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Start learning nowWe've all been hearing a lot about Pinterest lately, so you're probably wondering whether you should take the plunge and create a profile for your company. We say you go for it, especially if women are your target consumers–70 percent of pinners are female. Pinterest has a highly engaged audience–a reported 3.3 million users logging more than 421 million page views–so there's plenty of opportunity for brands to flesh out pinboards and catch pinners' eyes.
First, let's go through a quick explanation of how it works. Pinterest is a visual social discovery network. You create online pinboards (like a bulletin board) for various categories (i.e. "dream home" or "things to buy" or "recipes"), and you "pin" items to it. You can pin a photo or video in three ways:
Sounds fun, right? Now, businesses beware: Pinterest etiquette clearly states that it's not a platform for self-promotion–it's not a broadcast mechanism like Twitter or Facebook–so brands need to approach the site a little differently. Here are some tips for navigating Pinterest, along with a rundown of how various companies are already using the visual social network.
1. Promote a lifestyle
Pinterest designer and co-founder Evan Sharp sums it up well: "For most consumer brands, the idea behind your brand makes sense on Pinterest." Since you're not supposed to blast pictures of your products on Pinterest, try to think outside the box and pin images that capture a lifestyle and/or the essence of your brand. Pinterest calls for a more holistic approach to marketing, and it can be more effective and engaging than traditional advertising because the consumers can really see how your brand fits into their lives. For example, Bon Appetit can't just pin pictures from the website or magazine, but it can pin images of cooking appliances, beautiful kitchen decor, cutlery, dinner parties and delicious creations or recipes–basically anything related to cooking and food. Seeing these culinary items will continually drive home the Bon Appetit brand, thus making pinners more familiar with and more likely to trust the brand, visit the website and maybe even subscribe to the magazine.
On your page, you can curate as many boards as you like. Pinners can choose to follow none, a few or all of your boards, so don't be afraid to be adventurous and curate a wide array of boards–the point of Pinterest is to explore and discover new things, so eccentricity is appreciated and encouraged. If you own a hotel, post pictures of landmarks near the location, food from local restaurants and even pieces from local artists. Own a restaurant? Post pictures of the farm where the meat is raised, the appliances and gadgets used in your kitchen or anything related to the name of the restaurant–for example, Panera could have a board devoted to beautiful artisanal breads. If you're in fashion, you can pin new trends, fashion sketches, pictures of fittings and shots from runway shows.
Beyond pushing one's products, you also can use Pinterest as a way to convey your company culture–post pictures of the office, the mascot, people's cubicles, lunch breaks and office events. Fans are interested in these details, and this imagery helps to humanize the brand.
For a look at what some brands are already doing on Pinterest, check out the roundup below. Perhaps they'll inspire your own boards.
West Elm: The furniture brand posts images of various rooms–bedrooms, bathrooms and kitchens–to inspire the interior designer in you. By showering you with beautiful homes, it gets you thinking about nesting without taking an overtly sales-y approach.
Gap: The fashion company pushes the envelope and goes a bit into promotional territory. It's Holiday Gift Guide board is a collection of beautifully designed ads with marketing copy, a la the in-store signage. On a "wintry' board, there's a collection of images of snow and icicles, interspersed with Gap's own puffer jackets. And there's a board devoted to people wearing Gap, from Gap models (like Amy Poehler and Will Arnett) to everyday consumers.
Etsy: When your website is a marketplace for creative and adorable goods, Pinterest is your social network soulmate. The brand pins images of "handmade weddings," stationery, fashion, gift ideas, "cool spaces" and holiday decorating tips.
Rent the Runway: The fashion-rental site groups its boards into occasions–bachelorette party, fall wedding, dance party, New Year's Eve–and each board contains various "looks" for that particular event to help you get inspired and achieve an appropriate look.
Birchbox: The beauty subscription service pins close-ups of made-up hair, eyes, lips and painted nails to show various looks that can be created with makeup. There's also a board devoted to food, since a girl has to eat.

Modcloth: The ecommerce site sells apparel, but its Pinterest page looks more like a deep-dive into vintage-loving founder Susan Gregg Koger's mind. There are retro pictures, DIY crafts and home decor boards, which essentially make the Modcloth page a go-to for any thrift-store shopper.
