I started Practical Wanderlust in June 2016. One year later, we averaged 50k page views monthly. I’m often asked the secret to that early success. And I’ve love to just be like “~follow your dreams and believe in yourself~” or whatever, but let’s be honest: that’s totally useless. Can’t nobody develop a traffic-driving strategy based off of dreams.
So let me be totally honest with you: the secret to my early blog success was Pinterest. Pinterest drove 20k page views to my site each month within its first 6 months. Years later, it’s still our second highest traffic driver after Google!
But Pinterest isn’t your average social media platform, and it can be confusing to figure out how to use Pinterest for bloggers! So consider this post your introduction to how it all works – and how you can start using Pinterest to drive traffic to your blog.
Table of Contents
Looking to up your Pinterest game? Check out a few of our other posts:
- How to Grow Your Followers on Pinterest … & Why You Shouldn’t Bother
- 8 Guidelines to Follow When Choosing an Image for a Pinterest Pin
- 5 Steps to a Kickass Pinterest Profile
- 8 Things You MUST Do Before Sharing Your Blog Post on Pinterest
To help you up your Pinterest game, I’ve also created a handy printable worksheet to help you makeover your Pinterest profile! And to help you implement each of the 5 steps, I’ll pop into your inbox each day to walk you through it (and cheer you on)! Sign up below:
Pinterest FAQ’s
I get asked a lot of questions about Pinterest from my Coaching clients, and I do my best to answer each one individually. But sometimes, the same questions come up over and over again. So I’d decided to answer these frequently asked questions as part of my Pinterest Makeover Series! Because it’s educational for you, but also it saves me a lot of explaining. Let’s be real.
I’ve covered some of those questions already in other posts, like for instance:
- What should I do before sharing my blog post on Pinterest?
- What photo should I use on my Pin?
- How do I grow my followers on Pinterest?
- Do followers on Pinterest actually matter?
Today, we’re focusing on one that a lot of bloggers wonder, but for some reason, not a lot of bloggers want to admit to wondering: what do I DO on Pinterest?
Like, OK, I have a profile, I gave it a Kickass Profile Makeover and it looks really great… uh, now what? Do I just sit and wait for the traffic to roll in? What am I missing here?!
First of all, don’t feel bad if this question is on your mind. You are so not alone. That feeling of “but wtf even is this?” It’s exactly how I feel when I open up Twitter. Like .. what is even happening on this site?! I still haven’t figured out what the heck a Twitter Chat is or how to actually participate in one. I’m open to suggestions, y’all. PS, please follow me on Twitter. I frequently do things like post sloth GIFs out of pure desperation, sooo there’s that to look forward to. Anyway.
There are really only 2 over-arching strategies when it comes to Pinterest: the sharing of your own content and the sharing of other people’s content. Both are equally important to grow your Pinterest account and drive traffic to your blog. But they’re very different and require completely different strategies.
Let’s start with the most exciting one: sharing your own content on Pinterest! After all, that’s what will directly contribute to clicks to your site and traffic from Pinterest.
Sharing Your Own Content to Pinterest
Putting your own content on Pinterest is the exciting part for a blogger. It’s what brings visitors to your blog, builds loyal readerships, grows your email subscriber list, etc etc. It’s awesome.
But it’s … complicated
For starters, you don’t want to just share any old content from your site onto Pinterest. Pinterest is a search engine, but it’s a VISUAL search engine.
So, the content that works best on Pinterest is visually appealing and enticing. It’s inspiring, motivating, and informative. And it’s vertical.
Yes, vertical.
Vertical content works best on Pinterest. It’s rare that a horizontal photo takes off, goes viral, and/or drives traffic to your site. Frankly, I don’t bother pinning any horizontal images from my blog at all. (Although I do have a trick for making vertical pins from horizontal images – learn more in this post!)
If I have a good vertical image in a blog post, I definitely will share that to Pinterest, and generally, it gets lots of shares – but not necessarily clicks.
Why? Because people are saving it to look at, not to click on. They’re saving it for inspiration, not clicking through for information.
I know what you’re thinking: but I want them to go to my blog and read stuff! I want them to be informed and entertained! There’s so much more where that ONE vertical photo came from that they’re totally missing out on!
Well, that’s where Pinterest templates come in. A Pinterest template is basically a Pinterest-optimized graphic, meant to communicate the content of your blog visually to Pinterest users, that links to your site.
