5 Reasons Why Your Business Needs construction pin?

15 Apr.,2024

 

Are you currently just using Pinterest to plan your dream vacation or find delicious-looking baked goods to try — or are you using Pinterest for business? If you aren’t doing the latter yet, it might be time to consider getting your brand on this visual platform.

Pinterest offers businesses of all sizes a unique way to market themselves — as a visual search engine, Pinterest is great for exposing new potential customers to your brand.

That’s because Pinners come to the platform for inspiration. They want to try new things, discover new ideas, find great recipes, and often, get inspired to make their next purchase.

This article will cover all the Pinterest marketing basics to get you started including:

  • What is Pinterest marketing?
  • How to use Pinterest for business
  • How to set up a Pinterest business account
  • Important lingo you should know that will help your Pinterest marketing strategy
  • How to use Pinterest with Hootsuite

Let’s get started.

Bonus: Download your free pack of 5 customizable Pinterest templates now. Save time and easily promote your brand with professional designs.

What is Pinterest marketing?

Pinterest marketing is a set of tactics that incorporate Pinterest into your business’s bigger social media marketing strategy to reach new audiences and grow awareness for your brands and products.

According to Pinterest Business, social media marketers turn to the platform to:

  • Reach a new audience and grow an online presence.
  • Drive more traffic to the business’s website or online store.
  • Encourage conversions like newsletter sign-ups, ticket sales or purchases.

In other words, using Pinterest for business can help your brand reach a lot of people and make money.

As of 2021, Pinterest is the 14th largest social network in the world with 459 million active users each month.

Source: The Global State of Digital 2021

And its advertising reach is impressive:

Source: The Global State of Digital 2021

In fact, 80% of weekly Pinners have discovered a new brand or product on Pinterest. And Pinterest statistics show that both the number of Pinners and boards created, is increasing year over year.

This platform can be particularly beneficial if your business targets the same demographic that loves and uses Pinterest. The platform has historically attracted women and people who want to shop or start a new project. As of 2021, it’s becoming increasingly more popular with men and Gen Z-ers.

Source: Pinterest Business

Pinterest is also popular among people looking for positive inspiration — it’s not the platform for FOMO or controversial back-and-forths.

Now that you know what Pinterest marketing is, time to move on to how you can market your business on Pinterest. Keep reading for 8 actionable tips.

How to use Pinterest for business: 8 tips and tricks

1. Create a Pinterest marketing strategy

Just as you would with any other social media channel, start by drawing out a social media strategy for Pinterest — don’t just jump right in.

Creating a Pinterest marketing strategy means:

  • Setting SMART goals (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant and Time-bound). On top of gaining a following on Pinterest, do you hope the platform will drive traffic to your website, increase sales for a specific product or drive sign-ups for an event?
  • Learning about the general Pinterest audience and the demographic that is most likely to use this channel.
  • Learning about your brand’s specific Pinterest target audience.
  • Considering what your competitors are doing on this social media platform.
  • Planning and incorporating on-brand content for Pinterest into your social media content calendar.

Once you’ve set a clear strategy, you can begin working toward your goals.

2. Pin engaging, captivating content

Pinterest is a visual platform, so effectively using it for business means producing high-quality, engaging visual content to share.

So, what makes a captivating Pin?

  • Vertical imagery. Data shows 82% of users browse Pinterest on mobile. Shoot for a 2:3 aspect ratio to avoid ending up with awkwardly cropped images.
  • Consider your image and video quality. You want to avoid pixelation, so aim for the highest quality image and video that Pinterest recommends.
  • Descriptive copy. Good descriptions can help you improve SEO, add context to your images, and encourage users to click on links.
  • Text overlay. Consider including a headline that reinforces your visual message.
  • Tasteful branding. If it makes sense for your brand and corresponds to your Pinterest marketing strategy, incorporate your logo in your Pins so your brand doesn’t get lost in the Repin shuffle.
  • Make sure your links work. Broken links won’t help your brand! Make sure the link with your Pin won’t go to a 404 and that it loads quickly to give Pinners the best user experience.

Finally, be consistent! Consistent, daily Pinning is more effective than creating a board and filling it up at once. And Pinning regularly ensures your content will reach a wider audience.

Using Hootsuite to schedule Pins will help your brand stay on top of your content calendar. (Learn more about how to use Pinterest with Hootsuite below.)

