This year has been about growth for Pinterest. The platform started out as being
“exclusive,” meaning you had to request to join. Then, it seemed like the only people using Pinterest were
young women, pinning pictures of clothing, food, and exercise ideas. However, in 2013 Pinterest has made
serious changes in order to grow as a social media platform and they seem to be
working.
Announced in May, Pinterest partnered with several major brands, such as Target, ModCloth, and Sony, to include more descriptive pins in
a new format. These pins will now
include information such as the pricing for products, or recipe descriptions
that are directly on the pin, meaning users no longer have to switch back and
forth between sites for information.
This is incredibly beneficial to brands because it gives them a stronger
presence on the site. Previously,
users would find a pin, not know its source, click on the pictures and
potentially be taken to a website that held no information about the product or
picture. Now, brands are more
interactive on the pin, allowing users a chance to interact directly with the brand while on the Pinterest site.
An example of new pins on Pinterest.
In September, Pinterest announced their new article pins. Before, when users pinned
articles on Pinterest only the photo from the article with a link on the bottom
were featured. Now, the article
title, author’s name, article description and a larger link will be on the pin. The goal behind this was for users on
Pinterest to pin more articles from news sources.
Even more recently Pinterest announced location pins, where
users can create pinboards for specific cities, neighborhoods, and for mapping
out travel plans. The new feature
allows users to “add a map” on a new board or existing board to add “Place
Pins” to add the location of where a pin is from so other users can go directly
to a restaurant or store where the product is.
I tried out the new location pins.
Pinterest has also been expanding overseas. The company recently announced that
they will be expanding into Scandinavian countries by adding language
capabilities for Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Finland. Pinterest already has French and UK
capabilities, and they have offices in London, Paris, and Tokyo.
I have always thought that brands tend to overlook or misuse
Pinterest and part of that isn’t their fault but rather had to do with faults
on the site itself. That being
said, new descriptive pins with an emphasis on content sharing and growth to an
overseas market show immense promise for the future of Pinterest. In the past I thought there were some
brands that would never be able to make it on Pinterest because they weren’t
consumer based, but if Pinterest becomes a site that includes consumer products
and news content sharing, it has the opportunity to be used by a much wider
audience. Rolling out these new
capabilities shows that Pinterest has longevity and the ability to reach more
than just one audience. I’ll be
interested to see what new growth they make in the future, but focusing on
becoming a content sharing site will separate them from Facebook and Twitter,
and make Pinterest a platform that everyone and every brand can use.
Check out my Vine exploring the new Pinterest features: https://vine.co/v/hUnjvUlQxTr
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