Pinterest gets dismissed as a platform for recipe inspiration and home décor mood boards, but that’s a mistake. The platform has 465 million monthly active users, and unlike most social networks, these users aren’t just passively scrolling—they’re actively looking to buy.
Here’s what most marketers miss: Pinterest functions more like a visual search engine than a social network. When someone searches for “modern farmhouse living room ideas” or “easy dinner recipes,” they’re in research mode. They’re planning. They’re close to buying. Your business can get discovered exactly when people are looking for what you offer.
This guide covers everything you need to get started with Pinterest marketing—from setting up your account to creating a pinning strategy that drives real traffic and sales. I’ll walk you through the specific steps, the tools that matter, and the common mistakes that trip up most beginners.
Pinterest for Business is a suite of tools designed for brands, retailers, and creators who want to reach audiences on Pinterest. It gives you access to analytics, advertising options, and marketing-specific features that help you understand what’s working and scale what isn’t.
Converting to a business account (or creating one from the start) unlocks capabilities that personal accounts don’t have:
The basic functionality of pinning and creating boards exists in both account types, but the business features turn Pinterest into a legitimate marketing channel. If you’re serious about using Pinterest for business growth, a business account is necessary.
The numbers are worth considering. Pinterest users tend to have higher household incomes compared to average social media users, and a large percentage say they use the platform to plan purchases. When someone saves a pin from your website, they’re bookmarking it for future purchase. That’s intent-level engagement you won’t find on most other platforms.
Competition is also lower than Facebook, Instagram, or TikTok. For many niches—home decor, fashion, food, wedding planning, fitness, DIY—Pinterest remains underutilized by businesses. Your content has a better chance of getting discovered here than on more saturated platforms.
Setting up your business account correctly from the start saves hours of frustration later. Follow these steps, and you’ll have a fully optimized profile ready within about 30 minutes.
Go to business.pinterest.com and click “Join” or “Create Account.” You can convert an existing personal account or start fresh with a new email. If you already have a personal account with your brand username, you can convert it—but be aware this changes how your account functions. Many businesses prefer starting fresh to keep things organized from day one.
You’ll need to provide:
The category selection matters more than most beginners realize. Pinterest uses this to understand your content and show it to relevant users. Choose the most specific category that applies to your business.
Once your account is created, claim your website right away. This connects your website to your Pinterest profile and unlocks several important features:
To claim your website, go to Settings → Claimed Websites → Add Website. You’ll need to add an HTML meta tag to your website’s header, upload an HTML file to your root directory, or add a DNS TXT record through your domain provider. WordPress users can use the Pinterest Tag plugin. Shopify users have built-in integration.
Your Pinterest profile is your storefront. It needs to communicate who you are and what you offer in seconds:
The Pinterest Tag is a piece of code that tracks conversions from Pinterest to your website. Install it before you start running any ads—or even before you build out significant organic content. You’ll thank yourself later when you can actually measure whether Pinterest is delivering results.
You can install the tag through Google Tag Manager, directly in your site code, or through platform-specific integrations like the Pinterest Channel for Shopify. The tag tracks page views, conversions, and enables audience targeting for your ads.
Now that your account is set up, it’s time to understand the features that drive results. Pinterest has a learning curve that surprises many beginners. The platform rewards strategy, not just volume.
Boards are the organizational backbone of your Pinterest presence. Think of them as themed collections that help users find content—and help Pinterest understand what your business offers.
Create boards that reflect the main categories of what you sell or the topics your audience cares about. A home décor retailer might create boards like “Living Room Ideas,” “Modern Kitchen Designs,” “Color Schemes,” and “DIY Home Projects.” A fitness coach might have boards for “Workout Routines,” “Healthy Recipes,” “Weight Loss Tips,” and “Fitness Motivation.”
When creating each board:
One mistake beginners make is creating too few boards. Spread your content across multiple focused boards rather than dumping everything into one or two catch-all collections. This improves your discoverability and makes your profile look active and organized.
Here’s where most beginners go wrong: they pin obsessively, posting 50, 100, even 200 pins per day, expecting volume to drive results. It doesn’t work that way anymore. The platform has shifted toward rewarding quality and relevance over sheer quantity. That doesn’t mean you should only pin once a week—it means every pin needs to be worth saving.
