How to enjoy Pinterest without losing your shirt (and everything else you own)…

I love Pinterest – let me just get that out there first. It’s a fun platform to use and discover new and amazing things. I heard it likened to fantasy football for girls and I don’t think the analogy is too far off. It can be a good way for people to discover your products and services and website.

As people start pinning everything, it’s important to keep in mind that for the creators, Pinterest is a business. This may not immediately occur to you as you’re pinning away and creating new boards, but it’s worth keeping in mind.

To understand what this means for you – let’s look at how they make money. It’s built into their terms and conditions that anything you pin on Pinterest, they own, and can do whatever they wish with. (Quote via Pinterest Terms and Conditions)

“you hereby grant to Cold Brew Labs a worldwide, irrevocable, perpetual, non-exclusive, transferable, royalty-free license, with the right to sublicense, to use, copy, adapt, modify, distribute, license, sell, transfer, publicly display, publicly perform, transmit, stream, broadcast, access, view, and otherwise exploit such Member Content only on, through or by means of the Site, Application or Services.” 

For example, this means that they could take that photo you pinned, of the necklace you made, the cake you baked and your kid’s birthday party decorations and sell them, owning the rights to those images to resell and publish forever. So, you can make that decision to give away the rights of your photos, but if you don’t own the original photo you pin, beware – you could be liable for copyright infringement.  The Boston Business Journal stopped using Pinterest for this very reason.

“Exceptions for publishers of user-generated content protect Pinterest, but they don’t protect you,” Moore wrote with a link back to an earlier ReadWriteWeb article. “Unless you know you have a ‘worldwide, irrevocable,’ perpetual, non-exclusive, transferable, royalty-free license,’ you’d better tread carefully.”  (via ReadWriteWeb)

Or, if you post a photo of the new book you just wrote, they can amend the link to not go to your book page to purchase it, but instead add on their own affiliate link to Amazon, earning affiliate commissions from the sale of that book and anything else that was purchased in the Amazon shopping cart. A recent CNN report showed they were doing this very thing.

“CNN reports that the popular virtual pinboard social network site has been ‘appending affiliate links to some pins,’ particularly those featuring goods from Amazon, eBay, Target and thousands more merchants.” (via ReadWriteWeb)

So what can you or should you do about it?

1. Read all Terms and Conditions very carefully. If you are not in full agreement – do not sign up for that service.

2. If you are pinning a new photo or image to Pinterest, be sure you have ownership rights of the image you are posting, and are willing to give those rights to Pinterest

3. If you own the photos – it may be worth giving up the rights if you are receiving new traffic and business from Pinterest. Just be informed about why and what you’re doing, and that the short term gain is worth more than the long-term ownership of the images would be for you.

4. If you don’t want others to Pin your images (thus infringing upon your rights and leaving you to wrangle with them and Pinterest to try and somehow get your images back) you can insert code into your website to block images from being pinned on Pinterest. (Here is a tutorial on how to do this via Typecast ) {important note: this will only stop people from using the “Pin It” button from their toolbar to post your image – they can circumvent this by using the image url and pinning it directly through Pinterest}

Want to learn more – here is a great article about this: Is Pinterest a Haven for Copyright Violations? 

 

Matt Mullenweg’s – 6 Steps to Kill Your Community

There is a lot of instruction on the web on how to grow your community, add followers and readership online. But is it all about the numbers? Instead the focus should be about engagement and conversation. The value you’re providing your readers in terms of fresh content that is helpful or actionable. Creating not just a resource – but a forum for debate and communication. Matt Mullenweg, the founder of WordPress recently created a post on his site highlighting what not to do in being successful in building your online community and web presence.

I thought I’d write a guide for how to increase the number of comments you get by 400-1,000% and ruin whatever shred of community you had on your site.

In short his list is:

  1. Abandon Search Engines.
  2. Be Famous!
  3. Put the Comment Form at Top.
  4. No Subscriptions.
  5. Make People Click Click Click.
  6. Treat Everyone the Same.
  7. Don’t Ask Anything of Your Audience.

Read Matt’s full essay here at ma.tt

What would you add to take this list to 10?

Ready to Start Your Blog? Try WordPress

Have you been thinking about starting a blog or new site but not sure where to start? WordPress is a great tool that can help you get started in no time. I’ve created a brief WordPress startup guide and tutorial to walk you through the process of getting your blog up and running today.

Click the link below to download your free PDF copy of my quick-start WordPress Tutorial
Click Here for the WordPress Tutorial

You’ll learn answers to the following questions:

  • What is a blog
  • How and what to write about
  • How to install WordPress
  • How to create and edit Pages
  • How to add and edit new Posts (or articles)
  • How to add links and pictures to your blog
  • How to add new categories and categorize your Posts

and more…

Group Collaboration – Step 1 Conversation

The internet has allowed for user groups, colleagues and new partnerships to form without the necessity of face to face time. How do we stay in synch on a project if we’re not working down the hall from each other? There are some great options available for online collaboration of work teams and projects.

Of the paid solutions one of the most popular seems to be Basecamp by 37 signals. While I enjoy this product – there are so many other free solutions available they definitely need to be considered when evaluating a collaboration tool or platform that’s right for your project or business.

To keep the conversation flowing two great tools are Yammer and the WordPress P2 Theme. Think of Yammer as a hosted solution and WordPress P2 Theme as your own white label, self hosted solution.

Yammer is a tool for making companies and organizations more productive through the exchange of short frequent answers to one simple question: ‘What are you working on?’

As employees answer that question, a feed is created in one central location enabling co-workers to discuss ideas, post news, ask questions, and share links and other information. Yammer also serves as a company directory in which every employee has a profile and as a knowledge base where past conversations can be easily accessed and referenced.

Anyone in a company can start their Yammer network and begin inviting colleagues. The privacy of each network is ensured by limiting access to those with a valid company email address. Information is never shared with third parties.

The advantages are that the basic Yammer service is free and it’s a hosted solution so updates and upkeep is performed by Yammer. The disadvantage is that to become an administrator or have control over the group or information companies need to pay to claim and administer their networks.

The WordPress P2 Theme would be installed on your own site. Access can be controlled by modifying your privacy and user settings. The advantages are that as it’s on your system you’re in total control and can truly customize this installation. The disadvantages would be that you need to purchase or own your url and pay for hosting fees.

 

screenshot PS Theme is a ”group blog theme for short update messages, inspired by Twitter. Featuring: Hassle-free posting from the front page. Perfect for group blogging, or as a liveblog theme. Dynamic page updates. Threaded comment display on the front page. In-line editing for posts and comments. Live tag suggestion based on previously used tags. A show/hide feature for comments, to keep things tidy. Real-time notifications when a new comment or update is posted. Super-handy keyboard shortcuts. Helvetica Neue for you modern font lovers. And more to come…”

Together these two both offer a great solution to keeping the conversation flowing when working together. How do you keep in touch with your work team?

Copyright © 2011 Jackie Cuyvers