Affiliate Disclosure
Last updated: June 23, 2026
Hi, Robert Grice here. I want to be 100% upfront and transparent with you. Software evaluation takes hours of direct testing, subscription payments, and continuous tracking. To fund StackRanger's deep evaluations and avoid charging a subscription wall or pasting intrusive display ads, I participate in affiliate marketing programs.
What does this mean for you?
When you click one of the outbound recommendation buttons or links on StackRanger (which point through our secure internal paths like /go/jotform/ or /go/reclaim/) and complete a purchase, the software company pays me a small commission.
Does this increase your cost?
No, absolutely not. In fact, sometimes these partnerships allow me to secure exclusive discounts, saving you money compared to registering directly.
Does this influence my testing?
Never. My recommendations are driven solely by my calibration standards and testing. If a tool has severe issues, I state them clearly in the "Honest Cons" section of every review. If a cheaper tool is objectively better for your specific workflow, I will tell you to pick the cheaper one. The moment I recommend a broken tool just to earn a commission, StackRanger loses its reputation—and that reputation is the only asset I have.
If you have any questions about how StackRanger handles affiliate links, please don't hesitate to reach out. I value your trust above all else.