Standard Pins are what most businesses create: images with titles, descriptions, and links back to your website. These should be vertical (2:3 aspect ratio is ideal—1000×1500 pixels) because they take up more screen space and perform better in the feed.
Idea Pins (formerly Story Pins) let you create multi-page, swipeable content directly on Pinterest. These work well for tutorials, behind-the-scenes content, and storytelling. They can boost engagement significantly and are currently favored by the algorithm.
Shop the Look Pins are available to businesses with a connected product catalog and work particularly well for fashion, home décor, and beauty brands. They let users click directly on items within an image to see product details and pricing.
The single most important thing you can do for each pin is write a compelling description. Include 2-3 relevant keywords naturally, add a call to action (“Save this for later,” “Get the tutorial here”), and make sure it clearly conveys what the user will find when they click. Avoid keyword stuffing—it reads as spammy and Pinterest’s algorithm is smart enough to penalize it.
Pinterest functions as a search engine, which means search engine optimization principles apply—but the keywords are visual. When you optimize for Pinterest search, you’re optimizing for how people actually search on the platform, which is often more specific and idea-driven than Google searches.
Start with keyword research specifically for Pinterest. The search bar itself is your best tool. Type in a topic related to your business and watch what autocomplete suggestions appear. These are actual queries people are making, which makes them incredibly valuable for understanding intent. Build your content calendar around these real search terms.
Your pin titles and descriptions should include primary keywords near the beginning, followed by secondary keywords and natural language. Pin titles should be descriptive and readable—something like “Modern Farmhouse Living Room Ideas on a Budget” rather than “Living Room.”
On your website itself, make sure the images you want people to pin have keyword-rich alt text and file names. When someone pins from your site, Pinterest reads this information and uses it to determine where to show the pin.
One counterintuitive tip: keywords in your pin design itself (the text overlaid on the image) can help. Pinterest’s technology now reads text within images, so adding a few words to your pin graphics—like “Best Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe”—can improve your ranking for that term.
Having a business account and knowing how to create pins is only half the battle. You need a strategy that makes your efforts sustainable and effective over time.
Successful Pinterest marketing requires a steady stream of fresh content. But “fresh” doesn’t mean you need to create new images from scratch every day. A smart content strategy repurposes what you already have.
If you blog, turn your best blog posts into multiple pins. Each blog post can generate several pins with different titles, descriptions, and images targeting different keywords. A single comprehensive guide might become a “how-to” pin, a “tips” pin, a “mistakes to avoid” pin, and several “listicle” style pins—all linking back to the same article.
For product-based businesses, your product images become your pins. But don’t just pin your product photos directly. Create lifestyle images that show your products in use. A coffee company should pin images of people enjoying coffee in various settings, not just product shots against white backgrounds. Make your audience envision themselves using what you sell.
Create a content calendar and aim for consistency over perfection. Most successful Pinterest businesses pin somewhere between 10 and 30 times per day, but that number includes both their own content and content they’re saving from others. Don’t burn yourself out trying to hit an arbitrary number. Focus on consistently creating great pins and scheduling them efficiently.
Pinterest Analytics lives within your business account and provides insights into how your content is performing. Three metrics matter most for beginners:
Pay attention to the “Top Pins” section to understand what’s working, then create more of that type of content. Also check the “Audience Insights” tab to learn what your followers are interested in beyond your own content—this tells you what topics to branch into.
One honest limitation worth noting: Pinterest Analytics has improved but still lags behind platforms like Google Analytics for detailed attribution. You’ll get a general sense of what’s working, but connecting Pinterest activity directly to sales requires proper UTM tracking and sometimes the Pinterest Tag setup I mentioned earlier.
There’s no magic number that works for every business. Factors like your industry, audience size, and content resources all play a role. However, general guidelines suggest posting 5-15 new pins per day from your own content, while also saving 10-20 relevant pins from other creators to engage with the community.
Consistency matters more than volume. It’s better to pin 10 high-quality pins every day than 50 mediocre ones one day and none the next. Use scheduling tools (Tailwind, Later, or Pinterest’s native scheduler) to maintain consistency without spending all day on the platform.
The best times to pin vary by your audience, but general research suggests morning hours (especially around 8-11 AM) and evening hours (around 7-9 PM) perform well. However, Pinterest has become more sophisticated about showing content at the right time for each user, so don’t overthink the perfect timing. Consistent daily presence matters more than hitting an exact hour.
