Join hosts Jesse and Rich who talk with Kim Sutton from Positive Productivity podcast. The episode covers the ins and outs of Pinterest marketing, explaining how to use pins and boards to attract traffic to your store without even spending a cent. Bonus: download Kimās Pinterest checklist for entrepreneurs — a special gift for all 51ŹÓʵ listeners!
Show notes
- Introduction to Pinterest
- Vertical Images (Pins, Boards)
- Repinning and curating
- and
- Catalogs, Pixels, and Shoppable Pins
- Kimās gift for all 51ŹÓʵ listeners: The
Soul-Centered Entrepreneurās Pinterest Checklist
Transcript
Jesse: Happy Friday, Rich!
Richard: Whatās going on, Jess? How are you doing?
Jesse: Iām doing well.
Richard: That day again! Here we go.
Jesse: Yeah. Itās a good day. Towards the dog days of summer here in San Diego.
Richard: I hope our Happy Friday carries on to people. Whatever day youāre here in this. It always feels weird because we do it live and weāre here, and itās live now if youāre listening to the studio, but we know people listen anyway. So hopefully if itās Monday, if itās Tuesday, if itās Sunday night and youāre fired up, and youāre feeling it like itās Friday.
Jesse: I think so. I think people are in the spirit of letās start building this business because I donāt want to go to work on Monday. Maybe something like that. I donāt know. (laughing)
Richard: Unless itās for your
Jesse: Yes. Thatās the dream there. Awesome. Rich, we talked about this with several other podcasts, but basically, we do this to help people with
Richard: Yeah, weāre
Jesse: Yeah, total nerds. I donāt know if we should get a
Richard: Someone will buy it. Thereās a few of us out there because itās growing. Yeah. Iām actually really excited about todayās guest too because weāve covered a lot of stuff. Weāve covered 51ŹÓʵ itself and a lot of the functionality backward. Weāve brought in 51ŹÓʵ users and spotlighted their stories and their stores. Weāve talked about almost every single social platform, but weāve never really⦠I canāt remember us actually bringing this one up. I donāt even know if this word has come up.
Jesse: Maybe it has, but yeah. To that point, weāre all about trying to help you find the right way to market your business. And Iām going to go have an admission here to make publicly⦠I never mentioned this before, but I really love Pinterest. I think itās pretty cool.
Richard: Are you coming out? (laughing)
Jesse: Iām coming out as a Pinterest fan. Everybody, thatās public. Todayās August 2nd or something like that. So, yes, a Pinterest fan, thereās a lot of reasons why I love it. And I think other people will, too. But instead of just me and Rich talking about it here, letās bring on our expert here, Kim Sutton from Positive Productivity. Howās it going, Kim?
Kim: Oh, itās going great. Iām over here laughing that you love Pinterest because you are actually part of a growing demographic. So I love to hear it.
Jesse: Thatās good. Yeah. Thereās this idea that Pinterest is only for Midwestern moms, right? Thatās the old idea. But Iām not a Midwestern mom. And, I think Pinterest is awesome.
Richard: But maybe thatās why Kim is so good at it, not trying to pigeonhole people but Kim, arenāt you in the Midwest?
Kim: You are so right. Who do people think Pinterest is for? They think itās for moms. Midwestern moms who are looking for clothes, crafts, and recipes. But I burn every meal I try to cook. So I just donāt cook anymore. My husband does all that. I hate shopping for clothes. OK. Sorry to all the
Richard: Weāre breaking all the stereotypes here. This is great. Jesseās coming out. This is awesome.
Jesse: Iām a man who loves Pinterest. Youāre a Midwestern mom who doesnāt cook or shop for clothes. Thatās great. (laughing)
Kim: Yes, absolutely. No, that does not mean I donāt shop for clothes. I do not operate my business without clothes. But, yeah, I still love it. Itās the number one driver to my business and to a lot of my clientsā businesses.
Jesse: Huh. Well, now weāre getting some golden nuggets there. So Pinterest is the number one driver of traffic to your business.
Kim: Absolutely.
Jesse: Awesome.
