Seeding vs. paid partnership: two different mechanics
"Product seeding" on TikTok Shop specifically refers to sending creators free product in exchange for content, with sales tracked through TikTok's affiliate infrastructure rather than a flat fee. It's mechanically different from a paid partnership (where a creator is paid a fee regardless of sales) and it's worth understanding the actual steps, because most of the friction brands run into happens at specific, predictable points in the process.
Step 1 — List products in the TikTok Shop Affiliate/Seller Center
Before any creator can be seeded, your product needs to be live in TikTok Shop with a commission rate set on the affiliate program (this is configured in your Seller/Affiliate Center, not something we track or publish — see our data policy for what our database does and doesn't cover). Commission rate is your primary lever for attracting creators to opt in.
Step 2 — Open or targeted collaboration
TikTok Shop supports two seeding models:
- Open collaboration — any eligible creator can request a sample directly through the platform. Low effort, but no control over who applies.
- Targeted collaboration — you invite specific creators you've identified (e.g. via a screening process like our 7-step framework) and send samples directly, often after direct outreach (see our outreach guide).
Most brands running a deliberate strategy — rather than hoping volume compensates for lack of targeting — use targeted collaboration for their priority tier and leave open collaboration running in the background for incremental reach.
Step 3 — Sample fulfillment
This is the most common bottleneck. Plan for: shipping cost and time to the creator (especially for East Malaysia — Sabah/Sarawak — where delivery windows run longer than Peninsular Malaysia), and a no-show/no-post rate. Not every creator who requests or accepts a sample ends up posting; budgeting only for confirmed samples without a buffer is a common planning mistake.
Step 4 — Content goes live and gets tagged
The creator posts a video with your product tagged via TikTok Shop. From this point, any purchase made through that tagged link within TikTok's attribution window is credited to the creator, generating the commission and counting toward their tracked GMV. This is also the point where compliance disclosure matters — see the disclosure section in our contract basics guide.
Step 5 — Track attributed GMV and decide who to re-engage
Your Seller Center dashboard shows GMV and items sold per creator. This is the same type of commerce data our database tracks at the profile level (see any creator profile for the public version of these metrics). Use it to build a repeat-seeding list: creators who convert well are worth re-engaging with better terms or a paid upgrade; creators who post but generate no sales are candidates to deprioritize — see our red flags guide for related screening signals.
Common mistakes we see
- Setting commission too low to attract serious creators. If your commission rate is well below category norms for the product type, mid and micro-tier creators with other options will simply not apply.
- Treating seeding as "free marketing" with no cost tracking. Product cost, shipping, and staff time to manage requests all add up — model this against expected GMV using our ROI framework.
- No follow-up after the first post. The highest-ROI seeding programs re-engage creators who converted well rather than treating every relationship as one-and-done.
Next: if you're deciding between seeding and a paid flat-fee deal for a specific tier, see our budget planning guide.