Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
1
July 2013
anner ads are passing away without so much as a eulogy. Good riddance. The clickthrough rates on banners have been abysmal since the beginning of the internet. Pinterest is here now, offering a similar aesthetic an image, some text, and the chance to click through but to a far more engaged audience. The platform is already attracting huge numbers of users, approaching 50 million around the world, and reached 10 million monthly unique visitors faster than any independent site in history. People are going to Pinterest for the sole purpose of being inspired. Theyre seeking visual stimuli, and willingly clicking on the things they find interesting. Visual marketing on Pinterest fits the context, and the behavior everyone on the platform is familiar with. Since any product-related content is identical to non-marketing content, the rates of sharing and clicking through on brand posts are just as high as non-branded content. And it doesnt stop at clicks. Pinterest is a conversion machine. Sephora has reported that customers who follow the brands Pinterest page spend 15 times more on Sephora products than the average Sephora Facebook fan*. So the user base may be smaller than other networks, but they certainly pull their weight.
*Source: http://www.digiday.com/brands/5-brands-winning-at-pinterest/
ts important to understand exactly how the user experiences Pinterest in order to understand how people will find your brand page. Users will most often navigate to your brands boards through re-pins from other users, by actively searching for related content, or by scrolling through the related content on another board (i.e. People who pinned this also pinned). These illustrations demonstrate how a user sees Pinterest, and how the typical pathways to brand discovery look. Note the emphasis on related content, which helps keep users engaged with a steady stream of targeted pins.
The home screen displays recent imagery from any Pinterest accounts or boards that the user has followed.
As you can see, Pins have a standard width, but the height can vary.
Aside from scrolling through her personal feed of followed content, the user can discover content one of three ways. The rst is a simple keyword search on the home screen, pictured above.
Users are also offered related boards to browse beneath every pin.
Lastly, just below the related boards on any pin are the suggested pins a huge board of content pinned by users who also interacted with the page.
How do users interact with content and repin back to their own boards?
When viewing a board or individual pin, you may repin, like, visit the linked website, send to another Pinterest user or share via Facebook, Twitter or embedding.
When repinning, the user can add a personal caption, which replaces the caption of the original user when the pin is displayed on the new users board. The website behind the image always remains when an image is repinned.
efining yourself through social activity is a big part of any social network, whether that means 140 characters on Twitter or a square photograph of your homemade chili on Instagram. On Pinterest, the way for users to build their digital personalities is by curating boards of products and imagery that they want, or want to be associated with. This is where the inspiration comes in users spend their time looking at and interacting with items that move them in some way. They aspire to have or to be associated with the things they pin. If a user has been inspired by a pin featuring a product, then its safe to say the hard work of convincing a customer that they want that product is already done. It should come as no surprise that on average Pinterest traffic spent 60% more money on discovered items than did traffic coming from Facebook. Pinterest traffic converted to a sale 22% more than Facebook traffic.*
*http://readwrite.com/2013/04/17/social-networking-for-marketers-pinterest-crushes-facebook-infographic#awesm=~ocDRhX0aiZbHQy
76% 69%
67%
57%
The motivations of Pinterest users are quite different from other social sharing sites.
Facebook
1. An effective way of sharing information because most people I know are on the site 76% 2. Allows me to connect with people who I wouldnt normally be in touch with 76%
Twitter
1. Can follow celebrities/public figures who I may not know in person 2. Provides quick updates 60% 51%
Instagram
1. Ability to upload pictures I take 2. A way to appreciate good photos/photography 67% 62%
Of note: excluding Twitter, women felt stronger than men about nearly all motivations across the social media properties.
s of May 2013, 93% of all U.S. Pinterest users are female*. However, that isnt to say that the platform itself cant hold a male audience. In fact, reports in 2012 showed that Pinterest users in the U.K. are actually predominantly male, and brands like Mashable and Jetsetter that index well with both male a female audiences host some of the most popular boards on the site. But at least for now, Pinterest is dominated by women. Attitudes toward brands are much more favorable on Pinterest, where 43% of people say they prefer to associate with retailers or brands, vs. just 24% on Facebook.
http://mashable.com/2013/05/08/pinterest-most-popular-brand-boards/
48.7M 47.5%
4.75M
people follow L.L. Beans Woodland Creatures board, which is nearly 10% of total users
58/100
21-30
37%
-20 11% 31-40 23% +50 41-50 17% 16%
10 million
Pinterest hit
U.S monthly unique visitors faster than any independent site in history!