3. Try different Pin formats

Pinterest is an image-sharing platform, but it’s not just about photos.

Mix it up! Pin a video encouraging Pinners to shop at your e-commerce store or try adding multiple photos to a Pin to create a carousel.

For example, Nike uses video to promote its products:

And carousels to show a variety of products in one Pin:

But even though 80% of Pinners discover a new brand or product on Pinterest, think beyond shopping and explicitly promoting your brand.

Pinners also come to the platform for inspiration, with 85% of Pinners saying they come to Pinterest to start a new project. Consider also posting how-to Pins or inspiration boards to provide your audience with fun and valuable content.

For example, Nespresso pins step-by-step content to engage Pinners with its brand:

4. Carefully plan your boards

As 97% of Pinterest searches are unbranded, your brand’s boards can help reach new Pinners interested in specific topics or learning specific things.

For example, Oreo’s boards include Pins with inspiration for upcoming seasonal holidays — like its Spooky Sweet Halloween board and Holidays with Oreo board — as well as recipe ideas, like its Oreo Cupcakes and Oreo Cookie Balls board.

In other words, the brand skillfully mixes useful, engaging and inspiring content boards with boards that are more promotional:

PS: Looking to create content for your own Halloween board? Browse our collection of real Halloween social media post examples.

And Aveeno has boards for their own products, like Aveeno Body and Sun Care boards:

But the brand also has other boards, like the Earth Day board that includes Pins indirectly showcasing the brand while showing an understanding of what their audience values and supports.

5. Optimize your Pins for SEO

Pinterest is a search engine, so make sure your business’s Pins are easy to find in a search! Include keywords in your Pins’ descriptions, on boards and in hashtags.

Rich Pins, designed to pin new content from your business’s website while avoiding duplicate content will also boost your brand’s Pinterest SEO.

Find more SEO tips — and the top 100 Pinterest keywords— in this article.

6. Try out different Pinterest ads

Another effective way to market your business on Pinterest is with ads. Pinterest allows advertisers to target ads around keywords, interests, location, age and other metrics and categories.

And detailed audience targeting lets advertisers reach specific groups of Pinterest users, including:

  • People who have visited your website.
  • People who have engaged with your Pins.
  • People who have engaged with similar content on the platform.
  • A custom list, such as your newsletter subscribers.

From video ads to collections to promoted Pins, there is a range of ad types available on Pinterest. Learn everything you need to know about Pinterest advertising here.

7. Track the metrics

A successful Pinterest marketing strategy is data-driven. In other words, tracking, measuring and analyzing key Pinterest metrics and audience behavior helps social media managers see what content performs best and what content is a little less engaging.

We let you know which metrics you should be tracking and which tools you can use to monitor them here.

8. Promote your Pinterest profile

Finally, make sure your loyal followers from other platforms know you’re also active on Pinterest. Promote your Pinterest profile:

  • By linking to your Pinterest profile on your company website.
  • Including the link in your email signature.
  • Cross-promoting your Pinterest business account on your business’s other social channels.
  • Sharing the news of the Pinterest profile in a company newsletter.

How to set up a Pinterest business account

When using Pinterest for business, you want to make sure you’ve created a Pinterest business account and aren’t just using a personal account. That’s because a business account allows your brand to:

  • Access analytics to monitor and measure your Pinterest marketing strategy.
  • Run a wide variety of Pinterest ads.
  • Set up a Shop tab.

Here, we walk you through the steps to setting up your brand’s Pinterest business account.

How to set up an account if you’ve never used Pinterest before

Step 1: Start by creating a new account

Go to pinterest.com and click Sign up.

Step 2: Navigate to the bottom of the pop-up

And click Get started here!

Step 3: Fill in your details

Add your professional email and your age, and create a secure password. Make sure the email you’re adding isn’t connected to any other Pinterest account. Then, click Create account.

Step 4: Fill out the fields to build your business profile

You’ll be asked to add your business’s name, language and location. Then, click Next.

Step 5: Describe your business

Choose the description that best fits what your business does and add a link to your website.

Now you’re ready to start Pinning and running ads!

How to set up an account if you have a private Pinterest profile

Step 1: Log into your personal Pinterest account and navigate to Settings

Get here by clicking on the last button (a simple arrow icon) in the top right hand menu. This opens a drop-down menu. Then, click Settings.

Step 2: Select Account Settings in the left hand menu

Step 3: Scroll down to Account Changes

And click Convert account under the Convert to a business account section.