It’s like having a Twitter header, or a feature photo, or a title image just for Facebook – except for Pinterest. It’s a combination of images and text, and the text is key: that’s where the visual search engine bit comes in.
The text on a Pinterest optimized image (henceforth, I’m going to refer to it as a Pin, because it’s less of a mouthful) is like visual SEO. It needs to catch the eye of a Pinterest user as they’re scrolling through their feed, and then quickly & clearly communicate the content of your post in a way that makes them want to click on it to go straight to your site.
Easier said than done, right? I’m not going to talk about how to make Pin templates in this post – that’s an entire future post that I’ll be writing very soon. But I want you to understand what a Pin IS, because that’s what I’m talking about when I’m referring to sharing your Pins on Pinterest.
OK, so, you have a beautiful and totally clickable Pin. You’ve uploaded it to your blog post, and pinned it on Pinterest. Now what?!
Now, you get to work. It’s time to Launch That Pin.
How to Launch New Content on Pinterest
What the heck do I mean by “launching” a pin? I’m referring to giving a pin a boost – getting it off the ground and circulating, so it can start getting engagement, like re-pins and clicks (yay, clicks!).
There are a few ways to do this. Here is my complete Launch strategy. I like to refer to strategy as strat when I’m being really strategic and serious, so:
Launch Strat
- I share my Pin to my most relevant niche boards
- I share my pin to a few Tailwind Tribes
- I drop my pin in a Facebook re-pin thread
- I share my pin to my most relevant Group Boards on Pinterest
- I add my pin to my Best Of Blog board
Annnnd that’s Launch. By the time a pin has been fully Launched, I expect it to have at least 100 re-pins. Between my 50 group boards and another 50+ people sharing it from a Facebook re-pin group, 100 is totally doable.
For me, 100 is my base number. Any pin below 100 hasn’t been given the proper chance to succeed on Pinterest.
Your number will probably be different. For starters, trying to keep track of 50 group boards is insane and requires things like spreadsheets and organization, which is a whole thing. And a 50-person re-pin thread means manually pinning 50 other pins, which takes a long AF time.
So maybe your target number is only 50, and that’s totally fine! Find a number that works for you, and make that your goal for every new pin.
Sharing Older Content on Pinterest
Launch is all well and good for a new pin, but what about an older post that needs a boost? Maybe a pin that never took off, or an old post that you just re-vamped?
For most pins, I typically find that Launch is enough to set it and forget it for a few months – it should get organic growth, re-pins, and traffic during that time.
But for any blog posts that I’ve updated, I make a whole new pin and go through the Launch process with it as if it’s a brand new pin!
Pinterest has made changes to their algorithm recently to prioritize “new” content, which includes anything that’s new to Pinterest: brand new blog posts, new pin designs, or even photos that have never been shared on Pinterest before. So you want to circulate as much “new” content as possible.
The way I like to do this is to make up to 4 pins for a single blog post, and space out the “launch” for each of them (I do about one per month). I’ll also schedule out all of the photos from my post over the course of several weeks or even months using Tailwind.
I also have automatic re-sharing set up on Tailwind using the Smartloop tool to keep my pins regularly sharing to my group boards and personal boards without having to manually share them, but honestly, I get the best results with a brand “new” pin.
Pinterest FAQ: What about an old post that never took off?
For a pin that flopped, I usually like to create a brand new pin to see if that pin works better – I’ll use a new template, different photos, and/or different text.
But if I’m really pleased with my pin design, I might just give it another Launch – so long as it’s been plenty of time since I did it the first time, so I’m not spamming people with the same pin again.
You can definitely throw your Pin into a Facebook re-pin group again after a while, too. And don’t forget to circulate it occasionally in Tailwind Tribes. If you haven’t tried Tailwind yet, it’s the best automation tool for Pinterest! Sign up for a free trial and see what you think.
The beauty of Pinterest is that once you get a pin circulating, it tends to continue circulating on its own! So Launch is the most important part of my Pinning strategy when it comes to my own content because it’s crucial for getting my Pin off the ground so I can sit back and watch the traffic roll in.
Now that we’ve talked about sharing YOUR content on Pinterest, let’s cover the other half of your daily Pinterest activity: sharing other people’s stuff on Pinterest.