Chobani: The yogurt brand has aggressively marketed on social media sites, and Pinterest is no exception. There's a board for treats made with yogurt, recipes that can use Chobani instead of other ingredients such as sour cream, the CHOmobile's travels and even utensils (adorably called "We Would Like To Eat With You"). Like the brand's fun, healthy voice on other social media channels, the Pinterest page is a perfect destination for active individuals who embrace life.
AMD: The tech company curates boards for a nerd's life–there are quirky gadgets, creative interpretations of the computer mouse, cute laptop bags and pictures of computer workstations.
Whole Foods: Whole Foods is a healthy lifestyle mecca, and its Pinterest boards reflect that. There are boards devoted to recycling, beautiful gardens, kitchens, art projects and even the Whole Planet Foundation, which offers microcredit to the entrepreneurs who sell goods through Whole Foods. The Pinterest is holistic, just like the brand itself.

Travel Channel: You'll observe a serious epidemic of wanderlust on Pinterest, which means that the Travel Channel has an innate advantage. With access to destinations far and wide, the brand is able to fill up boards of beaches, food, city landmarks, exotic animals, travel souvenirs and more. There are even boards devoted to the channel's various shows to give an inside look at what goes on when the camera turns off and to offer insights into the hosts' travels.
Mashable: Our community team pins memes and other tidbits of web culture, in addition to gadgets, which are the facets of our digital and tech coverage that are the most visual.
The Today Show: NBC's morning show has something for everyone on Pinterest, since that's also what it offers on-air. You'll find behind-the-scenes anchor antics, pics of the Today Plaza, recipes and even cute animals.
Drake University: The school pins images of dorm life, as well as bulldogs (Drake's mascot) from all over the web.
2. Use it like a focus group
Millions of people use Pinterest to keep track of objects they love, places they enjoy, foods they devour and things that inspire them. Therefore, you can view it as a sort of focus group. Look at the pinners who follow your brand and see what they're pinning and who else they're following. They're volunteering a lot of information about their interests, passions, dreams and sense of humor in a more natural way on Pinterest than they would on say, a survey or even on Facebook, where they have to manually enter "sarcasm" or "travel" as an interest. Use this information to your advantage to glean insights about your target consumers.
3. Crowdsource
You can ask fans to pin pictures of themselves with their favorite product of yours and tag you, and then you can easily repin those photos onto a VIP board–it'll give a shoutout to these fans and show potential customers that your current users really like using your product. If your company hosted an even recently, encourage people to pin and tag the photos as a sort of crowdsourced scrapbook. And around the holidays, encourage them to pin a "wish list" board to curate the gifts they're hoping for.
4. Run contests

We've talked about crowdsourcing and asking people to tag you in their pins. The next step is to run a contest on Pinterest. Since the site is relatively new, there aren't that many case studies, but one company recently did a particularly good job harnessing the power of Pinterest. From December 14 through 21, Land's End Canvas's "Pin It To Win It" campaign asked users to create a Pin It To Win It pinboard (in the women's or men's apparel categories) and pin 10 to 20 images from the Land's End site or repin them from the Land's End Pinterest page. Once your board was complete, you were to email the URL of your pinboard to Land's End for a chance to win one of 10 $250 gift cards–this was your official "entry" for the contest. A search on Pinterest shows that there were around 200 boards created for the contest, with each containing at least 10 to 20 images, which means a lot of Land's End merchandise was injected into the Pinterest feed at no cost. Running contests like this is a great way to expose your brand and products to a large audience, given the viral nature of these images and the engaged Pinterest audience.
5. Inspire your team
There are a lot of inspiring things on the web, and you can create a sort of mood board for your company, pinning things that are relevant, interesting or inspiring to you brand and your team. Pin logos and websites with good design, clever copywriting, images of possible team outings (bowling night or karaoke, perhaps), colors to figure out your new advertising palette or use it to brainstorm an upcoming campaign. By browsing Pinterest, you might even see items that could inspire your company's next big idea, so keep that Pin It button handy.
