I chose niches that I personally loved scrolling through — nail designs, cute outfits, aesthetic looks, things that girls naturally save without even thinking twice. It didn’t feel like work. It felt like I was just creating the kind of pins I would click on myself.
To make things easier, I used tools like Nano Banana and Google Flow to generate images quickly. That saved me so much time. Instead of spending hours designing, I could focus on posting consistently and improving my content.
Days passed. Then weeks.
Something slowly started changing.
My pins began getting impressions. Not a lot at first… but enough to make me keep going. And then suddenly, it picked up faster than I expected.
By the end of 30 days, my account reached 34.5K impressions.
I remember staring at the screen thinking, Wait… this actually worked?
And the crazy part? I still had almost no followers.
That’s when it really hit me — Pinterest isn’t about followers like other platforms. It’s more like a search engine. If your content is good and consistent, it will find its way to people.
Now I feel like I’m just getting started.
Since my pins are finally getting traction, I’m planning to slowly introduce Amazon affiliate links. But this time, I’ll be smarter about it. I won’t just throw links everywhere. I’ll only add them to pins that are already performing well and match them with the content naturally.
I want it to feel helpful, not pushy.
I’m honestly excited to see where this goes next — especially when it comes to earning.
If you’re reading this and thinking about starting Pinterest, just start. Don’t wait for the perfect plan. Don’t overthink it like I almost did.
Just show up, stay consistent, and let the platform do its thing.
And if you want, I can share more updates about my results, growth, and even earnings in the future.
Let’s just complete 50 claps each💫