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How to Save 5+ Hours a Week on Pinterest Marketing Using AI

  • 14 hours ago
  • 3 min read

I’m sure I’m not the only one that feels like although Pinterest is amazing for traffic…it can quietly eat up your entire time.

You sit down to “just create a few pins” and suddenly it’s been two hours. You’re still tweaking fonts. Still second-guessing keywords. Still wondering if this pin will even get clicks.



And if you’re a busy mum,or someone working a 9–5, or building your blog on the side, that kind of time drain just isn’t sustainable.

Today I want to share how instead of doing more, you can do Pinterest marketing smarter!


How to save time on Pinterest Marketing using AI

This is exactly how you can save at least 5 hours a week using three tools:

  • KeySearch

  • Ideogram

  • ChatGPT



Step 1: Stop Guessing Keywords (Use KeySearch Instead)

This is where most people waste time without realising it.

They:

  • type random phrases into Pinterest

  • copy what others are doing

  • hope something sticks

I’ll tell you for free, instead, use pinterest keyword tool like KeySearch. It’ll help you find real keywords people are searching for.

Here’s the simple workflow:

  • Type in your blog topic (e.g. “anti inflammatory meals”)

  • Look for low competition keywords i.e keyword score with “difficulty” less than 35.

  • Pick 3–5 variations.

Now you’re not creating 10 targeted pins that have a chance to rank.

This alone saves you about 1–2 hours a week because you’re not overthinking what to post.



Step 2: Let ChatGPT Write Your Pin Titles + Descriptions

Writing Pinterest titles sounds easy… until you’re on your 8th pin and your brain is tired. The fix?

This is where ChatGPT becomes your content assistant.

Instead of writing everything manually, you just prompt it like this:


“Give me 10 Pinterest titles and descriptions for a post about anti-inflammatory breakfasts. Make them click-worthy and SEO optimised.”

Then tweak slightly so it sounds like you.

That’s it.

No more:

  • staring at a blank screen

  • rewriting the same sentence 5 times

  • wondering if it’s “good enough”

This saves another 1–1.5 hours weekly, especially if you batch content.



Step 3: Create Scroll-Stopping Pins in Minutes with Ideogram

Design is where time really disappears.

You open Canva… and suddenly:

  • you’re adjusting spacing

  • changing colours

  • testing fonts

  • starting over

Instead, use Ideogram to generate your pin designs instantly.

What makes it powerful:

  • It creates ready-made aesthetic images

  • It handles text + layout automatically

  • You can match a vibe (neutral, boho, clean, etc.)

Example prompt:


“Pinterest pin design for anti inflammatory breakfast ideas, neutral aesthetic, soft beige tones, clean modern text”

Then you:

  • download

  • make small tweaks in Canva if needed

  • post

This can easily save you 2–3 hours a week on design alone.



Step 4: Batch Everything in One Sitting (This Is the Real Game-Changer)

Now combine everything:

In ONE session:

  1. Use KeySearch → find keywords

  2. Use ChatGPT → generate titles/descriptions

  3. Use Ideogram → create 5–10 pins

You can realistically create a full week of Pinterest content in 1–2 hours.

Then open the Pinterest scheduler. Upload 10 pins at once. Select all and add in the link, board, key terms. Then select all and tweak the title of each pin for variety. Finally click on the “schedule for later” toggle and choose the day and time you want your pin to be published. So simple!


Final thoughts - Pinterest Marketing

Final Thoughts

If there’s one thing I want you to take away from this, it’s this: Pinterest doesn’t need more of your time, it needs a better system.


For a long time, it feels like the only way to grow is to keep doing more. More pins, more designs, more effort. But once you start using tools like KeySearch, ChatGPT, and Ideogram together, you realise something important. You don’t need to work harder, you just need to remove the parts that slow you down.


Instead of spending hours overthinking keywords, writing captions from scratch, or redesigning pins again and again, you’re making quicker decisions, creating faster, and actually staying consistent. And that consistency is what moves the needle.


This is especially important if you’re building your blog in pockets of time. You don’t have hours to waste, and you shouldn’t need them. When your workflow is simple and repeatable, Pinterest stops feeling like a chore and starts feeling like something that quietly works in the background for you.


And that’s really the goal. Not perfection, not constant posting, but a calm, efficient system that helps you show up regularly without burning out.



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