Once you’ve built a foundation with organic content, Pinterest’s advertising options can amplify your reach significantly. But be cautious—ads on Pinterest can get expensive quickly if you don’t know what you’re doing.
Promoted Pins look identical to regular pins but get shown to audiences beyond your followers. You only pay when someone engages with the pin (saves, clicks, or close-ups), not just when they see it.
Start with a small budget—$5-10 per day—and promote your best-performing organic pins. Pinterest’s algorithm learns from engagement, so your highest-performing organic content typically works best as promoted content. Promoting content that nobody is saving or clicking is throwing money away.
When setting up a promoted pin campaign, you can target by:
For most beginners, keyword targeting is the best starting point. It’s more direct—you’re reaching people already searching for what you offer.
If you sell products, Shopping Ads (sometimes called Catalog Ads) can be effective. You upload your product catalog to Pinterest, and Pinterest automatically turns your products into shoppable ads that appear in relevant search results and the Shopping tab.
Setup requires connecting your product feed through Pinterest’s Catalog Manager. If you use Shopify, this integration is straightforward. For other platforms, you may need to generate a product feed and upload it manually or through a data provider.
The advantage of Shopping Ads is that they’re automatically optimized—they show products most likely to convert based on what’s available in your catalog. You don’t need to select individual pins or keywords for each product.
One thing to know: Pinterest ads tend to have a higher cost-per-click than Facebook or Instagram, but often higher conversion rates because of the intent-driven nature of the platform. Don’t be alarmed if your CPC is higher than other platforms—this often signals that you’re reaching people closer to purchase.
Visit business.pinterest.com and create an account using your business email. You’ll need to provide your business name, website URL, and select a business category. Once created, claim your website through Settings to unlock analytics and Rich Pins, then install the Pinterest Tag on your website for conversion tracking. Optimize your profile with a clear bio, logo, and website link before you start pinning.
Pinterest works well for business when your target audience uses the platform—which is particularly true for industries like home décor, fashion, food, wedding planning, fitness, beauty, and DIY. Pinterest users have high purchase intent, with many saying they use the platform to plan purchases. The platform functions as a visual search engine, meaning people actively look for products and ideas rather than passively scrolling. For the right businesses, Pinterest delivers qualified traffic and measurable sales.
You promote your business on Pinterest through a combination of organic strategy and paid advertising. Organically, create keyword-optimized pins, organize them into themed boards, and maintain consistent pinning schedules. For paid promotion, use Promoted Pins to reach new audiences beyond your followers, and if you sell products, use Shopping Ads to automatically turn your product catalog into shoppable advertisements. Always start with your best-performing organic content when testing paid options.
A Pinterest business account is free. There are no fees to create a business profile, access Pinterest Analytics, create boards and pins, or use most features. Costs come only if you choose to run Pinterest Ads, where you set your own daily budget and pay per engagement (click, save, or close-up). You can run effective Pinterest marketing entirely for free—ads are optional, not required.
Pinterest for business isn’t a set-it-and-forget-it platform. It requires strategic setup, consistent effort, and ongoing optimization. But unlike most social media platforms where organic reach continues to decline, Pinterest still rewards businesses that invest in quality content and proper optimization.
Start by setting up your business account correctly—claim your website, install your tag, and optimize your profile. Then focus on creating genuinely valuable pins that solve problems or inspire your audience. Use Pinterest’s search suggestions to guide your keyword strategy, not just your assumptions about what people want.
Think of Pinterest as a search engine, not a social network. The businesses that win on Pinterest are the ones creating content that answers real questions people are asking. If you can be the answer to those searches, the platform will work for you.
The hardest part is starting. Your 30 minutes starts now. Create that business account, claim your website, and pin your first optimized content today.
Kashvee Gautam is a name that’s buzzing around India’s women’s cricket scene — and quite…
Shab e Barat Namaz: How to Pray, Dua, and Importance opens a window into a profound night…
Kamindu Mendis, the Sri Lankan all-rounder with an uncanny knack for rewriting cricketing norms, has…
Spending money on ads before you have product-market fit is one of the most expensive…
Your value proposition is the only thing that determines whether a prospect keeps reading or…
Most entrepreneurs waste weeks crafting marketing plans that sit in drawers gathering dust. The reason…