Unlocking the Power of Pinterest: The Overlooked Search Engine for Marketers
Digital Coffee: Marketing BrewDecember 04, 2024
51
26:0129.78 MB

Unlocking the Power of Pinterest: The Overlooked Search Engine for Marketers

Pinterest is often misunderstood as just another social media platform, but in reality, it functions as a powerful search engine that can significantly enhance digital marketing efforts. Host Brett Dyster welcomes James, a seasoned digital marketing expert, to discuss the critical importance of strategy in navigating the digital landscape. They delve into the necessity of understanding the customer journey and how marketers can utilize AI tools to streamline their processes, all while maintaining a human touch in their interactions. The conversation highlights the emerging potential of Pinterest for driving website traffic and the need for marketers to tailor their approaches based on whether they are targeting B2B or B2C audiences. As they wrap up, James emphasizes the importance of focusing on creating value for customers and avoiding the common trap of overextending oneself in the marketing realm.

Takeaways:

  • Pinterest is primarily a search engine for images, not just a social media platform.
  • A strategic foundation in digital marketing helps resonate with and engage the target audience.
  • Marketers should focus on understanding the customer journey to create effective marketing strategies.
  • AI tools can assist in marketing tasks, but human oversight is crucial for success.
  • Creating value for customers is essential; do not try to do too much at once.
  • Using tracking metrics like UTM codes is vital for measuring the effectiveness of marketing efforts.

Links referenced in this episode:


Companies mentioned in this episode:

  • Pinterest
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Meta
  • X
  • Twitter
  • WordPress

James

I discovered recently that Pinterest is like the third most important search engine after YouTube.

James

People think of it as a social media platform, but it's really a search engine.

James

Just like YouTube is a search engine that features video, Pinterest is a search engine that features images.

Brett

Mmm, that's good.

James

Good.

Brett

And welcome to a new episode of Digital Coffee Marketing Brew.

Brett

And I'm your host Brett Dyster.

Brett

And please subscribe to this podcast and leave a review.

Brett

Really just help with it.

Brett

But this week we're going to talk about digital marketing.

Brett

It is a marketing podcast, so why wouldn't we talk be talking about that?

Brett

But with me is James and he's done digital marketing for quite a while.

Brett

He's built his business since 2010 and James is passionate about websites and helping the rest of us understand online marketing and customers value his jargon free, common sense approach.

Brett

But welcome to the show, James.

James

Hey man.

James

I'm really happy to be here.

James

It's an absolute pleasure.

Brett

Yes.

Brett

And the first question asks all my guests is are you a coffee or tea drinker?

James

Coffee.

Brett

Anything specific?

Brett

Anything like dark, medium, light, roast or you just give me a cup of coffee.

Brett

I don't really care what it is.

James

Just give me a cup of coffee and I'm good to go.

Brett

All right.

Brett

And I gave a brief summary of your expertise.

Brett

Can you give us a little bit more about what you do?

James

Well, we're very involved in website design and development.

James

That's our core business.

James

We have two basic propositions.

James

We do large custom websites for corporations.

James

These are custom from the ground up and usually have custom code in the back end.

James

They're connected to other things, APIs, all that good stuff.

James

Which is a roundabout way of saying we actually know what we're doing.

James

But this has allowed us to be vertically integrated.

James

We don't use other people's hosting platforms.

James

We've built our own hosting stack and I have developers and content specialists and we've repackaged that platform as innately.

James

And this is more of a semi custom solution for six figure businesses who are just getting into digital marketing and are ready to move away from the DIY thing and take advantage of my team and their expertise which has been honed by supporting the large corporate websites to actually do their day to day maintenance work on the website and help them with their digital marketing and that sort of thing.

Brett

So what have you seen from your experience of businesses missing the mark in digital marketing?

James

I think the most common problem that I see is an absence of strategy.

James

There's an awful Lot of what I call inside out marketing.

James

And that's where the marketer is shouting at the world about how awesome they are.

James

When you know, sad, but the world really doesn't care.

