Categories
Social Media

Using Pinterest for Blogging

Practically every time I read a blog post, I see a Pinterest button somewhere that gives me the option to pin the post.

I started to wonder why Pinterest is so closely connected to blogging.

It’s likely because Pinterest is useful for education. Users create boards to save things like inspirational quotes, recipes, home decor ideas, blogs, and even future purchases. It makes sense that helpful blog posts are an excellent choice for pinning.

If you’re not already blogging for your business, there are plenty of reasons to get started.

All of these things translate to more potential for your audience to discover you, higher potential for better ranking in the search engines, and ultimately the potential for more revenue.

If you want to get started blogging or you’re already doing it, let’s take a closer look at how to use Pinterest for blogging.

Set Up A Pinterest Business Account

This is a free account. Unlike the personal account, you’ll get access to Pinterest analytics to give you detailed information about how your pins are performing. The Pinterest business account also gives you the option to apply for rich pins, which is an upgrade from the standard pin. There are five types of rich pins – movie, place, recipe, products, app, an article. The article rich pin is the most effective option for blogging. Article rich pins provide tools that allow you to add a larger logo image, and it has lines promote your post as well as a link to your website.

Using Pinterest for blogging allows you to promote posts, product offers, send traffic to your blog, and ultimately engage with your followers.

Getting Started

When considering how to leverage Pinterest for your blog, think about how you want your users to find your account and what you believe they want to see. Pinterest should be a compliment to your blog and reflect your brand.

Create And Name A Board After Your Blog

It’s crucial to keep things consistent with how you name your boards. It helps not only SEO but organization and readers. Both search engines and readers will have an easier time finding your blog on Pinterest if it has a similar name. Use your blog board to highlight posts that don’t fit into other categories as well as making Roundup pins for a week’s worth of posts.

When you pin to this board, group your posts that are similar to one another to keep things organized. For instance, if someone wants to find posts about protein powder, they should be able to find that in the supplements section of your board or something similar.

Ideally, your pin should have one to two sentences about your post in the description, such as a quote from the blog, a featured image, and a link back to your website. Pinterest business handles the link back to your website for you

Structure A Winning Pin

Pinterest says pins that earn high engagement are optimized, branded, well written, and, most importantly, structured the right way.

Optimized

Describe your blog post or use a quote that tells pinners what they will gain from the pin.

Branded

Include your logo and ensure the featured photo has to do with the product or service you offer. This way, users will know its your brand they’re looking at before they even open the pin.

Well Written

Always include a call to action. Even something like click this link to see more will do the trick. Use sensory-related words to connect with users emotionally.

Structured The Right Way

Pay attention to Pinterest aspect ratios for photos, and make sure you’re taking advantage of the linkable options on standard pins to increase your traffic.

Check The SEO On Your End

Make sure your Pinterest account is set for public search within your privacy settings so that search engines can find the account.

Remain consistent when it comes to titles of your pens, boards, and blog posts. Keeping consistency makes it easier for Google to understand Pinterest.

Use as many relevant keywords as possible when naming your boards. Provide all text for Featured images in your pens to tell the search engines what your image is. Describe it using keywords if and when possible.

Create Related Pinterest Boards

As you create different boards, categorize them by your blog post categories. You can also make new boards that relate to other areas of your audience’s interest. Think about what your buyer Persona would be interested in seeing and make boards accordingly.

Going back to our protein powder example, you should create boards that have to do with other areas of health and fitness, such as cardio, nutrition, and accessories. These can include recipes, tools for working out, etc.

Create A Staff Board

This provides a wonderful opportunity for fostering emotional connection, so you may wish to consider creating a staff board. This helps you to show the faces behind your brand. Seeing those faces will help consumers feel more like they know the business, which makes them more likely to follow.

Create a staff pin with a headshot as the featured image of the employee. Use a short bio that’s engaging for the descriptions and have each employee link to their favorite or newest blog posts to get you more traffic.

Ensure Your Blog Is Pinnable

Using Pinterest means your blog has to be pinnable. You need to have buttons with the Pinterest logo that allow users to pin a blog post from your website. This will enable viewers to explore your blog, find posts they want to read later, and save them to their Pinterest account to find later. This gives you more traffic on your blog and Pinterest.

Engage With Your Followers

To keep your profile welcoming and active, interact with followers to make your Pinterest more targeted towards your audience. Follow new followers back. Conduct a little market research by looking through their pens and board. This can help you make targeted content later.

Repin posts that have to do with your blog. If you see that one of your followers has an awesome pin that would fit well into one of your categories, engage with it. Like, comment, and repin. Repinning is essentially the same as retweeting or reposting it in general. Users can save up on their page or to one of their boards.

Take time to follow influencers and Industry leaders as well. Doing so demonstrates your interest, support, and knowledge of the industry to make your Pinterest look credible. Repinning influencers’ posts allows you to begin building a community around your industry

Include Interesting Visuals

Your images must entice the reader to open the pin. Choose photos that are in the correct aspect ratio of either 2:3 or 4:5. If you’re cropping things manually, you should have a width of 650 and a height of 975 pixels.

