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World of Software > Computing > You Are Repinning on Pinterest All Wrong
Computing

You Are Repinning on Pinterest All Wrong

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Last updated: 2025/12/07 at 9:21 AM
News Room Published 7 December 2025
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You Are Repinning on Pinterest All Wrong
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While I share money-making strategies, nothing is “typical”, and outcomes are based on each individual. There are no guarantees.

You see a Pin you like, you hit ‘save,’ you pop it onto a board, and you move on with your day. You figure you’re doing a good thing for your Pinterest account, but what if I told you… you’re probably repinning all wrong? And those seemingly harmless clicks? They might actually be killing your reach.

In this article, I’m going to break down the most common repinning mistakes that are secretly stopping your traffic. And more importantly, I’ll show you the strategic way to pin that will actually get your content seen by a whole lot more people.

The Problem: Why Your Old Habits Are Holding You Back

The biggest problem for so many creators on Pinterest is what I call “mindless repinning.” It’s that habit of seeing content, hitting save, and moving on without any real strategy. Maybe you save your own brand-new Pin to ten of your boards in less than two minutes. Or maybe you only repin other people’s super popular content, just hoping some of that viral magic will rub off on you.

This is all based on an outdated idea of how Pinterest works. Years ago, repinning was the name of the game. The more repins a Pin had, the more popular it was, and the more Pinterest showed it. But the platform has changed. It’s not just a digital scrapbook anymore; it’s a powerful visual search engine, and its algorithm is way, way smarter now.

The first major mistake is treating all repins the same. Saving a Pin you just published to five of your own boards back-to-back isn’t strategic. To Pinterest’s algorithm, this can look repetitive and, even worse, like spam. While Pinterest may not send a formal email to everyone, many creators have seen their content get caught in spam filters for this exact kind of activity, and that’s a nightmare for your reach.

The second mistake is thinking that repinning your own content is the main way to keep it alive. You have a Pin that’s doing well, so you keep saving it to more and more boards, trying to give it another little boost. While that might have worked in the old days, it’s a super inefficient strategy now. Each time you repin your own existing Pin, you’re creating a duplicate version with weaker results. Pinterest has made it clear that it prioritizes new, “fresh” content. So, by constantly repinning, you’re essentially telling the algorithm, “Hey, I don’t have anything new, so here’s the same old thing again.”

And the third common mistake—this one is huge—is repinning without ever checking where the Pin actually goes. You see a gorgeous image with a catchy headline, you save it, but you don’t click through to check the link. That Pin could lead to a broken link, a totally irrelevant article, or a spammy website. When you save that Pin, you are basically vouching for it. If you send your audience to a bad link, you don’t just lose their trust—you also signal to Pinterest that your boards might not be a high-quality resource, hurting your chances at earning future pinclicks.

The Pain: How This Is Sabotaging Your Growth

So, why is this mindless repinning so bad for your account? It’s not just that you’re doing something “wrong”—it’s that you are actively sabotaging your own growth and leaving a ton of traffic and valuable pinclicks on the table.

First, you’re picking a fight you can’t win with the Pinterest algorithm. Think of Pinterest as a visual Google. Its main goal is to show users the best, most relevant, and freshest answer to their search. When you keep repinning the same image over and over, you’re not giving the algorithm anything new to work with. In fact, repetitive pinning is a classic spammy behavior that can get your account flagged. Getting caught in that spam filter can crush your account’s visibility, sometimes for months, and it’s tough to recover.

Second, you’re wasting your most valuable asset: your time. Trying to manually track which Pins you’ve saved to which boards, spacing them out just right, and managing some complicated repinning schedule is exhausting. And for what? For a strategy that delivers tiny results compared to what you could be doing instead. Imagine spending hours every week on a task that is actively holding your account back. That’s the reality of a repin-heavy strategy today.

And finally, you’re missing out on the single biggest opportunity for real growth on Pinterest. While you’re busy reshuffling your old Pins, other creators are focusing on the one thing Pinterest rewards above all else: freshness. Every moment you spend repinning an old Pin is a moment you could have spent creating a fresh Pin—which the algorithm is practically designed to push out to a brand-new audience. It’s like choosing to run in place when there’s an open field right in front of you. You’re working hard, but you’re not actually going anywhere.

The real pain point here is that fear of fading into obscurity, mixed with the desire to make your content last. That’s a totally valid feeling, but the answer isn’t to just repin like crazy. The answer is to start pinning smarter.

