December 11, 2024
Explore our guide to all things targeting, from basic settings to advanced strategies. Whether you’re new to Pinterest ads or looking to up your strategies, you’re sure to find tips to help.
Even the most compelling ads won’t make an impact if they don’t reach the right people. That’s why targeting is so key for strong campaigns—and we’re here to help you find just the right approach.
On Pinterest, you can build a custom targeting strategy that really narrows in on the right people for your brand and message. Mix and match options from our basic targeting settings and more sophisticated strategies to figure out the right combination of demographics, interests and customer data that makes your ads perform at their best.
Your targeting strategy will depend on business needs and audience insights, so make sure to explore all your options. Scan it all, or jump to the most important topic for your business:
If you’re new to targeting, you’ll want to start with the basics. On Pinterest, our core targeting portfolio probably looks pretty similar to options you see on other platforms, spanning basic information types like demographics, psychographics and placements. You can access all of these options within Pinterest’s Ad Manager and control settings for each campaign.
First, think about your audience demographics. These targeting settings cover general audience information like gender, age, location, language and device type1. These settings help you reach a specific audience you’re particularly interested in, like Gen Z consumers or people in a certain country.
Once you’ve figured out the demographics, it’s time for psychographics. Pyschographic targeting gives you a competitive advantage because it gets beyond the surface level traits, and helps you reach people based on things like interests or topics they enjoy. On Pinterest, this shows up as interest and keyword targeting.
Because people use Pinterest to find new ideas and shop, we get strong signals into people’s interests and intent. The psychographic targeting suite helps you tap into this first-party data and narrow in on people most likely to be interested in your content.
You can set up psychographic targeting for broad impact, or go deep on specific topics. For example, you could target anyone interested in beauty content on Pinterest, at the category level. Or you could go deeper with keyword targeting, and target people searching for topics like “workout” or “aesthetic workout gear.” The second strategy might reach a smaller audience, but it can help improve results if you’re looking to reach people with high intent for a specific product or topic.
Target specific behaviors or mindsets with placement targeting. This gives you the option to pick between home feed placements, search placements or a combination of both. You might want to think about how your interest and keyword strategy aligns with placement strategy to really optimize results.
Leverage search, home or both.
Expanded targeting uses automated signals and adjustments to optimize your targeting. This setting automatically expands your ad’s reach, finding more people interested in topics related to your ad and its keywords. Pinterest’s tools analyze inputs like ad images and descriptions to determine who falls into the expanded targeting group. Your other choices like negative keywords and demographics stay intact, too.
With the basics down, you’re ready to take things to the next level. More advanced targeting solutions combine multiple types of data to help you build ever stronger strategies. You have a lot of options here, from retargeting existing customers to building actalike audiences.
By securely integrating your CRM data with Pinterest Ads Manager, you can tailor campaigns to specific customer groups. Import a list of hashed emails or mobile ad IDs from your CRM to Ads Manager and you can target or exclude existing customer groups.
This helps you cross-sell or upsell more efficiently, since you’re using existing behavioral and purchase data to tailor your campaigns. You can show specific loyalty offers, showcase items adjacent to what they’ve previously bought or use other kinds of personalized content. For example, imagine you run an apparel store—you could retarget recent buyers with ads promoting accessories that are related to their previous purchases, inspiring incremental sales and strengthening customer relationships.
You can also use first-party data to retarget your own site visitors. This helps you find people who previously interacted with your own website or store, and reach them with tailored messaging on Pinterest. For example, you could upload data for people who previously visited your page for home decor. Then, use that data for ads about home decor, reaching people who are already more inclined to buy your brand. By using data from the Pinterest tag or Conversions API, you can serve ads for the specific products that people who visited your website were interested in, so they’re more likely to buy.
By using data from the Pinterest tag or Conversions API, you can serve ads for the specific products that people who visited your website were interested in, so they’re more likely to buy.
Engagement targeting lets you reach people who already interacted with your organic Pins or ads. This is a great way to reconnect with people already interested in your brand or content, and help nudge them to take further actions. You can target different types of behaviors like clicks, views or saves.
For example, you could re-engage with people who tapped on your organic Pins about party planning, by serving them specific Shopping ads for your party products. Or, you could nudge people who saved your Pins on Fashion trends, with ads that show your latest Summer style collection.
Actalike targeting helps you reach more people who share similarities or characteristics with your existing audience. You start by selecting an audience that’s performing against your business goals, then asking Pinterest to find more people like them. This can help expand your reach beyond your existing customer base using helpful insights about people who are likely to love your brand.
Persona targeting gets you even deeper than interest targeting, because it helps you build entire audience profiles based on custom setups. For example, you could build a persona to reach Gen Z consumers interested in fashion. Personas are curated, so ask your Pinterest team for help getting started.
There's always more to try when it comes to targeting. For even more insights and hands-on examples, take our dedicated course on Pinterest Academy.