Pinterest is one of the latest Social Media platforms that has risen on the scene and it is an excellent tool to use to Market your Embroidery Business. Marketing with pictures is the most effective way that marketing is done today.

We have heard a lot about Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn for the past few years, but Pinterest just popped up out of nowhere and has very quickly risen very high in the ranks and is taking over in lot of different ways. Right now it is the 4th largest website in the world used to drive traffic to your website or your offer that you are trying to put in front of your audience. It drives more referral traffic than YouTube, Google+ and LinkedIn combined. It drives more traffic than Twitter.

Whether we like it or not Social media is driving our business today! We must learn to express ourselves in pictures in order to be able to drive traffic to our website or the products that we are offering our customers and prospects. Social media in pictures is how we are getting their attention today. People have stopped paying attention to just words and it is the pictures that are captivating their interests.

Pinterest is getting over 70 million unique visitors a month and is quickly taking over the Social Media Marketing community. It is the first site to really get the social shopping concept right!

Women are dominating Pinterest more than any other social networking site and the current age group is 18-39. In North America 60% of the Pinterest users are women and 50% of those women have children. These are women that have money to spend and are looking for something that is different and unique. If you are marketing to women then you absolutely need to be on Pinterest. 40% of men are Pinterest users in the US.  In Europe Pinterest users are a 50/50 split between women and men.

Pinterest is perfectly positioned for growth as the mobile revolution continues to expand. As users continue to fall more in love with mobile devices in record numbers, the visual strategies that work on Pinterest will become more and more effective across ALL online marketing channels. In creating our marketing messages today, we have to start thinking in pictures and very visual images.

Getting Started With Pinterest

Step 1  Set Up Your Account

You can sign up as an individual person or as a business. I do not see the point of signing up as an individual person. I think that signing up as a business is the only practical thing to do unless you are there just there to socialize and if you have a serious embroidery business; that should not be your goal.

Basic Rules To Follow In Setting Up Your Pinterest Account
There are some basic rules that you must follow to receive the best results as you are setting up your account, creating your Pinboards and your Pins. Boards are your categories and Pins are your pictures or content that you are posting.

  • Use Keywords in your Profile
  • Name your Pinboards with keywords
  • Name your Pins with keywords Put keywords in your captions along with a call to action and a link.
  • Create original content for your Pins
  • Add prices to your products
  • Only 20% of your Pins should be selling products!
  • Be inspirational with your products; show how they can be used
  • Show what is unique about you

The Embroidery Coach Pinboard

Types Of Pinboards To Set Up

  • Customers-Testimonials
  • Inspirational Photos of settings showing how your products can be used to give them ideas
  • Different Niches
  • Different Categories
  • About You & Your Business
  • FAQ
  • Gift Ideas

The Embroidery Coach PinTypes of Pins To Create

  • Inspirational
  • Quotes
  • Humor
  • Wedding Inspiration
  • Craft Projects
  • How To‚’s
  • Infographics
  • Products & How to Use them
  • Video
  • Decorating Ideas

You want to create original content and pin it. 80% of all of the Pins are repined from someone else‚’s board. While this is good, you need to be creating your own content and it will help you rank higher in the search engines. You want to create beautiful pictures that will attract other people so that they will repin them onto their boards.

You do not just want pretty pictures, they should be promoting one of your products in one way or another. It is great to just put up pictures, but without thought behind them, they will not produce the type of results that you want as a result of spending your time creating them.

When you first log into Pinterest, you will see all of the recent activity. This is like your Newsfeed in Facebook. You will also notice that you canThe Embroidery Coach on Pinterest either Pin it or Like any of the pictures that you see. As I said before these pictures are called Pins. When you bring up your actual page, you will not see the Like button. This is replaced with the Edit button.

Step Two: Set Your Goals

You need to set your goals and stay focused on them during the process that you are setting up your Pinterest account, creating your Pinboards and Pinning your posts. Knowing your goal can help you fine-tune and focus all your Pinterest efforts into achieving them. You won‚’t waste time and scatter your Pinterest energy by posting Pins that don‚’t help to move your business towards your objectives. Keep your goal in mind with each Pin that you create.