Step 4: Fill out your business information

You’ll be asked to add your business’s name, language and location. You’ll also choose the description that best fits what your business does and add a link to your website.

Another option is to link a Pinterest business account to your already-existing personal account. To do that, simply click Add an account after navigating to settings while logged into your personal account:

Click Create under Create a free business account:

After creating a linked Pinterest business account, follow the same steps as above: add your business’s name, language, location, business description and a link to your website.

Whichever method is right for your brand, once you’re set up with a Pinterest business account, you’re ready to start marketing on Pinterest!

Important Pinterest for business terms you should know

Like every social media site, Pinterest has its own lingo you should familiarize yourself with to set yourself up for success. To help you out, here’s a glossary.

Pins and Pin formats

Pinner

LinkedIn has members. Snapchat users are Snapchatters. And Pinterest has Pinners. In other words, a Pinner is the branded term for a person who uses Pinterest.

Pins

A Pin is a primary post published on Pinterest. Pins include images or videos and can link back to an original source, much like a website bookmark.

Promoted Pins

Promoted Pins are a kind of Pinterest ad. They are Pins that companies have paid to promote so that more Pinners are likely to see them. These Pins appear in the home feed, category feed and search results, and include a “Promoted” label.

Promoted video Pins, carousels, and app Pins are also available. Learn more about Pinterest ad options here.

Repins

Think of a Repin as a share on Facebook or a Retweet on Twitter. A Repin is when someone Pins a post they like (but that they didn’t create) to one of their boards.

Rich Pins

Rich Pins automatically pull more information from your website to the Pin. The point is to provide more information, such as product availability and up-to-date pricing. Rich Pins are available in three formats: Product Rich Pins, Recipe Rich Pins and Article Rich Pins.

Video Pins

These are much like regular Pins, but instead of a static photo, they feature a video that loops.

Carousel Pins

Instead of just one image, carousel Pins feature multiple images. Up to five images can be added to a carousel Pin.

Collections Pins

This Pin format makes it easier for Pinners to shop for similar products. When a Pinner clicks on the magnifying glass in the bottom right corner of a Collections Pin, white dots will appear.

Idea Pins

This is a new Pin format that isn’t widely available yet. Idea Pins can be used to promote your brand in a new way, by customizing the colors and fonts in your Pin, creating step-by-step guides or curating collections.

Try on product Pins

This is another new Pin format that isn’t widely available yet. Try on Pins use augmented reality (AR filters), allowing Pinners to virtually “try on” products they see on Pinterest using the Pinterest Lens.

Boards and Board types

Boards

Think of Pinterest boards as digital mood boards. Use boards to save, collect and organize your Pins. Many use boards to group Pins according to a certain theme or topic. For example, you might create a board around the planning of a product launch event, for seasonal content, or for wedding inspiration.

Group boards

Group boards are the same as regular boards, except more than one person can add content. This format is ideal for marketers looking to share ideas or plans with their team, as anyone can contribute.

Secret boards

A secret board can only be seen by its creator and invited collaborators. When you create one, you’ll see a lock symbol beside the board name. These are useful for planning you don’t want to be public — secret boards won’t appear in the home feed, in search, or anywhere publicly on Pinterest.

Protected boards

Similar to secret boards, protected boards live at the bottom of your Pinterest profile and only you can see them. However, the Pins on these protected boards can be seen across Pinterest if a Pinner has a direct link.

General Pinterest terms

Audience Insights

Pinterest business accounts have access to important metrics and analytics via Audience Insights. Learn more about how to use Pinterest analytics and what platform-specific metrics you should be tracking.

Pinterest Lens

This augmented reality tool is available on mobile devices only. Pinterest Lens is a camera tool that lets users take a picture of something — like a product or a Pincode — and then they can find related content on Pinterest.

Pincodes

Pincodes are essentially QR codes. These codes can be placed on hard copies of marketing material (like a business card or a press release) and scanned using Pinterest Lens — the codes then link back to a Pinterest board or profile.

How to use Pinterest with Hootsuite

Hootsuite allows you to streamline your Pinterest marketing efforts, work on social media marketing as a team and handle all of your social accounts (across platforms) from one dashboard.

Here’s how Hootsuite’s integration with Pinterest can help you save time and effortlessly add Pinterest to your social media strategy.

