kiit is different. Everything on your profile is something you own and have rated honestly. Your audience can see the 3/5 you gave something after six months. That's what makes the 5/5 worth trusting.
// why kiit is different
You post a link. You earn commission. Your audience sees a 5/5 on everything. After a while they stop believing you. The commission keeps coming but the trust is gone.
You can only review things you own. Your ratings are public over time. They can see the 3/5 from month one, the 2.8 after eight months. When you give something a 5/5, it means something. That's the asset.
// the rating that builds trust
Your audience knows when everything is a 5/5. One honest 3/5, with a real reason, does more for your credibility than ten perfect scores. kiit is the only platform where giving something a low rating is a feature, not a mistake.
"ANC is genuinely impressive. Sound stage feels a bit narrow but the noise cancellation alone is worth it for travel."
"Headband started creaking at month four. Customer service was poor. Still good ANC but build quality let it down. Wouldn't buy again."
// how it works
Log what you actually own and use. Rate it honestly. Your profile becomes a living record of your real opinions, not a curated highlight reel. Ownership is verified. You cannot add something you don't own.
Your ratings update as your opinions change. Your audience sees the full picture: the first impression, the six-month reality check, the two-year verdict. That history is what makes your recommendations worth clicking.
Affiliate links sit behind every item in your kit. When your audience buys through you, you earn commission. The difference: they're buying because they trust the rating, not because you told them to.
Early access. A small group of creators building kits that their audience can actually trust.
Set up your kit