Women love Pinterest. Are there too few men on the site?
With Twitter’s IPO up and out of the gate — its shares gained more than 70 percent in the first day of trading — there’s plenty of buzz in the investor world: “What’s the next big thing in the internet startup world?”
One fast-growing firm that comes up in every list of potential IPO-launchers over the coming year is Pinterest, a fast-growing social-media site with tens of millions of users backed by hundreds of millions in venture capital. (Pinterest raised $225 million in October 2013.)
Pinterest spokesman Barry Schnitt said in an email to Marketplace that Pinterest has “no plans at all” to go public at this point, adding “it’s not even on our radar. We’re focused on the core experience for Pinners and building an advertising program (we don’t have revenue yet).”
Still, many technology and investment analysts think Pinterest has plenty of potential, and with so much venture capital on the line, they say the company will be looking for an exit, through an IPO or an acquisition, at some point.
Pinterest lets users ‘pin’ digital pictures into online scrapbooks, grouped under user-generated categories, for instance, “tasty doggy treats,” “DIY kitchens” or “really awesome boots.”
“I think there’s interest in Pinterest,” says Brian Blau, technology analyst at Gartner. He says while Pinterest hasn’t yet generated sales, it’s a perfect platform for ecommerce. He says Pinterest will have to figure out how to advertise, and provide ways to sell, the consumer brands of which people collect pictures on the site.
Pinterest users are mostly female: at least 70 percent of them. “If I had a startup that had that percentage of women and was growing that fast, I’d be a super-happy guy,” says technology writer John Battelle at Federated Media. He adds, “Women are seen as a primary driver of the most important household and large-ticket items, including cars.”
CNET senior editor Bridget Carey is a typical Pinner.
“I’m actually using Pinterest a lot right now to plan my wedding with my mom,” says Carey. “It’s a really efficient way of saying ‘Hey, what do you think of this?’”
And her dad? As of yet, he’s not pinning-up online pictures of stuff he likes. So Carey says she has no clue which tools he might want from Sears for Christmas.
There’s a lot happening in the world. Through it all, Marketplace is here for you.
You rely on Marketplace to break down the world’s events and tell you how it affects you in a fact-based, approachable way. We rely on your financial support to keep making that possible.
Your donation today powers the independent journalism that you rely on. For just $5/month, you can help sustain Marketplace so we can keep reporting on the things that matter to you.