The Funnel Trap — And How to Escape It
Based on the same transcript.
Digital marketing funnels are often sold as the essential path to growing an online business. But for purpose-driven solopreneurs, creatives, coaches, consultants, and Substack writers, funnels can quickly become a trap.
In this episode of Creative on Purpose Live, Scott Perry [https://substack.com/profile/39971827-scott-perry] challenges the assumption that funnels are a necessary evil. He explains why traditional digital marketing funnels rely on pressure, force, manipulation, and volume, and why they often leave both the business owner and the buyer feeling misaligned.
The alternative is Be a Blessing Marketing: a principle-based approach rooted in presence, trust, permission, and real conversations. Instead of forcing people through a funnel, Scott invites you to create gravity by showing up where your people already are, telling true stories, making small promises, and keeping them.
This episode is for anyone tired of digital marketing BS and ready to build a business that funds and fits the life they actually want.
In This Episode
Scott explores:
How digital marketing funnels became treated as a “necessary evil”
Why funnels are inefficient, leaky, and often misaligned with purpose-driven work
The difference between pressure-based marketing and gravity-based marketing
How Be a Blessing Marketing creates trust through presence and service
Why subscriber count is less important than attention, permission, and engagement
How Substack can help writers, creatives, and solopreneurs reach the right people
Why “what’s it for?” is still the most important question in business
Key Ideas
Funnels are built on the wrong metaphor. People are not liquid, and they do not naturally flow through a funnel. To make a digital funnel work, pressure has to be applied.
Funnel gymnastics often turn solopreneurs into full-time digital marketers. Many end up spending most of their time optimizing systems instead of doing the work they started the business to do.
Be a Blessing Marketing starts with a different premise. Show up as you are, with what you have, where your people already are, and be useful.
Permission matters. An email address is not a lead to be exploited. It is permission to send anticipated, personal, and relevant messages.
Growth is not the goal by itself. The better question is: growth for what? The right people, paying attention for the right reasons, matter more than a large audience that does not engage.
7 Key Takeaways
* Funnels are not a necessary evil.Digital marketing funnels are relatively new. People built successful, sustainable businesses long before landing pages, lead magnets, email sequences, and automated sales pages became standard advice.
* The funnel metaphor breaks down because people are not liquid.A physical funnel works because gravity does the work. Digital marketing funnels often require pressure, force, urgency, scarcity, or manipulation to move people toward a transaction.
* Most funnels are wildly inefficient.Even a “good” funnel converts only a small percentage of the people who enter it. That means most solopreneurs need a huge volume of traffic, usually powered by ads, to make the machine work.
* Funnel gymnastics can pull you away from the work you actually care about.Scott shares how he once built a financially successful funnel-driven business, but spent most of his time managing ads, sequences, offers, and optimization instead of doing the meaningful work he started the business to do.
* Be a Blessing Marketing creates gravity instead of pressure.The better alternative is to show up where your people already are, tell true stories, have real conversations, and be genuinely useful. Trust is created through presence, not pressure.
* Growth only matters if it serves the right purpose.Subscriber counts, follower numbers, and platform metrics are not the real goal. What matters is whether the right people are paying attention, engaging, opening your emails, joining your community, and eventually asking for deeper access.
* Permission is precious.When someone gives you their email address, they are granting access to their attention. That permission should be treated with care by sending messages that are anticipated, personal, and relevant.
Standout Quote
“People don’t behave like liquid in a funnel. If your marketing requires pressure to work, it may not be aligned with the kind of business you actually want to build.”
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