display: grid; grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr 1fr; gap: 1rem; margin: 1.2rem 0; } .creative-card { background: var(--white); border: 1px solid var(--card-border); border-radius: 12px; padding: 1.2rem; transition: all 0.2s; } .creative-card:hover { border-color: rgba(177,108,234,0.3); transform: translateY(-2px); box-shadow: 0 4px 12px rgba(0,0,0,0.06); } .creative-card .cc-type { font-size: 0.68rem; font-weight: 500; text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 0.08em; margin-bottom: 0.5rem; } .creative-card p { font-size: 0.82rem; margin-bottom: 0.5rem; } .creative-card p:last-child { margin-bottom: 0; } /* ═══ SOURCE GRID (2-col) ═══ */ .source-grid { display: grid; grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr; gap: 1rem; margin: 1.2rem 0; } .source-card { background: var(--white); border: 1px solid var(--card-border); border-radius: 12px; padding: 1.2rem; transition: all 0.2s; } .source-card:hover { border-color: rgba(177,108,234,0.3); transform: translateY(-2px); box-shadow: 0 4px 12px rgba(0,0,0,0.06); } .source-card .sc-num { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; width: 22px; height: 22px; border-radius: 50%; background: var(--near-black); color: var(--white); font-size: 0.65rem; font-weight: 700; margin-bottom: 0.5rem; } .source-card h4 { font-size: 0.9rem; font-weight: 600; color: var(--near-black); margin-bottom: 0.3rem; } .source-card p { font-size: 0.82rem; color: var(--light-grey); margin-bottom: 0; } /* ═══ H3 ═══ */ h3 { font-size: 1.05rem; font-weight: 600; letter-spacing: -0.02em; color: var(--near-black); margin: 1.8rem 0 0.6rem; } p { margin-bottom: 0.7rem; } strong { color: var(--dark-grey); } ol, ul { padding-left: 1.4rem; margin-bottom: 0.7rem; } li { margin-bottom: 0.3rem; } /* ═══ PHASE COMPLETE ═══ */ .phase-complete-btn { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; gap: 0.5rem; margin-top: 1.5rem; padding: 0.6rem 1.2rem; background: var(--white); border: 2px solid var(--border-grey); border-radius: 4px; font-family: inherit; font-size: 0.85rem; font-weight: 600; color: var(--light-grey); cursor: pointer; transition: all 0.2s; } .phase-complete-btn:hover { border-color: var(--coral); color: var(--coral); } .phase-complete-btn.done { background: var(--near-black); border-color: var(--near-black); color: var(--white); } /* ═══ FOOTER ═══ */ .footer { background: var(--near-black); color: rgba(255,255,255,0.5); padding: 2rem; text-align: center; font-size: 0.8rem; } .footer strong { color: rgba(255,255,255,0.8); } /* ═══ PRINT ═══ */ @media print { .phase-nav, .phase-complete-btn { display: none; } .hero { padding: 2rem; } body { font-size: 10pt; } .phase { page-break-inside: avoid; } .context-note { display: none; } } @media (max-width: 640px) { .hero h1 { font-size: 1.9rem; } .hero { padding: 2.5rem 1.5rem 2rem; } .container { padding: 0 1.2rem; } .creative-grid { grid-template-columns: 1fr; } .source-grid { grid-template-columns: 1fr; } } /* Flow diagram animations */ .diagram-line { stroke-dasharray: 1000; stroke-dashoffset: 1000; animation: drawLine 2s ease-out forwards; } .diagram-text { opacity: 0; animation: fadeIn 0.6s ease-out forwards; animation-delay: 1.2s; } @keyframes drawLine { to { stroke-dashoffset: 0; } } @keyframes fadeIn { to { opacity: 1; } }
Replace your pressure-based funnel with a system of positive experiences that lead prospects to buy on their own terms. Build once, run on autopilot.
Most marketing advice tells you to build a funnel: grab attention, push prospects through stages, and close the sale. The problem is that modern buyers resist pressure. They need 8–12 touchpoints before they trust you enough to buy — and they want to get there on their own terms. This playbook shows you how to replace your funnel with a “playground” of helpful experiences that attract, educate, and convert prospects without the hard sell. You’ll build it phase by phase over 3–6 weeks.
For decades, marketing funnels worked. You found a prospect, pushed them through stages (awareness, consideration, decision), and closed the sale. Pressure on every step. It worked because people needed fewer touchpoints to decide.
