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The TopRanked.io Weekly Digest: What’s Hot in Affiliate Marketing [Masters of Trivia Referral Program]

Question: When does a referral program become an affiliate program? Answer: When Masters of Trivia (an edu-gaming app) launches a token that turns its in-game currency into real-world utility (and thus, real-world value). And this week, that’s exactly what we’re going to look at: how the Masters of Trivia referral program basically became an affiliate program (and why it’s worth your time).

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TopRanked.io Weekly Digest

Quick Disclosure: We’re about to tell you how great the Masters of Trivia Referral Program is. And we really mean it. Just know that if you click on a Masters of Trivia Referral Program link, we may earn a small commission. Your choice.

If you’ve read anything more than a single edition of our weekly affiliate news roundups, then you probably know there’s a pretty predictable pattern we like to follow.

It goes a little something like this:

But this week, I’m gonna do something different.

We’re not doing an affiliate program review (well, I sorta will… but it’s not an “affiliate program”)

And I’m not really doing any “news”. At least, not in the sense of “here’s stuff that happened this week”.

Curious to see what comes next?

Here’s a hint:

Masters of Trivia referral program

Masters of Trivia Referal Program: An Edugaming Referal Program That’s Basically an Affiliate Program

While there’s a lot of similarities between affiliate programs and referral programs, we usually love the former and hate the latter.

Why?

Because 99.99% of the time, the former — affiliate programs — reward you with money.

And therefore, we love affiliate programs because… well… we like money.

But when it comes to that other thing — “referral” programs — 99.99% of the time, you get rewarded with something that’s about as useful as low-carb water.

Well, maybe not that useless. But hopefully you get the point. Discounts and service credits are pretty useless unless you’re a heavy user of the product you’re promoting.

And let’s be honest here for a second — would you even use half the products you’re promoting?

And yes, Clickbank affiliates, I’m especially looking at you here…

Anyway, to get back on topic, this week I stumbled across a referral program that’s basically an affiliate program, even though the brand behind it hasn’t even advertised it as such.

It’s the Masters of Trivia referral program.

Masters of Trivia referral program

Now, I’ll talk a little bit more about the niche behind the Masters of Trivia referral program in a moment. But in case you’re impatient and wanna know more now, I’ll give you this pretty screenshot of the Masters of Trivia website which should hopefully give you a few hints.

Masters of Trivia referral program

Right now, what I really wanna talk about is how the Masters of Trivia referral program is basically an affiliate program.

It goes a little something like this:

  • You sign up for the Masters of Trivia referral program (you’re in by default the moment you sign up)
  • You send out “join me on Masters of Trivia” invites to your 5.64 billion internet friends (or just run a regular affiliate campaign).
  • Your Masters of Trivia referral program invitees join (for free, of course), and hopefully they engage a little (last I checked, they had to at least play a couple of games before they became a qualified referral).
  • You earn (previously) useless in-game currency.

And just in case you were wondering, yes, you did read that last bullet point right.

I did just say it was (previously) useless.

Up until recently, Masters of Trivia’s referral program was no better than the rest of them — all you got was in-game goodies. Great if you like the platform, but not so great if you’d rather spend your time running affiliate campaigns than playing educational games.

But then, something changed.

Masters of Trivia launched a token — the MOT Token.

You know, like a bit like cryptocurrency, except for the fact that $MOT’s more of a utility token and less of a meme/shitcoin.

But don’t take the word of some dude you don’t even know — go check it out for yourself slash DYOR.

As for those of you who’re yet to DYOR, the only bit you need to know for now is that Masters of Trivia’s in-game currency (the currency you’ll earn in the Masters of Trivia referral program) can be converted into $MOT tokens — tokens that you can hold in your Solana wallet.

And you know what you can do once you’ve got those $MOT tokens in your wallet…?

That’s right! You can go and exchange/trade your $MOT tokens just as you would with any other crypto.

And just like that, the Masters of Trivia referral program basically became an affiliate program since its in-game currency basically became real money (admittedly through a couple of layers of abstraction).

Bet you didn’t see that coming!

But maybe you’re not quite convinced yet.

Maybe you like this clever little “turning a referral program into an affiliate program” hack. But you’re still not convinced that edu-gaming’s the right niche for you.

