Simple, practical ways to get the most out of the program — for vendor partners and creator partners alike.
The best results come from sharing your link where you're already talking to couples or event hosts — or already posting to your audience — not from broad, impersonal blasts. A quiet recommendation at the right moment outperforms a loud one to everyone.
Partners who've seen AlphaRes Studio's work firsthand tend to refer with more confidence — and it shows. A short, honest recommendation (or a genuine reaction to real footage) goes further than a generic one.
Vendor partners: your complimentary shoot is marketing material for you too — real, beautiful photos of your space alongside your recommendation make the referral feel effortless. Creator partners: pull from the Marketing Kit's ready-to-post clips and photos for the same effect.
Timing matters. A couple actively planning vendors — or a follower right after seeing a wedding reel — is a much warmer moment to share your link than a cold mention months later.
A QR code on a printed card, a link in your welcome packet, a link in your bio, or a pinned post — the easier it is for someone to click through right when they're interested, the better your results.
A quick look at your partner dashboard now and then helps you notice what's working — which moments, which channels, which posts — so you can do more of what's paying off.
"The partners who do best with us aren't the ones sharing the most — they're the ones sharing at the right moment, to the right person."
— AlphaRes Studio Partner ProgramAdd your link to your website, welcome packet, or booking confirmation emails — or your bio and post captions.
Introduce it personally — a short, warm recommendation beats a generic mention every time.
Use your assets — vendor partners: your complimentary shoot photos, tagging AlphaRes Studio; creator partners: the Marketing Kit's ready-to-post clips.
Print your QR code for tours, welcome tables, or anywhere couples linger and look at their phones.
Check your dashboard occasionally to see what's converting and lean into it.