The marketing funnel is total bullshit. But I still use it every day.
Lots of smart people say we should toss the entire concept of the funnel (e.g., Marc Binkley, Mark O’Brien, Anton Lipkanou, and many more). And honestly? I totally see their perspective. Yet I still find myself mapping content to funnel stages, discussing TOFU vs BOFU strategies with clients, and using the framework to organize marketing plans.
That's the tension at the heart of many frameworks, isn't it? We know they oversimplify the messy reality of how people live, work, make decisions, and more. But it’s this simplification that makes them useful—they help us navigate chaos and take control of a complex world. In marketing, the funnel is perhaps the most ubiquitous example.
Today I want to explore why the funnel is flawed, why I still find it valuable, and how tailoring your understanding of the funnel (like Digital Sisco does with our "Pink Cloud" concept) can bridge the gap between theory and real-world marketing.
First, let’s all level-set on some of the flaws of the funnel that I wholeheartedly agree with:
The funnel implies people are rational beings who methodically progress through awareness, consideration, and decision. But that's not how humans work—especially in B2C, where emotional and impulsive decisions are common.
Consider how a single Instagram post showing your friend's vacation at a boutique hotel can trigger an immediate booking without any "consideration" phase. Or how many of us FOMO-try every new AI tool because we’re worried about being left behind rather than really making a considered buying decision.
Even in B2B, with all our process diagrams and procurement policies, the reality is messier than we'd like to admit. People are influenced by biases, relationships, and factors that don't fit neatly into funnel stages.
Attribution is a mess. Last-click attribution tells half the story at best. Certain marketing channels get all the credit while others look like they’re driving mere vanity metrics. The connective tissue between the funnel stages is rarely, if ever, tracked and that story remains untold on most marketing teams.
This leads to a disproportionate focus on BOFU activities because they're closer to the conversion and easier to measure—not because they're actually more important. Everything that’s not BOFU often gets lumped into a vague TOFU catchall category.
We’re a pragmatic team at Digital Sisco: We develop and present models to our clients that we think might serve them and help uplevel their approach to marketing (and their results).
We can definitely argue (and agree with) both sides of the funnel argument. But, for us, the useful, practical applications of the funnel trump the areas it falls short. You can simultaneously hold on to both!
One way we’ve made the funnel even more useful for both our work and clients is with our "Pink Cloud" concept. (If you want to dive deeper into how we think about the funnel and particularly our Pink Cloud concept, check out our detailed post on the topic).
High level, the Pink Cloud refers to content that speaks magnetically to your target audience but isn’t directly related to the problems your product or service solves. It sits above the traditional funnel, creating engagement and connection before explicit problem-solving begins. This new category helps us ensure that top-of-funnel doesn’t become a vague catch-all category.
We use these funnel definitions to organize our thinking and planning without being constrained by it. For example, we might map keywords and content to funnel stages in order to understand the historical work that has been done (and the implied strategy that was driving it) in order to understand gaps and potential challenges it has created for the teams we’re working with.
See, it’s not really about expectations of how people behave: We expect them to jump around, skip stages, and sometimes completely subvert our carefully constructed paths. It’s actually about understanding and improving the work clients do, and that we do for them.
For example, we often see:
Despite its acknowledged flaws, I find the funnel incredibly useful:
Marketing can often over-index on its investment in BOFU or conversion-attributed channels. But we all intuitively understand that not every marketing activity should be conversion-focused (no matter what our CFO or Chief Metrics Officer-style CMO says).
The funnel helps explain investments in awareness and consideration, recognizing that people need different types of information at different points in their journey. It reminds us that not everyone is ready to buy right now – and our marketing should address that reality.
Marketing teams can get notoriously siloed. You may have a ‘fuzzy’ social media team and content team playing in Pink Cloud. Meanwhile, your performance marketers feel resentfully on the line to drive real metrics.
An SEO or content marketer may measure their contribution in rankings, clicks, and eyeballs and assume it’s somebody else’s job to convert them.
But every channel can likely contribute a little more to each funnel stage, while appreciating those connections. This helps teams connect dots to each other and to the ultimate result (revenue) rather than staying siloed and chasing individual metrics, real or vanity.
It’s so obvious but it does need to be said often: Different deliverables have different metrics of success.
Looking at your top-performing blog posts by page views alone may lead you to believe you should write more TOFU-style blog posts. But if you put on a different hat (like conversion), those TOFU posts may suddenly look junky compared to your ‘boring’ product marketing posts
The point is, that they each have different jobs and should be measured on the job they’re supposed to do, not against each other. The funnel helps set appropriate KPIs for different pages, pieces of content, and keywords—acknowledging that success can look different for different assets.
We work with many different clients, with many different skill sets and experience levels. And we’re usually working across marketing teams. Level-setting on simple language and frameworks is key to our success. And the funnel remains a useful shorthand when you’re in the weeds of keywords and content executions. For example,