Most email funnels are transactional: “Here’s the problem. Here’s my solution. Buy now.” They work, sometimes. But they’re forgettable, easily ignored, and require constant volume to generate results.
The narrative funnel flips this. Instead of a series of sales pitches, you build an email sequence that unfolds like a story—with character development, rising tension, and a payoff that happens to be your offer.
Here’s the structure:
Email 1: The Inciting Incident
Introduce the protagonist (your ideal customer) in their current state. Show the problem, but don’t solve it yet. End with a question that creates tension: “What if there’s another way?”
Email 2: The Backstory
Share your origin story. How did you encounter this problem? What did you try that failed? This builds relatability and credibility simultaneously.
Email 3: The Discovery
The moment everything changed. What insight, tool, or approach shifted your trajectory? This is where you introduce your methodology without naming the offer yet.
Email 4: The Transformation
Show proof. Case studies, testimonials, or your own results. The reader needs to believe the transformation is real.
Email 5: The Obstacle
Address the objection. What’s stopping them? Usually it’s not money—it’s fear, doubt, or misalignment. Name it, validate it, and reframe it.
Email 6: The Invitation
Present the offer as the natural next chapter. Not “buy my thing,” but “here’s how we do this together.”
Email 7: The Choice
End with agency. You’ve told the story. Now they decide if they’re the protagonist who takes action, or the one who stays where they are.
The narrative funnel doesn’t feel like marketing because it isn’t—it’s storytelling with a commercial outcome. And people don’t resent a good story, even when it ends with an offer.
