Do people who love pink clothes also buy pink backpacks, pink cameras, and pink skateboards?
I asked myself this question in 2017, and after doing some brief research on Instagram, I decided to build an online store that only sold pink products.
The initial step for this project was to be able to answer three main questions. Where would the products come from? Which e-commerce platform should I use? And how can I attract customers?
The answers revealed themselves after a bit more research. I would create the site as an affiliate store, so I wouldn’t need to carry inventory. I chose WooCommerce for the e-commerce platform, as it offers the ability to customize in numerous ways. And I would use Instagram to drive traffic (and hopefully sales) to my online store.
Any business on today’s Internet is fighting for attention against several massive platforms that take up the majority of users’ time spent online. Instead of competing against them, why not use this concentration of users to your advantage?
The visual nature of the platform meant that bold, color-themed graphics would resonate with Instagram audiences, who often meticulously curate their feeds. Researching pink hashtags, I descended down the rabbit hole of Instagram’s pink aesthetic. From here I was able to begin unraveling methods to target fans of the color.
Soon I began to identify users with a high probability of being interested in pink products. The ultimate goal was to drive these high-quality sales leads to the shop. I experimented with strategies to identify fans of the color pink by their images, bios, user names, and in one particularly clever approach, by location.
Have a quick look at the Instagram channel I created for a better understanding of the concept and a peek at how it works. If you’re browsing with a mobile phone, you’ll see that the Instagram account @omgpinkstore is made up of eye-catching graphics along with ‘shoppable’ posts.
Shoppable posts allow you to go directly from browsing an Instagram feed to purchasing an item that you desire. There used to be an intermediary step, where you were taken to an online store first, but that is quickly disappearing, as the process is getting streamlined into more direct, one-shot purchases from within the Instagram app.
Building and running the store as an experiment for a short amount of time, I was able to confirm the strength of this concept and the techniques that I devised to generate traffic. Running over several months I tried out multiple Instagram strategies which worked well. On one occasion, I woke up to a flood of Instagram ‘Likes’. It turns out that the brand Moschino re-posted one of my images to their account with over 9 million followers.
As a one-person project this was getting time consuming. I started to wonder if this was a viable business, due to the amount of time it took to research products, create colorful images, and post to both the web and Instagram. This pushed me towards investigating automation, which lead me to a whole new series of discoveries!