Trident Affilate Information

HOW TO SHARE YOUR AFFILIATE LINK WITHOUT GETTING SHUT DOWN
A guide for Trident Peptide Technologies affiliates

The rules of the game have changed. Social media platforms are actively flagging and suppressing content related to research compounds — and the word "peptide" alone can trigger automated account reviews, shadow bans, reduced reach, or outright removal. Your account is your most valuable asset. Losing it means losing your audience. We want you to protect both.

At the same time, the FTC and FDA have clear guidelines about what can and can't be said when promoting products in the wellness and research space. The good news: when you speak authentically from your own experience and stay within these guardrails, you're both compliant and compelling.

WHAT YOU CAN AND CANNOT SAY

You CAN say:

  • Share your personal experience and results

  • Describe how a product made you feel

  • Say it's "for research purposes"

  • Reference general wellness benefits you've personally noticed

  • Use outcomes-based language: "I noticed…", "I felt…", "My recovery felt different when…"

  • Ask your audience if they're curious to learn more

  • Link to the product page with your affiliate link

Never say:

  • "This treats / cures / heals [condition]"

  • Anything that diagnoses or prescribes for someone else

  • Clinical or FDA-approval claims

  • Specific medical conditions the product is for

  • Promises of specific results for others

  • Anything claiming it's a substitute for medical advice

The golden rule: Speak from your own experience. "I" and "my" are your best friends. The moment you tell someone what a product will do for them, you've crossed into territory that creates legal risk — for you and for us.

PLATFORM RISK LEVELS

🔴 High risk (use coded language, never drop direct links in captions):
Instagram, Facebook, TikTok

🟡 Medium risk (be mindful, avoid specific terminology):
YouTube

🟢 Low risk (you can be more direct here):
Email lists, SMS, Telegram, Signal, private communities

Direct channels — email lists, personal texts, private communities — are far safer than public social posts. Think of your public social as the hook, and your DMs or email as where the real conversation happens.

THE LANGUAGE TOOLKIT: WORDS THAT WORK

Swap flagged terms for alternatives that communicate clearly to the right people without triggering filters.

Instead of "peptide":
→ "research compound," "wellness support," "the thing I've been stacking," "what I've been using lately"

Instead of product names in posts:
→ "the blend," "what's in my kit," "the one I linked below," "my current stack"

Instead of health claims:
→ "I noticed a difference in…," "personally I felt…," "my recovery felt different when…"

To invite curiosity without triggering algorithms:
→ "DM me if you want more info," "link in bio for what I use," "curious? I'll send you the details"

For the research angle:
→ "doing my own research on this," "exploring this for personal use," "I've been looking into this"

For communities that already know:
→ "people who are serious about optimization," "those who know, know," "not for everyone — but if you're in the space…"

THE SMART SHARING PLAYBOOK

1. Lead with your story.
Post about your experience — your energy, your recovery, your routine. Let curiosity come to you. The most powerful marketing is authentic.

2. Use "link in bio" — never paste links in captions.
Platforms suppress posts with outbound links. Put your affiliate link in your bio and reference it in your post.

3. Move conversations to DMs.
When someone engages, take it private. In DMs you can be more specific, share your link directly, and have a real conversation without algorithmic interference.

4. Build a list.
Email and SMS are yours. No algorithm can suppress them. Even a small list of genuinely interested people is worth more than 10,000 casual followers.

5. Use private groups or channels.
A private Telegram group, vetted Facebook group, or Signal channel lets you speak more openly to people who have opted in.

6. Always disclose your affiliation.
FTC rules require you to disclose when you earn a commission. A simple line like "I earn a commission if you purchase through my link" keeps you legally protected and builds trust with your audience.

IF YOU GET FLAGGED

Don't panic — and don't delete the post right away, as removing it can sometimes accelerate a review. Review the content for terms that may have triggered the flag and edit where possible. Use the platform's built-in appeals process. Going forward, lean on the language toolkit above and move toward lower-risk channels for more direct conversation.

Products sold by Trident Peptide Technologies are for research purposes only. This guide does not constitute medical, legal, or financial advice. When in doubt about a specific claim or post, reach out before publishing.

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