Contrary to its older reputation, half of Pinterest's half-billion users are now Gen Z. This demographic uses visual, in-app search as a primary shopping discovery tool, bypassing traditional search engines. Marketers must adapt their strategies to capture this app-native search behavior.
Pinterest functions more like a visual search engine than a social media feed. Users actively search for ideas and solutions, indicating they have pre-qualified interest. This places them further down the customer journey compared to users on Meta platforms who are typically just scrolling.
Despite its stock dropping 20% after making under-16 accounts private-by-default, Pinterest's young user base nearly doubled a year later. The move resonated with Gen Z's desire for safer, less performative online spaces, turning a perceived business risk into a major growth driver and competitive advantage.
Social media algorithms are "separators," showing content to a fraction of your audience to maximize on-platform time. Pinterest's algorithm is a "connector," aligning its goal (giving users the best answer) with your goal (reaching ideal clients), effectively matching you with people actively searching for your solutions.
Unlike social media posts that disappear within 48 hours, the average Pinterest pin reaches 50% of its lifetime engagement over 13 months. This means content "ages like wine," with old pins continuing to drive traffic for years, creating a powerful, long-term marketing asset from a single effort.
Because users treat Pinterest as a research and planning tool, the path from discovery to purchase is longer than on other platforms. Pinterest itself historically used a 60-day attribution window. Marketers should anticipate a longer consideration phase, especially for higher-ticket items discovered on the platform.
The old strategy of creating long, infographic-style pins is obsolete. Pinterest now prioritizes authentic, scroll-stopping videos similar to Instagram Reels. Even poorly designed but powerful videos that grab attention outperform highly polished, traditional pins, signaling a major shift in creative strategy.
The most effective Pinterest ad assets now mirror the authentic, short-form video style popular on TikTok and Instagram. Marketers can simply repurpose high-performing reels with minor copy tweaks, significantly lowering the creative barrier to entry for testing the platform.
Gen Z consumers curate different personas across various social channels (e.g., TikTok vs. LinkedIn), making brand positioning exponentially more complex. A brand's purpose must serve as a connective tissue, agile enough to be tweaked for different channel-specific identities while maintaining a core consistency.
The vast majority of users search for generic solutions (e.g., "brown sneakers") rather than specific brand names. This creates a massive opportunity for smaller businesses to be discovered based on the quality of their solution, not their brand recognition, making Pinterest a true meritocracy for content.
Gen Z possesses valuable business skills learned outside of formal education, such as creating viral videos, building online communities, and strategic thinking from gaming. Leaders should actively seek to "unlock this technological genius" as it directly relates to modern customer engagement and marketing.