The nervous system is the customer
Designing for reflex, not decision.
This is the companion piece to Your Customer Is Three People. That essay mapped who your customer is. This one is about how you build for them, not as a rational actor moving through a funnel, but as a nervous system navigating states it didn’t choose.
A few weeks ago, Monica Vinader sent an email with the subject line: “Rather not hear about Mother’s Day?”
That was it, just a quiet acknowledgment that for a meaningful portion of their list, the promotional cascade that was about to begin was not a gift but a wound and an opt-out button that asked nothing in return.
I’ve been thinking about that email ever since because of what it understood that almost nothing else in my inbox does. It understood that before I am a customer, I am a nervous system. And that nervous system had already decided, in the milliseconds before I read a single word, whether this was a safe place to be.
Attention spans aren’t declining because people are lazier. They’re declining because the nervous system has learned, correctly, that most digital environments are not safe. Not in the clinical sense in the deep, pre-conscious sense that neuroscientist Stephen Porges described in his polyvagal theory. Before your brain makes a decision, your autonomic nervous system has already scanned the environment for threat. The process takes milliseconds. Porges called it neuroception, a below-conscious surveillance that routes the body toward openness or away from danger before the thinking mind has voted.
Most design thinking still gets it wrong: it treats the nervous system as a gatekeeper to cognition. Calm the person down, the thinking goes, and then you can reach the rational mind. That framing reinstates the same Cartesian split it claims to solve — body as obstacle, thinking as the goal.
Consider what makes thrifting feel different from buying the same item online.
The thrift store is, by every metric of conversion optimization, a disaster. No personalization, no recommendations or reviews. No “only 2 left.” The inventory is random, the lighting is often bad, and nobody is trying to close you. And yet people describe finding something at a thrift store the way they describe falling in love — the specific thrill of the Levi’s jacket in exactly the right wash, the ceramic bowl that was somehow waiting. The desire feels real because it is. Nobody manufactured it. The nervous system was never under pressure, so when want arrived, it had somewhere to land.
Ecommerce inverts this entirely. The product is surfaced because an algorithm calculated that you would want it. The social proof is pre-loaded. The scarcity is engineered. Every element of the page was tested to produce a decision. And it works up to a point. But what it produces isn’t desire. It’s compliance. The nervous system was managed toward a purchase, and somewhere in the body, it knows the difference. This is why return rates for algorithmically recommended purchases are often significantly lower than those for self-sought items, particularly when the recommendation leads to an impulse buy. The body is correcting a decision the funnel made for it.
What a regulated nervous system actually enables isn’t better decision-making. It’s fuller presence. Sensation, emotion, cognition, the impulse toward action, wonder, aesthetic perception don’t operate in sequence. They are expressions of the same underlying state. A person whose nervous system has found safety doesn’t just think more clearly. They feel more. They notice more. They can be moved. Curiosity becomes possible. The aesthetic registers. The desire has somewhere to land.
When that state collapses under friction, urgency, overwhelm, noise, it isn’t a cognitive faculty that shuts down first. It’s the whole texture of experience. Nothing feels like it matters enough to act on. The wonder goes. And with it, any chance you had.
A confusing onboarding flow, a wall of testimonials that feel pressured, a countdown timer. These aren’t just bad UX. They are physiological events, ones that collapse that texture before the person has read a single word of your offer. They’re being escorted out by circuits that are older than language, and what leaves with them isn’t just a decision. It’s an entire quality of aliveness.
The infrastructure of persuasion we built over two decades (education section, desire amplification, case study stack, urgency trigger, final CTA) was designed for a person who could be reached through argument alone. It assumed that if the logic was sound and the benefits were clear, the sale would follow. It left the nervous system out entirely. And the nervous system, it turns out, was always the whole game.
So what does a nervous-system-informed experience actually look like?
Not calmer or slower, necessarily but more sequenced. The shift is from designing for a rational arc (stranger to buyer, one section at a time) to designing for physiological state.
