Posts tagged pinterest
Five ways to help your product market itself online
Apr 17th
By Neicole Crepeau, Contributing {grow} Columnist
If you sell a web app or a software product that has web elements, it’s time to consider how your product can help market itself. More and more we’re seeing marketing built into products, allowing the code to do some of the advertising work for you. Here are five methods to consider.
1) Perfect Social Prompts
Social sharing is the most obvious and easiest form of marketing that a product can enable but it is also critically important because when fans and followers see a personal recommendation of your product or service from someone they trust, that carries real weight.
The trick is to prompt users at appropriate times and provide an easy way for them to share, without overwhelming them. Marketers need to work with development to design the right sharing experiences in order to generate maximum, positive posts.
Let’s look at a fantastic example of this. I recently had my laptop stolen. Luckily, I was using Backblaze to back up my files. On the screen for restoring my content, there were prominently placed Share buttons. It was the perfect time to prompt, because I felt incredibly relieved and thankful to Backblaze at that moment.

What better advertisement than seeing a post from a person who feels immensely grateful for your product?
2) Creative Content Options
Does your product generate content or help users create content? Content is the fuel that powers the Internet and in an ideal world, your product would actually create content of interest your customers want to share.
A good example of this is the social influence company Appinions. Just by using the product, they can generate reports and infographics that are interesting and useful to the press, the public and industry publications.
If your product doesn’t naturally provide content, there are still ways to use the product as the content in a marketing strategy.
For example, say you have a business productivity tool, something akin to Evernote. Can you provide a public option that allows business users to highlight and share content that might promote them or their company? Putting a little effort into making your productivity tool a valuable marketing tool for other users means a public page that showcases your app.
Or, perhaps you’re able to track usage statistics via your product and provide data that might be of interest to other business users. Even support-related content, where existing users provide tips and hints, or describe how they are using your product, is a way to highlight your tool and garner SEO benefits.
Another option is to display user-generated or curated content on your site, which draws other potential users like a magnet to see it. This subtly endorses your product simply by showcasing it. Pinterest, which shows up in search engine results, is a perfect example of a site where user-generated content is both the product and a self-marketing tool.

3) In Search of Stickiness
The first step in obtaining powerful word of mouth marketing action is for people to actually use your product. That’s why it’s important to consider how to make your product “sticky,” i.e. keeping people glued and coming back.
The most common method of making a product sticky is through automated notifications through email, text messages, or even Twitter DMs. The notifications can range from a simple, “We haven’t seen you in a while…” to updates that inform users of activity or engagement opportunities. Social media tools often use this kind of engagement notification. For example, Twitter notifies you when someone sends a DM and Facebook tells you when someone has tagged or mentioned you.
When designing notifications into your product, you need to consider the whole experience in order to make sure that you are maximizing stickiness without annoying users. Make sure that messages are useful and the total number of notifications is appropriate to the level of activity and investment the customer has made in your product each day/week.
Make it easy for users to move from the notification to the appropriate, corresponding area or actions of your software, website, or app. For example, when you click the link in a notification from Twitter about DM or @, you go to that DM/tweet so you can see it and immediately respond.

Don’t forget to look for opportunities to capitalize on notification for additional marketing opportunities. For example, say that you’re notifying users of a new post or picture that might interest them. When they click the link to go to that post or picture, it might make sense to have Share buttons that let the user immediately share that item with others, further spreading links to your application.
4) Rewards and Prizes
Who doesn’t like getting something for free? There are myriad ways to build rewards into your product to encourage actions that help market it. For example, Dropbox has a getspace page, listing ways to get more diskspace. In addition to upgrading to a paid or higher-priced version of Dropbox, you can earn space for free by taking actions that market or otherwise help the product:

