The Company's go-forward advertising strategy seems like a fitting and
somewhat unique plan. The Company is
planning on implementing a self-serve auction which will be based on a
pay-per-click system rather than a click-per-thousand impressions plan. This auction is targeting small to medium
sized businesses, rather than large consumer giants, such as Kraft, Nestle, Gap
or General Mills. The Pinterest users
are everyday people as well as small to medium sized businesses, so it makes sense
that these businesses would be the ones able to bid for advertising space. Users create pages based on a range of
interests, while usually giving credit to the products included in their
montage. The application is a way for
users to share their creativity and design ideas from content already out
there. If there are medium sized companies
that have a large amount of products pinned by specific users, those companies
should be able to advertise right alongside those boards.
The auction seems somewhat contrarian to the digital
marketing of today, where the largest player can bid the highest, however the auction
seems to be more in line with Pinterest’s core function. The application is a venue to share new
thoughts and design ideas, so if one user has a friend who has started a new
business, then that user should be able to create boards that include her
friend’s product. Keeping in line with
the motto that the users are “just like you”, than the friend’s company should at
least have the opportunity to bid on advertising space for people who like the
boards created by her user friend without giant companies taking over and
dominating that space. Pinterest will
surely be able to capture long-tail advertising dollars with this system, and
will likely not have to compete as intensely as its counterparty applications
as it will be targeting a different segment of advertisers.
http://adage.com/article/digital/pinterest-launch-a-serve-ad-auction/293551/
http://adage.com/article/digital/pinterest-launches-paid-ads-kraft-gap/293142/
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