The question stops being “does this section/campaign/website educate?” and starts being: “what state is this person arriving in, and does what I’ve built meet them there?”
The audit is simple: open your last three campaigns and ask not what they were trying to say, but what state they assumed the reader was in when they arrived.
If you read Your Customer Is Three People, you already know that your customer isn’t a unified actor moving cleanly through your funnel. They are a mirror self, a severed twin, a shadow buyer — each with different hungers, different hours, different tolerances for friction. Here is the part I didn’t say then: those selves also have different nervous systems.
The mirror self, the person who finds you through a piece of content, a share, a recommendation, arrives regulated and often curious. They chose to be here. This is a nervous system in ventral vagal territory: open, socially safe, capable of absorbing nuance and identity signaling. This is the state where a brand voice lands, where an aesthetic registers, where someone decides whether you’re for them. The move here is not to convert. It is to not dysregulate. Hit them with a pop-up, a flashing notification, a density of competing CTAs and you’ve burned the only moment they were ever going to be fully present.
The severed twin with the abandoned cart, the half-finished application, the email sequence ghost, arrives activated. There’s a low-grade threat encoded in returning to something unfinished. You’re asking them to revisit a version of themselves they didn’t commit to. This is where most re-engagement sequences make the fatal mistake: they amplify. More testimonials, more benefits, a sharper deadline. But urgency applied to an already-activated nervous system doesn’t persuade, it confirms the threat. What actually works here is co-regulation. You were looking at this and it’s still here, no pressure. The phrase that converts isn’t the most exciting one. It’s the one that makes the person feel safe enough to decide.
The removal is even simpler: find the urgency trigger in your re-engagement sequence and delete it. Replace it with one sentence that acknowledges the pause without judging it. That’s the whole intervention.
Instead of: “Only 3 left — complete your order before it’s gone.”
Try: “We’re keeping one for you, whenever you’re ready.”
No deadline, no scarcity, no restatement of the case. Just an acknowledgment that the pause was legitimate and a door left open without pressure. The nervous system reads the absence of urgency as its own signal. Safe to return and safe to decide.
The shadow buyer, the one who purchases at 11:47pm, no research, no deliberation, doesn’t need to be sold. They’ve already sold themselves, in a previous session, in a previous version of the day. What they need is … almost nothing. A frictionless checkout, a single confirmation, the feeling that this transaction is simple and the outcome is certain. Any content that treats them like a new reader is a dysregulation event. Every extra word is a reason to close the tab.
But before you can design for these states, you have to learn to read them.
And the good news is you already have the data. You’re just not asking it the right question.
Time of day is a state signal. The person opening your email at 7am on a weekday is in a fundamentally different physiological register than the one who clicks at 11pm on their phone.
Entry point is a state signal. Someone who arrives via a referral from a trusted friend has a nervous system that’s already partially regulated aka trust was pre-loaded before they got to you. Someone who arrives via a retargeting ad is the severed twin, carrying the low-grade dysregulation of an unfinished decision. Treat them accordingly.
Scroll depth and session time are state signals. A person who reads slowly, all the way through, is regulated enough to deliberate. The one who bounced at the third scroll is telling you their nervous system called it before their mind did.
Content behavior is perhaps the most underused signal of all. Someone who watches a video to the end is in a different state than someone who skims headlines. Someone who returns to the same page three times without converting isn’t confused about your offer, they’re a severed twin whose nervous system hasn’t found safety yet. The re-engagement email that acknowledges this quietly, without pressure, will outperform the one that adds urgency every time.
Most analytics dashboards are built to tell you what people did. The more useful question is what state they were in when they did it. Those two questions have entirely different design implications.
Nervous system as a new data layer
The behavioral signals described above time of day, entry point, scroll depth, session count, content completion are not just proxies for state. They are the beginning of a nervous system map. Right now, brands treat them as engagement metrics. The more useful reframe is that they are physiological data, collected passively, at scale, every time someone interacts with a digital environment. You are already running a nervous system study. You just haven’t named it that.
