I used to be a big fan of leveraging infographics to grow my traffic and brand. Why? Because it used to provide exceptional results.

The results were so great that when we started releasing infographics on the KISSmetrics blog in 2010, it helped us generate 2,512,596 visitors and 41,142 backlinks.

Based on the KISSmetrics stats from 2010, we know infographics worked well then. But the real question is: do they still work today?

Over the years, I’ve created 218 infographics, so let’s analyze the data to see what we can glean from these numbers:

The KISSmetrics blog

Within the two-year period, from 2010 to 2012, 47 infographics generated 2,512,596 visitors and 41,142 backlinks from 3,741 unique domains. They also generated 41,359 tweets and 20,859 likes.

That means, on average, each infographic generated 53,459 visitors and 875 backlinks from 79 unique domains. When it comes to social shares, each one generated 879 tweets and 443 likes.

After 2012, infographics weren’t providing the same results as before. One of the main reasons for the poorer ROI was their rise in popularity. More and more companies started leveraging them, which made them more common.

The newer infographics, on average, drove 21,582 visitors and 371 backlinks from 34 unique domains. As for social shares, each one generated 486 tweets and 259 likes.

The reason for the drop in traffic and links isn’t related to the quality of the infographics. We used the same research methods to come up with topics and the same designer in many cases. And we promoted them through the same channels.

As you can see from the KISSmetrics data, infographics still drive traffic but not as much as they used to.

Quicksprout

In addition to publishing infographics on KISSmetrics, I also publish infographics on Quicksprout every Friday.

My goal with releasing infographics on Quicksprout is to help you understand complex marketing data through simple visuals. And my hope was that infographics would help generate a lot of traffic.

Because I didn’t get on the infographic bandwagon early enough on Quicksprout, I didn’t have the same results as we did at KISSmetrics. But each infographic did generate 41,487 visitors and 469 backlinks from 38 unique domains. As for social shares, each graphic generated roughly 621 tweets and 572 likes.

But what is interesting is that the infographics haven’t helped increase the overall search traffic for Quicksprout. You would think that the more backlinks you generate, the more search traffic you’ll have, but this hasn’t been the case so far.

I’ve also tested releasing infographics on Quicksprout on days other than Friday, but it didn’t make a huge difference in traffic. If I posted them on Mondays, I would receive about 8% more traffic. If I posted them on Wednesdays, I would get 11% more traffic.

Although the infographic stats look good on Quicksprout, when you compare them to my text-based posts, they don’t seem to be doing as well. On average, my non-infographic blog posts generate 35% more traffic and 22% more search traffic.

One other thing is worth mentioning. I have been receiving emails from people, saying they see mentions of Quicksprout more often than before. Quicksprout’s logo, featured on each infographic, is primarily responsible for this effect. When others embed my infographics within their websites, they also promote the Quicksprout brand.

As you can see from the graph above, this has helped increase Quicksprout’s popularity, according to Google Trends.

Conclusion

If you are looking to drastically increase your search traffic, infographics won’t help you as much as you think. Infographic links were more effective four years ago, but since then, Google has been tightening its algorithm, which tempers the impact infographics have on SEO today.

Although the data doesn’t look as appealing as it used to, if I were you, I would still continue to leverage infographics for the following 3 reasons: