Their product, our product. Notice the difference?

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Fabiha1030
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Joined: Tue Sep 23, 2025 3:49 pm

Their product, our product. Notice the difference?

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Comparison campaigns have been around forever, from taste tests to Bounty paper towels. They are the go-to idea when you’ve exhausted your first few inspired ideas and hit a wall. A high mark for this kind of campaign was Rolling Stone magazine’s first foray into advertising: “Perception, Reality.” Directed at their readers (but also at their advertisers) this campaign contrasted the percep-tion of who their audience was and the reality of what they actually really were (for example, the hippie of old was, today, a well-off businessman). Although there is always room for a new twist on the comparison campaign (which Geico proved recently with their customer “taste test” commercials), nine times out of ten these ads tell you what you already know.

Inspirationally Vacant

Nothing is less effective than an advertisement with a vague, clichéd image and an equally vague headline. How many times have you seen ad or banner with “inspirational” images, such as hands holding a globe or someone standing on top of a mountain, and a headline like “Moving Forward”? More than you’ve probably taken notice of. The uk sme data body copy for these ads usually explain that these companies are forward thinking and on top of their game, but their advertising is as vanilla as it gets. These are the kinds of ads that nobody remembers because they all mesh into each other. To break the cliché, the ad needs to be specific: How a company is

Pinterest is one of the fastest growing social
media platforms on the market today, but B2B organizations haven’t all figured out how to make it work for them. Some are skeptical that their audience even spends time on Pinterest. Given that the largest demographic in Pinterest’s user base is Mid-western females between the ages of 25 and 54, they might be right.



However, just because Pinterest’s users
today aren’t the target audience for most B2B salespeople doesn’t mean Pinterest’s user base will stay that way. As Pinterest grows and attracts more professionals to its user base, will your brand be ready to drive leads from the site, or will it completely ignore a potential lead generation tool?

Spend a few hours building up your Pinterest page, and give it a chance to perform. At most, Pinterest is a place where potential customers can organically discover your brand. At least, Pinterest is a repository for your brand content.

Optimize Your Pinterest Profile

Take a look at Grey Poupon’s Pinterest page. A branded icon defines each pin board, and when you click on each icon, you’re taken to a pin that describes the category. Most B2B organizations aim to own certain SEO terms and host information about those terms on their websites to drive link traffic and increase their Google search value. We have no way to know where Pinterest is going, but we think Pinterest traffic will play an increasingly important role in search rankings. Optimize your Pinterest page with a different board for each of the SEO terms your brand wants to own, and Pin all your content to those boards. Create clean branded icons for a finished, professional look, and have them linked to SEO terms on your site. Make those Pins the board covers.

Image

Describe What You Do

Pinterest users may visit the site to discover and share photos, but when they encounter your brand profile page, you want to capture their information and count them as leads. How can you go about doing so? Describe your products on your Pinterest profile page, and include Pins that link directly to landing pages where visitors fill out forms. Pin the Webcasts you host and the events you’ll attend. Pin your sales demos. A prospect might be attracted by the photos you pin, but quickly lose interest when they hit your profile. According to Inc. Magazine, it is mandatory to have sufficient information on your profile about your business. Links to your websites and your presence in other social networks is a definite plus for you.

Create Unique Content

PInterest works especially well for companies that are content powerhouses. Pinterest works much the same way as Twitter and Facebook: the more content you post, the more often your content will get in front of your audience. Consumers today aren’t looking for content, they’re waiting for it to come to them. If you post one Pin every day, you won’t see a lot of traffic. If you post lots of original Pins in one day, your prospects will have even more opportunities to click on content that takes them to your brand. This way, you are able to create an perpetual brand.

Determine Your Pinterest Audience

Are you pinning to attract new business, or to engage current customers? In her article, Jennifer Lonoff Schiff advises business owners on the pros of considering customer needs on pinterest. As much as pinning photos about your business and products will help customers understand how to use your products, it might draw new prospects’ interest. Don’t just Pin everything. Develop a strategy.

Always Have a Call to Action

Include calls to action in marketing content is requisite for pretty much every campaign, so why would Pinterest be any different? Don’t just write Pinterest off as a marketing experiment and Pin a bunch of random things. Pin content that’s relevant to your brand, and don’t Pin it unless it has a call to action.

According to eConsultancy, engaging and interactive digital imagery increases the chance of click-throughs and actual product purchase. So Pinterest, because of its image-based philosophy, is already primed for lead conversion; you just have to take advantage of the opportunities it offers.

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This article originally appeared on InsideView's Sales Intelligence | B2B Sales Productivity and has been republished with permission.

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