Consider offering users something for tweeting or posting about your product. Definitely consider a referral reward. Many products generate a “coupon” code that users can share with others. When friends/fans use the code, the sender gets a discount or other reward. (There are even apps like Ambassador to help you create and track these codes for your product.) You might also consider rewarding bloggers for posts. I know a marketer who gives users a free year of service if they write a blog post about his product.
5) Fun, fun, fun
“Gamifying” products is all the rage. It can keep the product sticky, encourage users to explore features, and entice users to take marketing actions in exchange for status, badges, or to level up.
You can even combine the rewards and gamification techniques. For example, users might level-up through marketing actions to earn discounts, free months on your subscription product, or unlock selected premium features. Again, design these gamification elements carefully. If your users can level up to use selected premium features, pick features that will showcase the premium version and that are sticky, making those leveled-up users reluctant to give up the feature or the data they’ve saved with it.
Remember to make people’s level and status prominent in the product. Part of the benefit of gamification is to encourage competition. When a new user sees that another user has a special status, the new user may be driven to obtain that status as well. This competitive instinct can be leveraged to encourage users to take the actions you want.
As a marketer, you need to also consider your product pricing structure and how you can use gamification to get users to spend more money. For example, users who pay for higher-priced versions may have greater public status and privileges (like an American Express Black Card). You may also decide that it makes sense to allow users to earn or pay for specific features or privileges.
It’s a wired world, so let’s allow our products to help them market themselves! Was this helpful? Any ideas you’d like to contribute?
Neicole Crepeau is the Senior Marketing Manager at Vizit Corporation, and blogs at Coherent Social Media. She’s the creator of CurateXpress, a content curation tool. Connect with Neicole on Twitter at @neicolec
Research shows that Pinterest is big, it’s bad, and it’s for real
Dec 6th
A new report from The Social Habit focuses on revelations about Pinterest and if you weren’t a “pinner” before, it might be time to get in the game!
The study concludes that while Pinterest has a smaller user base than services like Facebook or Twitter, the service engenders enormous loyalty and has become a daily habit for more than half its users.
As a reality check, Pinterest just ditched the limited “invitation” stage of its growth in early August of this year! So the expansion has been explosive and rapid.
The Social Habit research of American social media users shows some pretty staggering insights. A few highlights:
- Usage of Pinterest is already nearly as large as LinkedIn with 21% having a Pinterest account versus 26% on LinkedIn
- More than half of Pinterest users visit the site each day.
- We could be seeing just the tip of the iceberg for Pinterest’s growth. 38% of U.S. social media users plan to use Pinterest more often
- 70% of the site’s users are women and 64% of the site’s fans are under the age of 34. In fact, Pinterest is the third-most widely-used social network for women 18-44 (behind Facebook and Twitter).
- The most popular pins?
- Food
- Arts & Crafts
- Fashion
- Interior Design
- Family-Related Content
- Photography
- Here’s the big one: 27% of Pinterest users have purchased a product as a result of seeing it on someone else’s pinboard.
Pretty amazing stuff. How are you using Pinterest for your business? Or is it just for fun?
By the way, this is just one tiny glimpse into the amazing dataset compiled by Edison Research and the Social Habit report. This is a MUST HAVE and affordable resource for any agency, marketing department or social media professional.
Disclosure: I am an adviser to Edison Research.
Punterest: It’s kind of like pins, only funnier.
Mar 1st
My friend Reza Malayeri likes my sense of humor. He’s the only one, really.
So I’ve created a new app for him and I’m debuting it today.
Punterest. The place where everybody can pin their puns! Like this:
The Secret History of Pinterest — REVEALED!
Feb 14th
Do you feel like you woke up a week ago and Pinterest had taken over the world? I read on Twitter (so it is true, of course) that Pinterest is now bigger than Google, will be running for President of the United States, and is recording an album of Justin Bieber cover songs.
The meteoric success of Pinterest has shocked everyone.
Except me.
I have it all figured out. You see, Pinterest makes perfect sense if you just look at the natural evolution of social media …
THE GOLDEN AGE OF BLOGGING: 2005-2009
When blogging first caught on, people actually wrote things. There was a post, comments, debate, and dialogue. But then something happened. Blogging went mainstream and became so popular that soon there were thousands and thousands of blogs. Even plumbing companies had blogs (a sub-genre known as clog blogs). What to do? Where to go? We needed something to help us consume more of these blogs quickly. So that led to …
THE GREAT ERA OF LISTICLES: 2009-2010
Numbered lists! That’s the answer! Bite-sized morsels of information like “The 10 Worst Blogging Mistakes” and “The Five Biggest LinkedIn Tips!” Bloggers learned how to dumb-down the content by counting it down! Putting a number in a headline was the key to RT Nirvana. But the information density continued to get progressively worse as companies of all sizes got in on the content marketing game. Now what do we do to communicate to people who have less and less time to read our lists? I know! We’ll make our blog posts into a picture called an infographic! This led to a strategy where companies and bloggers could communicate with EVEN LESS CONTENT!
INFOGRAPHICS A-GO-GO: 2010 – 2011
Well if people won’t even read our listicles any more, let’s turn our content into a colorful illustration. It’s kind of like using cartoons to tell your stories. Let’s not make people read. Let’s just SHOW them what they need to know. And if we don’t have the data, we’ll just make it up. Only 4.6 percent of social media users ever check a fact any way. And yes, I just made that up. See how easy that was? But soon, the web was FLOODED with infographics. We needed another breakthrough — an innovation that would be even less challenging to over-taxed web users. Let’s just cut out the information! We’ll simply show people photographs of stuff!
PINTEREST, THE NATURAL EVOLUTION OF SOCIAL MEDIA – 2012
Pretty pictures! Woot! And MORE pretty pictures! Let’s face it, that’s all we can really handle these days, right? We’re just too busy to read, think, or process an idea. Just show us a picture of a cute dog or a wedding dress dammit. Of course … It all makes perfect sense. Pinterest is truly a reflection of our society, and a natural evolution of a need to create and distribute information that takes less and less time and attention.
Where will this all lead? In my mind it can only go to …
MONDRIAN — THE FUTURE OF SOCIAL SHARING – 2013
So we have moved down the line from meaningful, debate-worthy blog posts to pictures of crafts and puppies. Where can we go from here? I think the painter Piet Mondrian had it right. When he and other painters moved their craft into a new level of simplistic abstraction, all they had left was lines and primary colors. So I predict that the next big thing will be a social platform I dub “Mondrian” (maybe I need to delete a vowel to be cool – Mndrian?) which will consist solely of colors, lines, and occasional grunts, which will replace the too-complicated “like” button.
So there you have it. The history of Pinterest and the future of social media in five paragraphs. Hope it wasn’t too much to read? 8-)












You’re in marketing for one reason: Grow.
Grow your company, reputation, customers, impact, profits. Grow yourself. This is a community that will help. It will stretch your mind, connect you to fascinating people, and provide some fun along the way. I am so glad you’re here.
-Mark Schaefer