How Hootsuite can help your Pinterest marketing strategy
Using Pinterest will help you and your business by:

  • Saving time. Hootsuite allows you to create and schedule Pins. You can also post the content to multiple accounts at the same time.
  • Improving teamwork. With Hootsuite, you can make sure that content is created consistently, regardless of which team member is doing the work. Do this by setting up an approval workflow in Hootsuite and using the dashboard’s collaboration tools.
  • Making it easier to manage multiple channels. The scheduling feature ensures your Pinterest marketing strategy aligns seamlessly with all of the other social platforms your brand is using including Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and Twitter.

How to start using Pinterest with Hootsuite

Step 1: Connect your Pinterest business account to Hootsuite

Make sure you’re logged into your Pinterest business account. Then, click Add social network:

Select Pinterest as the network you want to add to Hootsuite:

And authorize it by clicking Give access.

Step 2: Create your first post

Hover over the Composer icon and select Pin.

Step 3: Select a board for your Pin

You don’t have to pick just one — you publish the Pin to multiple boards.

Step 4: Upload your media files

Upload your image (and edit it, if you’d like), add a link to the website and type any text for additional context about your Pin.

Step 5: Pick a time for the Pin to be published

Click Post now to publish the Pin immediately. Or, click on the arrow for more publishing options:

Step 6: When scheduling for later, select your publishing day and time

Then, click Done.

For more information on how to publish posts to Pinterest using Hootsuite, check out this video:

Save time managing your Pinterest presence using Hootsuite. From a single dashboard, you can compose, schedule and publish Pins, create new boards, Pin to multiple boards at once, and run all your other social media profiles. Try it free today.

Get Started

Schedule Pins and track their performance alongside your other social networks—all in the same easy-to-use dashboard.

If you’re not using Pinterest to market your products or services, you’re missing out – and so are your potential customers. With a visual-first format, Pinterest draws in viewers and sparks a desire to learn more. Not only that, many Pinterest users are there specifically to look for products and services – with 85 percent of users making a purchase because of the site, according to Pinterest – offering a great opportunity to find new customers that your traditional marketing channels may not reach.

Before you sign up and start pinning, here’s everything you need to know about using Pinterest for your business.

Pinterest basics

On Pinterest, users share and save content to virtual collections called boards. Most of the 450 million Pinterest members are female (more than 76 percent, according to Statista). While you can find just about anything on Pinterest – the website’s categories include everything from art to technology – it’s known as a hub for craft projects, recipes, fashion, home decor and health-related information.

If you want to use Pinterest to promote your small business, it’s important to sign up for a business account. Pinterest business accounts, which are free, give you access to sales-minded features such as analytics. If you already have a personal account, you can convert it to business or just create a new account.

Pinterest terminology

  • Pins: All content shared on Pinterest is a pin – i.e., ideas to inspire you. When you click on a pin, it links to a website.
  • Pincodes: Sort of like QR codes, Pincodes are special codes you can create to unlock your business’s curated boards and profile on Pinterest. Users can enter the code to be taken directly to your suggested boards.
  • Pinners: This is what Pinterest calls its users.
  • Boards: Sort of like visual bookmarks or digital bulletin boards, boards are how you organize your pins.
  • Group boards: A group board is a collaborative board owned by one user. Owners can add other users to contribute to the board. You can ask to join a group board, but the board’s owner has to send you an invite.
  • Archived boards: You can archive a board you no longer use but don’t want to delete. Archived boards won’t show up on your profile, and you’ll stop seeing suggestions related to the board. For example, you can opt-out of seeing wedding dresses after the big day has passed.
  • Feed: Similar to a Facebook or Twitter feed, this is a group of pins from people you follow or what Pinterest thinks you’d be interested in.
  • Hashtags on Pinterest: Hashtags on Pinterest work like they do on other social media platforms, like Instagram: They make it easy for other pinners to find your pins and relevant content.
  • Lens: This feature in the Pinterest app uses your smartphone’s camera to suggest pins based on the pictures you take. For example, if you snap a picture of a product, it’ll show you similar products. You can choose to “explore” similar pins or choose “shop” to click to pins that are tied to an online store.
  • Comments: You can add comments to other users’ pins.
  • Save: When you click on a pin, you have the option to save, send or hide. When you save, you pin it to one of your boards.
  • Sending pins: You can send pins to other users or non-Pinterest users in private messages.
  • Tagging: You can tag other users using the @ symbol.
  • Messages: You can send private messages to other Pinterest users.

