Pinterest: An Introductory Guide for Marketers

Meet Pinterest. The hottest social network offers many benefits to marketers. Understanding how to use Pinterest and leverage its marketing potential requires diving in. Here’s everything you need to know to get started and become pinteresting.

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Date published
April 12, 2012 Categories

Navigating the choppy waters of a new social networking site can be challenging as a marketer. The latest social media site to have marketers buzzing these days is Pinterest. Experian Hitwise finds Pinterest is the new No. 3 social site on the web (total visitors), just slightly ahead of LinkedIn.

Massive growth and popularity prove Pinterest is a wise avenue for your next marketing dollars. But how can you use it?

Pinterest: A Guide for Marketers

One of the first things you need to understand about Pinterest is what the heck it is. The site is “A content sharing service that allows members to “pin” images, videos and other objects to their pin board.”

Pinterest allows users to create customized themed boards to pin their images, video and other objects to. The board and theme are as creative as the individual and for marketers this can be ripe ground for our talent.

Demographics

Hitwise classifies Pinterest users into three categories:

As far as gender goes, a large percentage of the users on Pinterest are women. Google Ad planner shows Pinterest with an 80 percent female and 20 percent male demographic, ages primarily 25-44. The site caters to their interests so there’s no surprise there.

Men, however, are slowly migrating to the site and finding interest in their own ways. Sports teams have even created Pinterest boards for their male audience.

The information shared by Hitwise and Google Ad Planner can help marketers to see exactly who makes up the user base on Pinterest and what industries may do well. What marketers should understand here is that women are the core audience right now.

Research shows that women make the online purchasing decisions for roughly 75 percent of American households. This highly coveted demographic can be worthwhile for your marketing dollars. Don’t forget, however, that the site also has its appeal to other demographics as well.

Benefits

There are many benefits to using this new social networking site for marketing a brand. Just like any other social site, brands stand a chance to reap the rewards of reaching more customers, driving more traffic, and selling more products.

Traffic

According to Shareaholic, Pinterest sent more referral traffic to websites than Twitter did in February this year. The site still doesn’t beat out StumbleUpon as a referral traffic source, but is slowly climbing the ranks becoming a contender.

Over the summer, Pinterest became the top social media referrer for MarthaStewart.com and MarthaStewartWedding.com. The site is sending more referral traffic than Facebook and Twitter combined.

Cooking Light magazine’s website shows Pinterest as the second highest traffic referrer behind Google. The most popular topics that seem to drive traffic are in the wedding, arts and crafts, culinary, décor, design, and fashion industries.

Sales

For Etsy store owners, Pinterest has proved to be a boon to their success. The site caters to the creative and interesting, the unique.

Users are encouraged to share the prices of items in their pins, by placing a “$” prefix before the price. Attractive prices can certainly garner a click through and potential purchase.

Pinterest recently updated their Terms of Service and took out their pin etiquette statement that requested users not use Pinterest for self-promotion. Concerns about self-serving promotion restrictions are seemingly over.

While we certainly don’t recommend promoting the heck out of your products, adding boards to showcase your products that in turn can help sell them is a good idea.

Reach

If people love your products, there’s a good chance you’ve already debuted on Pinterest. Here’s a trick: Check for yourself by going to pinterest.com/source/yourdomain.com to see the users pinning your photos. You may find that customers pin many photos, have photos that get re-pinned or liked, and even have some Pinterest followers comment on their pins. These are all opportunities a brand’s name is spread and the reach is expanded.

Marketing on Pinterest: Quick Tips

Summary

Understanding how to use Pinterest and what marketing potential the site offers requires diving in and getting started. Test, measure, and track your efforts. Brainstorm with your team and look for opportunities outside the box. Continually tailor your efforts until you find the groove that works for you.

What are you waiting for? Get started today!

Etsy Image Credit: Design Style Guide

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