NEW YORK — In its five short years of life, Pinterest has become the place where brides-to-be create wish boards of wedding china photos and do-it-yourself home renovators bookmark shiny turquoise tiles for bathrooms. It’s where people share ideas and ingenuity and get creatively inspired. And it’s fueled a new way of searching for items that’s even stolen traffic from tech giant Google.
The San Francisco-based venture capital darling was recently valued at $11 billion. While its core audience has always been female, Pinterest says its popularity is growing faster than ever among men. It is winning in the all-important social-mobile space — the vast majority of “pinners” connect from mobile devices — and is enjoying a healthy expansion overseas.
In celebration of Pinterest’s fifth birthday — here are five things to know about the site and where it’s headed.
Who uses pinterest?
Pinterest had 79.3 million unique visitors in February, up 47 percent from a year earlier, according to Internet research firm comScore. The vast majority were women, but male visitors grew at a much faster clip: 62 percent for men versus 42 percent for women.
Enid Hwang is the company’s community manager and the fourth employee hired at Pinterest. She wouldn’t disclose what percentage of users are male but says Pinterest’s male user base in the U.S. has doubled in the past year. She doesn’t think Pinterest is just for women any more than it is for men.
“At its most fundamental, we believe that Pinterest is a tool for unlocking people’s creativity,” she says.
Pinterest often gets lumped in with popular social networks like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, but there are plenty of ways that it stands apart. Hwang sees it as more intimate and personal. While Facebook is about sharing what you did, read or saw “friends,” Pinterest users pin stuff for their own inspiration and benefit.
“Man trends”
Popular “man trends,” as Pinterest put it recently, range from do-it-yourself home projects such as making a wooden couch sleeve for your drinks, to different ways to tie knots, to the world’s best hiking trails.
After Pinterest introduced “Place Pins” in late 2013, the vast trove of pinners’ travel-inspired boards became easier for people to find. Users pin photos, links and videos inspired by past trips or travel aspirations. Place Pins are designed to work sort of like an online travel magazine combined with an interactive map.
By the numbers
• There are now more than 50 billion “pins” on Pinterest. One billion boards have been created.
• Headquartered in San Francisco, Pinterest also has international offices in Britain, France, Germany, Japan and Brazil. More than 40 percent of Pinterest users are outside the U.S., up from 28 percent in 2013.
• About two-thirds of the content on its site was created by brands. “If we were in the magazine business, (that) would be 50 billion pages being ripped out and referenced,” says Joanne Bradford, head of partnerships at Pinterest.
• Earlier this year, Pinterest raised $367 million that valued the company at $11 billion. It says it may raise as much as $211 million more, and plans to use the more than half a billion dollars for international expansion and other corporate purposes.
A new way to search and shop
Pinterest’s penchant for exposing people to something new has turned its site into a learning and shopping hub that can be more useful than Google and other search engines for certain topics. Many people now go to Pinterest first when they are looking for ideas on planning a wedding, preparing an exotic dinner, planning a kids’ birthday party or finding the perfect pair of shoes for a new outfit.
Diversity
The push is on at tech companies to improve gender and racial diversity among their employees, especially in the highest ranks. Pinterest seems to be doing better on this front than some of its Silicon Valley counterparts. According to statistics released last July, 40 percent of the company’s employees are women. This compares with 20 percent at Apple Inc. and 30 percent at Twitter Inc. and Google Inc.
Technology Writer Michael Liedtke contributed from San Francisco. Find Barbara Ortutay on Twitter at