13
60%
40%
14
93%
50%
n order to make a brand page into a Pinterest destination for users, the key is to host the type of content that has drawn users to the platform in the first place. Ideas and inspiration are the currency of Pinterest, so think about how your brand can offer that type of content. You dont need to dilute your brands lifestyle message at all, just understand what that lifestyle message looks like as a series of pins. The platform rewards brands who can successfully compartmentalize their message into visually stimulating suggestions for how users can achieve that lifestyle. Highlight the moments when your brand really matters to people. This should help your products seamlessly integrate into your Pins.
Great branded content comes from brands who understand why their product matters
16
17
DIY
Recipes and small DIY projects are a huge draw for the inspirationseeking crowd.
Etsy has earned about 250,000 repins from their Yum! Recipes to Share board.
18
Lifestyle imagery
There is only so much furniture that ts in one house, but theres no limit to the space on a Pinterest board.
Lowes has been extremely successful in this category as well with their Time to Shine board, pairing imagery of chic outdoor living spaces with suggestions or useful product information.
19
Jetsetters Daily Moment of Zen is a one-stop shop for beautiful and exotic vacation settings.
20
21
22
Your Brand
Build a personality space for your brand that users can align themselves with through repinning.
Your Boards
Focus on the simplicity of deliverable, sustainability of content, and consistency within the board. The more users know exactly what to expect, the more likely theyll come back to see similar content.
Your Pins
Make your product part of your post. Dont just make a post about your product. Keep the captions relevant. Treat them like a little bonus to the image maybe a helpful or entertaining nugget of information Use positive and beautiful imagery things that people will want to claim for their own.
Your Followers
Create content that adds depth to your followers virtual personalities by aligning them with your brands image.
23
STUDY
24
Lowes Pinterest shows the depth of their brand identity at the same time that it showcases the retail offering of the store. Through inspirational pins that appeal to user interest in seasonal and holiday content, Lowes has been able to build one of the largest retail communities on the platform, which has helped to drive preference for their brand over competitors.
Challenge
Create a Pinterest presence that inspires consumers to take on home improvement challenges with the help of Lowes.
Idea
Capitalizing on the interests of the regular Pinterest fan base, create boards that engage Pinterest users in their passion points. Home related content is already one of the most popular categories on Pinterest, so the real challenge for Lowes became making their home content more compelling than other brands and user generated content. The mix of DIY content and seasonal boards helps keep the page fresh and worth returning to for users at each login.
Results
Noted as a top retailer brand on Pinterest, with over 3.5 million brand followers Published the 5th most popular Pinterest board on the platform, Build It!, with over 3.5 million board followers Continues to garner large scale engagement, surpassing top competitor engagement on Pinterest by nearly 9 times
25
Build It! (3,567,985 followers): Lowes most popular board features DIY projects, often including the price of construction right on the description. Content is a mix of original Lowes.com projects and pins/repins from other websites.
Time to Shine (81,972 followers): Showcases home outdoor spaces, with furniture, appliances and recipes that make those spaces special. All pins link to purchase or recipes on Lowes.com.
Fix in Six (77,625 followers): Taking Lowes successful Vine campaign, this board translates the same helpful tips into pins. The images link to the original Vine content on the Fix in Six Tumblr, helping to grow Lowes digital ecosystem outside of Pinterest.
Emerald: 2013 Color of the Year (77,549 followers): Everything emerald green. It can be this simple. Mostly repinned, mixed with purchasable content from Lowes.com.
26
STUDY
27
In this first-of-its-kind Pinterest hack, Campbells turned a regular Pinboard into one crowd-sourced, almost endlessly scrolling casserole. With the help of Thanksgiving casserole fans, the brand created the longest scrolling food image in history and drove a ton of people back to the recipe website.
Challenge
Thanksgiving is Americas biggest foodfocused holiday. To drive more traffic to CampbellsKitchen.com during this time of year, the brand leveraged the worlds fastest growing recipe referral site - Pinterest.
Idea
In a first-of-its-kind Pinterest hack, Campbells transformed a Pinboard into a giant casserole and developed a way to let fans make it grow. Every time the recipe was repinned, Campbells would add another portion to the Pinterest board casserole. Each portion added also represented a dollar donated to Feeding America for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Results
250% increase in traffic on CampbellsKitchen.com Over a million new Green Bean Casserole recipe views The longest-scrolling food image in history Over 50 million impressions Over $10,000 donated to fight hunger over the holidays
28
29
For more information or business opportunities, please contact: Simon Bond, Chief Marketing Ofcer, BBDO and Proximity Worldwide Simon.Bond@bbdo.com
WRITTEN BY JACK LEONARD EDITED BY ZACH PENTEl DESIGNED BY KATHLEEN HANNA MEGHAN MILLER NINJA
30