Most people who become referral partners do it by accident. They mention a tool to a colleague, the colleague signs up, and someone tells them later there was a commission they could have earned. Then they go looking for how referral programs actually work.
This guide covers the basics from the partner's perspective: what a referral partner is, how to pick the right program, how to make your first referral so it actually gets credited, and how attribution and payouts work. We'll use Giftronaut's program as the worked example throughout — the mechanics are clearly documented and representative of how most well-run B2B programs operate.
TL;DR
A referral partner is someone who introduces potential customers to a company's product or service, and earns a commission when those introductions convert into paying customers.
No sales quota. No cold calling. No product expertise required beyond enough to make a genuine recommendation. You connect a company you know with a product that would help them. If they sign up and use it, you earn a percentage of what they spend.
These terms are used interchangeably, but they describe slightly different roles:
| Role | How you refer | Commission basis | Relationship type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Referral partner | Direct personal introductions | Per conversion | Trusted personal network |
| Affiliate | Content + tracking links | Link-driven signups | Audience-based |
| Reseller | Buys and resells directly | Margin on resale | Deep commercial relationship |
Most modern programs — including Giftronaut's — support both referral and affiliate models under one program. You can make personal introductions and share a public link, depending on what fits the situation.
The highest commission rate isn't always the best program. Evaluate these four things before you sign up:
The most reliable referral income comes from products you already believe in. Your contacts trust your recommendations. If you're pushing a tool purely for commission, the referrals won't convert — and you'll damage the credibility you've built.
Think about your professional network. What problems are the people around you trying to solve? Giftronaut serves companies that send gift cards to employees, clients, or prospects. If you work with HR teams, marketing agencies, or ops consultants — that's a natural fit with no convincing required.
Three things to look for in the program terms:
Attribution window: How long after your introduction does a signup still count as your referral? Shorter than 60 days is risky in B2B where decisions take time. Giftronaut offers 180 days from lead form submission.
Payout method: Cash, credits, or gift cards — and does the format work for you geographically?
Earning cap: Giftronaut caps commission at $200 per referred customer, but places no cap on the number of customers you can refer.
A good program gives you a referral link, a way to submit leads directly, and a regular performance report. Programs that are vague about attribution or slow on payouts aren't worth your time regardless of the commission rate advertised.
Once you've joined, most people stall at the same point: they have a referral link but aren't sure how to use it without it feeling like a sales pitch. The practical approach:
Think of one or two specific contacts who've mentioned a relevant problem. A referral works best as a natural extension of a real conversation — "You mentioned you're trying to send rewards to your team across five countries. There's a platform I've seen work really well for this — zero fees, completely digital, recipients choose their own gift."
Most programs offer both a public referral link and a direct lead form. For people you know personally, always use the lead form. When you submit a lead's business email, your claim is registered regardless of whether they later arrive via a different channel. Lead form submissions take priority over link attribution in nearly every well-run program.
This matters because in B2B, a prospect you introduce today might sign up three months later after a budget approval cycle. A lead form submission keeps your credit intact throughout that process. A link click may have long expired.
If you write a newsletter, a blog, or post regularly on LinkedIn, add your referral link anywhere you mention the product. Lower-conversion than a personal introduction, but it runs without ongoing effort once it's in your content.
If you recommend a product publicly and earn commission from signups, FTC guidelines require a disclosure. One sentence near the link is sufficient: "I'm a referral partner for Giftronaut and may earn a commission if you sign up." Disclosure builds trust — most readers appreciate the transparency.
Understanding attribution before you start prevents surprises later.
Attribution window: Giftronaut's 180-day window runs from the date of your lead form submission — not from when a prospect clicks a link. This is important in B2B where decisions stretch across quarters.
Lead form beats link: If you've submitted a lead via the form and they later arrive via a different link or channel, your form submission retains priority.
First submission wins: If two partners submit the same lead, the first valid submission gets credit. If you know a prospect personally and plan to submit them, do it promptly.
Payouts are issued monthly via Choice Card. Amounts below $25 roll to the following cycle. Choice Cards are redeemable across 30,000+ brands in USD — you choose the brand at the time of redemption.
No. Giftronaut's program is open to anyone with relevant professional connections. There is no minimum audience size, no traffic requirement, and no need to be an existing customer.
It depends on how many companies you refer and how much they spend. Giftronaut pays 10% per qualified order, up to a $200 cap per referred customer. Refer 10 active customers each spending $500/month, and you're earning $500/month without any ongoing effort beyond the initial introduction.
The claim expires. If they sign up after the 180-day window, that signup won't be credited to you. There's no penalty — you simply won't earn commission on that particular customer. This is why the lead form matters: the 180-day clock starts at submission, giving you more runway than a typical link-click window.
No. Giftronaut's program has no setup fee, no subscription, and no requirement to be an existing customer. You join, get your referral link and lead form access, and start referring.
A referral link is a trackable URL you share publicly. Anyone who clicks it and signs up is attributed to you, subject to the attribution window. A lead form lets you proactively submit a prospect's business email, claiming attribution upfront. Lead form submissions take priority over link clicks — for people you know personally, always use the form.
No. Self-referrals, referrals of family members, and referrals of companies you control or have a financial interest in are excluded. Attempting to do so typically results in removal from the program.
Becoming a referral partner is one of the lowest-effort ways to add income to work you're already doing. Pick products you believe in, use the lead form for personal introductions, and let the attribution window do the heavy lifting.
Not sure which program to start with? See our breakdown of the best B2B referral programs to join in 2026 — six programs compared on commission, attribution, and payout method.
If you work with companies that reward employees, clients, or prospects — Giftronaut's Referral Partner Program is open to join today. No cost, no minimums, 180-day attribution window.