Richard: Wow. Thatās like the quotable, twittable, Instagram
Jesse: Yeah, we will. But you just added like another 15 seconds to it. So we have to cut that part out too. (laughing) All right. You get all this traffic from Pinterest. Letās back up for people that are like, OK, I kind of heard a Pinterest. What is Pinterest? I guess that would be the question.
Kim: Well, I think we need to start by saying that what it is not, which is it is not a social media platform. And I think thatās where a lot of people get confused. Itās a search engine. And Google is getting increasingly concerned about the amount of search traffic that Pinterest is sending to sites now because itās actually taking. Googleās keeping an eye on what Pinterest is doing because people go into Pinterest to search for stuff, not to interact with people.
Richard: Iām going to take a little analogy, and I donāt know this to be true, but in the comment, you made there. This could be very similar to people who were on Facebook, and they started to get increasingly concerned that a bunch of people was doing the number one thing people did on Facebook in this little platform back then called Instagram. And so Facebook was watching them. Again, we donāt know. I donāt work at Google. You donāt work at Google. But I wouldnāt be surprised that that could potentially eventually be it. An amazing acquisition for them if they ever wanted to buy something in the space. Because it sounds like to your point there since Google is a search engine and they own the second biggest one, too, and YouTube, which is another search engine. This could be a perfect fit for someone like that. Weāre not going to go down that rabbit hole but to your point there. Itās not where people go and Hey, how you do and whatās going on? Hereās my puppy. They still might put a picture of their puppy, but maybe itās because they got puppy clothes on it. They are selling puppy clothes, or they got dog food that they make for puppies. Itās just a really interesting comment you made there. That search is really what Pinterest is. Search a visual platform, which is a visual platform search. Would you say that?
Kim: Oh, absolutely. Itās todayās equivalent to the bulletin board or the vision board of 30 years ago. And while a lot of us might still have vision boards and bulletin boards, this was the place that people could go and virtually pin the things that they really liked to one place and then share those boards with other people. And then it just grew and grew and grew to what it is today.
Jesse: And itās still growing.
Kim: Oh, absolutely.
Jesse: So if people have been slipping on Pinterest like maybe youāve seen it before, youāve seen somebody scrolling through on their phone. Pinterest has got a lot of action right now. Something that Iāve noticed, too. And for other people in the
Richard: Itās a good point, Jesse. I was thinking about this the other day. The way Tricia, my wife, uses Pinterest is unlike maybe Google, where theyāre doing a search, and they want to buy right then. This has a combination of they could buy right then. But thereās almost an element to Kimās statement earlier of this vision board or this planning board, where itās the things youāre maybe planning to buy. So youāre pinning it. When you come back, and you want to make that purchase later, youāre like, Oh, Iām going back, and Iām going back to that pin. And that could be one of the reasons why thatās so valuable. Have you noticed something like that, Kim, or know anything about that?
Kim: Well, I just want to give a personal example if thatās OK. I have a dream house that I will build someday. And Iāve been saving pins to my dream house board for five years now because I do intend to go back. And Iāve already shared it with, I was an interior architect in my previous life. I probably shared it with the architect that I will be working with because I want him to see it and his vision as well. But just see, you have an idea. Two million pins are saved to boards every single day that are shopping pins.
Jesse: Wow! OK.
Richard: Wow!
Jesse: Shopping pins, remember? Intent
Richard: Two million a day.
Jesse: So two million shopping pins. That means these are pins of essential products. That means itās not just a look at this shot of the beach. This is a picture, a pin of a product that they can buy reasonably easy from this pinboard.
Kim: Absolutely.
Jesse: All right. How come we havenāt done a Pinterest podcast, Rich?
Richard: We didnāt have Kim yet.
Jesse: OK. Thatās true. All right.
Richard: Well, there are some new things coming along with 51ŹÓʵ too, so that itās timely as well. But if we go back to the 101, youāre saying itās a search, youāre saying itās a visual search, back to the vision board and things that youāre planning to do.
Jesse: I think itās almost like a combo of Google and Instagram together, itās visual, and you can follow people, but it usually starts with a search and then people get down a rabbit hole of looking at different things.