Step Three: Decide Which Strategies will Best Work for You

Even if you don‚’t need to share photos with a group that values the photos as content and resource material for what you are looking for, you can still use Pinterest strategies to attract new subscribers.

Some of the current strategies that are working great are:

  1. Providing Permanent Posting Power
    If you post a perfectly optimized post on Facebook one that‚’s sure to excite your target subscriber it’s life is limited to a few hours of visibility (assuming Facebook even displays that post or photo to your subscriber at all  possibility, thanks to the Edge rank algorithm and other feed changes). If your perfect Facebook post response or post is number nine, most people won‚’t even see it. Opportunity lost. Pinterest, on the other hand, displays your Pins and Pinboards forever. It’s really easy for people to see every bit of visual information you’ve created on Pinterest. They can refer back to your infographic, go pick up that great photo they remember from last week, see what‚’s new, and find any Pin in a matter of seconds. A Repin is forever.
  2. Providing Information
    Is your target market composed of visual learners? In that case, Pinterest is tailor-made for you! All you have to do is create powerful and easy-to-absorb Infographics‚ and post them to a Pinboard named with a highly-optimized keyword your target subscriber might search with. (Note that you can share videos on Pinterest too.)
  3. Connecting With Other Pinners
    You may be missing a whole segment of your market, if they are avid pinners or highly-visual learners among your majority of text-based or audio learners. Creating optimized Pinboards allows you to find and connect with this group. You‚’ll be able to absorb them into your community as they get to know your name and face. A key part of this, however, lies in reciprocal behavior. Don’t just provide Pinboards you think they‚’ll like (or find): Make sure you reach out to them, too.On Pinterest, you‚’ll be able to see who is a likely candidate to become a customer, fan, or a client. You’ll be able to see who is hugely popular in your niche, and not only connect with them, but analyze why and what are they doing that is so right! Repin, Like and Comment on your target audience’s (and peers) pinboards and Pins just as you would on any other social network.

Step Four: Create Original Content

Pinterest has never really just been about plopping a photo into a Pinboard and leaving it there. People have created infographics demonstrating everything from How-tos to statistics to Before-and-After shots to recipes.
There are 4 techniques that you should be using as you are creating your original content.

  1. Protect Your Images
    Just because you‚’re sharing your images doesn’t mean you don’t want credit where credit is due. An easy way to make sure the unscrupulous don’t steal your images (while not annoying those who just want to share or display them) watermark them! And you can set your watermark to be as strong or faint, as large or small, as you like.
  2. Enhance your Photo Pin
    You can also use online resources to edit and enhance your graphics and photographs. There are free program available that will help you do this.My favorite is Picmonkey.com
  3. Create A Word Cloud
    Another resource that has proved surprisingly popular: Word Clouds. You can sign up for Wordle.net and create graphic versions of your text ideas instantly perfect if you, yourself, are not visually oriented‚ but your audience is.
  4. Create Infographics
    You can create infographics using any type of artwork program and you can even create them using Microsoft Word. There are several programs available on the internet that you can use to create infographics but the resources that I have used are:
    *Infogr.am
    *Piktochart.com

In order to make this really work you want to start getting your current audience to engage with you and Like your Pins. Post on your Facebook page that you want them to follow you on Pinterest. Give them a reason to follow you on Pinterest. Have some tips on Pinterest for some type of information that is not posted on Facebook.
I have learned in all of my efforts of marketing my business is that you need to be reaching out on all of the Social Media platforms with your information because you will find followers on each of them that are not necessarily on all of them. You must find a way to broadcast your message across all of the major Social Media platforms, but Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and Pinterest are the most prominent as of this writing that will help you market your embroidery business. I’d like to invite you to go to www.Pinterest.com/embroiderycoach and see how I have my page set up.

I do not have a lot of time to spend on social media, and I do not jump on any new social media platform as soon as it pops up! I want to know what the purpose of it is and what it is going to do for me and my followers. Is it actually going to add value? If I cannot add value for my followers then there is no purpose in it for me. It is like every other part of your business. You need a plan. You want to be able to reach other people with the efforts of your posts regardless of what platform you are using.

I feel that Pinterest is here to stay and is a great way to use for marketing your Embroidery Business!