Written by Jeff Bullas
Thanks, Jeff, for agreeing to share this blog post with
Teachers With Apps. Jeff is a consultant, coach, mentor and speaker who works with companies and executives to optimize their online personal and company presence and brand, with digital marketing and social media through the use of social media channels and other web and mobile technologies. He has a degree in Commerce and Economics and has spent most of his career involved with Information Technologies, Telecommunications, and the Web Industry.

If you think that publishing is going through an evolution then photography is experiencing a revolution. There are happy snappers everywhere. The smartphone with the built-in high definition camera is turning everyone into a photographer. Add some software technology with Instagram filters and an ordinary photo is becoming a piece of art.
Sites such as Pinterest are also allowing us to share this visual art form in glorious color, creativity, and ease just by pinning images from the screen with a couple of clicks.
Competitors such as
The Fancy.com are taking these concepts of visual pinning even further into the realm of social commerce and have announced that they have reached a whopping one million users already.
The Rise of Social Mobile Commerce
The Fancy has introduced a few new features into its mobile app offering, most notably the ability to buy products (they are reportedly making an average of $50,000 each week from users snapping up the products they fancy). Up until now, users could only collect images they fancied, but now you can buy them with one-click purchasing directly from your
iPhone or iPad.
This revolution is changing the way businesses perform commerce online. Online vendors are realizing that the habits and practices of buyers online are changing rapidly and that tablet and smartphone users are much more likely to impulse buy with the convenience of one-click shopping.
Pinterest has the Numbers
When it is all said and done, Pinterest still has the mind share and the numbers (currently at over 20 million users) but it certainly needs to keep developing its platform rapidly.
Online boutiques such as Boticca have turned their product categories into boards on Pinterest and are generating up to 10% of their sales from clicks from Pinterest. (
Read more about that here)
So how do you use Pinterest to market your business?
10 Tips for Marketing on Pinterest
As with all marketing, you need to start with a plan to win and Pinterest is no different.
1. Plan for Pinning Success
When setting up your account make sure it is set up properly and branded with your logo. Create boards that suit your target customers and your industry niche. Also, make sure that you have integrated your Pinterest platform with your other social media platforms.
2. Remember Copyright
I was attending an online retailer conference recently and ShopNBC pointed out that it is important to ensure that you are not pinning images that have copyright. Also, remember to attribute your source.
3. Pin Strategically
The mantra is Pin, Repin and follow. Build up a loyal tribe and they will reward you with significant sharing. Remember when anyone repins the link still points back to your site. Think of Pinterest as a friendly virus.
4. Be a Social Pinner
Don’t forget to comment, like other pins and @tag other pinners by name. Also, remember your manners and say thanks when you are repinned.
5. Produce Pinnable Content
The rise of a much more visual web requires you to create and share high-quality images. Also, remember that you can also pin video as well. For B2B businesses that work in knowledge industries, you can also pin images that point to your presentations on Slideshare.
6. Create and Curate
Don’t just post your images curate other quality images and photos from others. Remember to share the love. The power of reciprocation is alive and well and if you share others content they will feel obliged to share yours.
7. Be a Creative Pinner
A lot of business have great images offline that could be placed online to add to your content. Run competitions and include a call to action in your pins.
8. Keep Search Engines in Mind
Google notices fresh content and also social signals. So optimize your pins with hashtags, links, categories, and keywords. It is very important to pin images and content from your website. Pinterest can drive a lot of traffic to your website if you do this correctly with compelling and contagious photos and images. Infographics work very well on Pinterest.
9. Don’t Forget your Tools
The essential tool is the “Pin It” button on your browser. Also, download the Pinterest app for your mobile devices.
10. Monitor and Measure your Traffic
This will assist you in finding out what works and what doesn’t. Do more of what works. Also, monitor what your competitors and other brands are doing and you will be surprised by what you will learn.

Source:
Donna Moritz of Socially Sorted on the
AmyPorterfield Blog