And that’s cool.

But, before you bounce, take a look at this (courtesy of Business of Apps).

That right there is the number of users across the educational app market — a tad over 700 million users in 2023 and counting.

That’s a pretty big addressable market if you ask me.

And the best part is, it’s not like those 700+ million users are useless, either.

Check this out:

Yep, that’s right — there’s plenty of money floating around in this market.

And on that note, a quick digression — have any of you ever bothered to check out our educational software affiliate program reviews on TopRanked.io?

No, you won’t find Masters of Trivia (maybe we’ll add it another day… or maybe we won’t since it isn’t “technically” an affiliate program).

What you will find, however, are a bunch of affiliate program reviews for a bunch of apps/brands you’ve probably heard of without realizing they also had affiliate programs. (E.g., see our Skillshare affiliate program review, Coursera affiliate program review, Udemy affiliate program review, etc.).

Anyway, where were we?

Right — Masters of Trivia’s referral/affiliate program.

At this point, there’s not really a whole lot more to say about the program other than the fact that it’s probably at least worth a look.

Sure, it’s probably not the program that’s gonna make you super rich.

But hey, why not throw up a few low-effort trivia spam blogs or something along those lines just to see what comes of it?

It’s not like it’s really going to cost you anything now that Scam Altman’s invented 6-fingered typists who’ll spit out blog articles at fractions of a cent per unit…

Also, for those of you in geos that usually have a hard time getting into most affiliate programs, the Masters of Trivia referral/affiliate program might just be your ticket to ride.

For starters, there’s no “application” process. All you need is a Masters of Trivia account (open to anyone with a mobile number or email address). And once you got that, you’ll find your referral link waiting for you right here on your user dashboard.

Masters of Trivia referral program

And then there’s also the fact that, since you’re getting paid in crypto in the Masters of Trivia referral program, so you’re not gonna need PayPal accounts or anything like that either.

So long as you have some way of trading/exchanging crypto, then you’ve got everything you need to work with the Masters of Trivia referral program.

What more could you ask for?

Head here to sign up with Masters of Trivia (and make sure you use my referral code: Yw2W2822)

Masters of Trivia referral program

Closing Thought

That last point — the bit about the Masters of Trivia referral program being great for people in geos that usually have a tough time getting PayPal accounts and what not — it reminded me of something.

That something is quote I’ve seen floating around the interwebs for years.

If the plan doesn’t work, change the plan but never the goal.

Now, if you know me half as well as I know myself, then you probably know I’m usually not so keen on such rigid thinking.

I mean, what if you’re goals just wrong to begin with?

Case in point:

But hey, “yeah buts” aside, I think there’s something nice about this quote.

Why?

Because in a way, it takes that whole “where there’s a will, there’s a way” thing and turns it into something more practical.

Instead of being all wishy-washy “just stick at it and eventually you’ll succeed”, it rips the band-aid off and tells you exactly what you need to do — change the plan.

Take for instance our affiliate friends in Cuba who wanna Havana pice of the affiliate action most of us enjoy.

For the most part, they’re not gonna get accepted/approved for anything.

And that probably means that, no matter how big their will is, there probably isn’t a way to get into a traditional affiliate program.

But that doesn’t mean they should just give up on their goal of making a little coin on the internet.

It just means they need a different plan.

You know, a little like the Masters of Trivia referral program hack we outlined above. (PS: If you’re reading this from Cuba, hola… and also, I can’t guarantee that you’re good to go with Masters of Trivia… I’m just spitballing here.)

You see where I’m going here?

All you have to do is repeat after me: If the plan doesn’t work, change the plan but never the goal.

And then go sign up for the Masters of Trivia referral program.

Masters of Trivia referral program

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(Featured image by SevenStorm JUHASZIMRUS via Pexels)

DISCLAIMER: This article was written by a third party contributor and does not reflect the opinion of Born2Invest, its management, staff or its associates. Please review our disclaimer for more information.

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Since a young age, Dylan has had three great loves: sports, money, and the internet. Naturally, it was only a matter of time until he found ways to bring the three together, and by the age of 17, he'd already created his first four-figure online sports portal. These days that passion burns just as bright, and he continues to enjoy writing about sports and the internet marketing opportunities that go hand in hand with them.