Most content marketing advice reads like a motivational poster. "Create valuable content." "Know your audience." "Be consistent."
None of that tells you what actually works.
$7.65 — average return per $1 spent on content marketing (RankTracker 2025)
80% — of content loses money — only 20% drives returns (RankTracker 2025)
12% — of B2B marketers exceeded content goals in 2025 (Content Marketing Institute 2026)
Here's the uncomfortable truth: most content marketing fails. The companies that win aren't following a secret formula — they found one strategy that fits their product and executed it relentlessly for years.
These 10 marketing content examples come with real numbers. Revenue, traffic, conversion rates. Not "they did great content" — what they actually built and what it produced.
Blog and SEO Content Marketing Examples
The oldest play in content marketing. Also the most misunderstood. Most companies publish blog posts and pray Google notices. The winners treat their blog like a product.
Ahrefs — $120M ARR Without a Sales Team
Ahrefs grew to $120M ARR with zero paid ads and zero salespeople. Their entire growth engine is blog content.
The secret? A "business value" scoring system. Every article gets rated 1-3 based on how naturally the product appears in the content. A score of 0 means they don't write it. Every post doubles as a product demo.
Their blog traffic grew 1,136% and now ranks for over 170,000 organic keywords. That's what happens when you build a content marketing strategy around product-led thinking instead of vanity metrics.
Score every content idea by how naturally your product fits the solution. If your product doesn't solve the problem in the article, that article isn't worth writing.
HubSpot — 106% More Traffic from Old Posts
HubSpot's blog pulls 7+ million monthly visitors. But their smartest move wasn't writing more — it was updating what already existed.
Historical content refreshes — rewriting and republishing old posts with fresh data — increased organic search views by 106%. Their annual State of Marketing report boosted downloads 50% year-over-year and drove 44% more net new contacts.
Most teams chase the next publish. HubSpot proved that your back catalog is an undervalued asset.
Canva — Design Education as a Growth Engine
Canva's blog answers questions like "how to make a poster" and "best fonts for resumes." Every tutorial leads straight into the product. You're reading about design — and the answer is always "here, do it in Canva."
Traffic grew 226%. The company hit 220 million monthly active users and $1.7 billion in revenue. When you pair that with strong internal linking across your content hub, organic traffic compounds even faster.
Content builds relationships. Relationships are built on trust. Trust drives revenue.
— Andrew Davis, author of Brandscaping
Newsletter and Email
Email marketing returns $42 for every $1 spent. But most newsletters read like they were written by a committee. Morning Brew proved that voice matters more than volume.
Morning Brew — A $75M Newsletter
Two college students started a daily business newsletter in 2015. Their edge: writing business news like texts from your smartest friend.
Growth mechanics were simple. A referral program rewarded readers with stickers, mugs, and premium content for sharing. Referrals drove 30% of new subscriptions at near-zero acquisition cost. The result? 4+ million subscribers with a 42% open rate — nearly double the industry average.
Business Insider acquired them for $75 million. If you're building an editorial calendar, study how Morning Brew treats every send as a product experience, not a marketing touchpoint.
B2B Content Marketing Examples
Morning Brew, Gong, and Ahrefs share one trait: they built audiences before selling to them. The content came first. Revenue followed.
Video and Social Content Marketing Examples
890% — ROI from short-form video — highest of any content type (HubSpot 2026)
Most brands post corporate videos nobody watches. Two companies cracked the code by abandoning the corporate playbook entirely.
Duolingo — 16M Followers from Being Unhinged
Duolingo's green owl mascot has become the most recognizable brand character on TikTok. Their content strategy? Post trend-driven, comedic videos that intentionally break every corporate marketing rule.
The mascot is jealous, petty, and wildly popular. One video hit 602K engagements with an 11% engagement rate — 4x the industry average. Daily active users surged from 4.9 million in 2019 to 80+ million by late 2024. Quarterly billings reached $192.6M, up 40% year-over-year.
Forget "be funny on TikTok" as a strategy. Personality compounds. Duolingo committed to a character and voice, then let it run for years.
Red Bull — A Media Company That Sells Energy Drinks
Red Bull spends 25-30% of annual revenue — roughly €3 billion — on content and experiential marketing. They founded Red Bull Media House in 2007 as a full production studio creating documentaries and extreme sports coverage.