Sharing Other People’s Content on Pinterest
I know what you’re thinking.
It’s pretty obvious how sharing MY content on Pinterest is going to get me traffic.
How on earth is sharing OTHER people’s content going to benefit me?
Why should I bother?
Well, let me explain.
Pinterest FAQ: Why do I need to Share Other People’s Stuff on Pinterest?
Pinterst is designed to help people discover new content. When you scroll through your “Front Page,” you’ll see board suggestions, content ideas, and more.
Before we dive into the strategy behind pinning other people’s content on Pinterest, let me give you an example. Have you ever noticed the “More Ideas” button at the top of every single one of your Pinterest boards? If not, go take a look and click on it.
Go on, I’ll wait.
Did you see it?
That little curated list of suggested pins is one of the keys to growing your Pinterest. You want your pins – and your boards – to pop up to other people, and you want them to click through, take one look at your board/profile, and follow you immediately.
Of course, having a kickass Pinterest profile helps, but often what’s suggested is your board itself, so what’s IN the board really matters.
Now imagine if all you had was your own content.
Your boards would look boring and repetitive, and chances are, it wouldn’t have more than 50 or 100 pins in it. And how would Pinterest suggest new pins to you if all of your pins were from the same domain?
But more importantly, would you follow a board that only seemed to share content from 1 site? Would that interest you as much as a board that serves as a collection of hundreds of beautiful, inspiring, and informative content from all over the web?
Pinterest wants its users to collect lots of pretty images linking to lots of different sites, and save it all to their boards.
That’s what it’s designed for. It wasn’t designed for you to only share your own stuff. It’s designed like an interactive bulletin board, where you literally rip out pretty pictures from magazines and pin them up to your board to hang above your desk and inspire you.
You can’t have a robust Pinterest strategy without ignoring the key feature that the entire site is built around.
Sharing other people’s content is part of that foundational, Pinterest SEO magical algorithm-tickling goodness.
And unless you have a zillion blog posts and a never-ending ability to churn out brand new pins and photos ever single day (which Pinterest’s algorithm would love, but is entirely unrealistic), your boards will be filled with other people’s content.
The most important thing you can do as a blogger on Pinterest to grow your account – and thus, drive traffic to your blog – is to be active on Pinterest every single day.
I recommend 20 minutes per day, at minimum, of “activity” on Pinterest: pinning, following people, clicking on stuff, and so on.
Remember, the average user logs into Pinterest and shares other people’s content every single day.
So as a blogger, you’ll want to log into Pinterest and share stuff every day too – and it shouldn’t be the same stuff over and over. Pinterest likes NEW, remember?
So, barring devoting your entire life to churning out new pins, that means you’ll be sharing other people’s content, too.
But does sharing other people’s content drive traffic to YOUR site?
Yes. Indirectly, but … yes.
Are you raising one skeptical eyebrow at me right now? Sure, it sounds a little bit counter-intuitive that sharing OTHER people’s pins is going to drive traffic to YOUR site.
But, ultimately, it does. Let me explain.
Pinterest FAQ: How does sharing other people’s content drive traffic to MY site?
On Instagram, popularity and quality is measured with “likes.” On Google, it’s measured with backlinks.
On Pinterest, it’s measured with engagement: clicks, saves, shares, “Tried It”, comments, etc.
The Pinterest algorithm thrives on engagement. The more engagement your pins receive – no matter where they link back to – the higher your content will rank in Pinterest’s search engine (because Pinterest is, ultimately, a search engine).
Pinning high-quality content that lots of other people engage with signals to Pinterest that you’re a high-quality user with good taste, which means ALL of the content you Pin gets a boost in the Pinterest algorithm, INCLUDING your own.
So yes, pin that inspirational quote and that jaw-dropping photo. Jump on that bandwagon!
- Pinterest Blogger Tip: Go to Repinned and find a bunch of popular pins in your niche to share. It’s a quick ticket to exposure-town.
On the flip side, if you pin poor quality content that doesn’t get much engagement at all, Pinterest will judge the sh** out of you and subsequently tank your exposure, which means tanking all of your pins in its search rankings – including pins that link back to YOUR site!
Always, always, always pin for QUALITY over QUANTITY.
That said, pin a LOT of quality stuff. Consistent, frequent (ideally, daily) pinning indicates to Pinterest that you’re a high-quality user.
