Thursday, April 18, 2013

5 Strategies for eCommerce Sites to influence the potential of Pinterest

Pinterest was one of the huge success stories last year. Just when nobody thought a different social media site could take the online world by storm, the photo-sharing, “virtual scrap board” managed to do just that. Online sites speedily realized that it was sending even more referral traffic than Twitter, and with the intention of it was bringing a new look to the web itself. In truth, Pinterest currently drives more online sales than Facebook.


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So what can today’s eCommerce sites do to find out from and take benefit of Pinterest in the year ahead?

Look Like Pinterest

Apart from using Pinterest as a channel for referrals and customer preservation, eCommerce sites can learn a lot from its user interface and design. What social media has managed to do is give users the skill to browse the web, not just search it. Pinterest transformed that browsing experience into a visual experience that many site owners are starting to identify as a road forward.

Few things are more shareable than photos and images, unless of course we are talking about videos. As we all know, share ability is the key to success in social media. Pinterest’s network design has taken the web by storm, making it simple to browse through photos and find the way through them naturally. Such designs are also extremely friendly to the growing tablet and smartphone market.

Pinterest’s “infinite scrolling” capability also keeps users occupied, never getting that feeling that they have reached the end of the page and should move on to a bit else.

David Galbraith, an entrepreneur who started Wists, which was a precursor to Pinterest, recently told Gigaom that the “UI universe has boiled down to grids and feeds and slideshows, as far as I can see.” These interfaces are intuitive to humans, visually appealing, and ideal for the “touch and slide” future of interfaces.

Hire a specialized Photographer

It should go without saying that you should get a “pin it” button up on your site so that visitors can effortlessly share images and photos, but you want those photos to be beautiful if they’re going to get shared on Pinterest, Tumblr, Facebook, and the web at large.

Its customary practice on eCommerce sites to post a manufacturer supplied photo or otherwise basic image of a product on the product page. In the years going onward, this is going to change. You want that photo to be the main selling point of the product. It should take up a lot of space on the page, and it be supposed to be more than easy on the eyes.

Try to work with “artsy” photographers who can make any product look wonderful and unique. Use photos to tell a story, not just to show visitors what the product looks like. This means it comes down to more than just color, contrast, and angle. Truthfully shareable photos are clever and dazzling.

Money In On Keywords

Pinterest is a very popular site, but it’s definitely not as saturated as the Google search results. While it’s true that most people favor to browse Pinterest than to search it (that is its appeal, after all), every site has its trendsetters who want to discover somewhat that hasn’t already been repinned thousands of times, and search is where they do it.

With every image you post, you should take in a helpful description that people will enjoy reading. Try to mention a keyword that reveals few results in Pinterest but is likely to be searched for often. This can help get you the exposure necessary to get repinned and in front of more people.

Similarly, you can also take advantage of Pinterest’s popularity to get your Pinterest page into Google. Mention your pinboard during your online promotions and it is more likely to show up in Google’s search results.

Give Consumers Projects

Contempo Tech is a Seo Company, and they had done a great job of making the most of Pinterest. Take a look through their pins and you will see that most of the images aren’t of products. Instead, they are of projects. Visitors who click through to visit Contempo Tech will be taken to instructions to put together the project. A imaginative image with a story behind it, especially one that visitors can replicate, has a way of spreading through the network like wildfire.

Focus on projects, how-to, recipes, and activities that can be represented with good-looking eye-catching images. Anything that gets a user involved enough to start a project of their own is likely to be remembered. Such projects don’t always have to engage your own projects, or at least not exclusively your own products. If you get them occupied, they will remember you, and that’s the important thing when it comes to longevity.

Use a Price Banner

You might think getting your price listed on an image would make it appear more commercial and cause people to pay less awareness, but it turns out the opposite is true. According to Shopify, a pin with a price banner gets 36 percent more “likes” than a pin without one.

Getting a price banner on your image is also amazingly easy through Pinterest’s interface. All you need to do is comprise the price in your description with a dollar sign, and the banner will automatically be added to the corner of your image.

Doing this will also routinely add your picture to the “gifts” section and list it under the suitable price section.

Of course, there is the possible to overdo this. Don’t post a price banner on every pin, just product pins. If you stick to this and there seems to be an overload of price banners on your pin board, it’s because you’re posting too many product pictures and not enough creative projects that will help you build a reputation.

Conclusion

As a photo-sharing platform, Pinterest is much more commerce-friendly than the greater part of social networks. Provided that photos of your projects are interesting to look at, you can get away with posting them much more regularly than on other networks. By making all of your product images interesting, you can draw traffic.

That said, you still need to append value to the community with projects and activities that will keep users engaged. Pinterest is not itself an eCommerce site.

We can also take instruction from Pinterest’s design and social format to give confidence engagement on our own eCommerce sites.

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