Images are the most crucial part of a pin, so they have to fit Pinterest as much as possible to catch a reader’s eye. You can use templates from Canva and other services to help you get started on the right foot.

Post To Pinterest On A Regular Schedule

Keep to a schedule as you post on Pinterest. You don’t have to make it as consistent as you do on your other social channels, but it does need to be repetitive. Research suggests that Pinterest posts get the highest amount of traction between 8 p.m. and 11 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.

Because you don’t need to be as frequent with pinning, you have more time to make sure the pens you do post are of the highest possible quality. Use your Pinterest account to focus on quality rather than quantity, and your frequency goals don’t need to stress you out.

You can use Pinterest for your blog as a resource for showing off your new posts or create a bridge between e-commerce and blogging. Regardless of which path you choose, Pinterest remains a powerful distribution channel for your content, and ignoring it means missing out on an opportunity.

Categories
Content Marketing

9 Foolproof Ways to Transform Into a Better Blogger Today

Whether you’re blogging for personal reasons with the intention of monetizing and turning it into a business in the future, or you’re blogging as a means of lead generation for your business, there is always room for improvement. With tens of thousands of blogs created on just WordPress.com alone, every single day, the competition is always fierce. Granted, many of these blogs are soon abandoned, but with persistent effort and dedication, you can become a better blogger.

Check out these tips to help you get started.

 

Read Other Blogs

One of the best ways to learn is through reading other blogs. Choose a few of the top blogs in your niche, and see what those are doing. Watching the competition can help you see what your audience is most likely to respond to.

Does this mean copying what they’re doing? No, not at all. You are unique – and so is your voice. Can you cover the same topics? Yes, of course, but if competitor A just wrote about a topic yesterday, you don’t want to cover it today. (There are some exceptions to this rule, like when the topic or subject matter is time sensitive and must be addressed quickly. If you’re a news blog, then clearly you don’t want to wait too long before breaking or covering a story.)

 

Keep Up with the Industry

Blogging, and internet marketing in general, are constantly changing. What worked five years ago, doesn’t work now. And what worked even a year ago, may or may not pack the same punch as it used to. It’s important to read industry news and blogs to keep up to date with the latest changes in Google’s search engine algorithm changes, and to stay up to date with the latest trends in blogging.

Add these to your RSS reader so you can stay in the loop.

  • Copyblogger: This is an excellent blog, focused on helping you create the best quality content you can to use in content marketing, so you can develop a killer content strategy. Beyond that, you’ll learn about the craft of writing, editing (which is great if you don’t have your own editor on staff), and more.
  • ProbloggerThis a blog completely dedicated to helping you learn how to make money with your blog. There are a wide variety of blog posts and podcasts to help you learn. You’ll find everything from advice on how to start a blog, creating the killer content you need, finding reader, building a community, making money blogging, improving your productivity, understanding the technology, and even using your blog to get work.
  • Content Marketing institute: A blog dedicated to all things content marketing. There’s even a section for research, broken down for the B2C and B2B markets, to help you adjust your strategy according to the segment you’re trying to reach.
  • Search Engine Journal: SEJ is a website dedicated to all things search engine optimization related. It also covers social media, content marketing, internet marketing news, and paid search.
  • Moz Blog: This blog is dedicated to SEO and online marketing. Posts come from some of the industry’s best experts, so you’re always going to learn something.
  • Marketing Land: This blog covers everything from email, retail, to social media, SEO, and more. It’s run by the same people who do Search Engine Land.
  • Search Engine Land: This is a great blog that stays on top of the latest trends and news in SEO, search engine marketing (SEM), mobile search, local search, social, retail, Google, and Bing. No matter what you’re looking for, you can expect to find the latest research, case studies, and information to help you fine tune your marketing approach.

 

Create an Editorial Calendar

An editorial calendar will help you keep track of the ideas you’re going to write about over the course of the week, month, or year. It gives you a place to write down everything from the title to the keywords you’re going to use, and even a description of the post. You can keep track of sources you want to link to, and the image you want to use, if you so wish. If nothing else, it’ll keep you on track, but if your blog grows to the point where you want to add additional writers, it can help make sure everyone is on the same page.

 

Post Consistently

If you want to post one day a week, fine. Just make sure you post one day a week, every week. And do your best to make it the same day every week. If you want to post every day, that’s fine too, but you must be consistent. Many bloggers find they bite off more than they can chew – so it’s better to start small and make sure you can handle the consistency, adding more as you feel comfortable, than it is to start out hammering out five to seven posts a week. Less is more – as long as the content quality is there.

You, and your audience are far better served by one piece of well written, researched, and valuable content than they are by five sloppy pieces of content churned out for the sake of a higher number of blog posts each week.

Plan on spending at least a couple of hours on each post you write – from the research and writing to the image creation. This doesn’t even include promotional activity, which should be separate from the creation process.

