This mockup uses the Zhiyun Fiveray M40 SE Combo in every card as a stand-in product so you can test the structure, spacing, CTA positioning, and editorial flow before replacing each slot with different lights. Every call to action below points to your Geniuslink.
This is the most useful part of the page structure. In a real comparison article, each card would be a different light with its own image, brief verdict, key strengths, and affiliate button. For now, the same product is repeated so you can judge the design and how it would feel with multiple buying options on one page.
A compact light that suits creators who want something genuinely portable for product video, talking head setups, desktop shooting, or a quick on-set fill light that can live in a small bag without becoming a burden.
This same slot could represent a “best for YouTube desk setup” recommendation. The layout makes it easy to guide visitors by use case rather than overwhelming them with a wall of technical detail.
This third card shows how the same page can position products according to different buyer priorities. On a live page, this would likely become another brand or another model in the same category for side-by-side decision making.
This is where the format starts to become powerful for affiliate comparison pages. Once you swap in different products, visitors can scan the table quickly, click into whichever option sounds right for them, and move through the page without friction.
| Feature | Option 01 | Option 02 | Option 03 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Product | Zhiyun Fiveray M40 SE Combo | Zhiyun Fiveray M40 SE Combo | Zhiyun Fiveray M40 SE Combo |
| Buying Angle | Best overall | Best for desk setup | Best for travel kit |
| Why choose it | Balanced size, output and usability | Good fit for compact creator workstations | Easy to pack for mobile shooting |
| Best for | YouTube, product video, hybrid use | Talking head, home studio, top-down filming | Travel creators, on-the-go setups, small bags |
| CTA | Open product | Open product | Open product |
On a finished page, I would usually open with a short verdict explaining who this category is for, then move into the comparison grid, then the table, and after that add a more editorial section discussing the differences in real-world use. That helps the page feel useful rather than purely transactional. For your audience, I would write these in a creator-first way with angles like on-set usefulness, desk setup practicality, portability, creator workflow, filming products, and how easy each light is to keep in a camera bag without overloading the kit.