Richard: What are some of the things that people actually do there? Since you say, itās not social, but you are finding other peopleās pins like there is a form of a social element to it. If someone had never heard of Pinterest, what should they expect when they get on Pinterest a lot?
Kim: Vertical images. And I think when we look at social media separate from Pinterest, we see a lot of squares, but on Pinterest, we see a lot of really tall vertical images which really highlight the subject that weāre either talking about or promoting. The skyscraper images, but what you can expect is it starts to aggregate. When you go into Pinterest, it starts to notice what you really like, and it puts it in front of your face more as do a lot of different platforms. YouTube does that when it starts to see what you like to watch. It will start putting more of that in front of you. But what a lot of users have done is set up different boards where they make collections of images that tend to be all around one topic. Š”an I just give an example?
Richard: Of course, weād love an example.
Kim: Letās just say thereās an
Jesse: Weāve had on our recent podcast here, our example has been a pancake spatula. If youāre selling pancake spatulas, you could have a pinboard for pancake recipes and spatulas and one for spatula techniques. I donāt know. Is that thingā¦
Richard: Certain pancake pans.
Jesse: Yeah, absolutely. And you can get in super niche areas where the people that are gonna follow that board, they really feel, they really enjoy pancakes, and theyāre likely a customer of yours. And you can apply that to your specific niche.
Kim: Absolutely. You touched on a really good point there without even knowing it. I donāt know, or maybe you did know it. But even when youāre just talking about pancakes, you could have separate boards, one for pancake pans, but another one for pancake art because people are⦠Iāve seen some great pancake artists who make these elaborate designs on their pancakes. But that would inspire people to buy the extra apparatus that it would take to make the pancake art.
Richard: Iāve never really thought about this. But something in your comments made me think about it. Is there a way⦠we donāt have to get into the actually explaining how to, I just want to know yes or no at this point in time with Pinterest. Is there a way to relatively easy make one picture go on multiple boards? Say, you have this pancake art and could it be on a unique artboard. Itās a thing you can make with this pinboard. I know this is a crazy analogy, but I was just wrong with that pancake spatula thing for a second. But can you make one picture relatively easy go to multiple boards?
Kim: Absolutely. And thereās the easy way. And itās not so easy way, but itās still easy. You can repin manually to as many different boards as you want to. Or there are tools. Iām just going to throw out Tailwind here that can do that for you. You just tell it which boards you want that pin repin to. And whatās great about that is that every time you repin, your followers are seeing it again. They may not have seen it the first time. I know youāve talked about Twitter before, I think, but the average time spent on Pinterest purposes is 14.2 minutes. If itās not that the pinās seen in the last 14.2 minutes, youāre going to want to make sure that youāre shuffling it into the feed again and again and again.
Richard: That is super interesting because Iāve thought about that. The lifespan is short, but itās still potentially long. Based on what you just stated. Like a tweet, it comes, and it goes. But since itās a search engine also, it could come up via search. It could come up via this repin. But to bring back and tie together why I made that comment. Think you sell clothes and you sell kidsā clothes. And hereās a kidās blue shirt. This could be under blue kidsā clothes. This could be under childrenās clothes. This could be under just blue shirts, right? It could be in all these places. And then if you use a tool like youāre referring to Tailwind or Iām sure there are various tools out there, and then you start repinning this as people are searching for those things. Now they have multiple locations, multiple data points⦠I guess different data points is fine. Say multiple places they can go to find this. How do you recommend someone actually gets started? Say, theyāre just getting rolling. Is it pretty easy to set up with another platform? Or you set up with an email, how do you get started?
Kim: The first step is to register for an account with your business. And I do recommend making it a business account which is free. You would sign up with a perk for a personal account first and then upgraded to a business account. Itās only a couple of steps. But the reason why I would do that is that you can see all the analytics. See which boards are performing best, see which pins are performing best, because as in any case in our business, we want to know whatās performing the best. We donāt want to pin more of them. And then the second step that I would really recommend is creating some type of strategy for what the most important boards should be. Now, there are profiles out there that may only have five boards. Thatās great. I personally have 100 boards. I am not saying it in any way that you need 100 boards, but itās really great to know from the start what youāre gonna have so that you can start creating the content and even sourcing other peopleās content to go into your boards.
