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.
Most people waste time staring at a blank Canva screen.
I don’t.
I open my blog post, click one button, and my Pinterest image concept, title, and description are basically done.
This is how I use Harpa with a saved prompt to instantly generate Pinterest pins from any blog post.
Open your published blog post in a browser tab.
Not a draft. Not notes. The live post.
Harpa works directly on the page, which means it can pull from your title and excerpt automatically.
If you haven’t already, install the Harpa Chrome extension. Once it’s active, you’ll see the icon in your browser bar.
Click it.
Now here’s the part most people skip.
You don’t type a new prompt every time. You save one reusable Pinterest prompt once — and use it forever.
Inside Harpa, paste your Pinterest pin generation prompt. It should instruct the AI to:
Generate a share-worthy Pinterest image idea
Lead with a curiosity-driven text overlay
Use the blog title and excerpt for context
Create a keyword-aware Pinterest title
Write a description that teases the outcome, not the process
Save it using the bookmark icon. Name it something simple like “Pin Idea.”
Now it’s stored.
Every time you open a blog post, you simply type a forward slash and select your saved prompt.
Harpa scans the page and instantly generates:
An AI-ready image description
A text overlay hook
A Pinterest title
A Pinterest description
This is where speed happens.
Instead of inventing angles, you’re extracting them.
The key is the hook.
Not “How to Use Pinterest for Traffic.”
More like:
“The Pinterest Workflow That Quietly Builds Traffic in the Background.”
Same article. Stronger entry point.
Once Harpa generates the output, copy the image description portion and move to your image generator.
Create a clean vertical graphic. Clear focal point. Strong contrast. Minimal clutter.
Then grab the Pinterest title and description Harpa created.
Make sure your main keyword appears early in the description. That’s what helps it rank.
Make sure the first line creates curiosity or promises an outcome. That’s what earns the click.
Upload. Schedule. Done.
One blog post should generate at least three pins using this method. Different hooks. Same URL.
If you batch 10 blog posts, that’s 30 pins created in a few hours — without brainstorming from scratch.
This isn’t about working harder.
It’s about building a repeatable trigger.
Open blog post.
Run saved prompt.
Generate angles.
Create image.
Schedule.
When your workflow starts with assets you already own, Pinterest stops feeling like content creation and starts feeling like distribution.
Here’s the exact Harpa prompt structure I use. Copy it once. Save it. Reuse it on every blog post.
Paste this into Harpa and save it as a bookmark called “Pin Idea.”
Give me an idea for a share-worthy Pinterest pin for this article {{page}}.
Use the title and excerpt for context.
Start with a bold text overlay that creates curiosity or promises a transformation. Do not simply describe the article.
Example of what I mean:
Instead of “Pinterest Tips for Beginners,” use “The Pinterest Habit That Quietly Builds Traffic.”
Then provide:
- A detailed AI image description for a vertical Pinterest graphic.
– Clear central object
– Minimal clutter
– Strong contrast between background and text
– If any object includes visible text (like a notebook, screen, paper, or sign), specify exactly what that text should say
– Do not make the image text heavy - A compelling Pinterest title that includes a relevant keyword naturally.
- A Pinterest description that:
– Uses the primary keyword early
– Teases the outcome, not the process
– Encourages clicks without sounding spammy
Do not use emojis.
How to use it:
Open your live blog post.
Click Harpa.
Type / and select “Pin Idea.”
It will instantly generate the image concept, title, and description based on that specific article.
Run it three times on the same post and slightly tweak the opening instruction each time:
One version focused on a mistake.
One focused on a shortcut.
One focused on a result.
That’s three pins from one article in minutes.
