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Deep Cuts and Smash Hits: The Best of Animalz in 2020

There’s a lot to be learned from a year of content marketing. High traffic articles provide a blueprint for future content. Real-world feedback from readers shines a light on the articles that actually mattered.

So, as our sights shift towards 2021, we’ve decided to share an end-of-year highlight reel from the Animalz blog. Think of it as a playlist of deep cuts and smash hits—a collection of our most popular articles, accompanied by some personal favorites that slipped under the radar.

Smash Hits…

The following five articles received the most pageviews in 2020. While some of these posts took a ton of time, effort, and planning (I’m looking at you, Content Marketing Benchmark Report), others were simple, easy-to-write pieces that shared the right idea at the right time.

In true Animalz form, we also wanted to share our takeaways from these posts, ranging from the power of proprietary data to the marriage of SEO and thought leadership.

1) The Animalz Content Marketing Benchmark Report 2020 🔗

What it’s about:
We distilled 150 million pageviews into a dozen strategic takeaways for B2B content marketers.

Why it worked:


2) Everybody Wants Thought Leadership Content. But How Do You Do It, Exactly? 🔗

What it’s about: Thought leadership is powerful, persuasive, and totally misunderstood. Here’s our process for getting started.

Why it worked:


3) MECE: How to Think, Write & Persuade Like a McKinsey Consultant 🔗

What it’s about: Mutually exclusive, collectively exhaustive (MECE) is a core problem-solving framework in management consulting. It’s also a powerful method for writing better content.

Why it worked:


4) This Is What Content Marketing Looks Like in a Crisis 🔗

What it’s about: Marketing is hard in times of crisis. Use these real-life content examples to see how other companies balance business growth with customer needs.

Why it worked:


5) Why Wirecutter Wins: Opinionated Content 🔗

What it’s about: Wirecutter carved out a $150 million niche by understanding one core tenet of content marketing: opinions are not optional.

Why it worked:


…And Deep Cuts

“Traffic” is just one way to gauge the success of content. Not every article will bring a ton of pageviews to the party, and that’s OK. Content can build links, communicate a core message, help expedite the sales process, and achieve a whole bunch of other worthwhile objectives—without traffic factoring into the equation.

And true to form, our list of “smash hits” excludes many of our favorite articles from 2020. Here are five personal favorites, articles that were particularly helpful, inspiring, or counter-intuitive, as chosen by readers of the Animalz blog.

1) The Second Mover Advantage in Content Marketing 🔗

What it’s about: Take inspiration from the HubSpots of the world, and you’re basing your content strategy on the tactics that worked five years ago.

“I cannot count how many times Hubspot is referenced as the gold standard in content marketing—and they’re wonderful, but we need to have more heroes that look like newer orgs.”

Alicia Johnston, SproutSocial

2) How to Climb the Mountain of Data-Driven Content 🔗

What it’s about: Give your readers something they can’t get anywhere else, and traffic, links, and press coverage will follow. Here’s how to approach data-driven content.

I love the idea that the data drives the content. You can’t come up with a conclusion that you want and then make the data support that conclusion — you’re constrained (in a good way) to what the data can adequately and compellingly support.”

— Katie Parrott, Animalz

3) The Auteur Theory of Content Marketing: Why It Pays to Repeat Yourself 🔗

What it’s about: Wes Anderson. Hitchcock. Scorsese. The unique styles of “auteur” filmmakers have a powerful marketing lesson to share: it pays to repeat yourself.

“It was an a-ha moment for me for sure, especially since I’m trying to figure out new ways of talking about a popular topic.”

Alice Teodorescu, SEOmonitor

4) You Need a Nemesis 🔗

What it’s about: It isn’t always enough to cast your company as the hero—sometimes, you also need a villain.

“This was such a timely piece for me personally. We’ve been talking about having a nemesis and what that would look like for a while. This finally helped me understand how to approach this for Soapbox. Plus the 🌶 levels were hilarious and easy to follow!”

Hiba Amin, Soapbox

5) Risk vs. Reward: How to Build a Diversified Content Portfolio 🔗

What it’s about: Great content marketing looks a lot like a diversified investment portfolio: content lanes are paired with specific business objectives, and there’s no over-reliance on any single content type.

“The article framed the concept of content mix so simply that it pulled me out of the weeds and gave me an ‘ah ha’ moment. . .I’ve recently leveraged that post to help frame my plans to build/rebuild Udemy’s content engine.”

Ronnie Higgins, Udemy

Learning from a Year of Content

2020 was a wild year for everyone. Like every other company, we threw out our original marketing plan and spent much of the year experimenting, testing, and learning.

Here’s our biggest takeaway from our traffic data and reader feedback: we have the means, motive, and opportunity to answer some of the hardest questions in content marketing.

Next year, we’ll be doubling down on research reports and data content. If you want to be the first to receive updates as they launch, make sure you’re subscribed to our weekly newsletter.

Thanks for reading the blog this year!

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