What Pinsearch helps you do
Pinsearch is built around five common jobs:- Find Pinterest keywords with demand signals.
- Explore top-performing pins for a topic.
- Study competitor Pinterest profiles.
- Save useful keywords, pins, and profiles into Projects.
- Create Pin titles, descriptions, and blog articles from your research.
Main areas of the app
| Area | Use it for |
|---|---|
| Keyword Finder | Find Pinterest keyword ideas, estimated volume, categories, groups, and trend signals |
| Pin Explorer | Review top pins for a keyword or analyze specific Pinterest pin URLs |
| Profile Explorer | Study a Pinterest profile’s recent pins, topics, boards, and performance signals |
| Projects | Save keywords, pins, and competitor profiles while you research |
| Create | Generate Pin titles, descriptions, and article drafts |
| Library | Reopen article drafts and continue editing |
| Settings | Manage credits, WordPress connections, and connected AI assistants |
| Billing | Manage plans, credits, and access |
A simple first workflow
Search a keyword
Open Keyword Finder and search a topic you already create content about, such as
easy dinner ideas or small patio decor.Pick a keyword worth exploring
Look for ideas that match your audience and have useful demand signals.
When to use each research tool
Use Keyword Finder when you need topic ideas or want to understand how people search on Pinterest. Use Pin Explorer when you want visual proof of what is already working for a keyword, pin format, or angle. Use Profile Explorer when you want to study a competitor, creator, or brand in your niche. Use Projects when you want to keep research organized instead of starting from scratch each time.Your first useful session
For your first session, keep it small:- Search one keyword.
- Save five to ten promising keywords.
- Open Pin Explorer for one keyword.
- Save a few pins you want to learn from.
- Create one Pin title or article idea.