This guide is based on Mixergy’s course with Melanie Duncan.
Melanie Duncan struggled to get consistent traffic for her personalized home décor business, so she marketed her products on Pinterest and her traffic shot through the roof. It was all done by increasing traffic and sales with Pinterest, so we invited her to teach you how to do it.
Melanie is the founder of Entrepreneuress Academy, where she teaches women how to start and grow successful businesses online. She also offers Pinterest training in upcoming webinars.
Here are the actionable highlights from the course.
Melanie says that Anna White added a “pin it” button to her carpentry blog and people started pinning her images, and she now gets 6,000 visitors a day from Pinterest and is able to support her family from her blog’s ad revenue.
Melanie pinned an image she created and linked the pin to an opt-in page for her newsletter, and lots of people re-pinned it and drove traffic to her page.
Melanie has separate Pinterest accounts for each of her businesses that display their names and logos, and she has a personal account for pins that don’t relate to her businesses.
Melanie says that Lionsgate Studios pinned its own YouTube videos, and within five days the videos went from 200,000 views to 400,000 views.
Melanie pinned a video and added a caption that said, “Click here to sign up for a free webinar on how to use Pinterest for your business.”
Melanie adds hashtags to her home décor pins using keywords like “bridal shower” and “monogrammed bedding”.
Melanie recommends that real estate agents add prices to pins of houses they’re trying to sell, because otherwise people might think they’re pictures of homes from a magazine and not houses for sale on the market.
Melanie said that a fitness coach pinned before-and-after pictures of his clients, and that gave people proof of what he could do and made him more credible.
Melanie held a contest for her Luxury Monograms business giving away a free pillow, and 200 people re-pinned the pin to enter.
Melanie saw that a blog post about integrating Pinterest with Facebook business pages was one of her most re-pinned pins, and she realized that people wanted more information about integrating social networks.
Written by Sarah Brodsky, based on production notes by Jeremy Weisz