THE 100 BEST INFOGRAPHICS

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THE 100 BEST INFOGRAPHICSIf you want to create better, more effective infographics, this ebook is for you. You probably clickedthis article, not because you like looking at the best infographics, but rather, because you want tomake them yourself and you want those that you make, or are made for you, to be better.That’s what our team did. Whenever we found an infographic we really liked, we bookmarked it. We passed itaround the team. We pinned. We shared. We emailed.Eventually, we realized we had a repository of great content. Examples across spectrums, across industries,and across infographic types. A repository of amazing infographics that could help inspire our future pieces,train new hires, and keep our team innovating.That’s when we realized we needed to take it to another level, to really curate the best of the best, not just tohelp others, but to help ourselves. So we sought out to curate a list of 100 diversified, amazing infographics.www.siegemedia.com2

HOW WE PICKED THE TOP 100This post is the result of 20 years of experience designing, creating and sharing infographics. Westarted with that experience and jotted down every great infographic we could think of, giving usupward of 300 infographics.Then I spent an additional few days scouring the internet, grabbing the best of the best from infographic lists,and asking the opinions of experts I respected.To make sure we didn’t leave any rocks uncovered, I read through every infographic detailed in the BestInfographics books of 2013, 2014 and 2015, and included or annotated any we had listed that came fromthem, with the knowledge that they would be great sources for a post like this.www.siegemedia.com3

At that point, I chopped down from there. I removed any infographics that didn’t blow me away, or otherwise,followed design or idea frameworks that other infographics on the list alsoutilized.This gave us a list of 100 infographics that were not just great on their own, but also worked great as acollection – thereby making the list stronger overall.Each infographic on the list is annotated with an icon that allows you to subsegment by the types that interestyou the most. We plan to keep this list updated, too, so check back for updates or otherwise, feel free tosuggest infographics worthy of inclusion.www.siegemedia.com4

The Best 100 Infographics

WHAT THE INFOGRAPHIC ICONS MEANwww.siegemedia.com6

30 SHOTSMixed shots are a popular pastime for many people, and they are represented well in this infographic. Usinggradients to represent each, the designer found a way to create an elegant landscape to represent the alcoholicconcoctions. It’s useful, too — such simple recipes mean the details below make the shots easy to recreate.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com7

3D AGRICULTUREThis infographic is my favorite on this list in terms of sheer visual beauty. It uses photo manipulations,compositing, 3D tools and drawing to construct itsaesthetic.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com8

42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIESThe wings flapping in this animation is the part that really grabs you, so make sure you click through to see itin full. The illustration of these very unique butterflies is nothing short of amazing, too — so don’t forget to beimpressed by that,also.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com9

50 YEARS, 50 TOYSNostaliga is always a powerful effect, and when combined with great illustrations, you get a piece like this —one that generates 140 LRDs and establishes a trend that would lead several others to create similarpieces.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com10

A BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO TYPOGRAPHYAs a general rule, we try to avoid “guides” when doing infographics. This is because infographics don’t supportcopy, and also, effective infographics generally contain unexpected content. However, Downgraf makes itwork because their design is world-class — it might be a basic concept, but this shows that can be overcomewith amazing aesthetics.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com11

A COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURESEleanor Lutz of Tabletop Whale is a world class infographic designer and animator, and it shows from herwork showing up five times on this post — almost certainly the highest of any singular artist. This piece startsthe trend of impressiveness.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com12

A WELL-BALANCED BLOGPhotography is something that rarely finds its way into infographics, which makes its inclusion thatmuch more effective. This infographic from Column Five shows how a basic concept can be elevateddramatically withphotos.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com13

BIRDS OF NORTH AMERICAAnother compendium worth including, the Birds of North America is pleasant not just because it’scomprehensive, but also because North America’s birds offer such an enjoyable diversity of colors.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com14

