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While I share money-making strategies, nothing is “typical”, and outcomes are based on each individual. There are no guarantees.
Your first digital product funnel doesn’t start with creating a product.
It starts with finding out what people are already searching for.
Most creators do it backwards. They spend weeks building an ebook, then try to figure out how to get people to see it. By then they’re exhausted and the product sits there collecting digital dust.
I’ve built multiple digital products that sell consistently — ebooks, prompt packs, coaching programs. The ones that work all started the same way: with demand research, not a product idea.
Here’s the exact funnel I use.
Step 1: Validate the Problem Before You Build Anything
I open Pinclicks and search for the topic I’m considering.
Pinclicks pulls real search data from Pinterest — not Google. So I can see what people are actively typing in right now, how much competition exists, and whether there’s enough volume to make it worth building content around.
I’m looking for specific, problem-based searches. Things like “how to start affiliate marketing with no audience” or “Pinterest marketing for beginners.” Not vague inspiration. Actual problems people are trying to solve.
If there’s demand, I move forward. If there isn’t, I pivot before I waste any time.
Step 2: Build One Strong Authority Blog Post
Once I have a validated keyword, I write one deep, helpful, search-optimized blog post around it.
This post is the traffic magnet. It solves the problem thoroughly enough that someone who reads it feels like they got real value — and trusts me enough to want more.
This is not a teaser. It’s not a “here’s a taste, now buy something.” It’s a genuinely useful piece of content that happens to position my paid product as the logical next step.
Step 3: Create a Digital Product That Goes Deeper
If the blog post teaches the overview, the digital product delivers the framework.
I keep my products focused. Not 200-page exhaustive guides — short, actionable, high-transformation resources. A template. A prompt pack. A step-by-step playbook.
The product answers the follow-up question the blog post leaves the reader with: “Okay, I get the concept — now how do I actually do this in my own business?”
That’s where the sale happens naturally.
Step 4: Add a Free Lead Magnet to Capture Email
Between the pin and the paid product, I add one more step: a free lead magnet.
It’s aligned with the same keyword cluster. A checklist, a mini guide, a free template. Something that gives immediate value and gets the reader onto my email list.
Now Pinterest traffic becomes subscribers. And subscribers are worth far more than one-time visitors because I can continue to teach, build trust, and introduce my paid products over time.
Step 5: Create Three to Five Pins Per Blog Post
One blog post. Multiple pins.
I use Ideogram to generate the images — it produces the tall vertical format Pinterest favors, and I can create variations quickly. Then I write three to five different headlines, each hitting a slightly different angle on the same keyword.
Different hooks. Same destination. Same keyword theme.
I batch everything and schedule through Tailwind so the pins go out consistently without me having to manually post every day.
Step 6: Nurture the Email List
Once someone is on my list, I don’t immediately pitch them.
I teach. I share what’s working in my own business. I address the objections I know they have — “I’m not techy enough,” “I don’t have a big audience,” “I don’t know what to sell.”
By the time I introduce the paid product, it feels like a natural next step, not a sales push.
Step 7: Optimize Based on What the Data Shows
Every month I check two things: which pins are driving the most outbound clicks, and which emails are converting readers into buyers.
When something works, I duplicate the approach. When something doesn’t, I test a new headline or a different angle — not a completely different strategy.
The system gets more effective over time because every decision is based on real data.
The Full Funnel at a Glance
Validate the keyword. Write the authority post. Build the focused digital product. Add a lead magnet. Create multiple pins. Schedule consistently. Nurture via email. Optimize based on results.
One keyword cluster. One blog post. One lead magnet. One paid product. A handful of pins feeding the system every week.
That’s it. That’s the whole machine.
Pinterest drives people in at the top. Email builds the relationship. The digital product converts. And because Pinterest is a search engine, the pins you create today can keep sending traffic — and generating sales — for months or years.
If you want help building this system in your own business, Blueprint Coaching walks through every step with you, including the tools, the prompts, and the strategy I use in my own business every week.
