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The Pinterest Strategy Interior Designers Use to Book High-Value Clients

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Interior designers have a massive advantage on Pinterest that most of them aren’t using properly. Just take a moment to think who’s spending the most time on Pinterest these days:

  • People planning renovations

  • Homeowners dreaming about their future kitchen

  • Couples building mood boards for homes they haven’t even bought

  • Entrepreneurs looking for ideas to build their dream home office

These are your ideal clients, actively searching for real inspiration. And unlike Instagram, where content disappears into a feed within hours, Pinterest content keeps working for months or even years. A pin you post today can drive traffic and inquiries long after you’ve forgotten about it.

The interior designers booking clients from Pinterest have figured out how to turn this platform into a consistent lead source. They’re not just pinning pretty pictures. Instead, they’re building a strategic presence that captures attention and converts browsers into consultations.

Now it’s your turn.

Why Pinterest Works Differently

Instagram is about building a following. Pinterest is about being discovered. On Instagram, you’re reaching people who already follow you or who the algorithm decides to show your content to. That means growth is slow and dependent on constant posting. On Pinterest, people are actively searching for ideas:

“Modern farmhouse living room.” “Small bathroom renovation ideas. “Coastal bedroom design inspiration.”

If your content matches what they’re searching for, they find you. Even if they’ve never heard of you before. This is a fundamentally different dynamic. You’re not trying to build an audience from scratch. You’re positioning yourself in front of people who are already looking for what you do.

Now let’s dive into making Pinterest a valuable traffic source.

Setting Up Your Profile for Conversions

Before you start pinning, make sure your profile is set up to convert visitors into leads.

The essentials:

  • Business account (gives you access to analytics)

  • Profile photo that looks professional and approachable

  • Bio that clearly states what you do and who you help:

“Interior designer helping busy families create beautiful, functional homes in Nashville”

  • Link to your website or a dedicated landing page

  • Location mentioned if you serve a specific area

Your profile is often the first impression someone has of your business. Make it count.

Creating Content That Gets Found

Pinterest is a search engine. People type in what they’re looking for and Pinterest shows them relevant pins. Your job is to create content that shows up in those searches.

What works:

  • High-quality images of projects

  • Before and after transformations

  • Design tips in a visualized format

  • Room-specific content: kitchens, bathrooms, living rooms

  • Style-specific content: modern, traditional, farmhouse, minimalist

Optimizing for search:

  • Use descriptive titles that include keywords

  • Write detailed pin descriptions that incorporate terms

  • Create boards organized by room type, style or project type

  • Include location in descriptions if you serve a specific market

The more specific and searchable your content, the more likely it is to be found by people planning projects.

The Pinterest Click-Through Strategy

Getting discovered on Pinterest is only half the battle. You also need people to click through to your website where they can learn more and contact you. Tips for driving clicks:

  • Include a call to action in your pin descriptions

  • Create content to tease a bigger story with a link

  • Use your website URL in pin descriptions (must-have)

  • Create dedicated landing pages for Pinterest traffic

Don’t just post pretty pictures and hope for the best. Give people a reason to click and make it easy for them to do so.

Consistency Over Intensity

Pinterest rewards consistent activity over sporadic bursts. Pinning ten images every day for a week then disappearing for a month doesn’t work well. Instead: pin a few images consistently, several times per week, over a long period. This steady activity signals to Pinterest that your account is active and relevant.

Use this practical approach:

  • Schedule pins in advance using Pinterest’s native scheduler

  • Batch your content creation: spend a few hours creating and scheduling pins

  • Mix your own content with repins of complementary content (other designers’ work, home decor inspiration, etc.)

  • Review your analytics monthly to see what’s performing and adjust accordingly

The Long Game Payoff

Pinterest traffic builds slowly, then compounds. Your first few months might feel like nothing is happening. But pins you posted months ago start gaining traction. Search rankings improve. All the sudden, your interior design traffic grows.

Designers who commit to Pinterest for six to twelve months often find it becomes one of their most reliable sources of inquiries. And because this traffic comes from people planning projects, the lead quality tends to be excellent. However, you might be thinking:

“This all sounds great. But if I had the time to dedicate myself to Pinterest and other social channels, I would have done it already.”

That’s what Slamdot helps interior designers and creative professionals build. For over 20 years, we’ve created proven digital marketing strategies that are designed to be hands-off when it comes to executing them. The hands on part? That’s when you work your magic to close a lead and “wow” them with your services.

Ready to turn Pinterest into a client pipeline? Contact us today!

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