The marketing funnel is one of the most enduring ideas in modern marketing.
It is also one of the oldest. For decades, marketers have built strategies, budgets and reporting around the same model: awareness at the top, attention at the bottom, conversion at the bottom.
It’s clean. logical It’s easy to explain in the boardroom.
There’s just one problem: Customers aren’t buying that way anymore.
In 2026, the idea that people move politely from awareness to purchase becomes increasingly detached from reality. The old funnel assumes that the customer is moving exactly along a pre-planned path. In reality, they jump on platforms, double up, and make decisions in moments.
Yet, many organizations still organize their marketing around a linear funnel that was created for a completely different era of media, tracking and customer behavior.
They bring the 2010 playbook to the battlefield of 2026 and wonder why their results are declining.
So here’s the cold, hard truth: The marketing funnel isn’t just broken — it’s dead. And it’s time the marketers finally buried it.
Many structural changes have shattered the assumptions that the marketing funnel once relied on for success.
Privacy changes have undermined tracking and remarketing, email engagement continues to slide, and attribution is becoming harder to validate as part of customer journeys across devices and platforms.
At the same time, consumers have become quick decision makers.
A person researching a mortgage or personal loan can access comparison tools, calculators, product information and reviews in minutes. The same is true for credit cards, savings products and digital banking services.
In many cases, a consumer makes a decision before the care arrangement even begins its work.
A key challenge facing brands today is that intent can both appear and disappear in the blink of an eye. If your marketing can’t capture that intent at this point, you’re not just losing clicks; You are surrendering customers to competition that moves faster.
The traditional funnel is built on the idea that visitors go through three main behaviors: brand awareness, reconsideration, and conversion.
But the client stopped following that script years ago.
Consumers are now researching products on multiple tabs, platforms and devices at once. They bounce between resources, compare alternatives and loop back through their decision-making process before committing.
A customer researching a credit card might watch a TV ad during a football match, Google offers on their phone, open three comparison tabs, watch a quick explainer video on social media and scan a few reviews.
Sometimes this process takes days. Sometimes it takes half an hour. Sometimes, they fill the application form in minutes.
In other words, the neat little funnel marketers love to paint on slides no longer reflect how real customers behave.
The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) has been calling for this for years. Its research shows that modern customer journeys are fragmented and non-linear, with customers constantly switching between behaviors such as searching, scrolling, streaming and buying.
Instead of forcing this dirty behavior into a clean funnel, BCG offers a different framework: influence maps.
Rather than asking what stage a person is in, this strategy identifies the points that influence decision-making—because influence can happen anywhere.
Many marketers still hold onto the old playbook with the white cloths, believing it still has some life left in it.
But the reality is that the traditional funnel leaves no room for the new age of marketing, where any interaction with a potential customer may be the moment they decide to convert.
In this landscape, every touch point must be able to educate, motivate and convert at the same time. Basically, if your marketing can’t convert someone from “I’ve never heard of you” to “take my money” in one interaction, you’re missing out.
This does not mean that every ad needs to come in motion.
This means that every interaction should support a decision if the customer is ready to make one. If this information is not available, the customer will continue to move. And in digital markets, that switch happens in seconds.
Few industries are feeling this shift more than financial services.
Historically, banking relied on long decision cycles and strong brand recognition. Consumers often spend weeks researching mortgages, loans or credit cards before choosing a provider.
Today, most of this research is done online in compressed bursts. Prospective borrowers will browse various lender websites, comparison platforms, consumer reviews and social media descriptors in an afternoon.
In other words, the marketing battle is often won or lost before the bank even talks to the customer.
For banks competing with digital-first challenges and fintechs, that is changing the rules of acquisition. Marketing can’t try to keep prospects on a clean path that no longer exists. It should influence customers and capture intent wherever it appears.
This is where influence maps get their hold.
Instead of organizing marketing around funnel stages, organizations identify the touchpoints that really influence customer decisions and focus investment there.
For financial institutions, this may mean strengthening digital product pages, improving educational content or investing more in channels where the intent is there, such as search and comparison platforms.
The task now is to create a marketing system that can influence and convert customers wherever they encounter your brand.
Practically, this means:
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Design marketing that can convert in a single interaction.
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Creating richer, more engaging digital experiences.
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Setting up messaging at every customer touchpoint.
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Invest in channels where customer intent already exists.
In short, marketing should be engineered as a complete customer acquisition system, not a series of discrete campaigns.
Fennel had his moment. That moment has passed
The marketing funnel was a useful simplification of an earlier era. But now, customer behavior is changing faster than marketing frameworks.
Today’s journeys are messy, fast and multi-channel. Consumers are constantly moving between platforms, sources and devices, gathering information and making decisions much faster than most marketing strategies.
2026 will be the year most marketers realize they are polishing the funnel built for the customer that has been in place for years – while brands win the battle to influence customers wherever and whenever intent appears.
Sabri Sabi is the founder of King Kong, Australia’s fastest growing digital marketing agency
“2026 Is the Year the Marketing Funnel Finally Dies” was originally created and published by Retail Banker International, a brand owned by Global Data.
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