Lasso's Affiliate Plus overhauls stale affiliate infrastructure with AI, targeting a market where over 80% of sellers already pay to play.
ENTRY ANGLES
AI-driven link optimization layer on top of existing affiliate networks · Platform connecting marketplace sellers with manufacturers using AI to surface comparable products · Positioning between two parties willing to pay more, using AI to streamline bilateral transactions
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
AI-driven optimization and matching algorithms, Integration with existing affiliate networks or marketplace ecosystems, Ability to model and surface margin/pricing opportunities
LASSO FOUNDER
“leadership doesn't understand its value and potential”
Affiliate marketing has been around long enough to feel like furniture – mature, mostly ignored, occasionally generating awkward commissions for bloggers. Lasso is a veteran of the space, having raised a modest seed round back in 2021 to serve the standard use case. But last week Lasso posted to Product Hunt announcing Affiliate Plus – a new product layered on top of its existing platform, and one that reframes what affiliate marketing can actually pay.
The promise: partners can now earn up to 5x more than the standard commission they receive through Amazon's affiliate program.
Here's how it works. Lasso negotiates side deals with select Amazon sellers who are willing to pay extra on top of standard affiliate rates – and then passes the bulk of that premium on to partners who place those sellers' links. Currently, Lasso's catalog includes 300,000 products whose sellers have agreed to the enhanced payout. Lasso, naturally, keeps the spread between what it collects from sellers and what it pays out to partners.
In the old world, only top-tier partners – maybe 1% of the affiliate ecosystem – had the traffic and leverage to negotiate custom rate deals directly with sellers. Affiliate Plus opens those enriched payouts to everyone, with no traffic minimums or other requirements.
The real play is the AI engine embedded in the platform. It scans partners' existing link libraries and flags swaps: replace this low-commission link with a higher-paying alternative – sometimes the same product from a different seller, sometimes a comparable product that the partner's audience is just as likely to buy. Partners can configure the system to suggest only same-product swaps or open it up to comparable alternatives. They can also choose between manual mode (review and approve each swap themselves) and autopilot (the AI handles selection, placement, and performance monitoring automatically).
The elegance of the Affiliate Plus business model is that Lasso found a way to skim the cream off an audience Amazon already built. There's a massive, mature affiliate ecosystem out there – thousands of sellers, millions of partners. Lasso just needs to keep matching the sellers willing to pay more with the partners eager to earn more, then let the AI turn that mutual desire into a frictionless process.
A conceptually similar approach was taken by Levanta, [covered previously](/review/pljus-35-vyruchki-za-150-minut), which runs an affiliate marketplace where partners can auction off placement to Amazon sellers. Levanta allows direct partner–seller negotiations too, but those happen manually.
Affiliate Plus differs in two key ways. First, it promises 3–5x more – not the 50% uplift Levanta advertises. Second, it automates the optimization loop entirely, which creates a compound effect: better link selection drives higher conversion, which drives higher seller bids, which drives still higher partner earnings.
The market underneath all this is enormous. Forbes estimates that 83% of marketers already use affiliate marketing. Global affiliate spend surpassed $15 billion in 2023 and is forecast to reach $54 billion by 2032 – nearly 4x growth.
The data on why also stands up. Marketers rank affiliate marketing as a more important digital acquisition channel than social advertising, display, or paid search – 54% call it their most important channel vs. 45% for social. On revenue contribution, it scores even higher: 52% of marketers say affiliate drives more revenue than any other channel.
Perhaps the most telling data point: when marketers were asked about their biggest affiliate challenges, the most common answer was "leadership doesn't understand its value and potential" Which means that once leadership catches up, even more money flows in – exactly what the market forecasts already project.
The broader strategic question is which other markets let you replicate the "sit above someone else's audience" play – positioning between sellers willing to pay more and partners eager to earn more, then letting AI turn that bilateral desire into a clean process. One obvious adjacent: a platform connecting marketplace sellers with manufacturers, using AI to surface comparable products with better margin or bonus terms. The playbook is the same; the category is different.
The more direct path is affiliate marketing itself. At a projected $54 billion by 2032, the market is large enough to support new platforms with different angles. The specific entry point that Affiliate Plus validates: AI-driven link optimization on top of an existing affiliate ecosystem – not a new network, but a yield-improvement layer on top of the networks that already exist. That's a much faster path to monetizable scale than building a new marketplace from scratch.