BLOOMBERG BILLIONAIRESAlthough there might not be anything especially amazing about the data presented here, Bloomberg standsout with a few things — execution and freshness. Sadly, though, it’s not very optimized for SEO, as there’s noreason it shouldn’t surface for lots of queries around the world’s richest people.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com15

CAFFEINE IN POPULAR PRODUCTSA great infographic can create change. This is one of those. If you find your drink or food at the top of this list,it might make you rethink consumption — or otherwise, push you towards a secondary option that’s available.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com16

CAN I MAKE STUFF UP?This brilliant piece shows us how okay it is for different positions to make up what they do, from a journalist to afantasy writer. It’s nothing crazy, but the idea is absolutely original and is represented well in the visualization.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com17

CHEETAH: NATURE’S SPEED MACHINEThis was the first animated infographic I had ever seen, and it still stands as one of the best. The repetition ofthe cheetah is just awe-inspiring, and in combination with the other elements of the piece, makes this a bestin-class animation. Suggested by AJ Ghergich of infographic design company Ghergich & Co.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com18

COMMON MYTH CONCEPTIONSTell me I’m wrong and have the credibility to convince me. That single sentence is the biggest reason thisinteractive went viral, as it combined dozens of common misconceptions into one piece. The interactivity isnice, but a similar, static version was created and also had similar effect, showing that sometimes, idea (andexecution) is everything.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com19

CREATIVE ROUTINES OF SUCCESSFUL PEOPLEAnother take on the creative routines concept found a few times on the list, this static version also went viral— showing that we really do want a shortcut to a better life. InfoWeTrust was one of the first to debut thetrend (and do it well), so they are definitely worthy of being on this list.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com20

DAILY ROUTINES OF FAMOUS CREATIVE PEOPLEYou’ve probably seen a few “routines of famous people” posts out there, but Podio is the only one whomanaged to execute in interactive format. It worked like a charm, generating 656 linking rootdomains.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com21

EMOTIONS THAT CAN’T BE EXPRESSED IN ENGLISHThe English language is known for its weird idiosyncrasies and idioms that make it difficult for non-nativespeakers to pick it up. But did you know that there are also some emotions the language completely misses?Using almost impossible to replicate research, this piece shows us the gaps in our less-than-perfect language.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com22

EVERY ACTIVE SATELLITE ORBITING EARTHA scrolling interactive piece that fits perfectly with a representation of the Earth’s atmosphere. Anotherelement of a great infographic — it uses its format because that’s what best for it, not just because it’s thedesign or development trend of themoment.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com23

EVOLUTION OF VIDEO GAME CONTROLLERSCompendiums are a file format we found took up 15-20 results in this list — that we then had to dial back.There’s a reason for that — they blow you away. This interesting and nostalgic video controller piece from PopChart Lab is no different.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com24

FAMOUS WRITERS’ SLEEP HABITSEveryone likes a shortcut, and many believe that learning the habits of successful people means they maybecome successful if they do the same. Whether or not that’s true, this infographic visualziing the wakeuptimes of famous writers, is interesting and well laid out. Suggested by Courtney Seiter.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com25

FANTASTICAL FICTIVE BEERSNostalgia, fun illustrations, and a quasi-compendium. We must be pretty close to an equation for successthere — and that’s how Pop Chart Lab can sell this, and other pieces like it, asprints.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com26

FASTEST SHIP IN THE UNIVERSEThis infographic does several things well we’ve mentioned in this post: grabs unique data, starts aconversation, and generates nostalgia. Science fiction also allows the artist to capture the ships with solidillustrations, and the result is a piece that went viral and was covered 245times.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com27

FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTEDA common occurrence in great animated infographics is repetition. In order for the graphics to not be jerky/suddenly start over, they have to return to the beginning. The wing paths is an example of how that, whendone well, can blow you away.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com28

FLIGHTS IN THE SKYNo infographic on this list, besides this one from The Guardian, can claim to have live data. Doesn’t get muchmore impressive than that — unless you actually interact with the infographic, and realize this is also a piecethat recaps 100 years of aviation.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com29

