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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 don’t.
If you already have blog posts, you already have 30 days of pins. You just need a workflow.
Here’s exactly how I batch Pinterest pins using existing blog content — and the tools that make it fast.
First, start with research.
Before I touch design, I open Pinclicks.
I type in my core topic and look at keyword volume, related phrases, and what’s already getting engagement. I’m not guessing what might work. I’m validating demand.
If I see “Pinterest affiliate marketing” pulling traffic and strong outbound clicks, that’s the angle. If “Pinterest passive income” has better momentum, I shift the hook.
This step protects your time.
You’re building pins around what people are already searching for — not what you feel like posting.
Next, open your blog dashboard.
Choose posts that align with the keywords you just researched. Open 5–10 strong posts in separate tabs.
Now you’re not creating content.
You’re multiplying assets.
Then I launch Harpa.
Inside the blog post page, I trigger my saved Pinterest prompt. It pulls from the title and excerpt and generates:
An image concept
A curiosity-driven text overlay
A Pinterest title
A keyword-optimized description
The key here is the hook.
Not “Step-by-Step Affiliate Guide.”
More like:
“The Pinterest Strategy That Quietly Builds Affiliate Income.”
Same post. Different entry point.
Once Harpa generates the image description, I copy only the visual prompt section and move to Ideogram.
Inside Ideogram:
Set the format to vertical.
Keep it clean.
Clear focal object.
Strong contrast between background and overlay text.
If the image includes items with text, I specify exactly what that text should say. No clutter. No messy visuals.
Download the image as a JPEG. Name it clearly. Move on.
Now back to the Pinterest copy Harpa created.
I make sure the primary keyword from Pinclicks appears early in the description. That’s reach.
Then I make sure the first sentence sells the outcome. That’s clicks.
Now scheduling.
Instead of manually publishing, I load everything into Tailwind.
Upload the image.
Paste the Pinterest title.
Paste the description.
Add the blog URL.
Choose relevant boards.
I schedule three pins per day across the month. Morning, midday, afternoon.
If I pull 10 blog posts and create three pins each, that’s 30 pins done in one session.
At the end of the month, I check performance back inside Pinclicks.
Which keywords gained traction.
Which pins drove outbound clicks.
Which titles earned saves.
Then I double down next month.
This is the system:
Pinclicks tells me what to target.
Harpa speeds up ideation and copy.
Ideogram handles visuals.
Tailwind distributes consistently.
My blog does the selling.
No daily scrambling.
No blank Canva screens.
No burnout.
Just one asset turned into multiple entry points.
Stop guessing and start scaling.
If you want the exact, step-by-step workflow to turn one blog post into a month of high-performing pins, grab the 30-Day Pinterest Batching Playbook.
