Month: June 2014
Becoming a Power Pinner (on Pinterest)
I’ve been working on becoming a power pinner on Pinterest for a few months (in our industry, who isn’t eh?). I define a power pinner as someone who’s efforts have resulted in a vast number of followers. Fortunately, I did find a formula that seems to be working. To illustrate that I thought we would talk about two of Pinterest’s most prolific power pinners and how they achieved it. You’ll be surprised at their completely different paths and the one thing that makes them similar. Let’s start with:
Sherry Petersik
There is no way Sherry thought about becoming a power pinner on Pinterest when she started her blog YoungHouseLove.com. In fact, there’s a good chance she didn’t plan on making the blog as big a success as it is. But what her and her husband have built is nothing less than an internet Juggernaut.
Sherry and her husband started YoungHouseLove on October 5, 2009 on a part-time basis. Through unbelievable content and dedication to their craft they grew the blog into a full-time gig now receiving more than 70,000 visitors per day. Today’s blog post, for instance, has 332 comments already, yesterday’s 7,102 and 2 days ago 236. You don’t get that kind of love without working for it for sure.
They’ve built their Pinterest following by leveraging their web traffic. In the last couple years they’ve featured their own “Pinterest Project Challenge” on their blog asking readers to undertake a new “Pinterest-worthy” challenge, blog about it, pin it and then upload that pin to their site. I looked at one of the challenges and 688 readers had shared their project. What are you going to bet they followed Sherry’s Pinterest account as well? They merely had to share their love of Pinterest with their community to grow in on Pinterest as well.
And they didn’t have to pin 10,000 things to get to the top. Nope. As of today, they’ve only pinned 574.
Some would call that the iceberg syndrome. What’s visible above the surface doesn’t come close to describing the work that went into it behind the scenes. As bloggers yourselves, I’m sure you can relate to the amount of work they put into their site. That community is the bottom half of the iceberg.
Erin Dollar
Erin took a different route to becoming a power pinner on Pinterest, though it’s not apparent from the surface whether she fully intended to do so. Erin is an artist who sells her wares on Etsy.com and last year finished making fake silly beards on IMadeYouABeard.com.
Unlike Sherry, Erin hasn’t amassed an enormous 70,000/day following – in fact she just has a respectable 500 or so followers on Twitter. But like the rest of us, she’s started to build a “raving fan base” on etsy and her site, she just hadn’t hit super stardom prior to Pinterest.
An early adopter of Pinterest Erin started paving the way for Pinners yet to come. Because her boards were edgy, purposeful and smart, they often got noticed. In fact on August 26th, 2010 (2010? Hmmm. . . she’s been at this a while, eh?) Erin was interviewed by Pinterest on the Pinterest Blog. She didn’t get that honor by knowing the “higher-ups” at Pinterest. Nope. Someone liked her board and recommended to Pinterest that they interview her about it.
That same attention to great boards is what made her the winner of the Pantone Color of the Year Contest held on ChronicleBooks.com, a site that gets 50,000 visitors per day by itself. Similar to the Pinterest interview, she won that not by knowing someone who knew someone, but by creating a quality and engaging board called Tangerine Tango.
Constantly sharing her love of Pinterest with others (back before it was big) landed her interviews or mentions on sites like mademoisellecrankypants.com, juliacantor.com and PinterestPower’s “most followed pinners” board. And all of those interviews centered on her love of Pinterest.
The bottom line is Erin rose to the top because of her taste and dedication to creating engaging and quality pin boards. These mentions, interviews and contests got her in front of thousands of people she didn’t have access to alone. But there is a similarity between Erin and Sherry as both have about 500,000 Pinterest followers and both were early adopters.
For them becoming a power pinner on Pinterest meant not giving up, creating great quality pin boards, and having faith that their readership would grow over time.
