Why Patagonia and Bark only partner with publishers who pass this values test

Learn what values-driven brands like Patagonia and Bark look for in publisher partners—and how to stand out by leading with purpose, alignment, and authentic content.

A group of diverse individuals gathered around a table, collaborating with a laptop in the center.
Wafiqa Abbas
Wafiqa Abbas
Content Marketing Manager
Read time: 8 mins

The partnership rejection email was polite but predictable: ‘Thank you for your interest, but we don’t feel you’re the right fit for our program at this time.’

If you’re a mid-tier publisher, you’ve probably received dozens of these from premium brands. While you’re competing on traffic metrics and conversion rates, companies like Patagonia and Bark are building partnerships using completely different criteria—and they’re actively seeking smaller, authentic publishers over larger ones.

We spoke with Kirk Hausman, who managed partnerships with Walmart’s massive budgets before returning to Bark, and Cricket Treanor, who went from Patagonia’s retail floor to creating her own affiliate role. Here’s the insider intelligence they shared about what these selective brands actually want in publisher partners—and how to position yourself to get accepted.

Why publishers are shifting from traditional affiliate models to values-based partnerships

The traditional affiliate squeeze: Publishers compete on traffic volume and conversion rates while brands squeeze commissions and demand higher performance with less support. Meanwhile, the most profitable partnerships in the industry are happening between brands and publishers who share genuine values alignment.

What makes a brand “values-driven”?

These companies integrate their core beliefs into their business operations, not just their mission statements:

  • Patagonia: Donates 1% of sales to environmental nonprofits and builds products designed to last decades, reducing overconsumption.
  • Bark: Made dogs literal co-owners of their company and partners with rescue shelters to provide toys and food to dogs in need.

The insider perspective

Hausman learned this working on both sides of the equation. After managing massive advertising budgets at Walmart and then working publisher-side at Raptive, he returned to Bark with clear insights:

How evaluation criteria differ

Traditional brands focus on: Traffic volume, conversion rates, audience size 

Values-driven brands focus on: Authentic alignment with their specific cause—environmental sustainability, animal welfare, community impact

They want partners who already create content around these topics because they genuinely care, not because they see a business opportunity.

The mid-tier publisher advantage

Instead of competing against larger publishers on reach alone, you can differentiate based on:

  • Authentic content alignment with specific causes
  • Genuine audience engagement around values topics
  • Long-term partnership potential over transactional relationships

Treanor talks about the importance of working with like-minded partners:

Treanor goes on to explain how she works with a variety of publisher types:

What gets you on the radar of values-driven brands? 

Publishers want to know: what exactly are these selective brands looking for when they review applications? We asked Treanor and Hausman directly. Their insights reveal universal patterns that apply across values-driven partnerships:

The “existing evidence” test

Treanor explains her evaluation process, particularly for content partners: 

The universal principle: Values-driven brands look for publishers who are already creating content around their cause, not publishers who promise to start.

How this applies across categories:

  • Sustainability brands: Show existing content about environmental issues, ethical consumption, or conscious living
  • Health/wellness brands: Demonstrate personal commitment to fitness, mental health, or holistic living
  • Community-focused brands: Evidence of supporting local businesses, social causes, or community building
  • Innovation brands: Track record of covering emerging tech, supporting startups, or embracing change

The “authentic voice” filter

Hausman shares his approach to finding the right partners:

The universal principle: Values-driven brands prefer authentic, imperfect voices over polished, corporate-sounding content.

How this translates: Show genuine passion for the cause, including personal struggles, learning moments, and real experiences—not just promotional content or surface-level coverage.

The demonstration requirement

Both partnership managers look for the same thing: demonstrated authenticity over promised alignment. These brands want publishers who are already living and creating content around their mission, not publishers who claim they’ll start caring if accepted into the program.

What values-driven brands don’t want to see

Based on Treanor and Hausman’s insights, avoid these application red flags:

  • Generic outreach: Mass emails mentioning “brand partnerships” without specific reference to their mission
  • Promise-based pitches: “I’d love to start creating content about sustainability” rather than showing existing work
  • Metrics-only approach: Leading with follower counts instead of audience alignment
  • Overly polished presentation: Hausman specifically seeks publishers willing to “say the weird thing” rather than corporate-safe content

Timeline reality: Start small, grow strategically

Both Patagonia and Bark partnerships mentioned they began modestly. Treanor’s Stab Mag relationship “started really small” but once they got a foot in the door, it grew into major brand moments. Hausman’s most successful partnership started with small Instagram stories before evolving into long-form content.

Publisher takeaway: Apply for affiliate marketing programs as relationship-building opportunities, not just revenue streams.

