Marketing Strategy Academy with Jen Vazquez

329 | You're Pinning Consistently But Getting Zero Clicks? Here's Why (And the 5 Fixes That Actually Work)

• Jen Vazquez | Pinterest Manager, Marketing Strategist + Brand Photographer • Season 9 • Episode 329

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0:00 | 8:52

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You're doing everything "right" on Pinterest - pinning consistently, setting up boards, writing descriptions - but you're still getting almost no website clicks. Sound familiar?

Here's the thing: it's probably not Pinterest, and it's probably not your content either. After being on Pinterest since 2009 as a Pinterest Pioneer, I've seen this pattern over and over. There are five specific problems that cause click issues, and once you know what they are, they're actually pretty simple to fix.

In this episode, we cover: 

  • Why decent impressions but zero clicks is a packaging problem, not a content problem 
  • The difference between browse keywords and buyer keywords (and why this matters) 
  • How to write pin titles that actually promise an outcome instead of just labeling content 
  • Why your pin design might be getting lost in the scroll 
  • What happens after the click and why your landing page strategy matters more than you think 
  • The Pinterest timeline reality check - why month two is when most people quit right before it works

If you've been consistent for less than four months, keep going. If it's been six months of real consistency and you're still seeing zero clicks, something structural needs to change.

ALL LINKS MENTIONED: https://jenvazquez.com/why-your-pinterest-isnt-getting-clicks/


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SPEAKER_00

You've been pinning consistently, you got the board set up, you're posting regularly, maybe you even wrote keyword-rich descriptions, and you're still getting almost no clicks to your website. If that's you, I want you to know something. It is not Pinterest and it's probably not even your content. I've been on Pinterest since 2009 and I'm a Pinterest pioneer back when it was in beta and built my photography business using that platform. So when someone comes to me and tells me Pinterest doesn't work for service providers, I always ask the very same question. Which of these five things is happening? Because almost every single click problem comes back to one of these five. I'm your host, Jen Vasquez. Let's jump right into it. Before we get any further, if you want to audit your own account while you watch this, grab my free visibility vault. It's a resource library with Pinterest tools, keyword guides, templates, you name it, it's in there. It's built specifically for service providers. Drop a comment below if you grabbed it. So let's dig into it. Why your pins aren't getting clicks? Problem number one: your pin titles are not triggering the click. Here's the most common scenario that I see. Impressions are decent, maybe 10,000, 20,000, even 50,000 monthly views, but outbound clicks, almost zero. That's a packaging problem, not a content problem. Pinterest is a search engine for anyone that's been on this channel for any longer than a month, you're gonna know that I probably say that all the time. People don't browse it like Instagram, they search, they scroll the results and they click on the pin that most promises the best answer. Just like when you scroll on Google. If your pin title says my top branding tips, that's not a promise. That's a label. Compare it to five branding tips that helped me book clients at a higher price point, same content, completely different click-through rate. The fix is rewriting your pin titles to lead with a specific outcome, not just a topic. And this is exactly what we work on inside the club every single month. Problem number two, wrong keywords for the wrong stage. Not all keywords are equal. Some tell you someone is browsing, others tell you someone is ready to solve that problem right now. Brand photography is a browse keyword. Millions of people search it. Most are not ready to book. What to wear for a brand photo shoot is a buyer keyword. Someone searching that is actively preparing for a session. If all your pins target top of the funnel browse keywords, you'll get impressions from people who aren't ready to act. Your click rate tanks as a result. For every broad keyword you use, make sure that you have at least one long tail intent specific keyword to speak to someone farther along in the decision. Problem number three. Your pin design isn't stopping the scroll. Pinterest is visual, and in a sea of vertical images, only certain things stop the scroll. What doesn't work? Generic stock photos, all white backgrounds, text that's too small to read on a cell phone where most people are searching on Pinterest. Designs that could be anyone's. What does work? Faces with direct eye contact, text overlay that states the outcome clearly, a color palette consistent enough that people start to recognize your pins over time. Quick audit. If the answer is maybe or no, design needs attention before the keyword strategy even matters. Problem number four, you're sending traffic to a page that doesn't convert. This one is real sneaky. Your Pinterest analytics might actually look okay, impressions up, clicks coming up, but website conversions are zero. The issue isn't Pinterest. What happens after the click? People click with what they think they're gonna see in mind, and they land on your blog post, and there's nothing to do. There's no clear next steps, there's no opt-in, there's no offer, it's just content. Pinterest sends people to your front door. You have to invite them in. Every single page that you're linking to from Pinterest needs one clear next step: a lead magnet, a discovery call link, a sign-up form. Pick one, make it obvious, and put it above the fold, meaning at the very top of that landing page. Problem number five, you haven't given it enough time. I know, I know it's not what you want to hear, but skipping this one would be doing you a disservice. Pinterest is a slow start, a strong finish platform. The first two months almost always feel like nothing is happening. And that's because Pinterest is indexing your content, testing it in small batches, learning who to show it to by the results of what people do in that small batch test. If people click on it or save it, then it's going to go out to more people. Month three and four, impressions start to rise. Month five and six, clicks start moving. Beyond that, the compounding effect that Pinterest has kicks in and content that you built around six months ago keeps driving traffic without you lifting a finger. And sometimes if there's a topic that's super popular in search on Pinterest, your pin might take off years later, like my pin that was crazy last couple months. I put it on Pinterest in 2014. Yes, it really, really works. Most people quit in month two or three, right before the shift. And if you've been consistent for less than four months, keep going. If it's been six months of real consistency and you're still seeing zero clicks, something structural needs to change. And that's what a Pinterest audit is for. If you went through that list and realized that you might need a little support actually implementing any of those fixes, not just knowing what they are, that is literally what the club is for. Every month I drop Pinterest trainings, we do a live QA, and you get accountability built right in. Do me a favor, comment below which of these five problems do you think is your number one issue right now when it comes to Pinterest. And I know that you probably come to my channel because something is not working on Pinterest or you want to maybe learn about Pinterest. So please comment below. I am going to be replying to every single one. And I'll see you next week. Bye.

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