James

What they're really truly looking for is they have a problem and they need a solution to their problem, which is outside in.

James

And if you have a strategy, if you've started with understanding who your customers are and you've mapped the buyer's journey, you understand the steps they go through, the kinds of questions they have, the obstacles they're trying to overcome.

James

That's a strategic foundation that will allow your marketing, your digital marketing especially to resonate with and engage with your target audience and support the journey that they are on.

James

And the net result of that approach is the sale stops being a sale and starts being the next logical step in their journey, which leads to loyalty, which leads to long time customers, which leads to all kinds of mutual value in the relationship.

James

And that is with that simple application of a strategic foundation, you can achieve those sorts of things.

Brett

Gotcha.

Brett

So let's say the marketer is shouting to the world how, look how awesome they are.

Brett

And they're getting frustrated because no one cares.

Brett

How do they start that journey to figure out how to do that strategy?

James

The first step is to have a customer avatar for each of their key segments.

James

Most businesses, if they look at themselves honestly, 80% of their sales are coming from 20% of their customers.

James

And if they look closely at that 20%, there's usually two, sometimes three sub segments inside that group.

James

Do an avatar for each one of those sub segments and then do some investigation into what causes them to start noticing, because I sometimes call it the box and the dot.

James

The marketer sits inside of a box and they're surrounded by all of the things that are important to them.

James

But that box is barely a dot on the horizon to the average consumer.

James

You need to be there with the right message.

James

When something happens in the consumer's life that stimulates them to start thinking about this category that you're in, that's your top of the funnel stuff.

James

You want to draw them in and attract them into the funnel with something that engages with where they're at that point in their journey.

James

And then in the mid funnel, you're looking to create opportunities for microtransactions of increasing value.

James

This draws them in, it builds trust, it builds relationship.

James

They start to look to you as a trusted source of information.

James

And then at the bottom of the funnel is where the decision is being made.

James

And that's A different set of questions, a lot more around comparisons and reviews and reasons to believe, social proof, that kind of thing.

James

So each one of these tactics has a different role at different points in the buyer's journey.

James

And if you don't have that journey map very hard, you're just throwing stuff out there to see what sticks.

James

That's not smart.

Brett

Could, let's say AI help you with that?

Brett

Because marketers are busy people, we're scattered brains a lot of time.

Brett

Could AI help you with starting to figure out that journey?

Brett

Because I think for a lot of people it's not that they don't or marketers, they don't want to do that journey.

Brett

Sometimes they just don't know where to start.

James

Yeah, there are some AI tools that around Persona they call Personas is what they'll call it in the AI world.

James

And they can get you started.

James

You still have to apply your knowledge of your market and your experience.

James

And the better the information is that you can give to the AI, the better that Persona that you're going to get that comes back out.

James

The AI tools will make take a stab at a journey map.

James

It tends to be pretty rudimentary.

James

It, it's not much more than you could probably do yourself with a little bit of common sense and time.

James

But even an awful lot of this, Brett, is you remember the bear and the two guys in the woods?

Brett

Yes.

James

I don't need to run faster than the bear, I just need to run faster than you.

James

And if a marketer just steps back and puts some energy and effort into this, they're already likely going to be ahead of the game in terms of their competition.

Brett

And should there be like a list of different problems?

Brett

Because you could figure out one problem.

Brett

You're like, maybe that's not really a problem for the actual customer.

Brett

Should you have a list of them just to see if one messaging hits more than others?

Brett

Because like I said, it's all a testing process.

Brett

You're trying to figure out what combination works.

James

Right.

James

And that's where another key piece of this whole thing that often gets overlooked and that's measurement.

James

I had a call earlier today with one of my clients, which is a mid sized bank in the Midwest.

James

And I'm, I asked the marketing director, are you using UTM tracking codes to track your activity?

James

No, they're not.

James

So how can you tell whether Instagram is working for you or Facebook or Pinterest or LinkedIn?