Which brings me back to my goal of becoming a power pinner on Pinterest. I’m still interested in the viral approach that I wrote about in my recent article “How to make your photos go viral on Pinterest”. But I think quality, patience and hard work, exhibited by Erin and Sherry, are a much stronger community building strategy to get there than viral is for anyone.
Dan R Morris is the founder of LettersFromDan.com, a website dedicated to improving your revenue stream from online efforts. Dan is an infomercial producer, niche website owner, product developer, author and Mastermind leader. Dan actively encourages marketers to take that extra step so that “Hope” doesn’t become the marketing plan.
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Common Marketing Mistake: Leveraging Assets
One common marketing mistake small businesses seem to make is not leveraging operations activities for marketing purposes. As I highlighted in my “Dog the Bounty Hunter” story, the average, ordinary things that you do can be used as marketing.
I recently took a trip to Costa Rica, a fabulous country, and had opportunity to zipline with the Titi Canopy Tour group in La Foresta (outside of Manual Antonio National Park). The ziplining was fantastic. It wasn’t the scenery as much as the ride that really makes ziplining cool. And the crew at Titi Canopy Tours make everyone comfortable and safe each and every time. They are a class act.
But, they’re not making as much money as they could be. . . Continue reading “Common Marketing Mistake: Leveraging Assets”
How to create a media kit
A media kit is a pretty important piece of the puzzle. It is not the end-all be-all by any means, you still have to create great content, be a steward to your community and be someone people trust.
But you need a media kit, often times, to get in the door. Other times your foot is already in the door and the PR Gal you’re working with just wants to put your media kit in the file.
And other times the media kit serves as a professional tool. In fact the next time someone says “Oh, that’s cute”, when you say you’re a blogger, tell them to take a look at your media kit. That quiets the ignorant.
So I’d encourage you to hire someone to help you make your media kit, get tutored on how to do it or buy this great ebook on making them.
If you’d like to hire us to create your most awesome super rockstar media kit ever, this is what we’ll have done for you:
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No two media kits are the same. By using reader survey information, we are able to pull out key insights that brands are looking when they work with bloggers. That’s where the gold is and is what makes you stand out.
If you’d rather have experts do it for you, click this button and we’re off and running . . .
Build a Better Blog Bundle
Five amazing bloggers (and us) who have created a business from their blogs have came together to share their work so you too can build a business blogging from your niche. This bundle isn’t limited by a style or theme. It isn’t limited by geography, finding a sitter or even your budget.
- Lisa Woodruff, Organize 365, How to Get on TV
Lisa Woodruff of How to Get On TV will tell you everything you ever wanted to know about how to get on TV - Kelly Snyder, Foxen Media, How to Write a Media Kit
Kelly Snyder of How to Write An Effective Media Kit takes you step-by-step through the process of creating your own media kit – including the essential parts of a media kit such as an elevator pitch, demographic description, and your “about me” statement. - Dan Morris and Crystal Collins (a bloggers collaboration), the Marketing Calendar Blueprint
The Marketing Calendar Blueprint will show you that while a blog planner is a nice thing to have, it only make sense if you know how to use it. Marketing Calendar Blueprint is a plan to stay in front of your audience all year. - Kat Lee, How They Blog, Blog Planning Kit
Kat of Blog Planning Kit shows you more than just a way to get your blog organized. She shows you an entire system that will connect your blog dreams with your blog activities TODAY. - Tara Ziegmont, Feels Like Home, 25 Ways to Make Money Blogging
Tara Ziegmont of Make Money Blogging shows you how to monetize your blog through increased readership, ads (including the pros and cons of various different types of ads), and other opportunities. She even shares what works (and what doesn’t work) on her own blog. - Kelly Gore, iBloom, Business Success
Kelly Thorne Gore of iBloom in Business: Equipping You to Build a Successful Business & Live a Life You Love will help you fine tune your business, be a roadmap to success without all the detours, and serve as a life- long resource.
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This bundle will help even seasoned bloggers add income, define their purpose, plan their work and build their platform online and in media.