Pinterest introduces Idea ads and paid partnership tools

The new features are aimed at helping brands and creators reach consumers through creative images and videos.

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Pinterest has launched a new ad format – Idea ads – and a new partnership tool allowing creators to tag brand partners in their content. 

Idea ads. The new Idea ads follow a similar format to Idea pins, which were launched last year. Similarly, Idea ads are an immersive, multi-page format designed for advertisers “to showcase ideas in action.” When shoppers click on the ads they’re taken to the brand’s website to view relevant information. 

What the Idea ads look like:

The paid partnership tool. This allows brands to partner with Pinterest creators. The partnership allows large brands to collaborate with Pinterest’s community of creators and connect with their audiences. 

With the paid partnership tool, brands can review the tag and approve (or deny) the content. Brands will benefit from the authenticity of the creator’s content. Brands can also promote the creator’s content as their own Idea ad with paid partnership across Pinterest. 

Early adopters. An early launch of these tools showed that brands who worked with creators saw 38% higher brand awareness, and 37% higher Pin awareness. A few brands that saw success with this program in the U.S. are Gatorade and Scotch™ Brand. 

Gatorade. Gatorade’s goals were to help its audience stay interested and engaged. To do this, they launched an Idea ads with paid partnership campaign on Pinterest. By teaming up with popular fitness creators, they created ads providing workout inspiration, and reminders to stay hydrated. As a result, they saw 34 million impressions, 99k clicks to their feed. 

“Handing over the creative power to a Pinterest creator allowed for an authentic moment of fitness that could only come from that creator. It made our ads feel new, natural and engaging.” — Johanna Lugo, Marketing Assistant Manager, Gatorade.

Scotch™ Brand. Scotch™ had a goal to create a hands-on approach to back-to-school shopping. They wanted to showcase ads for making supplies like pencil holders, teachers’ gifts, and more. They found popular search terms related to crafts and created kid-friendly how-to videos using Scotch™ tape. The results were a 64% lower cost per impression than their initial goal, and a 4x higher click-through rate than their average benchmarks. 

Outside of the U.S., brands like Coty Canada and M.A.C Cosmetics have also seen promising results. 

The new formats and tools are now available in more than 30 countries. You can read the full blog post announcement here.

Why we care. Pinterest hasn’t really been on anyone’s radar lately. The development and launch of these new features was quite a surprise. Creators looking to monetize their social media content should take note. However, the results coming from the early tests show benefits to larger, already well-known brands, but what about the creators? It would be nice to see more credit given to the people who made Pinterest what it was pre-ad platform – a place to come for ideas and inspiration.

I can’t help but feel like this is another way for large brands to take advantage of smaller creators. Using them to build effective ad campaigns aimed at audiences they weren’t able to reach through traditional means. It sounds rather familiar. Either way, we’ll be watching. 


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Nicole Farley
Contributor
Nicole Farley is the founder of Web Sprout, an inbound marketing agency. She formerly was PPC Editor for Search Engine Land (from 2022-2023), covering paid search, paid social, Google Analytics and more. In addition to being a Marine Corps veteran, she has an extensive background in digital marketing, an MBA and a penchant for true crime, podcasts, travel, and snacks.

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