Richard: So that leads to another question. How does that work when you see something you like on someone elseās board or another pin, but you think it fits your board or fits your vision or itās something youād like to. Is there a reason that that would be good for you to pin to your board? Other than the obvious, it inspires you visually, or itās something you want to get later. Would there be a reason as a business you would want to pin somebody elseās things on your board?
Kim: Absolutely. Because the person whose pin you just repinned will get a notification that you pinned it to your board. Theyāll come over, see what youāre doing, and they may follow you. They might start pinning your stuff. And the moment they follow you, your pins are going to start showing up in their feet.
Jesse: Rich, I have a couple of different business accounts. And yeah, I get pinned all the time, people repin your stuff, and I havenāt done anything in a while. These are pins that I have maybe made⦠I donāt know like a year ago, and thereās still interest in there. People keep pinning them all over the place.
Richard: What about if⦠you guys weāre talking about, and you both know more about Pinterest, an idea. Thatās not the place I play yet. Weāll see. Maybe Jesse can convert me. (laughing) Say someone had a shoppable pin, and then you like it and you repin it. Am I now also driving traffic towards their site?
Kim: When you repin it now your audience sees it as well. Itās almost like a Facebook share. If you shared a piece of my content, now all of your friends or followers see my content now to. Which is fabulous.
Richard: What if itās shoppable though, say you have something that goes directly to one of your product pages, and someone else pins it, and they pin it. Will that pin that they just pinned lead back to your product?
Kim: Absolutely. The link carries as many times as itās repinned.
Richard: Wow. Thatās awesome.
Jesse: Yeah. Thatās why Iām excited about Pinterest. A lot of the things we talk about, you create all this content, and then it disappears. With Pinterest, it does live on for a bit. You do this work, and with Pinterest, you have to build more of a skyscraper image. Thatās a little bit of work there. But it does tend to live on way, way longer. And there we use shoppable all the time for other platforms. This is more of a rich pin, rich shopping pin. At the end of the day, it leads back to your store, so people can buy. Thatās why itās also so awesome for
Kim: The pins that are sending the most traffic to my site — just to inspire people — our blog articles from
Jesse: Yeah. You wrote this. You did the work for these blogs years ago. Then you made the pins, which⦠OK, letās ask that question. You did a blog post. You do all the stuff on your blog. Now, you made a pin for that blog post. How long does that take?
Kim: Five minutes tops in Canva.
Jesse: Okay. Good. Canva.com for everybody, which referenced many times, if you want to make a quick pin, go to Canva. Itās five minutes. And now youāre still getting traffic. Now six years later here, youāre still getting traffic from that pin in that blog post.
Kim: I am. And this might inspire you too, Jesse, but Iām even pinning all of my own podcast episodes now, and itās driving traffic to my podcast episodes.
Jesse: Okay. Love it. Love the hot tip there on the podcast. Unfortunately, I have a new job to do. But yes. And 51ŹÓʵ does have, we are trying to stay active on Pinterest as well. There are some Pinterest boards. Shout out to Karina, whoās managing it. Weāve got to get the podcast there now, too. You can also put a video there. We put some of our recent videos in there, the videos of Tim and me, by the way, Timās the star. All right. I could go a lot of different directions with this. Letās try to bring it back to the people that have heard of Pinterest, have heard of Pinterest and are doing a little bit of stuff on Instagram and Facebook and all this stuff. For them to get started, itās really maybe adopting a similar strategy, but applying it on Pinterest with a new image? Would that be a fair place to start or should they put a little more thought into it before they start their first pinboards?
Kim: A little bit more thought, but not a lot is necessary. I just want to make a one really important point, that because Pinterest is a search engine, you want to make sure that you are naming your graphic appropriately because itās not just looking at the title of your pin. When you upload an image, you give it a title on Pinterest, but you also want to make sure that when you saved a file in Canva or to your computer, that youāre giving it a great name.