James

How can you tell what's working and what's not working if you don't have Those tracking metrics we've been playing with really getting some great traction out of a bit of a surprising platform.

James

Pinterest.

James

I discovered recently that Pinterest is like the third most important search engine after YouTube.

James

People think of it as a social media platform, but it's really a search engine.

James

Just like YouTube is a search engine that features video, Pinterest is a search engine that features images.

James

And we've started treating Pinterest like a search engine and our results have gone huge improvements.

Brett

Is this just like general searches?

Brett

Is it like picture searches?

Brett

Because Pinterest started as more of a picture, Is it video?

Brett

Is it like an all encompassing one?

Brett

Because I think TikTok is pretty popular for searching as well.

James

Yes, it is.

James

Yes.

James

But it's with Pinterest it's using the same keyword strategy that you're going to use on YouTube.

James

It's a similar approach.

James

It's about creating your boards in Pinterest and not just calling it my left ankle, actually labeling the boards with keywords that you want to rank for.

James

We have a board for digital marketing, we have a board for relationship marketing, we have a board for all the various things that we're interested in website design and development.

James

So these are all the titles for the boards and the description of the boards are all being crafted against an S.

James

Against a keyword strategy.

Brett

Is it also creating those sub boards within the boards?

Brett

Because yes, I've used Pinterest, I really understand it.

Brett

But is it doing all that stuff to make it look more full?

Brett

Because when Pinterest was new it was all about just boards.

Brett

But now they've gotten a little bit more technical where there's no sub boards.

Brett

They don't do repins anymore, they just do shares.

Brett

I don't know.

James

Yeah, focused on saves and engagements and.

James

But Pinterest is great.

James

If you're trying to drive traffic to a website which is good for your domain authority, then Pinterest is one of the only platforms, third party platforms that rewards you for clicks.

James

The other platforms will penalize you for putting a link into a description or a caption.

James

Interest rewards you for clicks.

Brett

I think LinkedIn is probably the only other ones that doesn't really negatively impact you because they do have request to service in like your bio now.

Brett

So I think there's only like a few of them because yeah, X Twitter doesn't want you to leave.

Brett

Instagram doesn't really want you to leave.

Brett

Meta.

Brett

I should just say Meta just doesn't want you to leave at all.

James

Exactly.

James

So having A strategy.

James

Understanding where your audience is, understanding what your audience is looking for at each stage of their journey.

James

Creating content that's going to resonate with them at the stage that they're in.

James

That's how you're going to attract folks and draw them in to your environment, your world, your website, in a way that is creates value.

James

Your goal should be to create.

James

The website should create value for the customers and for the business.

Brett

And does content play a part with that as well?

Brett

Because we've done the technical side, but there's also the creative side that you also have to worry about.

Brett

Because for example, you said Pinterest, there's boards, there's pictures and I think they do vertical videos.

Brett

I don't know if they.

Brett

They don't do horizontal, but they're vertical.

James

Vertical videos.

James

Yes.

James

Same format as Instagram.

James

And it's.

James

And videos is up and coming.

James

Just like YouTube is pushing hard on their shorts.

James

That this is an up and coming.

James

It's still a minority of the activity, but it's definitely up and coming.

James

It's something that needs to be part of the strategy.

James

Yeah, create content is.

James

I've been working on a series of blog posts right now about content marketing and bringing that strategy under foundation into your content marketing.

James

The recent updates in the Google search algorithms are all focused around creating useful content.

James

And you know that what's useful.

James

What's useful is if you understand who your audience is and where they're, what they're looking for based on their journey, you can create content that's useful.

James

One of the things that I see a lot of people miss the mark on is they spend all kinds of time and energy on keyword research.

James

Awesome.

James

But they don't give proper consideration to search intent.

James

And search intent is really key in terms of understanding the content that you're creating and where that content should live in your website.

Brett

And LinkedIn is also experimenting with the vertical videos now because they've been the square videos for so long that should companies figure out which platforms to use Because Pinterest, when people think about Pinterest, they usually think it's more for where women usually do their boards and stuff.