Their YouTube channel has 22.5 million subscribers. The media wing generates $2.5 billion in its own revenue. Red Bull holds 43% of the global energy drink market with $10B+ in annual sales.
They didn't add content marketing to their business. They made content marketing their business.
Don't copy Red Bull's budget. Copy their commitment. They picked one audience (adrenaline seekers), one content type (extreme sports video), and invested for 19 years. Pick your lane and stay in it.
User-Generated Content
The cheapest content marketing strategy is getting your customers to make the content for you.
GoPro and Apple — Customers as the Marketing Team
GoPro's Million Dollar Challenge invites users to submit footage shot on their cameras for a share of $1 million. The #GoPro hashtag has over 50 million posts across social platforms. Every submission is a product demo made by a real customer. No production costs. No scripting.
Apple ran the same play with #ShotOniPhone — 29+ million Instagram tags and counting. Their entire Instagram feed is user-generated content. When your product creates content, your customers become your marketing department.
Data-Driven Content Marketing Examples
The hardest content to replicate is content built on data nobody else has. Three companies turned proprietary information into marketing engines that competitors can't copy.
Spotify Wrapped — 200M Users in 62 Hours
Spotify Wrapped packages each user's listening data into shareable, story-format cards designed for social media. The 2024 launch reached 200 million engaged users within 62 hours and generated roughly 500 million shares.
Every share is a personal endorsement of Spotify. Users aren't sharing an ad — they're sharing their identity. The 2020 campaign drove a 21% increase in mobile app downloads in a single week.
A campaign always stops. A content marketing initiative should never stop.
— Joe Pulizzi, Founder of Content Marketing Institute
Gong — 80% of Pipeline from Content
Gong uses anonymized sales call data — millions of conversations — to produce insights nobody else can replicate. Their blog posts aren't opinions. They're data-backed findings from real sales interactions.
Content drives roughly 80% of Gong's inbound pipeline. They run two podcasts and embed short clips across blog, social, and email — one recording becomes five pieces of content. If you're tracking performance with SEO reporting tools, that kind of efficiency is the benchmark.
Superdrug — 900,000 Shares from One Idea
Superdrug sent a photo to 18 designers across different countries and asked each to retouch it to match local beauty standards. The side-by-side results went viral: 600+ publisher pickups, 900,000 social shares, 700,000 page views.
One piece of content. One idea. Zero ongoing production cost.
What Most Content Marketing Guides Get Wrong
They worship volume. The data says otherwise. Teams that improved content performance in 2025 credited quality and relevance (65%) as the top factor — not publishing frequency. Knowing how to write blog posts that actually rank matters more than how many you ship. AI writing tools can help you produce faster, but speed without strategy is just efficient waste.
Distribution is an afterthought. Content without distribution is invisible. Morning Brew built a referral engine. Spotify designed Wrapped to be inherently shareable. Gong repurposes one podcast into five formats — a textbook example of content repurposing done right. Most teams spend 90% of effort on creation and 10% on distribution. That's backwards.
They treat content as campaigns. Ahrefs published consistently for years before hitting $120M. Recovery Brands invested three years before seeing 1,100% traffic growth. Content compounds — but only if you don't stop. Even a lightweight editorial calendar in Google Sheets can keep a solo founder publishing on schedule week after week.
95% of B2B marketers now use AI, but only 39% report it actually improved performance. Understanding AI's real impact on content marketing ROI separates teams that see returns from those burning budget. The tool isn't the strategy. The strategy is the strategy.
Build Your Own Content Engine
You don't need Red Bull's budget. You need a clear playbook.
Pick one channel. Blog, newsletter, social, or video. Not all four. Ahrefs only does blog content. Morning Brew only does email. Depth beats breadth.
Score every idea by product fit. Steal Ahrefs' 1-3 scoring system. If your product doesn't naturally appear in the content, skip it. The best examples of content marketing all share this trait — every piece connects to revenue.
Plan distribution before creation. For every piece of content, answer: how does this reach the right people? If the answer is "we'll post it and hope," rethink the idea.
Update before you publish new. HubSpot's 106% traffic boost from refreshing old posts proves that your archive is an asset. Refreshing beats creating.
Measure revenue, not traffic. A post with 500 views and a 5% conversion rate beats a post with 10,000 views and 0.1% conversion. If you're a startup, our SEO for startups playbook breaks down exactly where to focus first.
Want to build a content engine like these examples? Start with a free site scan — from site scan to published article in one workflow.
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