Digital

THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO PINTEREST FOR EVERY BRAND

BY: EKATERINA WALTER. There’s nothing wrong worth just pinning to your boards, but if you want to know the ins and outs beneath the surface, what the terms mean etc, then carry on, it makes interesting reading. We are currently at 552 followers, make that 553 someone else just followed all our boards! pinterest.com/brandingcomms/boards

DON’T KNOW YOUR SECOND-DEGREE FOLLOWERS FROM YOUR SHORT-TERM FOLLOWERS? YOU SHOULD. ACCORDING TO ONE RECENT STUDY, THE SITE DRIVES MORE REFERRAL TRAFFIC THAN GOOGLE+, YOUTUBE, AND LINKEDIN COMBINED. MARKETERS, START YOUR BROWSERS.

Pinterest has captured our visual fancy like no other network before it.

The image-driven network’s meteoric rise in only a few years shows the site is more than just a pretty community for people interested in fashion and lifestyle: Marketers are all over Pinterest’s lead-generation aspects, and online hits on products from the site have proved a marketing sensation. According to a study by Shareaholic, the site drives more referral traffic than Google+, YouTube, and LinkedIn combined.

But marketers still struggle to define what makes for a successful Pinterest content strategy–and what does not. Based on my experience with Pinterest analytics and with the support of Pinterest-savvy folks at ShareRoot, I have come up with a list of metrics that marketers should pay attention to when it comes to this social network. Below, you’ll find a helpful infographic that lays all the data out.

First, let’s start with the definitions.

PIN
Pinterest helps people organize the things they love through the use of pins. A pin can consist of an image or video of a gift, recipe, destination, or quote. In order to populate your brand’s Pinterest profile, your team will need to collect and pin individual pins to boards on your brand’s profile.

BOARD
Your brand’s Pinterest profile is made up of boards, with pins on each board. A board is an opportunity for your brand to showcase various themes/interests/passions of your brand. You can create as many boards as you like, but you want to make sure that each board has a purpose and strategy behind it. Pinterest users can follow individual boards, or entire Pinterest profiles.

PINNING
In order to turn a piece of content into a pin on Pinterest, a Pinterest user needs to take the first act of pinning the item. In order to pin a piece of content your brand owns, you can click on “upload a pin” to pin an image or video that lives offline, and “add from a website” to pin an image from online.

FOLLOWERS
A follower is any Pinterest user who has chosen to “follow” your brand. Once a user has become your follower, each pin/repin made by your brand appears in that user’s Pinterest newsfeed.

FOLLOWING
If you follow a brand or a Pinterest user, you are their follower. Once your brand becomes a follower of a brand on Pinterest or a Pinterest user, anytime that user or brand makes a pin or a repin, it will show up in your newsfeed.

REPIN
Once a pin exists on Pinterest, users are free to repin that pin. Each time one of your brand’s pins gets repinned, that pin will show up in the newsfeeds of all of the Pinterest users following the user who repinned your pin.

NEWSFEED
There are three newsfeeds on Pinterest: your brand’s newsfeed, another Pinterest user’s newsfeed, and the Pinterest category newsfeed. The newsfeeds are the most active locations for content discovery on Pinterest. The most engaged pins across Pinterest within a given category show up in the categorical newsfeeds.

LIKE
Similar to Facebook, Pinterest users are able to like pins. The difference between liking a pin and repinning it is that with liking, the user is not prompted to pin that pin to their profile and it does not show up in the newsfeed of their followers.

COMMENT
Below the content of each pin is an open text box where users can make “comments.” Although comments are not used too often by Pinterest users, there are some interesting ways to weave comments into a Pinterest contest execution. That being said, similar to a “like,” a comment does not push that pin into the commenter’s follower’s newsfeeds.

And now, let’s turn to…
PINTEREST METRICS THAT MARKETERS SHOULD TRACK

AVERAGE REPINS PER PIN
Based on your brand’s previous engagement history, average repins per pin defines the average repins your brand has received each time it has made a pin or a repin.

AVERAGE LIKES PER PIN
Based on your brand’s previous engagement history, average likes per pin defines the average likes your brand has received each time it has made a pin or a repin.

AVERAGE COMMENTS PER PIN
Based on your brand’s previous engagement history, average comments per pin defines the average comments your brand has received each time it has made a pin or a repin.

AVERAGE 2ND DEGREE FOLLOWERS
Average 2nd degree followers shows your brand how connected your follower base is. Specifically the average number of followers each of your brand’s followers has.

FOLLOWER ENGAGEMENT
Follower engagement percentage shows your brand what percentage of your follower base you can expect to engage with each of your pins/repins.

SHORT-TERM FOLLOWER ENGAGEMENT
A current/recent snaphshot of follower engagement. Your short-term follower engagement will fluctuate rapidly in comparison to follower engagement, and is best used to measure the effectiveness of a recent modification to your brand’s Pinterest strategy.

REACH
Reach shows your brand the number of unique newsfeed impressions you can expect each time you make a pin or repin.

VELOCITY
Current average number of pins/repins your brand makes per week. This metric is a great tool for testing out the ideal amount of pins/repins your brand should be pinning per week. If you modify the velocity and keep it steady at a modified rate, you can use the “short-term follower engagement” metric to determine whether the change in velocity produced better engagement results for your brand.

IMPRESSIONS
The number of times pins from your brand’s website were seen each day on Pinterest.

REACH
(Pinterest’s metric–specific to the relationship between your website and Pinterest): The number of people on Pinterest who saw a pin from your brand’s website each day on Pinterest.

CLICKS
The number of clicks pins from your brand’s website received each day.

MOST RECENT
This pin feed shows you the most recent pins that originated from your brand’s website.

MOST REPINNED
This pin feed shows you the most repinned pins that originated from your brand’s website.

MOST CLICKED
This pin feed shows you the most clicked on pins that originated from your brand’s website.

TOP FANS AND INFLUENCERS
A list of the most influential and most connected Pinterest users following your brand.

TOP PINS
Pins originating from your brand’s website with the most engagement.

TOTAL INTERACTIONS
Total Pinterest interactions with all of the pins originating from content on your brand’s website.

There are various tools available in the market that allow you to track some or all of these metrics, including ShareRoot, Curalate, and PinReach. But as a brand marketer it’s up to you to identify what service makes sense to you and what metrics are more important based on your marketing objectives. Here I wanted to provide a complete guide to help you make that decision. Happy pinning!