The traditional marketing funnel has long been the backbone of performance marketing. Given the linear structure of the funnel with stages like awareness, consideration, and conversion, it was once thought to be a silver bullet for growing a business. In reality, today’s consumer does not take a single path toward making a purchase. They go from one device to another, from one channel to another, from one social media platform to another, and their path to purchase is influenced not only by an ad, but also by reviews, communities, influencers, and experiences. In response, performance marketing is undergoing a significant shift from funnel-centric tactics to flywheel strategies designed around continuous engagement and experience.
The Rise of the Experience First Consumer
Consumers today are more well-informed, digitally native, and experience paved than ever before. They expect brands to not just sell, but add value either through personalized communication, seamless digital experiences or timely and relevant content. The considerations of convenience, authenticity, and trust now float higher than price points or promotional messaging.
An experience first consumer wanting, rather feeling understood, doesn’t just engage with brands seeking to sell their product, but more importantly brands that have provided value consistently across touchpoints from the ad impression through post purchase interaction/scenarios. In this evolution, the marketer role is expanding and evolving the way we think about performance is challenging.
From Funnel to Flywheel: What’s Changing?
The marketing funnel is inherently transactional. It focuses on pushing prospects through the funnel to the next stage and eventually to conversion. In the days when consumers made simpler decisions, this approach was widely successful. The funnel model does not acknowledge the nonlinear nature of the modern consumer journey nor the significance of the post purchase phase of the consumer journey.
The marketing flywheel presents a circular instead of linear framework. The flywheel has the customer at the center of the model, driven by momentum and feedback loops and continued engagement. In the flywheel, purchase does not conclude the customer experience; it is just the beginning. Happy customers become repeat buyers, brand advocates, and referral sources. All of these contribute to continuous growth.
In a flywheel model:
- Attraction includes not just ads but useful content, social proof, and organic discovery.
- Engagement goes beyond conversion to include support, education, and community.
- Delight means creating memorable experiences that lead to loyalty and advocacy.
Data Driven Personalization Fuels the Flywheel
Personalization has driven the marketing flywheel. In the era of the cookie fade out, the utilization of first party data has become extremely essential and brands rely on actual interactions with consumers to personalize messaging, offers and content.
Performance marketers are utilizing data platforms, AI, and automation technology to construct segmented user journeys based on first party data to create a personalized experience, but what has changed is that the mindset has shifted. Personalization isn’t just about delivering the right message at the right time; it is about providing a better experience. When done well, personalization can feel intuitive, helpful, and humanized.
For instance, after an online skincare brand uses past purchases, browsing behavior, and responses to quizzes to suggest a personalized skincare routine, they don’t just stop at the sale. They follow up with tips for application, alerts reminding them to restock, and rewards for loyalty, allowing the wheel to turn.
Performance Metrics: From CPA to CLV
As strategies change, the way success is measured must change too; in traditional performance marketing each successive investment in marketing is measured in cost per acquisition (CPA), click through rates (CTR), or return on ad spend (ROAS). These metrics are important. However, they don’t tell the whole story of lifetime value of a customer, and the power of a great experience.
The forward thinkers in marketing are now focusing on:
- Customer Lifetime Value (CLV): Measuring the long-term value of customers gained, not just short-term transactions.
- Engagement Quality: Time spent on site, repeat visits, and content interaction.
- Referral and Advocacy Rates: How likely a customer is to refer or promote the brand organically.
- Customer Satisfaction (CSAT) and Net Promoter Score (NPS): Indicators of brand health and experience quality.
By aligning performance metrics with the flywheel model, brands gain a more holistic view of growth.
Case in Point: Experience Led Performance in Action
Consider the ways streaming platforms think about customer acquisition and retention. Sure, the initial ads may highlight exclusive content, but there is a ton of work happening after the subscription transition. Suggestions, user experience, binge-watching alerts, personalized playlists, all of these evolve to serve the goals of engagement and retention. The longer you engage a viewer, the faster the flywheel spins, and the happier they are – the more likely they become your evangelist.
The same is happening with D2C brands, and they are creating whole customer ecosystems around their products. Unboxing videos, influencer campaigns, and loyalty communities are all touchpoints that can and are continuously being optimized towards delight. In turn creating lower acquisition costs long-term and more customer equity.
Human Insight in a Digital Age
Despite the advance of algorithms and artificial intelligence, the human insight remains irreplaceable. Data tells you what a customer has done, but not necessarily why. This is what makes qualitative input, social listening, and customer interviews so important for creating empathetic and resonant experiences.
Today’s marketing teams need to balance these two approaches. They utilize technology for scale and speed, while also using human intuition to shape an narratives, create emotion, and build trust. A performance campaign designed for clicks that does not land on the emotion will not persist in creating loyal customers.
Breaking Silos: Performance Meets Brand
One of the most significant changes happening in performance marketing is the breaking down of the silos between brand and performance teams. A few years ago, performance marketing was perceived as strictly numbers driven; now it is being driven by storytelling, design, and brand strategy.
Brand and performance are not mutually exclusive. A brand’s narrative informs its performance, and vice versa. Experience first consumers do not delineate perceived brand ads from performance ads. They only judge if the interaction feels authentic, interesting, and relevant.
Marketers are merging creative storytelling with measurable tactics to develop campaigns that not only perform, but resonate. Think about Nike being able to combine brand purpose with digital targeting as well as those fintech apps that are merging utility driven onboarding flows with lifestyle led content.
Preparing for the Future: Flywheel Ready Teams
To succeed in this new era, marketing teams need to be nimble, cross functional and aligned on customer experience. Success is reliant on a shared vision, understanding how to work together across different disciplines, using tools, and commitment to a customer centric approach, not just on data.
This means:
- Creating shared KPIs across performance and brand teams
- Investing in CRM, content, and CX tools alongside media platforms
- Building content engines that fuel not just acquisition but post sale engagement
- Developing internal feedback loops between sales, support, and marketing
In conclusion, as performance marketing expands to serve experience first consumers, the flywheel offers a better, scalable, and customer centric framework. Rather than measuring success via one single conversion, we can measure success as an ongoing value exchange.
For marketers, this is both a risk and a chance to move away from arbitrary short term wins and to sustainable growth. The brands who win tomorrow will be those who see performance as a mindset, centered around human experience and continuous improvement and long, heavily invested relationships.
(Views are personal)
