And you want Pinterest’s algorithm to favor you, because then ALL of your content – your boards, your profile, your pins, and the pins linking back to your site – will rank higher in the all-mighty Pinterest search results. And not just search: related pins, Front Page pins, everywhere.
It’s like Google – on steroids.
It all comes back to this simple (and very mathematical) equation:
The more high-quality pins you pin + the more engagement you get = the more exposure you receive + the higher your chances of getting clicks through to your site
You can also break it down step by step, like this:
- Pin lots of high-quality content
- Get lots of engagement on that content
- Pinterest thinks you’re a high-quality user (thanks, Pinterest!)
- Pinterest’s algorithm ranks your pins higher, including the ones linking to your site
- Your pins get more exposure, which gives you a higher chance of getting clicks to your site.
So, the more high-quality content from other people that you share to your profile, the better. Quality trumps quantity – don’t just share ugly or irrelevant pins just to be active on Pinterest – but what you really want to do on Pinterest is to share a lot of high-quality content that will appeal to your readers & will relate to your niche.
This is a really important point, so I’m going to summarize it one last time to really drill it home:
By frequently pinning high-quality pins that are in turn re-pinned or otherwise engaged with (essentially telling Pinterest that you have good taste in content) your account & Pinterest boards will be suggested to other accounts in various places on Pinterest, boosting your exposure.
In turn, every time someone follows you or one of your boards, they’re more likely to see the pins you’ve created for your own site popping up on their “front page” (more on the front page later), which means they’re more likely to save your blog’s pins on their own boards, giving you even more exposure, boosting your pins, so and so forth, which ultimately drives traffic back to your blog!
Pinterest FAQ: How do I find other people’s content to share?
Finding people’s content to share on Pinterest isn’t difficult. Like I said, that’s what the entire site was built for.
You can always creep other people’s boards to source content from (*cough* like mine *cough*), or you can use the search bar. Searching on Pinterest is a reliable way to find good stuff to pin – and it’s how lots of regular Pinterest users are interacting with Pinterest. Pinterest IS a search engine, after all.
But using the search bar requires like, thinking… and typing. Both of which take effort, and I’m lazy. So let’s talk shortcuts.
The easiest way to find great content is to develop a useful front page on Pinterest.
Remember when I mentioned the “front page” earlier? I’m a big front page fan. It’s the perfect place for lazy people like me to find great content that fits my boards and my niche. And it could not be easier to locate.
Your front page is what shows up as soon as you log into your Pinterest account. It’s filled with content that Pinterest thinks you’re interested in, based on whatever activity you’ve already done on Pinterest. It’s adaptive and will evolve and change with every action you take on Pinterest.
Follow a couple of travel bloggers, follow a few travel boards, do a couple of searches and pin some stuff about travel to your own boards, and boom: your front page will be bursting with gorgeous pins related to travel. And it will continue to serve up new, different, and useful content every time you do anything on Pinterest. It’s hugely helpful!
Oh, and by the way … when I talk about Pinterest SEO and the all-important ~algorithm~, I’m not just talking about search results in the traditional sense: like, what shows up when someone types in a search in the search bar. I’m also talking about the Front Page.
You want pins that link to your site to show up on other people’s front pages, especially people who are interested in whatever you’ve written a blog post about and created a pin for. As soon as they log in, bam: there’s your gorgeous pin, ready to click, without them even having to type anything in at all.
That’s the magic of Pinterest: it knows what you’re interested in before you even search for anything. Creepy … but kinda cool. Whenever I talk about exposure, picture that: your pin on someone’s front page, perfectly matched to their interests. Powerful stuff.
Anyway, back to YOUR front page. When it comes to finding other people’s content, the best (and easiest) place to start is at your own front page. Sharing other people’s content is, essentially, not much more than browsing and saving stuff to your own boards. But you have to do it consistently: every single day, you should pin a few things to your own boards.
By the way, remember those “suggested profiles/boards” that Pinterest pops up whenever a user pins something? Don’t ignore them! Following relevant suggested boards and profiles is a great way to build your front page …. AND organically grow your followers.
As a travel blogger, I follow nearly every single travel profile and board suggested by Pinterest, as long as it’s relevant to my niche.
Unlike Instagram, there’s not really a downside to following massive quantities of boards and profiles on Pinterest (which I dove into in detail in this post).
Even following a few out-of-niche boards and users won’t affect your front page too much: the Pinterest algorithm will always build your front page from scratch based on whatever you’ve pinned most recently.
Pinterest FAQ: How do I decide which pins to save to my Pinterest boards, and which to skip?
There are so many Pins on Pinterest, it can be overwhelming. Should you just dive right in and Pin everything on your front page?
I don’t recommend it. Instead, you should be super picky about what you save to your own boards. Never pin anything that doesn’t represent your blog, your brand, your niche, and your values.
If you’re a budget couple’s travel blog (hey, that’s us!) you shouldn’t be pinning content about luxury and family travel. Your readers will be confused, and if they see your pins show up on their front page, they might unfollow you – which sucks, and also sends bad vibes to the all-mighty Pinterest algorithm (and yes, I’ve experienced this first hand, before I took this rule to heart).
Similarly, if a pin rubs you the wrong way – let’s say it features someone riding an elephant, and you’re vehemently against harmful and exploitative elephant tourism (*AHEM*) – don’t pin it. Your pins should reflect you and your blog 100%.
Pinning content that reflects your blog is a start. The next thing to consider when pinning other’s pins is quality. Remember that you want Pinterest to suggest your profile & boards whenever other people pin stuff that you’ve pinned. Well, that means you need to post content that other people will want to pin!
This has a lot to do with personal taste and knowing your own niche, but essentially, only pin high-quality, attractive pins that fit your niche.
That means seeking out pins that are eye-catching, visually appealing, and link directly to high-quality content that appeals to your reader … and passing on everything else.
Yes, you need to be pinning regularly and frequently, so quantity IS important … but so does quality. Don’t pin an ugly pin that links to a sub-par page just for the sake of pinning something.
Your reader follows you because they trust you to recommend content that will appeal to them, just like YOUR content appeals to them, so never violate that by pinning something that your reader wouldn’t like. Not only will this make the content you share get pinned frequently – signaling to Pinterest that you’re a high-quality active user who also has great taste (stop it, Pinterest, I’m blushing!) – but you will cultivate a visually cohesive and appealing profile.
By always staying true to your quality standards and pinning with your reader in mind, of your boards will look gorgeous, deliver useful and engaging content, and readers in your niche will follow you knowing that you will, in turn, fill their feeds with gorgeous, inspiring, high-quality pins and content.
Pinterest is all about being motivated and inspired – and saving or “bookmarking” pages visually to refer to later – so it’s important that your reader gets that “oooh I want to go there/make that/try that” excited feeling when they look at your boards.
Whew – that was a LONG post. If you’re still with me, mad props. You’re rad.
Need more tips to up your Pinterest game? Check out a few of our other posts:
- How to Grow Your Followers on Pinterest … & Why You Shouldn’t Bother
- 8 Guidelines to Follow When Choosing an Image for a Pinterest Pin
- 5 Steps to a Kickass Pinterest Profile
- 8 Things You MUST Do Before Sharing Your Blog Post on Pinterest
Do you have any questions about sharing your own content or sharing other people’s content? Leave me a comment below!
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Oh and hey, since this post is all about Pinterest, how about sharing this on Pinterest?
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- What to Pack: Here are the travel essentials that we bring on every trip. We also have packing lists for hot weather, cold weather, and many more. Take a look at all of our packing guides!
Veronika says
Hello Lia, thanks for this post. It made a few things clearer for me. About the repinning threads on Facebook – don’t you find the pins often to be of a low quality? That’s the reason I stopped joining the threads, I just didn’t want to flood my own boards with bad looking pins..
Lia says
That’s a really good point. There are a lot of solutions that people have tried to avoid this: some have a single board that they throw everything into regardless of quality, some people pin to group boards. Of course the best bet is to join really high quality re-share threads but that’s much easier said than done! Sometimes the benefits outweigh the risks, though.
Melissa says
These are such great tips! Thanks for taking the time to share them. I’m excited to learn about pin templates 🙂
Nicole says
This post is amazing, thanks Lia! I understand Pintrest but this broke down an actual strategy, which is super helpful!
Ryan says
Awesome post! very informative
christine leger says
when you launch a pin, how long does all of this take? do you do it all in one week, a month?
Lia says
That’s a great question! I do it all within a week of posting the new post. Ideally, within a few days. It’s really a big, immediate push so you don’t want it to take too long.