How to Use Pinterest for a Business: Interview with Kara Duncan

If you’ve ever felt burnt out from the constant grind of creating content for Instagram or TikTok, you’re not alone. What if I told you there’s a smarter, more sustainable way to market your business that works while you sleep and keeps working for months or even years?

In this interview, I’m chatting with Pinterest expert Kara Duncan, a content strategist who helps busy entrepreneurs turn scattered ideas into blog and Pinterest content that actually does the heavy lifting. With a background that spans luxury salons to destination wedding planning, Kara’s marketing advice is grounded, doable, and refreshingly non-hustle-y.

Whether you’re prepping for your most profitable Black Friday yet or finally ready to escape the social media hamster wheel, you’re going to want to bookmark this post. Let’s dive into how to use Pinterest for a business in 2025 and why starting now is your secret weapon for Q4 success.

Why So Many Entrepreneurs Are Over the Social Media Hustle

We opened our chat by acknowledging the elephant in the room: social media burnout.

“A lot of entrepreneurs feel trapped in the social media grind because they think it’s the only way to grow,” Kara shared. “They’re told to post daily, jump on trends, and constantly be ‘on.’ It’s exhausting and it’s not always effective.”

Kara’s “aha” moment came in the pandemic when prior she had been doing all the things as a destination wedding planner and finally digged into her numbers since she was slower and 93% of her business was coming from Google and Pinterest and she was so confused about how when she was DAILY on Instagram versus definitely not on Pinterest.

Meanwhile, one well-optimized Pinterest pin she created for herself had the potential to bring in consistent traffic and email sign-ups for over a year.

“That’s when I thought: wait can I just stop marketing on Instagram? Spoiler YOU CAN!”

Moral of the story? GO AND LOOK AT YOUR ANALYTICS! When Bekah did this she realized not only were people not coming from Instagram but the ones who were weren’t converting to clients which made it an easy decision to say PEACE OUT for the summer (and maybe forever).

Why Pinterest is the Most Underrated Platform of 2025

Pinterest isn’t new, but it is wildly underused by service-based business owners and creatives who could benefit most. So many service-based businesses don’t use it (which means your competition is low), but people ARE USING it for their business, so the volume can be high (like in the thousands).

Pinterest is one of the first places people go when they start an idea including start a business, learn how to market on Instagram, do my rebrand or launch a website.

“Pinterest is a search engine, not a social network,” Kara explains. “It’s where people go with intent. They’re not there to scroll, they’re there to solve a problem, plan a project, or make a purchase.”

When asked who should be on Pinterest, Kara’s response was MOST businesses.

  • Coaches
  • Course creators
  • Bloggers
  • Food
  • Home Decor
  • Weddings
  • Etsy shop owners
  • Website designers and brand strategists
  • Anyone with a lead magnet, service, or product they want discovered

Even if you think your niche doesn’t fit Pinterest, Kara says it’s worth looking again. “If your audience is searching for answers, inspiration, or education, Pinterest should be part of your strategy.” Also, the fastest growing cohort is Gen-Z so it is NOT dying and if that is your clientele 100% get on Pinterest.

The best part? Pinterest offers long-term SEO marketing benefits. Your pins can show up in search results on both Pinterest and Google, giving your content even more reach and visibility without additional effort.

Pinterest vs. Social Media: Content That Lasts

One of the biggest differences? Pinterest content has longevity. As long as the content is relevant it will continue to rank. Kara has Pins that are 5 years old and still ranking. Most content peaks around 6 months so don’t expect a quick dopamine hit so it can be hard to see the payoff, but it will continue and you can balance evergreen and timely content. For example if you have a Black Friday thing you do every year, those pins will see a surge around Black Friday every year, it doesn’t need to be year sensitive.

A pin you create today could still be driving traffic to your site a year from now. Compare that to Instagram, where your post disappears in 48 hours. Pinterest is about building a library of searchable content.

Instead of needing to be constantly online, Pinterest allows you to schedule out fresh pins in batches and let them work in the background which is perfect for busy solopreneurs, moms, or business owners juggling a million plates.

This is also one of the most overlooked SEO marketing benefits. Pinterest doesn’t just help you grow now, it builds compounding traffic that supports your business month after m onth.

Pinterest Is SEO. Here’s How to Use It That Way

Pinterest and SEO go hand in hand, but many business owners overlook this powerful connection.

“Pinterest is really just visual SEO,” Kara said. “When you treat it like a search engine and use keywords intentionally, it can drive serious traffic.”

Straight images tend to get saved, but not clicked on. A graphic that is something like “10 Spring Flower Ideas” those type of things actually get clicked on and then you have more opportunity for conversion.

Here’s Kara’s breakdown for structuring a pin with SEO in mind:

  • Pin Title: Use a keyword-rich, problem-solving phrase that is short and to the point (e.g., “How to Plan a Profitable Black Friday Sale”)
  • Pin Description: Add your keywords naturally, include a call-to-action, and mention what’s behind the click. 200-300 words is the sweet spot is what the Tailwind CEO said. 500 words means you run the risk of keyword stuffing or confusing the algorithm.
  • Link: Make sure your website slug has a keyword in it. Pinterest wants blogs or some type of content so typically don’t go to a sales page, but instead to something helpful.
  • Image Text: Use bold, clear fonts and contrast so the pin is easy to read even on mobile
  • Alt Text: Fill in the image’s alt text with descriptive keywords—Pinterest uses this to understand your content

By treating your Pinterest strategy like SEO, you’re not only boosting Pinterest traffic, you’re building out long-term search visibility. It’s one of the SEO marketing benefits that makes Pinterest a game-changer in any sustainable lead generation plan.

Want more black friday tips?

READ MORE: Website Pop-Ups: How to Grow Your Email List Without Annoying Your Audience (Just in Time for Black Friday)

I’ve got messy hair and a thirsty heart. 

I overshare my life, and have an ultra-expressive personality. Some words people use to describe me are: helpful, real, fun, creative, authentic, and kind.

Elphaba from Wicked is kind of my alter-ego (I was a fan LONG before the movie-adaptation - anyone else?!). I am always trying to forge my own path and make a difference in the World, somehow, someway, while also constantly criticizing myself and trying to become the better version of me.

Quality conversations + coffee come easy to me. 

I’ve never had an issue connecting naturally with others (probs because I can go on and on about my life story, not that it is interesting, I just process externally...) 

I find so much joy in helping and serving others and I give myself fully to whatever it is that engages me, whether that is running a 50k or creating a website in a day.

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