The Solution: “Smarter Repinning” & The “Fresh Pin” Strategy

So, how do we fix this? It’s a two-part strategy. First, we’ll cover the “Smarter Repinning” method for the few times you do repin. And second, we’ll get into the “Better Than Repinning” method, which is where the real traffic explosion happens.

Part 1: The Smarter Repinning Method

Repinning isn’t totally dead, but it has to be done with purpose. The goal of repinning now should be to build your authority and provide value, not just to recycle your own stuff.

When it comes to your OWN content, be selective. When you publish a new Pin, save it ONCE to the single most relevant board. That’s it. Let it do its thing. If, after a good interval—say, several days or even a week—you want to share it to another highly relevant board, that’s okay, but give it some breathing room. Using a scheduler like Tailwind can help with this, but the days of blasting one Pin to ten boards at once are long gone.

A more strategic way to use repinning is to share other people’s high-quality content. This does two things: it helps you build valuable, well-rounded boards for your followers, and it signals to Pinterest what your niche is all about. When you repin a great, high-performing Pin from a top creator in your field, you’re associating your account with that quality content. But remember the golden rule: always click through first! Make sure the link works and the content is genuinely good. A good rule of thumb that many creators follow is an 80/20 split: where about 80% of what you pin is your own fresh content, and up to 20% can be strategic repins from others.

Part 2: The “Better Than Repinning” Method: The Power of Fresh Pins

Okay, this is the secret. This is the game-changer that will change how you see Pinterest forever. The absolute best way to get more traffic from an old blog post is not to repin the old Pin. It’s to create a fresh Pin.

So, what’s a fresh Pin? A fresh Pin is simply a new image or video that Pinterest has never seen before, which links to any URL you want—whether that page is brand new or three years old. The image is new, even if the destination is an old favorite.

Why does this work so well? Because the Pinterest algorithm has a strong preference for novelty. It will almost always prioritize showing a brand-new image over one it’s seen a hundred times before. By creating fresh Pins, you give your existing content a new “first chance” with the algorithm, every single time. Instead of one Pin fighting for attention, you can have 5, 10, or even 20 different Pins all linking to the same article, each one designed to target a slightly different audience or keyword.

Here’s your action plan:

  1. Find Your Top Content: Jump into your Google Analytics and Pinterest Analytics. Identify your top 10 blog posts or product pages that already get some love. These are your proven winners.
  2. Create Multiple New Pin Designs: For just one of those blog posts, create 3-5 new Pin graphics. Use different stock photos, different colors, and different text on the image. Maybe one has a simple title, another asks a question, and a third features a quote from the article. Tools like Canva have templates that make this super fast. Services like Tailwind even have a “Tailwind Create” feature to automate much of this design process.
  3. Write New, Keyword-Rich Descriptions: This is so important. Don’t just copy and paste the old description. For each fresh Pin, write a unique description using different long-tail keywords. Think about all the different ways someone might search for your topic. If your post is about “Indoor Gardening Tips,” your new keywords could be “apartment gardening ideas,” “low-light houseplant care,” or “easy plants for beginners.” This helps you show up in way more search results.
  4. Schedule and Publish: Schedule these fresh Pins to be published over several days or weeks using a tool like Tailwind to ensure you’re not seen as spammy. Pin each one to its most relevant board first. This consistent flow of new content tells Pinterest that you’re an active, valuable creator who deserves attention.

This strategy shifts your focus from just managing old content to multiplying the opportunities for your best content to be discovered. You’re no longer just repinning; you’re relaunching.

Conclusion

Let’s recap. The old way of mindless repinning—saving the same Pin over and over again—is an outdated and risky strategy. It can hurt your reach, waste your time, and even get your account flagged for spammy behavior.

The new way forward is a two-part solution. First, practice “smarter repinning” by being selective with your own pins and strategically sharing high-quality content from others to build your authority. Second, and most importantly, embrace the “fresh pin” strategy. Instead of repinning old content, give it new life by creating multiple, unique Pin images with fresh, keyword-rich descriptions. This is what the Pinterest algorithm rewards, and it is the single most effective way to get your content seen by more people and drive a flood of traffic to your website.

You now know the mistakes to avoid and, better yet, the strategy to fix them. You’re officially ready to stop repinning wrong and start pinning for real results.

What’s the biggest challenge you’re facing with your Pinterest strategy right now? Let me know in the comments below—I read and respond to every single one.

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