Four Ways To Drive Pinterest Traffic to Your Blog
written by: brian baccus brands
posted on: july 24,
2019
Pinterest traffic
generates a consistent influx of visitors to your evergreen content, regardless
if you are posting new content every day or even every week. In this post, we will
cover four key ways you can drive Pinterest traffic to your blog – setting up
your account correctly, optimizing your boards, pinning quality images, and
maintaining your account.
Pinterest + Us
Shortly after our first year of business, we realized that we needed
to expand our reach from local clients to national and international customers.
To do that, we relied heavily on Pinterest to drive
traffic to our website. Very quickly our site grew from a few visitors each day
to a thousand visitors from Pinterest each day. Over the years, as we have
rebranded and changed our blog content, Pinterest traffic drives a significant
amount of traffic to our website. As a result, we use this traffic to generate
passive income through affiliate links and digital products.
Set up your Pinterest
account correctly
The username, name,
and description used for your Pinterest account should be the same one you use
on other social media profiles, such as Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
Whether Pinterest or any other social media profile, your profile description
should include keywords and phrases that are relevant to your brand. Consistent
messaging across social media profiles reflects highly on your digital
legitimacy.
Once you create your Pinterest account, you want to make sure
you do two things – (1) convert your personal Pinterest account to a business
Pinterest account and (2) verify your website through Pinterest. When you
verify your Pinterest account, you will be able to set up Rich Pins. Rich Pins provide additional
information on your pins from your site, regardless of if you pinned it or
someone else.
Create relevant
Pinterest boards
Your Pinterest boards
should align with your blog niche. For example, if you are a food blogger, your
boards should all be related to food. If you are interested in using Pinterest
for other things, then create a personal account for those off-brand topics.
To optimize your
Pinterest Boards, utilize these four best practices:
·
In each board, you
should include a thorough description of what kinds of pins users can find. The descriptions
should include relevant keywords and phrases. In our Instagram board,
you can see what keywords and phrases we use to identify the types of pins
found there.
·
Use tools such
as Tailwind to
analyze your boards’ virality score. This score shows the number of engagements each pin receives.
The higher the score, the better for your images, board, profile, and website.
·
Strategically engage
with group boards. You
might find yourself invited to several group boards. When determining what
group boards to join, make sure they align with your content and have more
followers than your current profile. We found that several boards had poor
virality scores and fewer followers, so we left those groups.
·
Use Tailwind’s Tribes to share
your relevant content. I’ve been utilizing Tailwind Tribes to promote our graphics.
It’s a way to share graphics without getting penalized with a low-quality group
board.
·
A few years ago, you
could delete and move pins, and it would result in a significant improvement in
your Pinterest traffic. Since their algorithm changed, this method is not as
reliable. We still recommend removing low-quality pins. During our sabbatical
of blogging, we removed anything with poor engagement; our Pinterest followers
grew by 1000+ without pinning any new content. Food for thought!
Pin quality matters
The best way to grow
your Pinterest profile is to pin high-quality, beautiful images. Pinterest is
full of hideous graphics. It’s pretty easy to stand out with beautiful
templates. Using blog post templates to create a strong and consistent brand
presence can have a lasting impact. Potential readers will be able to identify
your content quickly.
When you are playing
around with Pinterest templates, identify what sorts of pins do best for your
brand. For example, long infographic type pins always do significantly well for
me. Simple blog post templates do okay. Thus, WE spend more time creating
infographics when possible. The type of graphic that works for your brand
varies on your niche. Infographics don’t make sense for food bloggers, but
long-pin collages do!
Anytime you pin an
image from your website, always include a detailed description full of keywords
and relevant search terms. We can’t emphasize how much this plays a part in
creating viral pins. When I’m pinning our images, we take extra time to make
sure that the descriptions are optimized. There are plugins you can use for
this, but we prefer the manual approach.
When pinning content,
make sure you are diversifying your content. Your pins should be a healthy mix
of your images and others. Aesthetically, other people’s graphics should have a
similar style to your pictures. Your pins (whether from your website or someone
else’s) reflect your overall brand, so those pins should follow your brand
standards.
Pin frequency
The easiest way to drive Pinterest traffic to your blog site is
to pin frequently. Pin your content from your website (even the old stuff).
Your readers will share your images on Pinterest, but you should be the first
to pin your images. Instead of pinning all of your graphics at one time
and the same image repeatedly to different boards, you can use Tailwind to schedule your
pins for optimal engagement.
Pin images to multiple
boards, especially if you are a member of group boards. Pinning the same image
to multiple boards ensures that different audiences can view your image, which
helps with virality score.
Consider deleting old
pins with low engagement. If you have images that are not driving traffic to
your website, you might want to consider reshooting them or updating the
Pinterest graphic. Your Pinterest profile should be full of pins with high
engagement. If the pins are really old, do not worry about doing this, they will be pushed down the board to show the newest ones first.
How to schedule pins
to Tailwind?
With the Tailwind
extension tool and app, you can easily schedule pins from your browser or
phone. Here’s how you can schedule pins:
1. Click the Tailwind browser toolbar.
2. Select the pins you want to schedule.
3. Click “Go Schedule!” button in the bottom
right-hand corner.
4. Assign the boards you want the pins to show
up. You can also keep pins in your drafts queue by selecting “Save for Later.”
How many times a day
should you pin on Pinterest?
Schedule between twenty to a hundred pins a day. Using
tools like Tailwind, you
can build up a queue of pins. So start small, such as twenty pins a day. As you
add more pins to your queue, you can adjust the number of pins you publish. By
using this approach, you will always have a healthy queue of pins ready to go.
It’s better to be active 365 days a year with twenty pins, then pinning 100
images one day a year.
What is the best time
to post to Pinterest?
Fortunately, you don’t
have to guess at it (like Instagram). Tailwind calculates the best time for you
publish your pins. When you set up your schedule, you will select how many
times a day you want to pin. Then, Tailwind will identify what times work best
for those pins.
Action Steps
If you need to do an internal audit of your Pinterest account,
first focus on cleaning up your profile and boards. Once those are optimized,
sign-up for Tailwind and
start scheduling all of your images (even ones you’ve previously pinned). Focus
on pinning evergreen or seasonally relevant pins first. Once you get everything
cleaned up, you will find that you can work smarter, not harder.
I hope this information in this blog has helped you. It has helped up all the way up until this point and its just getting better. Follow us across the board at Brian Baccus Brands and Style Click Media
Pin quality matters
I hope this information in this blog has helped you. It has helped up all the way up until this point and its just getting better. Follow us across the board at Brian Baccus Brands and Style Click Media