Brett

They don't really think about search, but they also don't think about probably B2B companies really focusing on Pinterest.

Brett

They probably would focus on LinkedIn.

Brett

Is it like a pick and choose thing between B2B and B2C for social medias?

James

It's a good question.

James

But if you've got a clear understanding of your audience, then you're going to use different channels in different ways.

James

We're using Pinterest for coaches and health and wellness folks and that sort of thing.

James

We're very carefully targeting our content to appeal to the audience that we know exists on Pinterest that could take advantage of our products and services.

James

Inside of LinkedIn we're much more focused on the corporate where we more often than not function as a subcontractor to a design agency that has a relationship with a corporation.

James

They're doing the design in the UX and they're using us as their construction general contractor.

James

So we'll use LinkedIn to facilitate that kind of targeting.

James

And the higher six figure type businesses that can take advantage of innately will use LinkedIn for that kind of messaging.

James

I use the LinkedIn newsletter for example, as a very useful channel.

James

Carousels on LinkedIn, if they're done properly, can be very useful.

James

It really helps.

James

I also do a lot of public speaking and LinkedIn is very good for supporting my authority when I'm speaking to events or conferences or podcasters about coming on their show.

James

So different channels should be used and it really depends on who the audience is.

Brett

And talk about more about emerging tech because as a marketer you always gotta be worried about the emerging stuff.

Brett

We have AI, we slowly have web3, which to me web3 is basically AI and blockchain.

Brett

So how do they future proof it?

Brett

Because I know right now marketers, it's basically it's nice to use AI, but you don't really have to.

Brett

Should marketers start to really lean in, not to have AI do their job for them, but to have AI help them with it.

James

It's all about AI as a helper, we're using AI every single day.

James

I'll give you an example.

James

Our content specialists do a really good job of helping our smaller businesses design and build websites, but they are not designers.

James

They're well trained, they can do a better job than the average person, but they're not designers.

James

One of the key things that separates a professional design from an amateur design is the use of color.

James

So I spent a month or so working on a prompt that would help us set a color palette for a website using the 60, 30, 10 color strategy.

James

That's a color strategy that web developers have taken from the design industry, the interior design industry, to help set the balance between background colors, secondary and primary colors, and the accent color.

James

It I worked on the prompt, it generated a palette.

James

I'd send the palette off to some design friends that I know they'd Give me feedback, I'd work on it some more.

James

It took about a month.

James

It works like gangbusters.

James

Is it as good as what a designer can do?

James

No, it's not, but it's much better than the content specialist could do on their own.

James

And it's been so successful, actually I got one of my developers to package it up and we submitted it to the WordPress repository and it's now a plugin that's available in the WordPress repository.

James

So AI as a tool to solve very specific things, very effective.

Brett

So for a one man team marketer, they could have AI help them with various different tasks.

Brett

Obviously they would still oversee it, but at least you could do various different tasks and it makes you look like you have a team when you really don't have a team.

James

I'll give you another example.

James

One of my friends owns a digital agency.

James

He has more than doubled his business and actually reduced his headcount by integrating AI tasks and AI task management into his systems and processes.

James

Because eight times out of 10, when somebody calls your support line, they're asking the same question.

James

It's a wonderful place where AI can be very useful.

James

Keyword research is another place where AI can be very useful.

James

There's a plugin, a tool that we use a lot called Keywords Everywhere that has an excellent extension to ChatGPT.

James

So it's a great, it's a great tool and you're, it's not going away.

James

So if you're frightened of it, yeah, you're going to get left behind.

James

You got to figure out how to make it work for you.

Brett

And so would you recommend them actually use Chat gbt?

Brett

Because there are several of them.

Brett

There's Gemini, which used to be Bard.

Brett

There's Gronk, if you have X slash, Twitter, Premium meta, just I can't release their own.

Brett

You also have Nvidia that you can download as an offline version of it with their Chat rtx.

Brett

And then you have Perplexity, which is pretty good with research.

