Our Story
Marketing With Care: Because Inclusion Strengthens Strategy
I started in law school, determined to fight for disability rights. I ended up building Pinvincibles, a Pinterest marketing agency. The gap between those two sentences is where everything worth knowing about me lives.
From Law School to Freelancing
I went to law school because I believed in disability rights. Not in an abstract way, but because I needed them. I live with chronic illness, and I wanted to change a system I knew, from the inside, was not built for people like me.
I didn’t finish. Not because I couldn’t do the work, but because surviving the structure was a full-time job on its own. The accommodations existed on paper. In practice, each one was a negotiation, a small battle, a justification for simply being there. Missing one exam during a health flare could cost me an entire academic year. The system believed it was flexible. It had one narrow definition of flexibility, and it did not match my reality.
So I left. And I rebuilt.
Rebuilding from Scratch
Freelancing became the bridge. I took whatever work I could find: data analysis, translations, SEO, grant writing, copywriting, event planning. For a while I ran a wedding calligraphy business, and for a time, it was exactly right. Then I broke my arm. Later, my back. Spending long days bent over paper stopped being possible, so I pivoted again, this time helping other wedding professionals become more visible online. That work was my introduction to social media marketing, and eventually to Pinterest.
Discovering Pinterest Marketing
Pinterest felt different from everything else. It did not demand daily performance or constant visibility. It rewarded strategy, patience, and long-term thinking. For someone whose energy fluctuates, that was more than a preference. It was a revelation.
Then came the second realization: the same qualities that made Pinterest workable for my reality were exactly what businesses needed too. It was not just a personal fit. It was a blueprint.
“Pinterest is proof that marketing can be both human-centered and high-performing.”
Building a Pinterest Marketing Agency That Lasts
As I worked with more clients, I began to see the shape of something larger. My agency is fully remote, mostly asynchronous, and disability-informed by design. Not as a selling point, but because that is how I know how to build things that actually hold up.
The systems that make work possible for disabled people, clarity over assumptions, flexibility built into the structure rather than granted as an exception, processes that do not depend on constant availability, are the same systems that give businesses resilience. I did not plan for that parallel. I just kept building what I knew how to build.
There is a number that still stays with me. I knew that gap before I ever saw the statistic. I had lived the conditions that create it. And I knew that the answer was not accommodation alone. It was building structures where people could actually participate.
51.3%
of disabled people (ages 20–64)
employed in the EU
75.6%
of non-disabled people (ages 20–64)
employed in the EU
A 24-point gap that has barely moved in years. Source: European Economic and Social Committee, 2024
That is what I am still doing.
“Inclusion is not a compromise. It is a strategy for resilience and long-term growth.”
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Pinvincibles do?
Pinvincibles is a Pinterest marketing agency. We build and manage Pinterest strategies for businesses that want sustainable, long-term growth rather than the churn of short-lived campaigns.
Who do you work with?
We work with businesses of all sizes, from solo entrepreneurs to established brands, across industries and time zones. Our clients share one thing in common: they want a marketing channel that compounds over time, not one that disappears the moment you stop posting.
Why Pinterest and not another platform?
Pinterest is a visual search engine, not a social media feed. Content lives for months or years, users arrive with intent, and smaller brands compete on equal footing with larger ones. For businesses focused on long-term growth, it consistently outperforms platforms that reward constant output over strategy.
What does “disability-informed” mean in practice?
It means our systems are built around clarity, flexibility, and sustainability, because those are the conditions that make work actually possible. In practice: cleaner processes, less back-and-forth, and a way of collaborating that adapts to your reality rather than demanding you adapt to ours.
Ready to grow?
Let's build something that lasts.
If your business is ready to explore what Pinterest can do for long-term, sustainable growth, let’s talk.