FOOD AND WINE PAIRINGSThe pairing concept of lines from one thing to another is something an infographic is very apt to support.Wine Folly shows us a best-in-class example with this food and wine pairing chart.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com30

GAY RIGHTS IN THE U.S. — STATE BY STATECombine a sensitive subject with an interactive, radial layout that is well thought-out, and you have a piecethat captures coverage from 125 unique outlets. It’s hard to come up with a concept that properly uses theradial format that doesn’timpress.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com31

GEOGRAPHY OF HATEDiscrimination is not a good thing. This map might also have the effect of getting you to stereotype certainregions of the United States, so I’m not sure that’s good either,but regardless, the ability of this piece tostart a conversation — and trigger an emotion — made it go viral.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com32

HOW A CAR ENGINE WORKSAnother amazing animation from Animagraffs, how a car engine works shows the power of the mediumthrough effective communication of engine motion using color. Suggested by Neil Patel, founder of contentmarketing company Quicksprout.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com33

HOW A HANDGUN WORKSTransparency is part of the reason this animation, as well as “how a car engine works” from Animgraffs,communicates their ideas so well. The detail combined with that effect demonstrates a level of quality fewother pieces do. Suggested by Jon Cooper, founder of PointBlank SEO.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com34

HOW COMMON IS YOUR BIRTHDAY?This data visualization took off like a viral firecracker when it was first released. Appealing to the vanity ofthe reader, we all — or almost all of us — wanted to know just how common our birthday was. While not theprettiest graphic ever, it was easy to interpret, and using such interesting data, that was all it took to create awidely spread piece.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com35

HOW FAMILY INCOME AFFECTS COLLEGE CHANCESWho knew drawing could be so effective in telling a really important story? The New York Times did, andthat’s why they created an interactive much unlike any other piece of content on the web. Suggested by RandFishkin, founder of inbound software company Moz.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com36

HOW FAR IS IT TO MARS?TL;DR — it’s pretty far. This interactive does a brilliant job of communicating the distance, while also makingthe experience of reaching the destination a lot of fun,too.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com37

HOW FAST IS THE FIRE DEPARTMENT?We commonly refer to the power of emotion in creating marketable ideas -- and this piece takes the conceptto a whole new level. If you live in LA, it almost certainly pisses you off -- which means this definitely belongson every best of list that’s ever created.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com38

HOW FAST IS USAIN BOLT?Simulating the difference between past and present is a pretty cool use of infographics. Using a short videoto explain the infographic? Cooler still. This piece from the NY Times is the only one that utilizes video onthis list.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com39

HOW MANY PEOPLE DO DRONES KILL?The emotion generated by this stunning interactive made it a no-brainer inclusion on the list, showing justhow ineffective drone strikes are in Pakistan while also doing so in a way that’s undoubtedly unique.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com40

HOW MUCH DO MUSIC ARTISTS EARN ONLINE?Musicians simply aren’t paid enough. We already knew record companies were picking their pocket, andwith this visualization, we know just how much. Showing that artists need 4,053,110 plays per month toearn minimum wage from Spotify was enough to spark a vibrant conversation and take this piece to 1,000 LRDs generated.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com41

HOW OFTEN DO THE FRENCH KISS?For the uninitiatied American (me), this fun infographic communicated something I hadn’t known — and didit really, really quickly. I’m now nervous about people kissing me if I visit France.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com42

HOW SEARCH WORKSNot just a scrolling interactive, this piece reveals itself upon you settling into the next section. Not a bigsurprise coming from the talented, deep team of engineers and designers that reside in Mountain View.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com43

HOW SOLAR PANELS WORKA great infographic isn’t something you look at for five seconds and then forget forever. This animation notonly solves a problem, but helps educate the audience, leaving them with information they can use for thelong-term.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com44

