This website contains affiliate links. Some products are gifted by the brand. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. The content on this website was created with the help of AI.
While I share money-making strategies, nothing is “typical”, and outcomes are based on each individual. There are no guarantees.
Context.
Pinterest is a search engine.
If your pin looks like a random product drop with “Buy This Now” energy, it won’t convert.
And it won’t rank.
Start with search intent.
Use a keyword tool like Pinclicks to find phrases people are already typing in.
Not “cute lamp.”
“Best bedside lamp for small bedroom.”
Specific searches don’t feel spammy because they solve a problem.
Next, create value-first pins.
Your title should focus on the outcome, not the commission.
Instead of “Amazon Lamp Link,” say, “Small Bedroom Lighting Ideas That Save Space.”
The affiliate product becomes part of the solution, not the whole story.
Then send traffic to content when possible.
Pinterest → blog post → affiliate link converts better than Pinterest → raw affiliate link.
On your blog, explain why you recommend it.
Add photos.
Add pros and cons.
Make it useful.
If you are linking direct to an affiliate product, be transparent.
Use a clean, natural description.
Don’t stuff hashtags.
Don’t shout in caps.
Don’t use ten emojis.
Pinterest rewards relevance and clarity.
Design matters too.
Avoid graphics that look like ads.
Use clean text overlays.
Show the product in context.
Make it look like inspiration, not a banner ad.
And don’t overdo it.
Mix affiliate pins with informational pins.
Build trust.
When every single pin is “Buy this,” you train Pinterest and your audience to ignore you.
Affiliate links aren’t spammy.
Low-value content is.
Lead with search intent.
Solve a real problem.
Integrate the product naturally.
That’s how you get clicks without looking desperate.