Jesse: All right, guys, thatās another like back to SEO 101 there. So pancake spatula. If youāre here making your pancake spatula pin, you name the file
Richard: You do know now that we transcribe this. And weāve talked about this enough time. You do know weāre almost mandating that weāre gonna have to create a pancake spatula site.
Jesse: Yeah, I think weāre going to own the keyword pancake spatula, and no one will be able to start a store because weāre just gonna blow everybody off the water with this and we donāt sell them. (laughing)
Richard: Yet.
Jesse: Yet, got it. So naming is a very important thing. Organic pinboards. Is it important for somebody thatās getting started to start pinning from other boards right away? Or how do they start getting interest to their pinboards?
Kim: Pinterest places more favor and more weight on boards that have at least 10 pins on them. Even if you donāt pin them all in one straight shot, if you use a scheduling tool, make sure that youāre scheduling 10 pins to go on that board as soon as possible. Now, another point for your boards is also to make sure that youāre naming your boards appropriately. Iāve seen so many boards, they have cutesy names. Letās just use pancake spatula here. Donāt name it pancake flippers, funny pancake flippers or something that people wouldnāt be searching for, which they could definitely be looking for that. But make it pretty obvious because if people are searching for pancake special, your board is going to come up closer to the top of the search results, if you named the board appropriately. Thereās also a description that you want to think about for your boards. And while the pins themselves will have a place to link back to your site, the boards donāt. So make sure that in the board description you include a link to letās just say the pancake spatula category within your shop.
Richard: Thatās a good point. Youāre thinking category when youāre putting a link on the board. Youāre thinking product page, directly to probably what theyāre looking at in the pin itself. The actual pin.
Kim: Right. Absolutely. For my podcast board, the description for the podcast board sends them back to my overall podcast page. But the podcast pins themselves take them back to their individual episodes.
Richard: Good point. So I have a question. Here we go back thinking of the listener, and theyāre going: Hey, guys, wait a minute, hold on. Remember, this is my side hustle business right now. Iām committed to building this business, but you, Jesse and Rich, you told me about YouTube. You told me about Instagram. I have to be in so many places. Can I repurpose photos Iāve had from somewhere else to get this going or do I have to start whole new photos with?
Kim: You can absolutely repurpose. But when you have time, I would recommend converting them all to tall images rather than square or short and wide. Because the more real estate you can take up on the homepage, the more attention youāre going to get and the more
Jesse: Yeah, and Rich, that was a good point. I think maybe we mentioned it briefly in the intro. But you probably cannot be everywhere all at once. You canāt do fancy YouTube videos, be active on Facebook and Instagram and your store and blah blah like all these things. But for some people, Pinterest is probably the perfect place. And for some people itās YouTube and for some people, Facebook. I donāt want to say you have to do all these, but letās talk about who is Pinterest perfect for? Kim, can you shed some light there? Thereās a ton of recipes, so maybe food, people that sell food would Pinterest might be perfect for. But what are some other niches that would be perfect for Pinterest?
Kim: I donāt know if this is how you want me to answer the question, but I got to be totally honest.
Jesse: Be honest.
Kim: If you have content, if you have blog articles, podcasts, episodes, products for sale in your shop if you have, a blog that shares recipes, any of the above. Pinterest is perfect for you. More and more every single day, more people are registering. Theyāre going there. Theyāre finding infographics, and theyāre embedding them in their own shop. Yes, you have to be careful, thatās not your intellectual property. You need permission to do that. But I go to Pinterest when Iām looking for a great infographic on a specific subject. So if you have content to share, Pinterest is a great place to go.
Richard: Let me clarify just to make sure. Youāre saying donāt go all over the web and then take an infographic and put it on your Pinterest. But if someone has an infographic on Pinterest, youāre more than welcome to repin it.
Kim: You are more than welcome to reprint it. Ask the permission before you reshare it to your site.
Richard: Okay. I just want to clarify. Got it.
Jesse: Never steal stuff online. Youāre just asking for trouble.
