This website contains affiliate links. Some products are gifted by the brand. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. The content on this website was created with the help of AI.
While I share money-making strategies, nothing is “typical”, and outcomes are based on each individual. There are no guarantees.
I built my affiliate blog to run like a publishing machine — built on Pinterest, powered by automation, and monetized through products I actually use and love. Every post starts with real searches happening on Pinterest and turns into a shoppable piece of content that earns on autopilot. My system isn’t about chasing trends or posting endlessly — it’s about building a blog that compounds. One workflow. One strategy. Endless income potential while I focus on living my life.
The Concept
My blog runs on a simple idea: publish lifestyle content that’s genuinely useful and built to earn. I create posts that align with what people are already searching for on Pinterest — beauty, fashion, home décor, crafts, holidays, pets, and everyday inspiration. Each post is designed to help, even if it’s selling, and naturally includes affiliate links to products I personally use or recommend. My Pinterest boards mirror my blog categories, so everything connects visually and strategically. When someone clicks a pin, they land on a beautiful, helpful post that feels authentic and easy to trust. That’s how Pinterest traffic turns into passive income without feeling pushy or forced.
This may feel foreign at first — like a lot of moving parts and new tools — but once you learn each step, it clicks. Over time, this process becomes second nature. You’ll stop overthinking and start publishing faster because you’ll know exactly what works. The real magic happens in the repetition. Every new post adds another traffic stream, another set of affiliate links, another opportunity for passive income. You’re not chasing viral moments; you’re building digital real estate that earns while you sleep. Stay consistent, keep refining your workflow, and let the system do its job — your job is just to keep showing up and creating.
The Workflow
Before I break down the workflow, I want to make something clear — none of these tools are required to make this system work. They just make it faster. When I started, I did everything manually: researching products, writing posts, linking items, and creating images by hand. It worked — it just took a lot more time. The paid tools came later, once I earned enough from my blog to invest back into it. So while tools like HARPA, Lasso, and Ideogram are incredible for automating the process, they’re not mandatory. They’re a luxury that streamlines everything and helps me move much quicker without burning out.
Here’s how the system runs from start to finish:
Amazon → HARPA → WordPress → Lasso → Ideogram → Pinterest.
Each tool plays one specific role in the process — together they form an efficient content machine.
I personally use and pay for each one listed below. If you decide to use my affiliate links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you — but I’m sharing them because they genuinely make my workflow easier, not because any brand paid me to.
- Amazon – where I research trending and high-quality products to feature.
- HARPA AI – Chrome extension that uses ChatGPT to pull product data and draft articles right from the page.
- WordPress – my publishing hub where all blog content lives and earns. My brothers Jeff & Paul build these (Call: 702-917-0755)
- Lasso – tool I use to create branded affiliate boxes and track clicks automatically.
- Ideogram – AI image generator I use to create Pinterest-worthy visuals.
- Pinterest – the platform that drives consistent, targeted traffic to my affiliate content.
Step 1: Research Products on Amazon
Amazon is the foundation of my entire affiliate workflow. It’s where I start every post — researching products, identifying trends, and finding items that people are already actively buying. I look at what’s performing well in specific categories, check reviews, and look for high-quality visuals that will also perform well on Pinterest.
Because Amazon updates so frequently, it gives me a real-time pulse on what’s popular. Instead of guessing what to write about, I reverse-engineer my content based on proven buyer intent. This turns each blog post into a curated, data-backed roundup designed to attract clicks, conversions, and long-term search traffic.
Start with the category you want to write about. For example, I searched “Cat Trees.”
Sort by Best Sellers and filter for products with 4 stars or higher. This guarantees your roundup features quality products people are already buying. Think of it as curating a “best of the best” list.
Step 2: Use HARPA to Generate Your Article
HARPA is a Chrome extension that works like an assistant inside your browser. It uses ChatGPT to read the web page you’re on and help you write content faster. For example, when I’m on an Amazon page, HARPA can scan the products and instantly write a full article draft based on what it sees — no copying, pasting, or switching tabs. Think of it like having an AI co-writer sitting right on top of your screen, pulling real-time information and turning it into usable blog content in seconds.
Once you’ve got the product list open, use the HARPA Chrome extension, which runs ChatGPT right on top of the Amazon page.
Drop in this prompt:
“Write an article about the best (item listed in the search bar on the page). Give me 10 items. Don’t repeat the same brand or item. Use subheadings. For each item, elaborate on the item and explain why it’s a best seller. Don’t mention Amazon.”
HARPA reads the page and instantly drafts a full article based on what’s visible — no copying and pasting product names manually. You’ll get a structured post with headings, descriptions, and reasoning.
Once HARPA builds the bones of the article — meaning the structure, subheadings, and basic explanations — you can take it a step further by giving ChatGPT style direction. You might say, “Write this for Gen Z,” or “Write it for moms,” and the entire tone and language will shift to fit that audience. You can also shape it around personality-driven styles like, “Write it like a popular home and garden TV host,” or even, “Write it in my tone of voice.” The more you use HARPA, the more it adapts to your writing style over time.