Tip

Tip

To make the most of Pinterest, familiarize yourself with its terms, such as pins, boards, lens and tagging.

Why your business should use Pinterest

Pinterest can benefit your business in a variety of ways. These are some of them:

Large user base

Pinterest is the seventh most popular social media platform in the U.S., with more than 39 percent of American adults using the platform, according to Oberlo. Using it can open your business to millions of new customers. 

Visual platform

Pinterest is a great place to display your business visually. It’s also the only social media platform that currently supports visual search, so it’s a good idea to jump on this trend early.

Commercial activity

Consumers often use Pinterest to determine whether they want to make a purchase or to browse their options. And Pinterest makes it easy to go straight from exploring and searching to outright shopping.

Customer insights

Front and center in the business portal, you’ll find the Pinterest Insights hub. This is a great resource for seeing what’s currently trending and what’s predicted, as well as information on who the overall Pinterest audience is.

Brand exposure

Pinterest can boost your exposure to new customers, with a majority of users reporting that they discover new brands and products through Pinterest every week.

FYI

Did you know

The use of Pinterest for your business can expose your brand to a wider audience and influence your customers’ buying decisions.

How to create a Pinterest profile

There are three main ways to create a Pinterest account: You can add a business profile to an existing personal account, convert your personal account to a business account or create a business account from scratch. Here’s how to create a profile, step by step:

1. Go to Pinterest.com/business/create.

If you already have a personal account, you’ll need to log out of it first. Enter your email and password. It’s a good idea to use a business email here to help differentiate your accounts. Click “create account.”


Source: Pinterest

2. Enter your business or brand name and add a link to your website.

Then, choose your language and location.

Source: Pinterest

3. Describe your business.

 Enter a few details to help Pinterest customize your recommendations based on your business.

Source: Pinterest

4. Determine if you want to run advertisements on Pinterest.

You can always change this preference later, and you can also include your contact information so that a Pinterest ads rep can reach out to you.

5. Choose a starting point.

At this point, you can continue to build out your profile or create your first pin or ad. 

Share ideas

Jump straight into creating your first pin to tell your brand story.

Grow your audience

Create an ad to reach more people right away.

Showcase your brand

Build your profile by adding a profile and a cover picture, location and more.

6. Claim your website analytics.

From your profile page, select Settings from the right-side arrow drop-down menu. On the Settings page, choose “Claimed accounts” from the menu on the left. On the next page, you can claim your website and install the free Pinterest app if you use Shopify.

Source: Pinterest

7. Start creating and pinning.

Now that you have set up your account, you can start creating boards and adding pins.

How to create boards, add pins and follow other users

From your profile page, click the “Create” drop-down menu in the upper-left corner. You can choose to create a pin or an idea pin. Idea pins used to be called “Story pins,” and they typically provide all the information you need to make a recipe or try a creator’s idea. The screenshot below shows the process for creating a regular pin.

Source: Pinterest

The drop-down “Select” menu lets you add a pin to an existing board or create a new one. If you use the Chrome browser, you can get an extension that allows you to pin right from a website.

In the Pinterest mobile app, you can now use your phone’s camera to find ideas. You simply open the app and point the camera at anything you’re interested in. The app will return with suggestions for similar things you might want to pin. For now, the company says this function is best at home decor ideas, clothing and food.

Key Takeaway

Key takeaway

There are seven main steps to getting up and running on Pinterest. You can create a business account from scratch or convert your personal account.

How to use Pinterest for business

1. Share creative, inspiring and actionable pins.

Pinterest is, first and foremost, a website for sharing pictures and inspiring ideas. If you want to succeed on Pinterest, you need to create and share visually pleasing and engaging pins. According to Pinterest, the most successful pins catch people’s attention and make them want to learn more. Great pins are typically vertical and show how to use a product or service.

2. Look at trending topics and keywords.

Trends on Pinterest can help you decide what content to pin or what your next product should be. For example, if you see that DIY projects are trending, that would be a good time to find and share DIY content that relates to your business, making your business more discoverable on Pinterest.

Content marketing consultant Camilla Hallstrom suggests using trending keywords to determine what type of content to create.

“Find relevant keywords by typing in a keyword in the search bar and checking the keyword suggestions you see right below the search bar,” she said. “Then, include those keywords in your titles and descriptions.”