Richard: Because some people are saying: Wait, you just said I could repin someone elseās things. So I just wanted to clarify. Youāre talking about going out, finding something somewhere else and bringing it. But if you just see an infographic that you like, youāre more than welcome to repin it on your board. And itās all good. Youāre saying more or less then, I guess it comes back to your comment of itās a search engine. Maybe thatās why people⦠going back to our initial conversation there when we were pigeonholing, or we think the world had pigeonholed that this is Midwestern moms looking for recipes.
Jesse: Yeah, and I didnāt mean to pigeonhole.
Richard: I know, because you like it, you just got done saying it. You blew the pigeonhole right out of the gate. And I know thatās not what you meant, but Iām saying I know even myself included when I first heard about it. Thatās what I heard about, it was recipes, it was pictures of things that were inspiring. But I was off playing on all those other platforms that we discussed and you never really got in there. Kind of going back to your comment since itās a search engine. Is there a way to possibly discover⦠letās say someone has an idea of something they want to do and then you could go into Google and you could look at searches and Google AdWords and Keyword Planner and see: Oh, thereās this many people search for that and only this many requests for that. Is there a way to look at the stats in Pinterest and almost
Kim: I have not seen a way to look at the number of searches in Pinterest but a real key indicator — you can see how many times a pin has been repinned. So if you see that thereās one idea, this one pin has only been pinned once, and you can see it right there. But this other idea that pen has been repinned 10000 times, that may be an indicator.
Richard: Got it. So we donāt have a place where we can go and look at hard stats butā¦
Kim: Not that I know of but Iām not going to say that for sure.
Richard: Iām sure there is. I donāt know of it because again I donāt pin it that much. But so in reading between the lines here what youāre saying is take your 10 ideas that you have in this hypothetical. Write those 10 ideas down, go into Pinterest, look them up, find the one that has the most engagement, and give that one a shot. If theyāre all equal and you desire to do those things and your ability to actually make margin on those things. Other things come into play, but if someone was trying to reverse engineer, man where do I start, there are so many things. I was hoping she would answer that itās a super narrow niche of exactly what I want to do, but she says no, this is a search engine and people are going there looking for all kinds of things. Theyāre looking for plants, are looking for houses, theyāre looking for how to rebuild a car, theyāre looking for recipes too. Theyāre looking for a clue, theyāre looking for everything it sounds like.
Kim: They are, they are. But I want to go back to the recipe points. There are 1.7 billion recipe pins on Pinterest, but thatās not to say thatās⦠I mean there are billions, and there are 75 billion ideas on Pinterest, so if only 1.7 out of those 75 billion ideas are recipes, think about everything else thatās out there right now.
Jesse: Yeah, yeah. I would encourage everybody. Most people listening to this podcast have an
Richard: We didnāt talk about this prior, but Iām assuming⦠and you know what that means sometimes, so hopefully itās not going that way. If theyāve listened to previous episodes and theyāve already set up that feed, itās gonna be a lot easier.
Jesse: It should be a piece of cake. But I say that knowing that⦠OK, donāt email me on this. (laughing)
Richard: Stick to the support.
Jesse: Yeah, itās OK to support. (laughing)
Richard: Jesse saidā¦
Jesse: Ok, Itās should be pretty easy. It should be a few minutes to get your products there. But now that allows the rich pin functionality which is kind of the big thing in Pinterest. Kim, let me redirect this back to you. Have you worked with some
Richard:
Kim: Iāve worked with myself. (laughing)
Richard: Thatās the best. We like it. Thatās why theyāre listening to the show. Theyāre trying to help build their businesses work. Thatās perfect.
Kim: Yes. I work with a lot of business and life coaches who do have products to sell. Not in the way that we might be talking about here but they are selling products online. Pinterest has been a great way to do it. And what we do is we make sure that we set up rich pins which I know with what youāre doing and making it so easy to get the pixel installed. The rich pins, and donāt let me overwhelm you at all, itās such an easy thing even if your tech skills are close to zero. Itās an easy way to add more information to every single pin so that itās easier to shop. Itās easier to find out about what youāre selling. And itās just easier to know if you do or do not want to buy the product from directly within Pinterest.