And if you’re on a Mac using ChatGPT’s new browser feature, you can skip HARPA completely and do this directly inside ChatGPT — same workflow, just built in.
Step 3: Bring It Into WordPress and Customize
Copy the HARPA-generated text into WordPress.
Once HARPA builds the bones of the article — meaning the structure, subheadings, and basic explanations — you can take it a step further by giving ChatGPT style direction. You might say, “Write this for Gen Z,” or “Write it for moms,” and the entire tone and language will shift to fit that audience. You can also shape it around personality-driven styles like “Write it like a popular home and garden TV host” or even “Write it in my tone of voice.” The more you use HARPA, the more it adapts to your writing style over time.
- “Make this tone more conversational.”
- “Add short bullet-point features for each product.”
- “Simplify the title so it’s not a long Amazon name.”
This is where your personality comes in. You can fine-tune tone, structure, and readability so the post matches your brand’s voice and feels natural to Pinterest readers.
Step 4: Create Affiliate Links with Lasso
Lasso is a WordPress plugin that makes it easy to add and manage affiliate links. Instead of manually creating product links or boxes every time, Lasso lets you paste a product URL — like one from Amazon — and automatically builds a clean, clickable product box with the image, title, description, and buttons. It keeps everything organized in one dashboard, tracks clicks, and updates prices automatically so your links never go out of date. You can also group products by category, like “Pet Favorites” or “Home Office Essentials,” and reuse them across multiple posts. It’s simple, visual, and built to help affiliate bloggers look professional while saving hours of manual work.
This is the part that turns your post into a moneymaker.
I bookmark the “Add a Link” page in Lasso so I can move fast. Then:
- Click Add a Link.
- Paste in the Amazon product URL.
- Lasso automatically generates the product box.
- Clean up the title — make it short and reader-friendly.
- Copy the product description from your blog and paste it into the Lasso description box.
- Add the product to a group (e.g., Cat Trees).
- Save your changes.
Lasso will automatically update the prices, so never list prices in your post. That’s handled dynamically in the background.
Step 5: Insert Lasso Boxes in WordPress
Back inside WordPress, scroll under each subheading and click the Gutenberg “+” icon.
Search for Lasso, choose the product you just added, and insert it.
This creates a clean, branded product box with the image, description, and affiliate link built in. It’s visually appealing, loads fast, and drives conversions without looking like a traditional ad.
Step 6: Design Visuals with Ideogram
Pinterest users are visual first. That’s why every post needs an eye-catching image.
Go to Ideogram.ai and create a featured image for your post using a detailed lifestyle prompt like:
“A cozy modern living room with pastel tones, a cat tree in the corner, two cats lounging, natural light, Pinterest-style aesthetic.”
Download the result, upload it as your featured image in WordPress, and reuse it as your Pinterest pin graphic.
The goal is to make your content look scroll-stopping — aesthetic, useful, and on brand.
You can also use create your featured blog photo in Ideogram. If you are using another tool for images like Canva, or within an AI Tool like ChatGPT, that’s fine too.
I’m just sharing what I do today. Sometimes, I like the output of ChatGPT images, and other times, I prefer Ideogram. I like to have options.
Step 7: Publish and Promote
Once your article looks polished — headings formatted, Lasso links added, excerpt added, categories selected, and image uploaded — hit Publish.
Then open Pinterest and upload your vertical pin using the Ideogram image. Add a short, keyword-rich description like:
“10 Cat Trees That Look Like Designer Furniture (And Your Cat Will Actually Use).”
Every pin becomes a clickable path that leads users directly to your monetized blog.
The FTC (Federal Trade Commission) and Amazon both require clear affiliate disclosures on your blog. This means you need to tell readers, in plain language, that you may earn money when they click your links or make a purchase through them. The FTC’s rule is simple — if there’s any chance you could earn from a link, your audience needs to know before they click. It must be easy to see and understand (not hidden in fine print or buried in a footer).
Amazon takes it a step further by requiring a specific statement if you’re part of the Amazon Associates Program. Their rule says you must include this sentence somewhere visible on your site:
“As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.”
I put my affiliate disclosure at the top of every blog post and sometimes again at the bottom, just to stay compliant and transparent. It’s not just a rule — it builds trust with your readers and keeps your content aligned with both FTC and Amazon policies.
Lasso also gives you the option to include affiliate disclosures directly within your product displays. This means you can add a short note or disclaimer right inside the product box itself — a great way to stay transparent and meet FTC and Amazon requirements without interrupting the reader’s flow.
Step 8: Repeat and Scale
Over time, this process becomes second nature. You’ll stop overthinking and start publishing faster — because you’ll know exactly what works. The real magic happens in the repetition. Every new post adds another traffic stream, another set of affiliate links, another opportunity for passive income. You’re not chasing viral moments; you’re building digital real estate that earns while you sleep. Stay consistent, keep refining your workflow, and let the system do its job — your job is just to keep showing up and creating.