Does your brand have a Pinterest? Share your tips in the comments below.
Well, I saw that Pinterest says that they don't want brands to just "blast pictures of your products" on Pinterest with pictures of their products, but it looks like they have done just that. Look at West Elm, the first example this article points out. I guess it's too tempting not to do that.
Pinterest is very amazing in its lay out... Of course, i agree with your post.. It gonna be very worth media for all kinds of professionals.. Here is the Pinterest Clone released latestly from Apptha by covering all the functionalities of Pinterest.. http://www.apptha.com/pinterest-clone-for-joomla
Pinterest is very amazing in its lay out... Of course, i agree with your post.. It gonna be very worth media for all kinds of professionals.. Here is the Pinterest Clone released latestly from Apptha by covering all the functionalities of Pinterest..
We use Pinterest for a number of reasons. One new way we're using Pinterest is to share customer comment cards that would typically be filed and stored away. Now, potential customers can read handwritten reviews from people who have been on a tour with us! Example: http://pinterest.com/discoverhawaii/greg-customer-comments/
I think it's very useful for brands, particularly in travel. Time will tell how it affects the bottom line but I run a travel site and rather than just re-pinning nice pictures, we have decided to use Pinterest solely as an adventure holiday shop window, each board categorised around the themes of the trips we aggregate on Much Better Adventures. Every picture is a trip that can be booked direct and is priced and linked. Here is our board: http://pinterest.com/muchbetteradven/ if you'd like to use it as another good example of how Pinterest works well for the travel industry. Cheers! Sam
Pinterest is great for brands, and not only for the visually appealing 'pins' Like here: http://pinterest.com/daarom I am adding boards on topics that don't have very visually appealing subjects. For instance the board on 'Pinterest publications' is gathering some followers. It collects great content on Pinterest (like the article here) and pinners like that too! I can't wait for the brand pages, but jump on now and get into the game, it's addictive and great for branding and promotion :)
Pinterest is absolutely amazing. I use it like a set of niche vision boards. I can visually explore each of my passions through pictures. Men's fashion, social media, and shoes just to name a few. I can share photos and see who pins them, likes them or follows my boards as well. this is a very addictive time sink that will prove to be one of 2012's biggest game changing social sites.
This looks like an up and coming social media site. Its gain members quickly and appears to have some good uses, such as real estate, mobile marketing, etc. I will look to use in in my social media strategy.
to get an idea of a social media marketing strategy, take a look at the University of San Francisco's advanced social media marketing training curriculum.
http://www.usanfranonline.com/social-media-marketing
Good, concrete examples of emerging best practices for this channel. Fast Company also had a great interview with the community manager for Chobani about how that brand in particular is taking advantage of Pinterest for marketing. (This article and that one are both featured in the Pinterest post we wrote today: http://blog.cdginteractive.com/my_weblog/2012/01/how-to-use-pinterest-to-market-your-business.html)
It'll be interesting to see how pinterest works for b2b.
Benjamin Winegarden
We strongly believe in this new service and we use it intensely on daily basis. Our traffic has increased considerably since we are using it. Here is our page: http://pinterest.com/luxacc/
This was such a great article, and the links and comments below were inspiring too! @Kathleen Gallagher, I think Tech brands can create inspiring tech walls, as technology has a lot of beautiful aspects to it. I am always clicking around on Mashable on cool gadgets and Microsoft and Apple have proven that imagery and design goes hand-in-hand with Technology. I would love to see more examples of CPG brands on Pinterest... I'm trying to gather ideas to pitch to my client of how we could utilize Pinterest for them... if anyone has anymore examples of Brand on Pinterest, feel free to send them my way on Twitter @GabiWinks or on Pinterest Gabriela Sofia. Thanks Lauren!
this sounds like a lot of fun as I look forward to learning more about that wonderful site Pinterest! =)
http://www.DrewryNewsNetwork.com
We have been using pinterest of late to help promote the mobile web pages and QR codes our customers are building with linkblots. It gets them exposure for their mobile marketing efforts and exposes potential new customers to our free service. It's a win-win for both.
I've enjoyed seeing what others have pinned from my website - it's a more visual way of digesting the "traffic stats". They are no longer just number of referrals, they are brought to life on Pinterest.