That era ended. Google research confirms it: the traditional funnel has broken down. People now need 8–12 touchpoints before buying—not 2–4. And they hate pressure. They want to explore, learn, and reach their own conclusion.
The Marketing Playground replaces this. Instead of a funnel (which implies pressure), you build a playground of positive experiences across three zones. Prospects move through at their own pace, discovering answers to their problems, learning how to solve them, and confirming you’re the right fit. Buying becomes the natural outcome.
Every customer moves through three zones of awareness before buying. Your playground must serve all three:
| Zone | Customer Awareness | What They’re Thinking | Your Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Problem | High problem awareness, Low solution awareness | “Something’s wrong. What’s causing this?” | Diagnose their situation. Show you understand. |
| Process | High problem & solution awareness | “Solutions exist. What’s the best approach?” | Teach the methodology. Share best practices. |
| Prize | High problem & solution awareness, Low buying confidence | “Is this the right solution for me?” | Remove doubt. Show what buying gets them. |
Before you build experiences, map where your customer is starting and where they end up. This requires three core questions:
Your customer knows something is broken. They don’t know why yet. Define the surface-level problem they’re facing. This is what they’re googling. This is what keeps them awake at night.
Example (Acme Inc, a 12-person accounting firm): “We get referrals, but new enquiries dry up whenever a referral source moves on.”
After diagnosis, they need to know how solutions work. Not your solution specifically—the category of solution. What are the approaches? What are the trade-offs? What does the journey look like?
Example (Acme Inc): “We could run Google Ads (pay for visibility), post educational content on LinkedIn (earn visibility), or build a referral programme with incentives (scale word-of-mouth).”
The outcome of solving it. Not just “more leads”—be specific. What does life look like? What changes? What becomes possible?
Example (Acme Inc): “Three to five inbound enquiries a week from people who already understand what we do. No more cold outreach. The partners spend their time on client work instead of chasing leads.”
Define your three zones:
Understanding what your customer is actually thinking helps you speak to them. Each zone has a different level of skepticism and readiness:
| Stage | Awareness Level | Customer Mindset | Experience Goal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Problem Zone | Something is wrong, but they don’t see the root cause | “Am I the only one feeling this? Is this fixable?” | Validate their problem. Show you understand the symptoms and causes. |
| Process Zone | They know solutions exist, but they don’t know which approach is right for them | “What are my options? How do I choose? What are the trade-offs?” | Educate on methodology. Show different approaches. Establish your point of view. |
| Prize Zone | They’ve decided on an approach but aren’t sure if your version is the right fit | “Will this actually work for me? What will I actually get? Is there risk?” | Remove objections. Show proof. Make the buying decision feel safe. |
With your three zones mapped, you know exactly what your customer is thinking at each stage. Next, you’ll build the first set of experiences — the ones that meet prospects where they are: aware of a problem but unsure what’s causing it.
Problem experiences do one thing: help your customer diagnose their situation. You’re not selling. You’re serving. You’re saying, “You’re experiencing X. Here’s why. Here’s what to do about it.”
Use this four-step framework for any problem experience. Think of it like a doctor’s consultation — you wouldn’t prescribe a treatment before understanding the symptoms:
When you visit a doctor with back pain, they don’t immediately prescribe pills. They ask about symptoms (when does it hurt?), dig into causes (is it posture? weak core? old injury?), suggest treatments (physical therapy, stretching, seeing a specialist), and set expectations (it will take 6 weeks). You trust them because they treated you as a whole person, not a problem to sell a product to.
Your problem experiences should do the same. Show your customer you understand their world. That builds trust. Trust builds the foundation for everything that comes next.
Your problem experience headlines should match this pattern:
“Are you frustrated that [symptom] despite doing [what they’ve tried]?”
Examples:
This formula works because it validates the frustration (emotional validation) while revealing the gap between effort and outcome (the real problem).
Mini-Courses
3–5 short modules (5–10 minutes each) that take someone from symptom to diagnosis. Use the clinical method as your outline.
Example (Acme Inc): “Why Your Accounting Firm Gets Referrals But Can’t Attract Clients on Its Own”
Problem Diagnosis Quizzes
15–20 questions that help customers identify their specific situation. Use branching logic to give personalised diagnoses.
Example (Acme Inc): “Answer 12 questions to find out why your firm isn’t showing up when people search for an accountant”
Discussion Groups
Private WhatsApp or Facebook groups for people struggling with the same problem. Moderate conversations. Share insights. Build community.
