This is a test to see if the grid works. Click here to buy
Step 2: The Pinterest Pins (The Magnets)
You go to Canva and create 5 different pins for that one post.
Pin A: A collage of 3 dresses with text "Summer Essentials".
Pin B: Just the pink dress with text "The Viral Pink Dress".
Pin C: A checklist image "What to Pack for Vacation".
Crucial Step: When you upload these pins to Pinterest, you paste the Link to your Blog Post (not your homepage) as the destination.
Step 3: The User Journey
User: Sees your "Pin A" on Pinterest. It looks cute.
Click: She clicks the pin.
Landing: She lands on your "Top 10 Summer Dresses" blog post.
Browsing: She scrolls down. She doesn't like Dress #1, but she loves Dress #4.
The Sale: She clicks the button for Dress #4 $\rightarrow$ Amazon $\rightarrow$ You get paid.
Why "Top 10" lists are better than Single Products
More Chances to Win: If you only pin one dress and she hates it, she leaves. If you pin a "Top 10" list, she has 10 chances to find something she likes.
Higher Cookie Value: People who read "Top 10" lists are usually in a "shopping mood." They often end up buying 3 or 4 things at once.
🚀 Your Next Task:
Create your first "Listicle" (List Article) to test this.
Title: "5 Summer Accessories That Look Expensive (But Aren't)"
Content: Find 5 items on Amazon (Sunglasses, Hat, Bag, Sandals, Jewelry).
Format: Image $\rightarrow$ Short Description $\rightarrow$ Button. Repeat 5 times.
Do you want me to give you the HTML code to make a "Number List" (1, 2, 3...) look fancy in your post?

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