Notice how most of them are location based, fashion or food. I'm guessing the leader categories are food then fashion, beauty and probably fitness and yes Pinterest is perfect for Etsy, but I don't get why some tech brands are trying to create techy walls when obviously Pinterest is more about the creative side of the industry I guess that's my only confusion, but who knows maybe I'll get surprised in the mean time my fitness and food boards are my love along with my tumblr now :)
Others big into Pinterest are Interior Designers, photographers, and do-it-yourselfers. Photos of completed projects linked back to tutorials are hot among the DIY group. Photographers showcase their talent plus pin ideas for future photo shoots. Designers...I use photos for my blog and Pinterest has been a great, timesaving resource. Now my idea files are online with easy access and links to sources, something difficult to maintain on my computer.
I cannot stop pinning! It's quite addictive from a user perspective. From a brand perspective, I certainly think it's a great resource and engagement channel for those that are willing to turn the spotlight outward. The Land's End contest example is a clever idea. Another great use is to create wish lists or gift guides. With Valentine's Day coming up quick, brands that offer relevant products could encourage their customers to create wish list boards and share them with their significant others, or the brands could create a gift guide for the holiday. I wrote a blog with some other ways that brands can leverage Pinterest: http://l3m.me/uJesVV
Great post! Thanks for all the fantastic examples!
Angie Pascale
Location3 Media
@angiepascale
We were just talking about Pinterest in the OPEN Forum offices this morning. I've personally had a lot of fun creating pin boards and find them very useful for items that in the past I would need to bookmark in my browser and then refer back to one at a time. I'm a visual thinker, so for me it's a great way to look at things cohesively and it really does feel like a design or idea board.
From other articles I've read recently, sites like Etsy are seeing big spikes in traffic referrals from Pinterest. As for brands that are using it well, Chronicle Books has been running a contest and asking users to create pin boards around Pantone's color of the year (Tangerine Tango) http://pinterest.com/search/boards/?q=Tangerine%20Tango with an opportunity to win prizes. An interesting use of the platform.
Julie
OPEN Forum Community Manager
As the Community Manager for Mac Duggal, Pinterest offers us a unique way for our brand to reach out and make our retailers and customers/fans/followers feel like family. We have some very exciting campaigns for this platform--love it!
http://pinterest.com/macduggal
As an art museum, we are using Pinterest to not only showcase our exhibitions, but to give our fans a behind-the-scenes look at what inspires the people who work in the Museum. Hopefully it will enable people to feel more comfortable in a museum setting and to understand the human element behind the gallery walls. http://pinterest.com/hunterdonartmus/
Total number of visits for Pinterest in this the week 11 million ! What is making it hot?
http://www.linkstoweb.in/2012/01/all-about-pinterest-new-growing-social.html
I think you have hit the nail on the head with this. If brands are going to use pinterest successfully they are going to have to promote lifestyles *or* listen and use it is a business intelligence tool to see what is popular with their audience!
I was just offered an invitation to join the site via e-mail, but have not yet set up my profile on that social network. Now that you're talking about it, I'm really interested now in the site, as well as hitting started now incompletely filling out my profile on Pinterest. Thank you for reminding me :-)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h40--TuTlCo
http://www.drewrynewsnetwork.com/f37/social-boom-how-master-business-social-media-brand-yourself-sell-yourself-s-2495.html
I have just read a big mashable article on pinterest ( http://mashable.com/2012/01/10/pinterest-business-consumer-engagement/ ) So far, i have been only reviewing other pin boards and not a member. The design of the site and the color scheme is simply beautiful and a nice treat to eyes.
On the technical side, I believe they are using the JQuery Masonry (http://masonry.desandro.com/) and the design is pretty responsive.
Is it possible to get an invite from somebody?
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Ceci Cuevas a day ago
I love this article! It is amazing how you can know your clientele through images, those are their real interests, dreams and personalities! Thanks for sharing! Welcome to my boards http://www.pinterest.com/cecicue I discovered Pinterest a short time ago and I love the smooth way it goes, following some boards and sharing images with people. Have a great Pinterest tour!