If you can’t a decent chunk of time to the development of each post from start to finish, start with one post a week and work your way up.

If you want to build an audience, and you say you’ll be posting once a week, but then go weeks without posting at all, you’ll ruin your consistency. Eventually people will stop coming to the blog to see if you’ve posted anything.

One way to circumvent this issue is to use the scheduling feature in WordPress to schedule your posts to go live even when you’re not there to push the button. Designate one day a week to writing and scheduling the posts for the next week. This way, even if something comes up, you’ve got content ready to go for your audience.

 

Keep a Running List of Post Ideas

You never know when inspiration will strike. Keep a notebook around you so whenever an idea hits, you’ll be able to write it down before you forget. You may not b able to work it into your editorial calendar right away, but you can refer to this list whenever you’re feeling like you’ve got nothing to write about.

Feeling stuck for ideas? Inspiration is everywhere – magazines, other blogs, TV shows, movies… news stories… you can always find something. And if you can’t – take a look at my post on content hacks you can use to break through writer’s block.

 

Promote Your Content

You could have the absolute best blog post on the internet, but it won’t do any good unless people know about it. Share your posts on social media. If you’re a member of any groups that share link love, put your best work forward in those groups to gain some traction there. If you’re particularly proud of a post, you may want to consider running some social media ads to drive traffic to it.

There are countless ways to promote your content, so don’t be afraid to get a little creative.

 

Promote Other Bloggers

Success in blogging comes, in part, from networking with other bloggers. You build relationships with them, and promote work that your audience will also find valuable. Then, when the blogger discovers you shared their work with your audience, they may be willing to do the same for you. Blogging is a part of the social media world, which is build upon theories of reciprocity. Promote others selflessly – however. Never expect them to return the favor. Some will, some won’t. If you don’t come into it with any expectations, then you will be pleasantly surprised when your content is shared with another audience.

 

Write Killer Headlines

According to Copyblogger, 8 out of 10 people will only read the headline. Only two or so will go on to read your entire post. So, that headline becomes your first, and quite possibly the only chance you have to make a positive impression on your reader.

The good news for you is that even if you suck at headlines, there are plenty of tools on the internet to help you take a basic title concept and turn it into something more compelling.

  • CoSchedule’s Headline AnalyzerEnter your title and you’ll get a grade. It looks at the number of words, types of words, and sentiment to make sure you’ve got a winning combination.
  • Advanced Marketing Institute’s Emotional Marketing Value Headline AnalyzerSee what kind of emotional power your headline has. This is valuable because we know emotional connections help drive shares.
  • Inbound Now’s Blog Title Idea GeneratorGet some basic templates to throw your keywords into – like “Back to [Keyword] Basics” or “This Method is Helping [Blank] to [Blank]
  • Tweak Your Biz Title Generator: Simply enter your keyword and press submit. You’ll get hundreds of titles. You’ll get a variety of options, including motivational, listicles, and more broad title suggestions.
  • Thrive’s Headline Optimizer: This one’s not free, and must be installed on your WordPress website as a plugin. But, it does give you an advantage – allowing you to split test titles to see which ones your audience responds to the best. Spent $67 for a single site, $97 for a five license pack, or $147 for a 15 license pack.

What I like to do, when I’m feeling a little less than inspired is to take ideas from the blog title generator tools, and then test them in the analyzer tools, tweaking until I get the results I am the happiest with.

A note about headlines: People know a clickbait title when they see it. Don’t write a headline like, “She was about to give up… and you wouldn’t believe what happened next!” unless you can for sure deliver on that promise.

Your headline should always be written to entice people to click on it, but it should also always deliver. If it doesn’t, you may get people reading your content the one time – with no desire to come back. To build a strong audience for your blog posts, you must capture readers who will come back to your blog again and again.

 

Experiment with Different Types of Content

The standard blog post, with text and a photo or some kind of image is what you see the most of. It’s because it’s often the easiest kind of content to produce. But, it’s not the only thing that will grab readers attention. If you have the budget and means to do it, explore using different kinds of content – like videos, infographics, quizzes, and the like.

If you’re not too keen on the idea of getting in front a camera, there’s always the option of doing a screencast video, to demonstrate how to do something, or to share a presentation. If you’re not a graphic designer, you can find one to work with on a freelance basis to help put an infographic together, Plus, with tools like Canva and Visual.ly, you can put together a decent quality graphic with relative ease, if you are on a budget.

 

Always Strive for Progress

Applying some of these tactics can make you a better blogger almost instantly. Others, will take time before you will see the results. What matters is that you keep working to be better – and you keep trying. If something doesn’t work the way you expected, that’s not an excuse to give up. Keep experimenting with different types of content and promotional options. You’ll eventually find what works best for your audience. If you’re struggling to figure out what readers want – just ask. Conduct a survey with something like Survey Monkey, or a poll or on Facebook.

What are some things that have helped you become a better blogger?

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