3. Advertise on Pinterest.

Pinterest ads, or Promoted Pins, look like regular pins. The only difference is that you’re paying for your pins to be seen by more people.

“You can use geographic targeting so your ad will only be shown to people in your specified area,” said Marc Andre, blog manager and content strategist at Vandelay Design. “Depending on the topic and keywords used, Pinterest advertising can be pretty affordable … Some users will see your ad and re-pin it, and you’ll get that additional exposure from their re-pin without paying for it.”

Promoted Pins can have a snowball effect that drives more visibility to your pin than you’re paying for. It’s important to make Promoted Pins look helpful and like a regular pin, said Andre.

Source: Rakuten / Pinterest4. 

4. Study Pinterest Analytics.

Pinterest Analytics gives you information about those viewing your page and pins. You can learn your audience demographics, the devices your visitors use and your most popular pins. You can also see data on your profile’s average daily impressions and viewers, your average monthly viewers, and average monthly engagements.

5. Add the Save button to your website.

Have you ever gone to a website, hovered over an image and seen a red Pinterest button pop up? That’s the Pinterest Save button, and it allows Pinterest users to pin your content to their boards directly from your website. Adding the Save button to your website makes it simpler to share your content, meaning more people are likely to do it.

6. Create fun, unique content.

There are many ways you can create fun and unique content while promoting your brand:

  • Create gift guides. For holidays or other occasions, create a new board that can be used as a gift guide. Include products from other brands as well as your own so it doesn’t look like one giant advertisement for your business. 
  • Show off playlists. You’re not limited to pinning images. Try pinning music videos from YouTube to create a playlist board. With a huge fitness community on Pinterest, for example, this could be a good way for fitness-related companies to stray from the norm of sharing workout guides and exercise gear.
  • Make a reading list. Save thoughtful articles and books related to your business with Pinterest by creating boards of all the good reads you think your customers would be interested in. You can also create secret boards with all the articles and books you’re dying to read in your spare time so they don’t get lost or forgotten in your bookmarks folder.
  • Do giveaways. If you’re holding a contest or promotion, pin it to the relevant boards on your Pinterest page.

7. Use rich Pins.

Rich Pins are special pins that make using the platform more straightforward and seamless. These pins include information beyond the image, click-through link and pinner’s description. Perhaps best of all, these pins, if they’re linked to your website, update automatically when your website changes. Currently, there are three types of rich Pins:

  • Article pins: Article pins make it so users can automatically see the article’s headline, author and story description, making them much more searchable and distinguishing them from other content on the platform.
  • Product pins: Product pins make shopping on Pinterest a lot easier. They show where the product you’re pinning can be purchased, the current price and a direct link to the product page. Product pins’ prices update in real time.
  • Recipe pins: Unlike a regular pin, which would show an image and a description that the pinner manually enters, these recipe-specific rich Pins show important information such as ingredients, cooking times and serving sizes.

You can find out more about rich Pins on Pinterest’s rich Pins page.

8. Participate in and create group boards.

A group board is a collaborative board owned by one person who can add others to contribute to it. This is a great resource if you’re planning a big event or working on a project, because multiple people can look at the board and pin ideas.

It’s also an easy way to get your pins in front of a lot of people, because more people typically follow group boards. The board owner’s audience sees the boards along with any of the collaborators’ followers.

“I write relevant blog posts with valuable content, create attractive pins with compelling headlines and pin them to the relevant boards on my profile as well as larger group boards with tens of thousands of followers,” said Kristin Marquet, founder and creative director of FemFounder.

9. Think of Pinterest as a search engine.

While Pinterest is a social media platform, it has a powerful search function. Many people go on the site to look for something in particular.

“When people are using Pinterest, they are often actively typing in searches to find what they’re looking for,” said Brian Wulfe, founder and CEO of Effective Spend. “On traditional social media, on the other hand, the audience is passively browsing the site.”

Since Pinterest is similar to a search engine, it’s important to properly label and categorize each pin and board.

Maximize the impact of Pinterest for business

Pinterest is a great vehicle for showcasing visuals of products and services and linking those back to your business. And Pinterest makes it easy for even small businesses to get started. Utilize its Help Center, analytics, trend reports and more to make sure you’re creating the right content to draw in and convert viewers to customers.

Jessica Pooree and Kiely Kuligowski contributed to this

5 Reasons Why Your Business Needs construction pin?

Everything Your Business Needs to Know About Pinterest