Example (Acme Inc): “Join the Small Firm Owners Who Want More Enquiries Without Cold Calling group”
Mini-Course Title: “Three Hidden Reasons Your Website Gets Traffic But Zero Enquiries (And How to Fix Them)”
Quiz Title: “What’s Stopping New Clients From Finding You? Take This 12-Question Assessment”
Group Title: “Small Business Owners Frustrated With Marketing That Doesn’t Work — Share What’s Happening”
Your problem experiences help prospects diagnose their situation. Once they understand what’s going wrong, they naturally start asking “How do I fix this?” That’s exactly what your process experiences will answer.
After diagnosis comes education. Your customer now knows what’s wrong. They want to know how to fix it. Process experiences teach methodology and best practices. This is where you establish your point of view and build credibility.
You’re answering: “If I commit to solving this, what’s the process I should follow?” You’re not selling your specific solution yet. You’re teaching the right approach.
This builds trust because you’re generous with knowledge. You’re not gatekeeping the answer. You’re saying, “Here’s how to think about this. Here are the steps. Here are the pitfalls. Here’s what good looks like.”
Long-form guides (5,000–15,000 words) covering the complete process from A to B. Comprehensive. Quotable. Something people bookmark.
Conversational deep-dives (45–90 minutes) on methodology. Interview experts. Tell stories. Make it memorable.
Stories of how someone went from problem to solved. Show the process in action. Highlight decisions, trade-offs, results.
Interactive sessions (60–90 minutes) teaching the process. Q&A. Group exercises. People leave with a framework.
Tools that benchmark where they stand against best practices. Show their gaps. Motivate them to move forward.
Structure your content using the key stages of solving their problem:
Your process experiences teach the methodology and build credibility. At this point, prospects know what’s wrong and how to fix it. The remaining question is: “Is your version of this the right fit for me?” That’s where prize experiences come in.
Your customer has learned how to solve the problem. Now they need to confirm: “Is this the right solution for me? Will your approach actually get me the outcome I want?”
Prize experiences remove the last layer of doubt. This is where you show what success looks like. What they get. What changes. What becomes possible.
Free Trials
Let them try it. Experience what solving the problem actually feels like. Make it real.
Example (Acme Inc): A free 30-minute “marketing audit call” where you walk them through exactly what you’d change on their website.
ROI Calculators
Show the money impact. “If you implement this, here’s what the numbers look like.”
Example (Acme Inc): Input your average client value and close rate, see how many extra clients per month a working website could deliver.
Explainer Videos
Show exactly what buying looks like. What’s included. What the process is. Remove mystery.
Example (Acme Inc): “Here’s what happens in the first 30 days after you sign up” (5-minute walkthrough video)
Customer Events
Invite existing customers to share their before/after. Let prospects see themselves in the story.
Example (Acme Inc): Virtual roundtable: “How three small firms went from zero inbound leads to five a week”
Prize experiences need three things:
At this stage, your customer has answered “Do I have a problem?” and “Is there a way to solve it?” Now they’re asking “Can I afford it?” and “Will it work for me specifically?” Prize experiences remove emotional and financial risk. They make buying feel safe.
You now have experiences across all three zones. The final step is wiring them together so prospects flow naturally from one to the next — without you having to push them.
You now have 6–9 experiences across three phases. The final step is connecting them into a coherent playground where prospects naturally flow from one experience to the next.
Your playground works like this:
This isn’t linear for everyone. Some people take one course, then skip straight to a free trial. Others go through everything multiple times. That’s okay. The playground gives them choice.
For each of your 6–9 experiences, add explicit calls to action that point to the next logical experience:
Remember the goal: 8–12 touchpoints before purchase. One touchpoint = one interaction with one experience. Map this out:
Example progression for Acme Inc (accounting firm):
Total: 10 touches
Your playground doesn’t live in one place. Distribute experiences across channels where your customer already is:
Track these metrics:
You’ll learn which experiences are working and which need improvement. Optimize as you go.
You have a playbook for building a marketing playground. Over the next 3–6 weeks, you’re building:
Start with your strongest content. If you’re a writer, start with the guide. If you’re a speaker, start with the workshop or podcast. If you’re analytical, start with the assessment. Build from strength. The rest will follow.
As you build, remember: the playground isn’t pressure. It’s permission. You’re giving prospects permission to learn, explore, and decide on their own terms. That’s why it works.