A model showing how sustained, consistent effort on the right set of strategic drivers compounds over time into self-reinforcing momentum — slow at first, then nearly unstoppable.
The Flywheel Effect describes how sustained effort on a consistent set of strategic drivers creates compounding momentum over time. Like pushing a massive flywheel, the first turns require enormous effort and produce little visible movement. But each push builds on the last, and eventually the accumulated momentum makes the flywheel almost self-sustaining. The key is consistency: the same drivers, pushed in the same direction, over a long period.
// historyCollins described the flywheel in Good to Great (2001) and expanded on it in the short monograph Turning the Flywheel (2019). He contrasted flywheel companies with "doom loop" companies that constantly shift direction, abandoning strategies before momentum builds. Amazon's flywheel (lower prices → more customers → more sellers → lower prices) became one of the most cited examples of the concept.
// exampleA KDP creator maps her flywheel: publish high-quality niche titles → earn reviews → improve Amazon ranking → attract organic traffic → generate royalties → fund better research tools and Midjourney subscription → create higher-quality titles. Each element feeds the next. The insight is that reinvesting royalties into production quality (rather than extracting everything as income) accelerates the next turn of the wheel. After 18 months of consistent pushing, the creator's backlist of 40+ titles generates passive income that funds new launches without any additional ad spend, because the accumulated review count and ranking momentum is self-reinforcing.
The Flywheel is how I explain KDP to people who don't understand why the first six months look discouraging. Your first few books get minimal traction because your flywheel is barely turning. But if you keep pushing in the same direction — quality titles, niche focus, review cultivation, reinvestment — you will reach a point where the momentum is doing most of the work. The biggest mistake is stopping pushing before the flywheel reaches critical speed, usually because the early results feel too slow to justify the effort. Map your own flywheel before you start — it makes the slow early phase much easier to endure when you can see where it leads.