Over the last five months, thousands of creators participated in the beta test period for Tailwind Turbo – a new feature that aims to help creator content succeed on Pinterest through expert curation by other creators.
But did it work?
Did community-driven Pin curation lead to better performing Pins on Pinterest?
The short answer: yes — especially for high-quality Pins with breakout potential.
What we found wasn’t that Turbo makes every Pin successful. Instead, Turbo amplifies what already works — helping strong Pins break out faster and reach significantly larger audiences.
Turbo isn’t about gaming the Pinterest algorithm – but rather contributing to it.
Creators in the beta program showed that they weren’t willing to engage with just any content – if anything, they are more discerning and choosier than the average Pinterest user.
So, in effect, Turbo adds an expert curation layer to the algorithm that also pays off big for creators.
Below, we’ll walk through:
During the beta period:
The 12x!! engagements per Turbo Pin on Pinterest vs those that happened within Turbo suggests that Turbo may be most effective at helping good to great Pins perform even better.
Turbo isn’t gaming Pinterest’s algorithm.
It’s improving it.
And it’s doing that through an expert curation layer of actively engaged creators who know good content.
Across the beta, Pins added to Turbo earned an average of 297 total engagements on Pinterest.
But that number doesn’t tell the full story — because Pinterest performance isn’t evenly distributed.
Just like views on YouTube or reach on Instagram, Pinterest follows a power-law curve:
So instead of focusing on averages alone, we looked at how Turbo affects the likelihood of breakout performance.
Comparing Turbo Pins to broader averages for Creator Pins shows a stark improvement in performance — especially at the high end.
When Pins are just being tested by Pinterest, they’ll usually receive a few hundred test impressions to see if users engage.
If a Pin reaches 10,000 or more impressions, it has done quite well.
Pins that reach 100,000+ impressions are big winners on the platform.
That’s a 4× increase in likelihood.
But the lift becomes even more pronounced at higher thresholds:
That’s a 312× increase in likelihood of hitting 100,000 impressions!!
This doesn’t mean Turbo “creates” viral Pins out of thin air.
Instead, it reinforces something fundamental about how Pinterest works.
Pinterest’s distribution system looks for positive engagement signals to decide which Pins deserve broader exposure:
Turbo accelerates those engagement signals.
For Pins that already have strong visuals, clear intent, and audience appeal, this added momentum helps Pinterest identify them as winners faster — leading to them being tested more aggressively with larger audiences.
Most likely, Turbo also helps Pinterest avoid getting it wrong.
With a massive number of Pins added to Pinterest each day and only so much traffic to go around, Pinterest has to carefully choose how many base impressions to give each Pin when testing it with the audience.
Any algorithmic system like this is going to get it wrong sometimes, creating “false negatives.”
A false negative is a Pin that would have been successful if shown to a larger audience, or a better fit audience, but was determined to be a failure in limited testing.
The early engagement created by Turbo is potentially solving for this, reducing the number of false negatives.
How can we see this?
Because the number of engagements earned by these Pins on Pinterest is ~12x the number earned directly from Turbo users. That’s a huge multiplier effect.
This means that after Turbo helps these Pins get exposed to larger audiences, the Pins are proving their worth.
If the response from the larger audience was poor, the Pins wouldn’t see this much success across Pinterest!
The result:
Turbo doesn’t flatten the curve.
It steepens it.
The biggest takeaway from the beta is this:
Turbo works best when it’s used intentionally — not indiscriminately.
Below are practical, data-informed guidelines for getting the most out of Turbo after launch.
During the Turbo beta, both already well performing Pins and new Pins benefitted from being shared with the Turbo community.
That said, Pins that are already performing well saw a bigger uplift, faster.
Consider starting by adding those Pins to Turbo first.
A suggested system might look like this
FIRST – Add already successful Pins you want to amplify more
SECOND – Add new Pins showing strong early engagement or outbound click rates
THIRD – Add new Pins that are strategic for you, such as targeting keywords you want to rank for on Pinterest, or Pins related to to emerging or seasonal Trends on Pinterest
LAST – Add Pins you simply believe in, even if they aren’t yet showing that spark
Momentum on Pinterest compounds over time.
Turbo can accelerate that compounding effect across the lifecycle of a Pin.
Turbo amplifies breakout potential. It does not turn weak Pins into strong ones.
Use Turbo for Pins that already meet your quality bar, such as:
If you wouldn’t want a Pin circulating for months, or seasonally year after year, it’s probably not a Turbo candidate.
We saw very early Turbo users adapt a strategy of frequently switching Turbo Pins in and out – because at first, Turbo gave you a set number of Pin slots that you could use to share different Pins over time.
This seemed effective at first because it would maximize exposure for Pins within the Turbo community. However it was NOT effective at driving longer-term engagement gains on Pinterest.
During the beta we switched to a model where unlocked Turbo Pins were one-time use to encourage longer, more consistent boosts to Pins. This ended up being more successful at helping Pins succeed.
Going forward, we will likely move more in that direction, encouraging longer time horizons for Turbo Pins to maximize your odds of finding success.
Some users would add batches of Pins linking to the same piece of content in batches, back to back.
This WAS NOT an effective strategy.
Turbo users showed VERY LOW tolerance for feeds filled with redundant content.
Creators who did this were reported or blocked at higher rates through our community moderation tools.
A small number of beta testers posted spammy Pins linking to scammy-looking affiliate programs, get rich quick schemes, low quality / unapproved marketing tools and the like.
This content was NOT tolerated by the Turbo community.
That goes for A.I. slop, too.
Turbo users posting this type of content were blocked very frequently – and much of their content added to Turbo was removed quickly due to it being flagged.
We even had to ban a small number of accounts permanently, if they repeated this practice even after being warned not to.
Turbo is powered by creator participation.
Creators who regularly engaged with others’ Pins and used their unlocked Turbo Pins regularly saw a much greater uplift than those who were less consistent.
Think of Turbo as a flywheel, not a switch.
You want to keep it spinning over time.
Turbo works best when Pinterest can clearly understand what a Pin is about.
That means:
Early engagement is most powerful when Pinterest knows who to show your Pin to next.
If Pinterest shows your audience to the wrong audience because it’s not clear who it should be shown to, Turbo will not correct that.
Turbo does:
Turbo does not:
Think of Turbo as a catalyst — not a panacea.
As Tailwind Turbo moves out of beta, we’ll continue to study performance to learn how to help the Turbo community succeed even more.
In the near-term, we’ve also gotten lots of great feedback that we’ll be working to improve.
Here are some of the key things we’ll be focused on near-term:
The beta results are clear: accelerating momentum matters, and when applied to the right Pins, it can dramatically change outcomes.
Turbo doesn’t replace great content.
It helps great content travel faster.
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Research conducted by Tailwind using five months of Tailwind Turbo beta data across thousands of creators and Pins.
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