For years, marketing has relied on the same basic funnel:
Different names, same idea.
The assumption behind it is simple:
People discover your brand, learn about it, then decide.
The problem?
That’s not how people actually experience content anymore.
Your audience doesn’t move through your marketing like it’s a Netflix series.
They don’t:
In reality, they’re scattered.
They’re on LinkedIn, YouTube, Instagram, email, podcasts, websites, and group chats. Often all in the same day. Attention is fragmented, short, and constantly interrupted.
Someone might:
None of it happens in the order you planned.
The Real Problem With the Traditional Funnel
The traditional funnel assumes control.
It assumes:
But today’s buyers control all of that.
What does still matter is this:
That’s the real question.
From Funnels to Entry Points
Instead of thinking in steps, it’s more accurate to think in entry points.
People enter your brand experience at different moments, with different needs:
Some are ready to act
Your job isn’t to force them into step one. Your job is to make sure something useful exists wherever they land.
This Is Where Video Systems Matter
This is exactly why we think in video systems, not one-off videos.
A video system allows you to:
Each video moment has a purpose:
On their own, they work independently. Together, they work as a system.
Video moments aren’t about flooding channels with content. They’re about coverage.
Coverage means:
When your system is built correctly:
Sales conversations are easier
Prospects arrive more informed
Your brand feels familiar before the first call
Momentum continues even when you’re not actively promoting
That’s the advantage of systems thinking.
The Goal Isn’t More Content. It’s More Alignment
This approach isn’t about creating more.
It’s about making sure:
Every piece has a role
Every role supports the larger strategy
Every entry point leads somewhere meaningful
When everything works together, the system does the heavy lifting.
A Better Way to Think About the Funnel
The funnel isn't dead. It's just not longer linear. It’s a web of moments, signals, and touchpoints, and the brands that win are the ones prepared for that reality. When your video strategy is built as a system, you don’t need to predict how someone will arrive.
You’re ready no matter where they do.