HOW STEVE JOBS STARTEDSometimes a visualization doesn’t need to be complicated or fancy, it just has to communicate a great ideain a simple, effective way. This is that chart, showing us how Steve Jobs made his mark. For aspiring businesspeople, this resonated, pushing the piece to 75LRDs.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com45

HOW TO BE PRODUCTIVEWhile this infographic doesn’t look bad by any means, it also shows the power of a well-executed idea. Welearn how to be productive in a distilled, actionable format, giving us a direct path to improving productivitymost other posts won’t offer.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com46

HOW TO BUILD A DOGThis design has a unique format in the “how much of 100%” layout it utilizes. It’s possible this could port toother concepts, as well — and it’ll be visually interesting just the same.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com47

HOW TO BUILD A HUMANThe infinity effect of this animation is really cleverly executed. As can be seen from her other animations,Eleanor Lutz has a unique touch for detail that also manages to somehow combine with stunningdesign.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com48

HOW TO EAT SUSHISolving problems we all have, but don’t talk about is often an angle that creates a whirlwind of shares online.This infographic on sushi etiquette appeals to a similar idea — while also applying a fun, comic-like look thatmakes it a pleasure toread.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com49

HOW TO MAKE THE PERFECT COCKTAILThis ratio infographic is one we frequently reference as a potential use-case for other pieces we do. There’sa reason for that — it’s elegantly executed and a pleasure to read through and use. That’s why it warrantspurchase for many.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com50

HOW-MANY GUIDE TO KITCHEN CONVERSIONSUtility is often something missing from most infographics. The best ones are things you bookmark andreference and re-reference time and time again. This infographic is a perfect exemplar of that type ofvisual.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com51

HOW-MANY GUIDE TO KITCHEN CONVERSIONSA genius visual representation, this piece is one of those that stuns you given it’s highly unlikely to be inspiredby other pieces and therefore, is very original as a standalone.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com52

HUNGRY TECH GIANTS: 15 YEARS OF ACQUISITIONSWhat’s the acquisition history of major tech companies? How do the acquisition sizes compare? These twoquestions — and figuring out a way to nicely display the answers, led to a highly successful piece by SimplyBusiness that generated 150 LRDs.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com53

IN CAFFEINE WE TRUSTAn infographic that helps you explain your coffee usage with actual coffee. That’s awesome. Although nottraditionally “interactive”, you might argue this is the most interactive of the entire list, if you buy the print.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com54

IS LIFE GOOD?Simple but oh so powerful. Amongst my favorite infographics on this list because it punches you in the gutif you are currently doing something you hate, I use this not just in work, but in personal life, passing to anyfriend that complains about something they’re capable ofchanging.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com55

IS YOUR STARTUP IDEA ALREADY TAKENEverybody in tech has heard it — “Uber for X”. But BuzzFeed was the only one smart enough to represent itvisually, using a grid layout just how many mini-startups poured out of Uber, Tinder, Birchbox and AirBnB.Simple, effective, and highly shared.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com56

IS YOUR STATE’S HIGHEST PAID EMPLOYEE A COACH?This might be the worst-designed infographic on this list, but it’s worth an inclusion because it, like many stateinfographics like it, began a trend that you’ve likely seen many times. That trend is creating content with local,targeted significance, which generates an amplified marketing effect for Deadspin and others like them.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com57

KETCHUP 17 CLEAN INGREDIENTSRandom and simple is sometimes genius. This piece is nothing striking from a design perspective, butthe unique idea grabs you, and if you’re like us, makes you laugh. Ingenunity like this makes for highlyshared pieces.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com58

KITCHEN 101: FRUITS, VEGETABLES & HERBSThis infographic isn’t easy to understand on the surface, but once you acclimate, it’s a powerful and usefulrepresentation of the seasonality of produce. Sometimes, effective visualizations are such because they cancompact more complicated information in a smaller space — while still retaining comprehension.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com59

