fix isn't a better email. It's architecture. Specifically: a system that makes performance visible to everyone in the program, routes investment toward the people who've earned it, and distributes what's working automatically so the program gets smarter without you having to constantly push it.

    Why your top performers are invisible (and how do fix it)

    Most affiliate programs are structured as a collection of 1:1 relationships. You manage your creators individually with individual check-ins, individual code updates, individual commission payments. And thanks to the growth of automated workflows inside creator platforms, it’s now possible to extend this 1:1 treatment to hundreds of creators inside a program, where before it would have buckled at 20. 

    But when performance is managed individually, it stays individual–and that’s the problem. 

    The creator who's quietly driving 30% of your program's revenue doesn't know they're doing that, unless that information is available to them. The creator who posted twice and went quiet doesn't know that three people are outpacing them, or why.

    In other words, nobody in the program has visibility into what the program is actually producing (except for you).

    The result is predictable: the program plateaus. Not because the creators aren't “good” enough, but because there's no feedback mechanism that makes performance visible and shareable. 

    The top 20% of creators keep doing what they do. The rest in your program keep guessing. 

    People want to be successful and I think you just have to give them the tools to be successful. And the more you can be their partner in it, the more that they'll post for you and be loyal to your program."

    Audrey Van Vark
    Affiliate Marketer at Jlab

    Visibility is one of those tools. Without it, even the best creators are flying blind.

    Fame, love, and exclusivity: The three levers your program should be pulling

    Once you've made performance visible, the next question is what you do with it.

    Most brands answer this the same way: higher commission tiers. Tiered programs are certainly a powerful motivator, but commission alone is a single lever in a system of multiple.

    According to Audrey at JLab, there are three things that creators actually want from a program they're invested in: fame, love, and exclusivity 👇

    Fame is what happens when a brand takes a creator's best work and amplifies it. 

    No generic shoutouts; a real signal that the brand is watching, paying attention, and willing to put resources behind what that creator made. Think running a top-performing affiliate video as a paid ad, or shouting out a creator in a brand email or blog.

    These aren't just relationship gestures. They extend a creator's reach beyond their own channel—and incidentally, they're often your most effective paid media creative.

    Love is the personal layer. 

    Be reachable directly by creators as a named person, not an info@alias. Respond when affiliates reach out, even if just to redirect them to the right channel. That accessibility is rare enough in affiliate programs that creators notice it. It's what makes the program feel like a relationship, rather than a transaction.

    Exclusive is the ceiling that only your best creators can earn. 

    At JLab, it's meant a TikTok Shop colorway that existed specifically because a group of affiliates made a product go viral. A collab product with a creator's name on it. Access to a product launch nobody else gets first. 

    The specifics are less important than the principle: there should be something at the top of your program that can't be bought or accessed any other way, because it signals to everyone in the program that there is a ceiling worth working toward.

    Most programs pull one of these levers and wonder why retention is inconsistent. The programs that compound use all three systematically, not sporadically.

    The community that teaches and motivates itself

    Here's the part that sounds like extra work–until you see what it actually produces.

    Audrey runs a Discord for JLab's 4,000 TikTok Shop affiliates. Every Friday, she posts the top five affiliate videos of the week. On the surface, that's a recognition moment; creators get visibility, motivation stays high. But underneath it, something more useful is happening: the best-performing content in the program becomes the program's shared curriculum. 

    Other creators aren't just inspired by those videos. They have a template. They can see what hook worked, what format performed, what angle connected with the audience. Plus, affiliates use the community to answer each other's questions. When someone posts in Discord asking how to structure a video, three creators chime in before Audrey has to.

    That's the real case for community. When learnings travel across a program automatically — creator to creator, not just brand to creator — every cycle builds on the last. New creators are faster to their first post. Mid-tier creators close the gap with top performers. Top performers stay engaged because the program keeps giving them reasons to.

    What to build first (And what to save for later)

    You don't need a 4,000-person Discord on day one. You need to identify which piece of the architecture is missing from your current program and close that gap. 

    Start with visibility. The simplest version of a leaderboard is a top performers callout in your monthly email: five names, their numbers, a quick line of celebration. It takes ten minutes and immediately changes what the program communicates to the people in it. Good performance is both visible and defined, which gives other creators a concrete target. 

    Add celebration. When you're talking to your top performers, make it specific. Not "great work this month" but "your video last week drove 47 link clicks and 6 conversions, here's how we're going to amplify it." Specificity signals to the creator that you're watching, which is worth more than any generic recognition.

    Build the container. Once you have 20–50 active creators, a private channel gives your program a home. Discord works well for TikTok-focused programs, while WhatsApp suits higher-touch communities. What matters most is the architecture inside it — weekly content tips, challenge announcements, a space where creators can ask questions and get answers from people who've already figured out what works.

    Design the top tier. What's the exclusive opportunity that only your best creators can earn? It could be an affiliate event at your HQ, a product collab with their name on it, or a paid amplification tied to specific KPIs. The specifics depend on your brand, but the top tier should exist and be visible.

    Once these systems are running, two things happen that emails alone never produce: performance becomes visible at the program level, and learnings start traveling between creators without you having to do the heavy lifting. Your program stops being a collection of individual relationships and starts being something that gets smarter over time.

    When your performance data lives in one place, the leaderboard isn't a manual exercise; your top performers are surfaced automatically. That visibility is what turns a list of creators into a program that compounds: You can see what's working, and that intelligence feeds directly into your creator engagement strategy.

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on creator marketing world. Honest talk. No secrets.
Real solutions.
    “Great influencer programs don’t happen by accident, they’re built 
by marketers who understand strategy, relationships, and growth”
    Sarah Crow
    Head of Creator Success
    “Winning at influencer marketing isn’t just about your tech stack or your budget; it’s about your ability to build relationships with creators who push your program onward.”
    Beth Owens
    Head of Content

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