Jesse: Yeah. Thatās what I was looking to get to. And unfortunately, as much as I like Pinterest, I donāt quite understand it. And the rich pin functionality is basically what youāre enabling by doing this catalog integration. Thatās going to be super key for
Richard: I have one quick question for you, Kim. I think itās a quick question. We talked about how you want to name the pins. And we talked about the importance of naming the board, and how to link pins to the actual product page, and linking your board to the category page in this
Kim: When people are searching on Pinterest for you, you want to make it really easy to find. With just an easier example, Richie, if the name of your shop is Travel Dreams, you want somebody to be able to go on Pinterest, search for travel dreams and find you really easily.
Richard: The reason why I ask that is Jesse, and Iāve been doing
Kim: You have the option to click over to accounts when you do a search. Itāll ask you if you want to look at the people. All the Pinterest users, whether you have a business account or a personal account, they refer to you as people, not a user. I would make sure if it canāt be the exact same as your shop, get it as close as you can but make sure that your user name is still keyword, Rich. And then also you do have a bio. I was actually just googling, full confession, I canāt remember how many characters. Itās not a whole lot of characters that you have for your bio, but you could put the name of your company in there. But also do a little bit of keyword loading or⦠is that the right expression? Load up your bio.
Jesse: Yeah, keyword stuffing.
Kim: In your bio, so that one if theyāre searching for you, if theyāre searching for a specific type of product that you specialize in, you can put it right in there. And it will help your search results as well.
Jesse: All comes back to that SEO 101. Donāt get too cutesy with your name and your description. Use the words that people use to describe what you do and what you sell, and it will probably work. Good advice to keep repeating. Kim, if youāve done any advertising on Pinterest, have you played wrong with that at all?
Kim: I have played with it, but I really havenāt put a lot of time or money into it. Full confession. For me, it didnāt work really well. But I donāt do a ton of paid advertising anyway, and itās not something that I want to spend a lot of my time learning. Iām sure that itās working wonderfully for some people. Itās just for me it didnāt.
Jesse: Fair enough. Actually, letās take a look at the positive side. Youāre getting all this traffic from Pinterest, and you donāt actually pay to advertise there. Even better.
Kim: Yes.
Jesse: And now for the advertising nerds out there, there are so many different options to advertise on Pinterest. I would say even a little bit overwhelming. But you can do remarketing, you can do act alike which is a
Kim: Sure. I just want to share that I have my business, I have my podcast, I have five kids. So the amount of time that I can spend to actually put into life Pinterest marketing, itās few and far between because I have a lot of other places that my attention is going. So what Tailwind allows me to do is schedule pins and Instagram posts to go out in the future. Usually, right now, my Pinterest queue is loaded for the next month, and I donāt need to worry about pinning anything in
Jesse: Perfect. So you can go on vacation.
Kim: Yes, please, hook me up. (laughing)
Richard: What is this vacation you speak of? (laughing)
Kim: But I also want to share if you donāt mind that I also use Tailwind to do a āsmart loop and this is what I was talking about before. I have designated some pins to be
Richard: Is this Tailwind a freemium model? Can people get started for free and check it out or is it paid? Does it have different tiers?
Kim: Yes to both. You can get started for free. And then if you need greater capacity and volume, then you can upgrade.
Richard: Awesome. Got it.
Jesse: Cool. Weāll include that on the blog post page on 51ŹÓʵ.com/blog/podcast. Got to get my shout out there for URL. Kim this has really been helpful, I think. I hope a lot of listeners out there were able to pull some ideas, how to get started on Pinterest. If theyāre looking to learn more from you, how they can build their Pinterest business or beyond, where can they find out more from you?
Kim: All right. Iād love to offer a Pinterest marketing checklist to listeners.
Jesse: Please do.
Kim: Which you can find at
Jesse: All right.
Richard: Awesome. Cool. Thank you so much, Kim. This has been fantastic. Normally, I am pretty versed in this subject, and this is one of those times where I was furiously taking notes the whole time, and I got to admit you guys might converted me too.
Jesse: All right, thatās good. Rich, weāll get you on the pinboards. Kim, thank you so much for appearing.
Kim: Thank you for having me.