Brett

And you have Claude, which I think is like the middle ground of everything because there's just a lot of them.

James

There are a lot of them.

James

And it's, you know, it comes into the.

James

Your earlier question about different social media channels.

James

One of the things I tell clients all the time is don't try to boil the ocean.

James

Find a couple of things that are working really well for you and figure out how to make them work better.

James

And that's what we're open to.

James

And look at lots of different platforms, but Generally speaking, we're using a combination of ChatGPT and Claude.

James

I find that ChatGPT is really good for basic stuff, for research, for structure, for outlines, that kind of thing.

James

And Claude is much better at write a long form copy.

James

Filling out the blanks, filling out.

James

Give me three paragraphs on.

James

Here's the headline.

James

And I pulled the headline from this outline that was provided by ChatGPT.

James

And then when it's all done, edit ruthlessly.

James

Inject your own experiences, inject your own language use.

James

Train the AI.

James

One of the things that I'll do is before I'll start, I'll pull copy blocks from three or four different blog posts and I'll ask the AI to analyze this copy block for tone and style and then analyze this copy block for tone and style.

James

Analyze this copy.

James

But I'll do it three times, four times, and then I'll say, summarize what you've just learned and then I'll say, you are an expert copywriter.

James

I'm where we want to do a blog post on this topic area using the same tone and style that you've just analyzed.

James

Prepare an outline of H1, H2, H3 tags that you know, that we can use to create this blog post.

James

And it does a really good job.

James

It writes like I write when I show it.

Brett

How got you.

Brett

And we're, I would say almost midway through 2024.

Brett

What should markers be focusing on from the rest rest of the year?

Brett

Because every year has its new challenges and everything, but what should they really be focusing on?

Brett

Since we're at this inflection point, obviously.

James

With AI and everything else, but AI is just a tool that what marketers should be focusing on hasn't changed and it hasn't changed in years.

James

Focus on creating value for your best customers and use the tools to deliver on that objective.

Brett

All right, and so people are listening to this podcast.

Brett

They're wondering where can they find you online to learn more about what you do and maybe get some more advice?

James

I would suggest if they're, if they'd like to chat with me, they can go to VIPchatwithjames.com that's VIPchatwithjames.com if they're interested in having me have a look at their website, one of the things that I will do is what we call the 6 second website audit.

James

And where that's coming from is you have six seconds or less to engage a visitor to your website.

James

Most of the most websites are not up to the task.

James

So to do that, you'd go to sixsecondsorless.com and you can grab a free 30 minute session on my calendar and we'll go through your homepage and I'll show you the sorts of things that you might want to consider to create a page on your website that is actually going to support the journey that your clients are on.

Brett

Any final thoughts for listeners?

James

Stop trying to boil the ocean.

James

There's just so much going on.

James

There are so many choices.

James

There are so many things you can do.

James

The Years ago there was an interview with Peter lynch was his name.

James

He was the general manager of the Magellan Fund, a big mutual fund.

James

And the reporter was asking him to what he owed his success and he was expecting a really deep and involved answer.

James

But the answer he got was water the flowers and prune the weeds.

James

And digital marketing is a lot like that.

James

But it because it gives you visibility on your metrics.

James

It lets you know what's working and what's not working.

James

Figure out what's working.

James

Do more of that.

James

Figure out what's not working.

James

Stop doing that.

Brett

All right, thank you James for joining Digital Coffee Marketing Brew and sharing your knowledge on digital marketing.

James

Brett, it's been my absolute pleasure.

James

Thank you so much for having me.

Brett

And thank you for listening.

Brett

As always, please subscribe to Digital Coffee Marketing Brew on all your favorite podcasting apps with a five star review.

Brett

Really just help with the rankings.

Brett

Let me know how I'm doing and join me next week as I talk to another great thought leader in the PR marketing industry.

Brett

All right guys, stay safe.

Brett

Get to understand your customer journey, learning how to use AI better and not boil the ocean because it's never a good thing to do.

Brett

And see you next week.

James

Later.