Proof points to include in your application

  • Content samples showing genuine engagement with their cause (not just promotional posts)
  • Audience insights demonstrating values alignment (comments, engagement on values-driven content)
  • Personal connection to their mission (your story, not just your stats)
  • Long-term vision for how you’d authentically integrate their brand into your existing content themes

How two publishers turned these principles into successful partnerships

The universal principles we just covered aren’t theoretical—they’re driving real results for publishers who understand how to apply them. Here are two examples that show the strategies in action:

Demonstrating authentic values alignment: The Collyn approach

Dog Mom creator Collyn had 200K followers—small compared to mega pet influencers. But when she created content driving Bark toys to rescue dogs for National Make a Dog’s Day, she demonstrated exactly what Hausman looks for: genuine care for dogs beyond just promotion.

Bark partnered with creator Collyn for tail-wagging dog rescue stories

One of Bark’s most heartwarming partnerships was with Dog Mom creator Collyn. She created an Instagram post of her driving Bark toys to dogs in various shelters and homes in honour of National Make a Dog’s Day. 

The real magic came when Collyn interacted with super excited pups who enjoyed playing with their toys. The dogs are clearly happy and thriving in their new environments. 

A woman joyfully interacts with a dog in a car filled with colorful toys, celebrating National Make a Dog's Day.

Source: Post by makoandkonasmom

This kind gesture showed Collyn going above and beyond to check-in with dogs, particularly those who had suffered harsh circumstances before being rescued. 

Since Collyn has over 200k followers, the post reached a wide audience. Plus, the post prominently showed Bark’s products without it being an overt placement. Both Collyn and Bark got incredible exposure and made an unbelievable impact on dog parents—tugging heartstrings all around. 

Stab Mag rode the wave with affiliate as an entry point

Stab Mag couldn’t get Patagonia’s attention through traditional PR channels. But Treanor’s approach through the affiliate program opened the door: 

Treanor approached them about an affiliate program and this opened the door to being able to pay for a partnership which started really small.

What followed was a brand moment Patagonia and its customers still talk about today. Stab invited Patagonia to sponsor an episode of their Electric Acid Surfboard Test, a beloved recurring video series where a pro surfer blind-tests boards from around the world. 

A surfer rides a large green wave, showcasing skill and fluidity in a sunny ocean setting.

Source: Patagonia’s Instagram 

Patagonia sponsored the episode and had one of their surf ambassadors as the tester.

The post doesn’t appear transactional—it feels natural, relevant, and community-driven.

For publishers wanting long-term partnerships, this example shows how a small affiliate relationship can make a big impression on audiences. This is especially true if you understand the brand’s audience and goals well.

How to position yourself and find values-driven brand partners

After seeing the success strategies in action, publishers need two things: the right positioning and the right discovery methods. Here’s the tactical approach:

Step 1: Create a values-focused profile that stands out

Your publisher profile needs to immediately communicate authentic values alignment, not just metrics. Key elements:

  • Lead with your mission/values in the first line
  • Include content samples showing genuine engagement with causes you care about
  • Highlight audience values alignment (comments, engagement on values-driven content)
  • Show long-term vision rather than a transactional approach

Step 2: Research and discover aligned brand partners

Use these methods to identify values-driven brands actively seeking partners:

  • Partnership platforms: Filter by values categories (sustainability, social impact, community focus) on partnership platforms like impact.com Marketplace
  • Brand research: Look for companies with authentic CSR integration, not just mission statements
  • Industry communities: Values-driven brands often cluster in specific networks and events
A person in a striped shirt holds their hands together, set against a backdrop of natural scenery, with a helpful tip about marketplace filters.

Turn shared values into strategic growth

The best partnerships aren’t one-and-done. They’re built on shared values, mutual respect, and a real understanding of each other’s audiences. As we’ve seen from Bark and Patagonia, long-term collaborations often begin with small, meaningful touchpoints and grow into brand-defining moments.

If you’re a publisher looking to work with purpose-driven brands, focus on alignment over scale. Show brands you understand what they stand for and speak directly to their community. Use tools like the impact.com Marketplace to discover opportunities where your voice and mission naturally sync with brands.

The result is high-impact campaigns that feel authentic, perform better, and build lasting value for both sides.

Ready to find your next values-aligned partner? Explore the impact.com Marketplace and start building community-driven partnerships that actually mean something.

FAQs

How do brands evaluate potential partners based on core values?

Brands look for partners whose content, audience, and messaging align with their mission. They often scan for signals like past content topics, tone of voice, social values, and audience engagement to assess whether the partnership feels authentic and aligned from the start.

What key benefits do brands expect when considering a long-term partnership?

Brands expect consistent, values-aligned messaging, deeper audience trust, and stronger performance over time. Long-term partnerships also offer efficiency, creative synergy, and the ability to co-create more impactful, brand-building campaigns.

Which brand partnership values should I highlight in my pitch to attract high-quality brands for strategic collaboration?

Highlight values that genuinely align with the brand’s mission—like sustainability, inclusivity, or community impact. Show how your content supports those values, share examples of past aligned partnerships, and emphasize your audience’s trust and engagement.

Discover more ways to use affiliate marketing to grow your partnership program:

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