KITCHEN 101: PASTASome of the best infographics come from unique, out there ideas that make for visually interesting andalso aesthetically pleasing portions. This encyclopedia of pasta is one example of just that — an immenselycomprehensive take on every carb-heavy option, presented in a way that’s enjoyable to read through.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com60

LATE BLOOMERS — LATE IN LIFE SUCCESSWe all want to be inspired. You can see this in how popular quotes are all around the web. Thisinfographic capitalizes on that trend, inspiring people who maybe haven’t quite made it yet — butdefinitely still have a chance.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com61

LITERAL MEANING OF THE STATESLanguage is a common occurrence in our top 100 list — possibly because communication is one emotionaltrigger, and also because there are so many missing, imperfect elements to it. This representation capitalizes it,revealing the definitional elements of the U.S. most of didn’t know previously.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com62

MILLION LINES OF CODESometimes a simple bar graph representation of a new idea is enough to have something big. That’s whatInformationIsBeautiful.net got from this data visualization showing how many lines of code many differentthings have — including a mouse.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com63

MORNING RITUALS OF INSPIRATIONAL ENTREPRENEURSAnother in the trend of “what famous people do”, this infographic uses that clever idea and applies it tosuccessful entrepeneurs. The result was a highly shared piece that received almost 100LRDs.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com64

MOST COMMON USE OF TIMEMost of the infographics on this list should bring you something unique, or present things in a way youhaven’t otherwise seen. This is one example of originality in action, using a unique format to visualize thediffering uses of time amongst different ages. Suggested by Rand Fishkin, founder of inbound softwarecompany Moz.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com65

NFL PLAYERS MENTIONED MOST ON SPORTS CENTERThere’s nothing crazy about the data used in this piece — many others have utilized data just like it, but it’s thevisualization that blows you away. They could have taken five seconds and went with a bar chart — but thatdoesn’t make best ever lists, now does it?Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com66

OMNIBUS OF SUPERPOWERSA compendium of a different flavor, what makes this piece especially effective is how it communicates itssubject in the context of the subject — a comic book aesthetic.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com67

OSCAR DRESSES WORN BY WINNERSThe only infographic on this list that connected to an event, we had to list this piece because it went very, veryviral when it was first released, and may have been the original trigger point for “what happened in the past”trend that frequently followed after it.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com68

PLANET EARTH CONTROL DECKOne of the most impressive parts of Lutz’ animations is the scientific attention to detail. They’re stunningvisually, but beyond that they take the subject matter to a level most would never — and that’s why her work iswhat it is.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com69

SNAKE OIL SUPPLEMENTSUsing the same code as their data breaches interactive, InformationIsBeautiful realized similar success withthis piece based on the somewhat-inconsistent data on the success rate of supplements. Interactives don’t needto start from scratch to go viral.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com70

SOUP RECIPESEasy recipes deserve an easy to understand infographic. Displayed with real photographs (that could have easilybeen stock), Shape magazine takes a concept that could have boring and injects it with life.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com71

THE 10 COMMANDMENTS OF UI DESIGNOne commandment you should stick to for your next infographic? Utility. This visual isn’t breaking any designrecords, but it’s damn useful — a bookmark (or background) that many UI designers reference during theirday today.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com72

THE BIGGEST DRAGONS IN FANTASYThe overlap effect utilized here is one I had never seen. Also, there’s definitely a big market for sci-fi relatedvisuals, which makes it no surprise that this was a very successful piece for Daily Dot.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com73

THE BILLION DOLLAR GRAMInformationIsBeautiful went “outside the box” to compare billion dollar spends in this visualization. You’llnotice that most visualizations with data like this go with bargraphs — because that’s easy. But sometimes —often even — there are better formats available. The success of this piece shows that a bar graph likely wouldnot have had the same success.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com74

THE CHARTED CHEESE WHEELCheese, please. Another clever vehicle that is effective time and time again is explaining something within thedesign context of that apparatus. In this case, we get 65 cheeses within one glamorous cheese wheel.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com75

THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING LIGHT SHOW DECODERWe did our best to remove infographics you can’t relate to on this list. You may have never visited the EmpireState Building, but we thought this representation was worth including because it’s so unique, and so welldone — something that may inform your next creative piece.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com76

THE ESSENTIAL HERB & FOOD PAIRING GUIDEA pairing guide in a unique format, this infographic provides helpful tips for matching herbs with foods, butwithout boring you on the uptick. Rich colors and great illustrations will make this a joy to read the next timeyou cook a meal.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com77

THE EVOLUTION OF THE BATMAN LOGONostalgia pairs well with infographics, because we can trigger memories with design that words have a moredifficult time capturing. These evolution pieces have caught fire for that reason, and this one on the Batman logois one of the best out there.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com78

THE EVOLUTION OF THE WEBIf your interactive feels a little like a rollercoaster, you’ve probably done something right. The Evolution ofthe Web isn’t quite that, but its ability to grab you early with a rollercoaster effect and then keep you with aninteresting storyline that details the advancements of each web browser is worth checking out.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com79

THE FACEBOOK OFFERING: HOW IT COMPARESA simple but effective interactive, this visualization hits because it tells a great story, and a story that resonateswith unexpected information. Interestingly, this chart seems to try and communicate that Facebook mighthave been overvalued, yet at the time of this writing, it’s worth 254% more than its IPOprice.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com80

THE FASTEST GROWING COMPANIES IN AMERICABecause of their interactivity, some content like this may have difficulty telling a story — because it’s hardto paint a narrative for something we control the path of. Column Five flips that on its head, giving us aninteresting narrative while also retaining the ability to interact.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com81

THE GROSS, DEADLY HISTORY OF COLORStyle doesn’t always carry itself into most infographics. Brand guidelines or otherwise, a simple lack ofcreativity put borders on truely interesting pieces. This representation of historical colors shows it can bedone, representing each in an entertaining, unique format.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com82

THE GROWTH OF WALMART & SAM’S CLUBWalmart feels like a virus in this visualization which maps their growth — along with Sam’s Club — across theUnited States. Is it really a surprise that the piece received coverage in 728 different publications?Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com83

THE LARGEST VOCABULARY IN HIP-HOPThis infographic takes data viz to another level, documenting the number of words used by famous rappersto show who really has the best command on the English language. Pieces like these, that gather data frompreviously-not-considered places, are some of the most successful you will see. Suggested by Michael King,founder of inbound marketing company iPullRank.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com84

THE PACE OF SOCIAL CHANGEA pattern emerges in some of the most effective interactives here — they take you on a controlled story thattriggers your emotional heartstrings. It’d be easy to just display the story immediately, but that ability to keepyou hanging amplifies the effect. Suggested by Rand Fishkin, founder of inbound software company Moz.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com85

THE RACIAL DOT MAPNext to utility, the ability to start a conversation is an infographic’s next-best attribute. This interactive on theracial breakdown in different parts of America does just that.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com86

THE REFUGEE FLOW TOWARDS EUROPEA great interactive holds you — it doesn’t just mean you click somewhere. This resource does exactly that,ticking up over time to show you the flow of refugees into the European continent while you interact with it.It makes it an easy inclusion on this list. Suggested by Danny Ashton, founder of infographic design agencyNeoMamS tudios.Click to view the infographicwww.siegemedia.com87

THE WORLD AS 100 PEOPLEAs mentioned in the description, this isn’t a new concept. But the representation is, and that’s what made it goviral, generating 112 LRDs and more importantly, starting several conversations around race, religion, povertyand more.Click to view the infographicwww.sie

THE 100 BEST INFOGRAPHICS I f you want to create better, more effective infographics, this ebook is for you. You probably clicked this article, not because you like looking at the best infographics, but rather, because you want to make them yourself and you want those that you make, or are made for you, to be better. That’s what our team did.

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