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Pinterest Recruits Small Business Advertisers in Push to Diversify Revenue

Startup knows what people want to buy online, making it an emerging rival to Google’s huge search business

Pinterest Recruits Small Business Advertisers in Push to Diversify Revenue
The Pinterest Inc. logo is displayed for a photograph on an Apple iPad Air in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Pinterest Inc. has started pursuing a segment of advertisers that may one day contribute a quarter of its revenue: small and medium-sized businesses.

The company unveiled a new program Wednesday, called Pinterest Propel, that provides special services for new advertisers unfamiliar with the way its site works. By committing to spend up to $100 a day on Pinterest ads, companies get extra support and education, and Pinterest will design some of their ads for them. The startup is also offering it to marketing agencies, which get customized tips from Pinterest ad specialists for up to three clients. 

Pinterest is recruiting smaller advertisers in part because people come to the company's site to get inspired by unique ideas. On Pinterest, people post and search for pictures they can use to plan vacations, weddings, home furnishing and cooking, for example -- and the ads look similar to posts from any other user. Bespoke furniture-makers and clothing designers tend to be smaller companies and are willing to spend to grow, said Tim Kendall, Pinterest's president.

While they aren't big marketing spenders in their own right, in aggregate small firms are a huge source of ad revenue for digital giants Google and Facebook Inc. Google is especially popular with smaller businesses that buy lots of online search ads, helping the company generate almost $80 billion in ad revenue last year. Pinterest is an emerging rival to Google's search business because the startup knows a lot about what people are looking to buy online -- valuable information that advertisers usually go to Google to access.

``This is a huge part of the advertising market and so what it sets us up to do is capture more growth,'' Kendall said. A year ago, Pinterest opened up a self-serve advertising program and saw a diverse set of businesses pay for promotions. The company has already used its Propel program with advertisers including Ghirardelli Chocolate and Too Faced Cosmetics, and found that it made their ads less expensive and more effective, Kendall said. 

The company is diversifying its advertising business ahead of a potential initial public offering. Pinterest is targeting more than $500 million in revenue this year, according to a person familiar with the matter -- a goal earlier reported by technology news website Recode. While Pinterest declined to comment on its revenue goal, Kendall expects Propel to contribute as much as 25 percent of sales in the next few years.

``When you focus on growing your business and going after more share of different segments, things like IPOs naturally follow, when you show really strong growth,'' Kendall said, while noting that there are no official IPO plans. ``We're very pleased with revenue growth to date and I think this is going to be a big contributor.''

To contact the author of this story: Sarah Frier in San Francisco at sfrier1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Alistair Barr at abarr18@bloomberg.net.