The next move and some brands are already making it quietly is to build measurement infrastructure around state rather than action. Not “what did they click” but “what were they ready for.” Not “where did they drop off” but “where did the nervous system call it.” This reframes the entire analytics stack. Session replays stop being evidence of UX failure and start being diagnostic tools for dysregulation. Email open rates stop being vanity metrics and start being state signals — a 40% open rate at 11pm from a returning segment is a shadow buyer population, already decided, waiting for a frictionless path to completion. Cohort analysis stops being demographic and starts being physiological: who arrives regulated, who arrives activated, what does each cohort actually need.
The brands that move first on this are not building a better funnel. They are building a different kind of relationship with their customer’s body. That sounds strange until you realize it’s what every good physical retail experience has always done intuitively — reading the room, adjusting the pace, knowing when to speak and when to step back. The difference is that it’s now possible to do this at scale, systematically, with data you already have. The thrift store has always known this. The question is whether ecommerce is finally willing to learn it.
What this makes clear is that the traditional sales page isn’t just structurally outdated. It’s neurologically incoherent. It stacks education, desire, proof, and urgency in the same register, addressed to a composite person who doesn’t exist, an average of three people who don’t share a nervous system state. Content optimized for all of them serves none of them well.
The more useful architecture separates by state, not by content type. Discovery experiences are built for regulation first — safety before proof, warmth before credentials, the absence of urgency as its own form of trust. Re-engagement is built for tone, not information density. Its job is to reduce threat, not add reasons. One unhurried sentence does more than a three-email nurture storm. And the conversion moment (the sales page, the checkout, the booking link) should be designed to do almost nothing. Remove the persuasion. You already did it. Let the person complete the action they were already moving toward.
The design principle that reorients everything: safety before curiosity, curiosity before desire, desire before decision.
The traditional funnel reverses this. It leads with desire and assumes safety is implied. That worked when attention was abundant and nervous systems weren’t trained to retreat. Neither of those is true anymore.
Monica Vinader sent this email probably because someone on their team understood that their list wasn’t a uniform audience moving through a rational sequence, it was a collection of nervous systems in different states, some of them carrying grief that a promotional cascade would activate before a single product image loaded. The opt-out was not a concession. It was co-regulation at scale. And it built more trust in one subject line than most brands accumulate in a year of nurture sequences.
Most brands are still designing for the person who arrives calm, reads carefully, makes rational decisions in sequence. That person occasionally exists. They are not the norm. They haven’t been for a while.
The ones that will feel different are building something harder to copy than a feature. A nervous-system-informed brand doesn’t just have better copy or a cleaner checkout. It has a different theory of its customer, one that starts with the body, not the brief. That theory, built into the measurement stack, the content architecture, the re-engagement logic, becomes compounding. Every interaction teaches the brand more about what state its customers arrive in. Every sequence gets more calibrated. The distance between that brand and one still optimizing for argument grows wider every quarter.
The infrastructure of presence-based commerce is being built right now, mostly by people who don’t have a name for it yet. They just know that something about the old model stopped working, that the list is large but feels inert, that the conversion rate is fine but the customers don’t come back, that something is being produced that looks like loyalty but isn’t. What they’re sensing is the gap between compliance and desire. Between a nervous system that was managed toward a purchase and one that arrived there on its own terms.
The question isn’t whether to design for the nervous system. You already are. The only question is whether you’re doing it intentionally or leaving it to chance, and to whoever figures it out first.
Your customer is three people.
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Marketing has always been about the ability to tap into emotion. Somewhere along the line we’ve lost that idea through excessive optimisation, (the wrong) metric obsessions and data analysis. This is a super smart framing that digs on deeper than just evoking emotion in customers, but actually understanding them at an emotional level. Great piece!
Curious where you land on this for B2B. The nervous system logic feels intuitive for DTC but the buying committee, the procurement cycle, the 14-person Slack thread does the framework hold or does it need a different translation?