What's Driving Pinterest's Amazing Growth
Pinterest is arguably the hottest social media site on the Internet—user traffic to the online social catalog has skyrocketed since mid-2011—but the website also boasts strong audience engagement, retention, and "virality" among its core demographic, according to a report by RJMetrics.
Based on data collected and analyzed by RJMetrics, key findings from the report include:
Pins Connect to a Vast Array of Web Sources
On Pinterest, every pin (or linked image) ties back to an external link. Among a sample of roughly 1 million pins, more than 100,000 distinct source domains were found.
Among those 100,000 domains, the following chart shows the top 20 sources. The most popular domain was Etsy, which powered just over 3% of pins. Google was a close second, though almost all Google links point to Google Image Search, which is technically misattributed content from other 3rd party domains, RJMetrics points out.
Flickr (2.5%), Tumblr (1.1%), and weheartit (1.0%) round out the top 5, after which no domain represents more than 1% of pins.
The Viral Nature of Re-Pins
The analysis also broke out the population of pins by how those pins were posted to Pinterest.
Remarkably, over 80% of pins are re-pins, demonstrating the impressive level of "virality" at work in the Pinterest community.
By contrast, a study conducted by Hubspot at a similar point in Twitter's history found roughly 1.4% of tweets were retweets.
Surprisingly, a low proportion of pins originate from pinmarklet, a browser bookmarklet that allows users to pin content from any website via one click.
User Engagement: Cohort Analysis
Cohort Analysis is a tool that allows marketers to study different groups of users at identical points in time in their lifecycles, regardless of when they actually joined the site.
In the following chart, each line represents a cohort, or a segment of users who made their first pin in a specific month. For example, the June 2011 cohort consists of users who made their first pin in June 2011. The line itself shows the "average cumulative pins made per cohort member." So, the "Month 1" data-point for the June 2011 cohort shows us how many items were pinned in June 2011 among users who joined in June 2011. The "Month 2" data-point on that same line shows how many pins were made by the typical user in that cohort by the end of July 2011, and so forth.
Among most most companies, even highly successful ones, similar cohort analyses show lines that steadily decay toward a more horizontal slope over time, RJMetrics points out. The effect occurs because there is some natural attrition, causing the incremental engagement of the typical user to drop off.
But that doesn't appear to be the case with Pinterest. Instead, the lines show little to no decay whatsoever. Their slopes remain consistent, indicating a net attrition rate of close to 0%.
Why no decay in engagement? The reason, according to the study, is possibly one of two factors: (1) no one who starts using Pinterest ever stops or, more likely (2) users who continue to use Pinterest become so much more engaged over time that their activities fully make up for those users who quit the site.
To explore the issue further, RJMetrics broke out the data on a weekly basis for the eight weeks ended December 18, 2011. The analysis found that between 40% and 60% of unique users were still actively returning back to the site to pin again in each of the first 8 weeks of their life cycle. Although that may seem like a steep drop-off, the results are exceptionally strong, particularly for a consumer Internet business, RJMetrics notes.
By contrast, when Twitter was at a similar point in its life cycle (late 2009) Twitter's decay rate was twice that of Pinterest, with user activity (measured by tweets) rapidly plummeting to roughly 20% before stabilizing, according to a 2009 analysis of Twitter by RJMetrics, published by Techcrunch.
Growing Pains: Quality Decay
Among most fast-growing consumer startups, however, an increase in media coverage inevitably drives a big spike in the number of registered users and a drop-off in the quality of the typical user, RJMetrics points out. (Similarly, quality is defined in the study by levels of engagement and likelihood to remain active.)
Pinterest is no exception tho that rule. The following chart shows how the typical new user who has joined Pinterest in November and December 2011 is using the site far less than their counterparts from previous months.
The drop off is likely caused by flocks of curious onlookers who are outside of Pinterest's core audience who are registering accounts but failing to get engaged.
Growth Stats
In order to put the RJMEtrics research in context, it's interesting to note Pinterest's growth trends, particularly over the past six months.
Below, some key Pinterest stats, according to separate research from Compete:
Read more: http://www.marketingprofs.com/charts/2012/7173/whats-driving-pinterests-amazing-growth#ixzz1n3JMe4Rx
Based on data collected and analyzed by RJMetrics, key findings from the report include:
- Pinterest is retaining and engaging its users 2 to 3 times more efficiently, on average, than Twitter was at a similar time in its life cycle.
- "Pins" link to a huge array of websites. For example, Etsy is the most popular source of pin content, but it accounts for only 3% of pins.
- 80% of pins are "re-pins," attesting the viral nature of the Pinterest community. By contrast, at a similar point in Twitter's life cycle, roughly 1.4% of all tweets were re-tweets, according to a study conducted by Hubspot in 2009.
- The "quality" of the typical new Pinterest user (where quality is defined by a user's level of engagement and likelihood to remain active) is high, but declining. Users who have joined Pinterest in recent months are 2 to 3 times less active during their first month than users who joined before them.
Pins Connect to a Vast Array of Web Sources
On Pinterest, every pin (or linked image) ties back to an external link. Among a sample of roughly 1 million pins, more than 100,000 distinct source domains were found.
Among those 100,000 domains, the following chart shows the top 20 sources. The most popular domain was Etsy, which powered just over 3% of pins. Google was a close second, though almost all Google links point to Google Image Search, which is technically misattributed content from other 3rd party domains, RJMetrics points out.
Flickr (2.5%), Tumblr (1.1%), and weheartit (1.0%) round out the top 5, after which no domain represents more than 1% of pins.
The Viral Nature of Re-Pins
The analysis also broke out the population of pins by how those pins were posted to Pinterest.
Remarkably, over 80% of pins are re-pins, demonstrating the impressive level of "virality" at work in the Pinterest community.
By contrast, a study conducted by Hubspot at a similar point in Twitter's history found roughly 1.4% of tweets were retweets.
Surprisingly, a low proportion of pins originate from pinmarklet, a browser bookmarklet that allows users to pin content from any website via one click.
User Engagement: Cohort Analysis
Cohort Analysis is a tool that allows marketers to study different groups of users at identical points in time in their lifecycles, regardless of when they actually joined the site.
In the following chart, each line represents a cohort, or a segment of users who made their first pin in a specific month. For example, the June 2011 cohort consists of users who made their first pin in June 2011. The line itself shows the "average cumulative pins made per cohort member." So, the "Month 1" data-point for the June 2011 cohort shows us how many items were pinned in June 2011 among users who joined in June 2011. The "Month 2" data-point on that same line shows how many pins were made by the typical user in that cohort by the end of July 2011, and so forth.
Among most most companies, even highly successful ones, similar cohort analyses show lines that steadily decay toward a more horizontal slope over time, RJMetrics points out. The effect occurs because there is some natural attrition, causing the incremental engagement of the typical user to drop off.
But that doesn't appear to be the case with Pinterest. Instead, the lines show little to no decay whatsoever. Their slopes remain consistent, indicating a net attrition rate of close to 0%.
Why no decay in engagement? The reason, according to the study, is possibly one of two factors: (1) no one who starts using Pinterest ever stops or, more likely (2) users who continue to use Pinterest become so much more engaged over time that their activities fully make up for those users who quit the site.
To explore the issue further, RJMetrics broke out the data on a weekly basis for the eight weeks ended December 18, 2011. The analysis found that between 40% and 60% of unique users were still actively returning back to the site to pin again in each of the first 8 weeks of their life cycle. Although that may seem like a steep drop-off, the results are exceptionally strong, particularly for a consumer Internet business, RJMetrics notes.
By contrast, when Twitter was at a similar point in its life cycle (late 2009) Twitter's decay rate was twice that of Pinterest, with user activity (measured by tweets) rapidly plummeting to roughly 20% before stabilizing, according to a 2009 analysis of Twitter by RJMetrics, published by Techcrunch.
Growing Pains: Quality Decay
Among most fast-growing consumer startups, however, an increase in media coverage inevitably drives a big spike in the number of registered users and a drop-off in the quality of the typical user, RJMetrics points out. (Similarly, quality is defined in the study by levels of engagement and likelihood to remain active.)
Pinterest is no exception tho that rule. The following chart shows how the typical new user who has joined Pinterest in November and December 2011 is using the site far less than their counterparts from previous months.
The drop off is likely caused by flocks of curious onlookers who are outside of Pinterest's core audience who are registering accounts but failing to get engaged.
Growth Stats
In order to put the RJMEtrics research in context, it's interesting to note Pinterest's growth trends, particularly over the past six months.
Below, some key Pinterest stats, according to separate research from Compete:
- Pinterest attracted 11,140,641 unique visitors to the site on January 20, 2011, up 815% from 1,217,935 visitors six months earlier.
- On a monthly basis, the number of unique visitors to Pinterest grew 54.6% in January over mid-December levels.
- Over the past six months, traffic growth has averaged 63.7% month over month.
- Ranked by numbers of unique visitors, Pinterest was ranked No. 119 in January by Compete, up 87 spots from No. 206 one month earlier.
Read more: http://www.marketingprofs.com/charts/2012/7173/whats-driving-pinterests-amazing-growth#ixzz1n3JMe4Rx
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