If you’ve been posting on Pinterest and feel like everyone else is growing faster than you…
More clicks.
More traffic.
More sales.
And you’re wondering why your pins aren’t taking off yet…
It doesn’t mean you’re behind.
It usually means one thing:
You’re not iterating fast enough.
And the good news?
That’s completely in your control.
In this guide, I’m breaking down the exact process to make money on Pinterest—and more importantly—how to learn the platform faster than everyone else, so you can start getting real results.
Why Most People Stay Stuck on Pinterest
Most beginners approach Pinterest like this:
- Create a few Pins
- Post them
- Wait for results
When nothing happens, they assume:
- The algorithm is broken
- Their niche is too competitive
- Their designs aren’t good enough
But that’s not what’s actually going on.
The real issue?
They’re moving too slow.
They’re treating Pinterest like a one-shot game instead of a feedback loop.
And Pinterest rewards people who learn fast.
Principle #1: Understand What “Winning on Pinterest” Actually Means
Making money on Pinterest is not about posting pretty graphics.
It’s about behavior change.
Here’s what that looks like:
You post a Pin → it gets no clicks
You adjust the title, design, or hook → now it gets clicks
Same platform.
Different behavior.
That’s learning.
And on Pinterest, the creators who win are not always the smartest.
They’re the ones who adjust faster.
The Real Advantage: Speed of Iteration
Some creators:
- Need 3 iterations to find a winning format
Others:
- Need 10 iterations
But here’s the difference:
If you run 10 tests in one day…
And someone else runs 1 test per week…
You’re going to pass them—fast.
👉 Your speed of improvement determines your growth.
Principle #2: Break Pinterest Into Smaller Skills
One of the biggest mistakes beginners make is thinking Pinterest is just one skill.
It’s not.
It’s a stack of smaller skills working together.
The Pinterest Skill Stack:
- Keyword research
- Pin design
- Writing clickable titles
- Creating curiosity hooks
- Scheduling content
- Testing formats
- Monetization strategy (funnels, affiliate links, offers)
Each one matters.
And when you improve each part, your results compound.
Example:
- Better titles → more outbound clicks
- Better hooks → more saves + reach
- Better landing pages → more revenue
Most people say:
“Pinterest doesn’t work.”
But the truth is:
👉 They just haven’t identified which part of the system is weak.
Principle #3: Define What Success Looks Like (Or You’re Guessing)
If you’re not measuring your results, you’re not improving.
You’re guessing.
On Pinterest, different metrics tell you different things.
What Your Metrics Actually Mean:
- Saves → strong idea or valuable content
- Outbound clicks → strong hook + title
- High impressions, low clicks → weak title or mismatch
- High clicks, low conversions → weak landing page
Every Pin gives you feedback.
You just have to read it.
👉 If you don’t track it, you don’t care about it.
And if you don’t care about it—you won’t improve it.
Principle #4: Stop Treating Pinterest Like a Mystery
You’ll hear a lot of vague advice like:
- “The algorithm liked this Pin”
- “This one had the right vibe”
- “It just worked”
That’s not helpful.
Something specific made it work.
Usually something like:
- Stronger contrast
- Clearer value
- Better keyword targeting
- A more curiosity-driven headline
- A more relatable topic
These are inputs you can control.
And that’s where your focus should be.
The Simple Rule:
👉 Post more → test faster → learn quicker
You don’t need to fully understand why something worked before repeating it.
If it works, do more of it.
Principle #5: Study the Top 10% (Not Random Advice)
Most people learn Pinterest from random posts.
That’s a mistake.
If you want real results, study what’s already working.
Look at:
- Top-ranking Pins in your niche
- Accounts dominating your keywords
- Pins with high engagement and clicks
Then ask:
What do these Pins have in common?
- Layout
- Color contrast
- Headline structure
- Use of numbers
- Curiosity angle
- Emotional triggers
Here’s the truth:
Most top creators don’t know why their Pins work.
But their behavior leaves clues.
👉 Your job is to observe patterns and replicate them.
Principle #6: Analyze Your Own Winning Pins
Once you’ve posted enough content, you no longer need to guess.
Your own data becomes your best teacher.
Look at Your Top 10% of Pins
Ask:
- What’s different about these?
- Are the headlines clearer?
- Are the benefits stronger?
- Is the design cleaner?
- Is the niche more focused?
Then do more of that.
This is where things start to shift.
At first, you copy others.
But over time, you start learning from your own results.
And that’s when growth speeds up.

Principle #7: Repetition Is What Turns Pinterest Into Income
At the end of the day, Pinterest rewards one thing more than anything else:
Repetition.
Not perfection.
Not branding.
Not waiting until everything is “just right.”
The Creators Who Win:
- Post more tests
- Learn from every result
- Improve intentionally
That’s it.
Because over time:
👉 Repetition builds skill
👉 Skill builds traffic
👉 Traffic builds income
What That Turns Into:
- Affiliate revenue
- Digital product sales
- Email list growth
- Website traffic
- Service leads
👉 Your speed of learning becomes your speed of earning.
Why Most People Never Reach This Point
Most people quit before they get enough reps.
They:
- Overthink every Pin
- Wait too long between posts
- Expect results too quickly
- Change direction too often
So they never gather enough data to improve.
They stay stuck in the “guessing phase.”
Meanwhile, the people who keep testing?
They figure it out.
The Mindset Shift That Changes Everything
If you feel like others are ahead of you, that’s not a bad thing.
It just means they’re further along in the iteration cycle.
That’s it.
They’ve:
- Tested more
- Failed more
- Learned faster
And you can catch up.
The Simple Pinterest Growth Loop
If you want to simplify everything in this article, it comes down to this:
Post → Test → Learn → Repeat
That’s the system.
Not complicated.
Just consistent.
Final Thoughts
You don’t need to be the most creative person.
You don’t need perfect branding.
You don’t need to wait until everything is dialed in.
You just need reps.
Because eventually…
If you:
- Post more
- Test faster
- Observe patterns
- Repeat what works
You will improve.
And when that happens, people will say:
“You’re just naturally good at this.”
What they won’t see?
The reps it took to get there.

