Do You Love Pinterest?

Wednesday 11 April 2012

Why Is Pinterest So Addictive?

Why Is Pinterest So Addictive?
Flowtown – Social Media Marketing Application
 

.Ten ideas for news outlets using Pinterest

Ideas sparked by the Wall Street Journal, Huffington Post UK and other news organisations using visual bookmarking tool Pinterest

Pinterest demographic data

Ignite Social Media has an interesting post showing some demographic data on Pinterest (which, unsurprisingly, skews heavily towards women aged 25-54).  Most telling for me though is their analysis of lifestyle segments.

Who are they?
  • This two-group segment includes baby boomer adults and the teenage/young adult children who live in their home
  • Both groups are heavy internet users and account for more than 10% of Pinterest.com visitsWhat would they pin?

Online habits include domestic travel planning
They also tend to live in houses ~15 years old which suggests to me they would be interested in discovering and sharing DIY, remodel and home improvement style projects

As you can imaging, those in the travel industry (domestic) or craft and home improvement stores should see this as a potential opportunity should Boomers & Boomerangs fit within their target audience.

Pinterest Climbing the Social Media Ranks

NEW YORK -- Now batting in the No. 3 position, behind Facebook and Twitter, is new kid on the social media block, Pinterest.

The social media site, which lets users "pin" photos and information from the Internet onto virtual boards, ranks behind only Facebook and Twitter in terms of total visitors, according to an Experian Marketing Services analysis, titled "The 2012 Digital Marketer: Benchmark and Trend Report."

The ranking is based on the total number of U.S. visitors during March and does not include mobile traffic, Experian spokeswoman Jennifer Marshall told CNN.
Last month, Facebook had more than seven billion total visitors, while Twitter had 182 million and Pinterest had 104 million total visits from people in the United States, according to data sent to CNN by Experian. Those numbers led to Pinterest pulling ahead of LinkedIn, Google+, MySpace and Tumblr.

"The site has really just rocketed," said Matt Tatham, another spokesman for Experian. "It's just been tremendous since [Pinterest] took off around October and then in the last few months. With Pinterest, it's kind of a new take on an old thing. Social networking is great. Pinterest is great. The way people are sharing on Pinterest is new."

However, Tatham added that since the numbers do not include mobile sites, Twitter, which sees much of its traffic from smartphones and tablets, may have taken a hit in this ranking, he told the news outlet.
Pinterest's traffic jumped 50 percent between January and February of this year. The report calls the site "the hottest social media start-up since Facebook and YouTube."

Pinterest's co-founder Ben Silbermann announced last month that an iPad application and new pinboards are in the works. The boards -- where people pin photos of products they'd like to buy and other interesting bits of info they find while trolling the Internet -- are key to Pinterest's success, Silbermann said at the South by Southwest Interactive conference in March.

The Experian report also found that Pinterest is proving popular with females -- about 60 percent of the users are women -- and among people living in the middle of the country. Pinterest is most popular relative to other social networks in Missouri, Utah, Alabama, Oklahoma and Kansas, the report showed.

Pinterest is third most-visited social site

April 06, 2012|By John D. Sutter, CNN
Pinterest lets users "pin" items they like to virtual boards.
Think back six months. You probably never had heard of a little website called Pinterest.

Now it's the third most-visited social-networking site in the United States, according to a report released Thursday by Experian Marketing Services, a digital marketing firm.
Pinterest, which lets its users "pin" photos and info from the Internet onto virtual boards, ranks behind only Facebook and Twitter in terms of total visitors, according to the analysis, titled "The 2012 Digital Marketer: Benchmark and Trend Report."

The ranking is based on the total number of U.S. visitors during March and does not include mobile traffic, according to Experian spokeswoman Jennifer Marshall.

Last month, Facebook had more than 7 billion total visitors; Twitter had 182 million; and Pinterest had 104 million total visits from people in the United States, according to data sent to CNN by Experian.

That ranking puts the newbie site ahead of heavyweights such as LinkedIn, Google+, MySpace and Tumblr.
"The site has really just rocketed," said Matt Tatham, another spokesman from Experian. "It's just been tremendous since (Pinterest) took off around October and then in the last few months.

With Pinterest, it's kind of a new take on an old thing. Social networking is great. Pinterest is great. The way people are sharing on Pinterest is new."
One caveat: Since the data doesn't include mobile traffic, sites such as Twitter, which sees much of its traffic from smartphones and tablets, may take a hit in this ranking, Tatham said.

Pinterest's traffic jumped 50% between January and February. The report calls the site "the hottest social media start-up since Facebook and YouTube."
Those stats add momentum to a site that already had become one of the hottest topics of conversation on tech blogs and was known to be one of the fastest-growing networks.

In February, Pinterest was the third-fastest-growing site on the Internet in the United States, with 17.8 million unique visitors that month, compared with 11.7 million in January, according to a report from another Internet tracking company, comScore.
Plus, it can't hurt when the U.S. president joins your website.

Pinterest launched in March 2010, but it has grown rapidly only in the past six months. Unlike many social-media darlings, tech bloggers in Silicon Valley largely ignored the site until they noticed that it was growing like mad.
The site's co-founder, Ben Silbermann, sounds somewhat surprised by the growth.