While there are many elements that influence your search ranking on Pinterest, perhaps the simplest to work with is keywords. Keywords do matter on Pinterest. Full disclosure – I did go in to this thinking there would be an even stronger correlation between results/rankings and keywords than I actually found. Looking at the top 10 or so pins for a search and the content they link to turned up a curious mix of partial matches, related terms and one very mysterious promoted pin. Not one single top 10 result had the exact key word string everywhere it should matter. I’m officially surprised!
Pinterest Search in a Nutshell
Pinterest is a search and discovery engine. It’s designed to help us find not just what we think we want, but also to find something new and wonderful. Search results clearly show a preference for answering “intent” versus a strict interpretation of the actual words we enter in search. Looking for “gifts for new moms”? You’ll probably see baby shower gifts, gifts for dads, recipes for meals you can bring to new moms. So, what you’re looking for, but also what you might not know you’re looking for. You’ll also get different results depending on when you search (Pinterest does not want to serve up the same old pins to you every time), who you follow, and what your interests are.
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Still, keywords do matter, and because of all the factors that will improve your search ranking on Pinterest, that element is probably the most in your immediate control, you might as well put to work for you!
Singular or Plural Keywords on Pinterest – Does it Matter?
A search for “how to recover from a running injury” returned exactly the same results as “how to recover from running injuries.” But, a search for “travel with my dog” and “travel with my dogs” did bring up slightly different results. Interestingly, two searches minutes apart for “travel with my dog” also brought up slightly different results (one of the factors in ranking is current engagement, apparently it changes fast). So, does it matter? It doesn’t seem to, especially when my first result on “dogs” brought up a pin with only the singular “dog” and my first result for “dog” included both singular and plural in the description. So, if both apply to your content, use both and don’t sweat it.
“Travel with my dog”
“Travel with my dogs”
11 Place to Put Your Keywords
There is evidence that using keywords in all these places, both on and off Pinterest will help your rankings. I can only tell you for sure that it won’t hurt, and it will most likely help!
1. In Your Pinterest Business Name
No-brainer, right? Well, not so much. If your brand name does not include your keywords, you’ll need to get creative. For instance, if your business is called “Lucky Stars” and you sell wall decals and decor, that profile name is not going to do anything for you on Pinterest. So, go with something like, “Unique Wall Stickers – Lucky Stars.” Think about what people would search for and be delighted in if your pins popped up.
2. Profile Description
Your description should tell people at-a-glance what you’re pinning and how they’ll benefit by following you. It also tells Pinterest what you’re about. If you are a local business, make sure to mention the city/state or area you are located in or that you serve.
3. Your Pinterest Profile URL/Username
If you have an established account, think carefully before changing this. The last thing you want is to lose any Google love you might have acquired by causing search results to either load a “Whoops! We didn’t find that page.” But, if you’re just starting, see if you can work in a keyword or two – if you can do it in 15 characters or less!
4. Board Names
Cute titles that are for your own amusement (“things that make me happy”) are fun and have their place, but they are not going to help you in search. Go for clarity over cleverness, and work in clever as a bonus to make you stand out from the crowd. But keep in mind that your long board name is going to get truncated in search results, so put the relevant words in the beginning.
Also, when you set up boards, make sure you choose a category (not “other”). This helps Pinterest return your pins in relevant searches, too.
5. Pin Descriptions
6. Text on the Pin Image
OK, OK, technically, Pinterest might not actually be reading this. BUT, pinners are. Artfully done text on a pin can tell people instantly if they’ve found what they’re looking for meaning more pins, more repins, more likes = more Pinterest search love. Besides you want to do well on Pinterest search because you want people to act on your pin, so make it easy.
7. Image File Names
Google uses image file names as a signal of the subject matter on your site, and so does Pinterest. For the sake of your ranking on both, use good, descriptive file names for your images. Think, “orange-lampshade-modern.jpg” instead of “image2341x.jpg.” Oh, and use hyphens to separate words – underscores are ignored. Simple.
8. Your Content
What do people see when they click on your pin to visit your website? Does your “10 ways to help your kids adjust to kindergarten” pin description lure someone to click on your “8 ways to clean a closet” blog post? Sounds silly, but you get the idea. If Pinterest is important to your business, keep the content consistent in substance AND in keywords. Pinterest notices.
9. Content URLs
Another subtle signal about your content is the URL you give it. You’re probably doing this anyway, but make sure you use your keywords in your blog post and website page URLs. “pinterest-search-keywords” rather than “pinjanuaryblog.”
10. Content Title
Does the name of your pin’s destination page contain the keywords you used in your pin? It should! In fact, if Pinterest is an important channel for you, you can use it to help plan your content and the keywords you’ll use in your next blog post or downloadable offer!
Bonus: If you use rich pins, the title and description you use on your blog post will be pulled into your pin and is searchable. That means, even if someone pins your content or repins your pin, they can only change the description – not the information pulled in from rich pins! So, if someone replaces your carefully thought out description with “love this!” that’s OK – your original description is still there! Rich pins do tend to rank higher. Whether that is because of the built-in keyword rich descriptions and info or because Pinterest rewards those who use all its features is unclear.
11. Image Alternate Text
Neglecting this hurts you in more ways than one. Your blog post image’s alternate text becomes the default description when someone pins from your website. You do NOT want someone to pin your gorgeous image with the description “pinterest-search-keywords.jpg” because they didn’t take the time to change it. They are doing you a big favor by spreading your content. Make it easy to pin and don’t expect them to do your Pinterest keyword work for you. 🙂
Over to you. Have you noticed a strong correlation between keyword usage in any of these elements and search performance?
Want to learn more about Pinterest Search? Check out some of these great articles I collected on Pinterest.
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