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If you’ve ever felt like you’re posting constantly on social media but no one is engaging, let me save you some frustration: it’s not that your content is “bad.” It’s that you’re not following the 80/20 rule of content marketing. Most people treat content like throwing spaghetti at the wall — posting randomly and hoping something sticks. But when you learn how to use this rule, every piece of content you create has a purpose and a place in your strategy.
The 80/20 rule (also known as the Pareto Principle) says that 80% of your results come from 20% of your efforts. In content marketing, this means:
👉 80% of your content should be valuable, engaging, and relationship-building.
👉 20% of your content should be promotional, selling, and conversion-focused.
Most people get this completely backwards. They either:
The magic happens when you strike the balance. And the best part? Once you start creating content with this split in mind, your audience knows what to expect from you — and consistency builds trust faster than anything else.
Think about it — no one opens Instagram or TikTok hoping to be sold something. They’re there to be entertained, inspired, educated, or to connect. That’s your 80%.
When you consistently give people what they came for, they start to trust you. And trust is the bridge that leads to sales. People buy from people they feel connected to, not strangers shouting at them with a discount code.
Then, when you drop your 20% of selling content — a product launch, a service offer, or a call-to-action — it doesn’t feel pushy. It feels natural. Your audience already knows you, likes you, and believes you can help them. And that’s why they’ll happily click, buy, or sign up when you finally ask.

Your 80% isn’t fluff. It’s strategic value-driven content. Here’s what that might look like:
This is the content that builds the relationship. It keeps your audience coming back because you’re giving them something useful or enjoyable. If you can make someone laugh, learn, or feel seen — they’ll remember you. And that memory is what makes them pay attention when you sell.
Your 20% is where you ask for the sale. Don’t water this down. Be direct, clear, and confident. Examples include:
The key is that your 20% works because your 80% has already warmed people up. If you only ever posted this type of content, you’d sound like an infomercial. But when you mix it in intentionally, it feels like the next step in a natural conversation.
Here’s a simple way to apply the 80/20 rule starting today:
At first, it might feel like extra work to categorize and plan this way. But once you practice it a few times, it becomes second nature — and you’ll notice your audience engaging more with all of your content.
The 80/20 rule of content marketing isn’t just about balance — it’s about building a strategy that actually works long term. It keeps you from burning out, it keeps your audience interested, and it creates a system that you can rinse and repeat as your business grows.
If all you do is sell, people tune you out. If all you do is give value, people love you but never buy. But when you combine the two in the right ratio, you build an audience that’s engaged, loyal, and ready to invest in what you’re offering. And that’s how you create a content marketing plan that doesn’t just look good on paper — it actually produces results.
So here’s my challenge to you: audit your content this week. Get honest about where you’re spending your energy. And commit to using the 80/20 rule from now on. Because once you do, you’ll wonder why you ever created content any other way.
August 26, 2025