Okay I have to share this because six months ago I was this close to giving up on social media marketing entirely. Instagram wasn't converting, Facebook ads were eating my budget, and I felt like I was shouting into the void. Then I gave Pinterest a real shot — and everything changed!!
A little background: I run a small online home decor shop. Mostly handmade and curated items — throw pillows, wall art, that kind of thing. My average order value is around $65. I had been basically ignoring Pinterest because honestly I thought it was just a recipe and wedding planning site. I was so wrong.
Here's exactly what I did over about 90 days:
- Set up a Pinterest Business Account properly. This sounds obvious but I had a personal account I was half-heartedly using. Starting fresh with a Business account gave me access to Pinterest Analytics and Rich Pins — which automatically pull product info like price and availability directly from your site. Game changer.
- Claimed my website. You have to verify your domain with Pinterest. This unlocks attribution so you can see which pins are sending traffic. Super important for knowing what's working.
- Created 12 keyword-optimized boards. I researched what people were actually searching for on Pinterest using the search bar autosuggest. Things like "cozy living room decor ideas," "modern farmhouse wall art," "small apartment decorating tips." Each board got a keyword-rich description too, not just a cute title.
- Pinned consistently — 5 to 10 pins per day. I used Tailwind (the scheduling tool) to space them out. Pinterest rewards consistency, not bulk-posting at once. I also pinned other people's content to my boards — not just my own. This keeps your boards feeling curated rather than spammy.
- Created multiple Pin designs for the same product. This was the biggest unlock. For each product I created 4-5 different Pin images using Canva — different color backgrounds, different text overlays, lifestyle vs. product-only images. You never know which version will take off. One of my throw pillow pins went semi-viral with 14,000 repins and I would never have predicted which design it would be.
- Used video Pins. Short 15-30 second videos showing the product in a styled room setting got dramatically more impressions than static images. You don't need fancy equipment — I shot everything on my iPhone.
- SEO in every pin description. Every single pin description had 2-3 natural keyword phrases in the first two sentences. Pinterest is literally a visual search engine. Treat it like Google.
The results after 90 days:
- Monthly website sessions from Pinterest: went from ~180 to just over 900
- Pinterest became my #1 referral traffic source, beating Instagram by 3x
- Revenue attributable to Pinterest (via UTM links): $3,200 over the 90 days
- Email list signups from Pinterest traffic: 74 new subscribers
The best part? Almost all of this is free. I spent $0 on Pinterest ads. I did pay for Tailwind (~$20/month) but that's it.
One thing I wish I knew sooner: Pinterest content has a long shelf life. A pin you post today can still be driving traffic 6 months or even 2 years from now. It compounds in a way that Instagram posts just don't. That evergreen quality is what makes it so powerful for product-based businesses.
If you have a visually appealing product and you're not on Pinterest, you are genuinely leaving money on the table. Happy to answer any questions about my setup or strategy!