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Guide

How to Create a Sales Funnel That Converts

A complete guide to building a sales funnel from awareness through retention. Covers the TOFU/MOFU/BOFU framework, channel selection, lead magnets, nurture sequences, conversion tactics, and retention loops. Includes funnel templates for SaaS, ecommerce, services, and B2B businesses.

Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 17 min

A sales funnel is a structured path that moves prospects from first contact with your brand to a purchase and, ideally, repeat buying. You create one by mapping the buyer’s journey into stages, assigning specific content and actions to each stage, and building the systems (landing pages, emails, ads, sales processes) that move people from one stage to the next. The average sales funnel converts 3-7% of visitors into customers (First Page Sage, 2025), but top-performing funnels in SaaS and ecommerce hit 15-35% by matching the right message to the right stage.

“Most businesses don’t have a funnel problem. They have a middle-of-funnel problem. They’re good at getting attention and decent at closing deals. What’s missing is the nurture layer between the two. That’s where 60-70% of potential revenue leaks out. A working sales funnel isn’t about more traffic. It’s about converting the traffic you already have.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

Contents

What’s in this guide

  1. What is a sales funnel and why does it matter?
  2. What are the stages of a sales funnel?
  3. How do you build the top of funnel (awareness)?
  4. How do you build the middle of funnel (consideration)?
  5. How do you build the bottom of funnel (conversion)?
  6. How do you add a retention loop?
  7. What does a sales funnel look like for different business types?
  8. What metrics should you track at each funnel stage?
  9. Pro tips for funnel optimization
  10. Common sales funnel mistakes
Fundamentals

What is a sales funnel and why does it matter?

A sales funnel is a model that represents the path a prospect takes from first becoming aware of your business to making a purchase. It’s called a funnel because fewer people move from each stage to the next. If 1,000 people visit your website (top of funnel), maybe 100 sign up for your email list (middle of funnel), 30 request a demo or add to cart (bottom of funnel), and 10 become customers.
Sales funnel is a structured sequence of stages that guides prospects from initial awareness to purchase, with specific content, messaging, and actions designed for each stage to maximize the percentage of prospects who advance.
Without a funnel, your marketing and sales efforts are disconnected. Your blog generates traffic but doesn’t capture leads. Your email list grows but doesn’t convert subscribers into buyers. Your sales team talks to people who aren’t ready to buy. A funnel connects these pieces into a system where each stage feeds the next. The concept isn’t new. AIDA (Awareness, Interest, Decision, Action) dates back to 1898. But the tactics and tools have changed dramatically. Modern funnels in 2026 operate across 10+ interaction channels, use behavioral data to personalize the path, and increasingly need to work without human sales involvement. Gartner’s 2025 research found that 61% of B2B buyers prefer a rep-free buying experience, meaning your funnel needs to educate, qualify, and convert prospects without requiring a sales call.
Framework

What are the stages of a sales funnel?

Every sales funnel has three core stages, plus an often-neglected fourth stage that drives long-term growth.

Stage Buyer Mindset Your Goal Key Tactics
TOFU (Top of Funnel) “I have a problem or question” Generate awareness, earn attention Blog, SEO, social media, paid ads, videos, podcasts
MOFU (Middle of Funnel) “I’m evaluating my options” Capture leads, build trust, educate Lead magnets, email sequences, webinars, case studies
BOFU (Bottom of Funnel) “I’m ready to decide” Convert leads into customers Demos, free trials, proposals, discounts, testimonials
Retention “Was this the right choice?” Keep customers, drive repeat purchases and referrals Onboarding, loyalty programs, upsells, referral rewards
The width of each stage represents volume. Lots of people enter the top. Fewer make it to the middle. Even fewer reach the bottom. This narrowing is natural and expected. Your job isn’t to prevent the narrowing; it’s to maximize the percentage of people who move from each stage to the next. Typical conversion benchmarks between stages (First Page Sage, 2025):
  • Visitor to Lead: 1-5% (depends on traffic quality and offer relevance)
  • Lead to Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL): 25-35%
  • MQL to Sales Qualified Lead (SQL): 13-26%
  • SQL to Opportunity: 50-62%
  • Opportunity to Customer: 15-30%
Top of Funnel

How do you build the top of funnel (awareness)?

The top of funnel is about getting in front of people who don’t know you yet. At this stage, prospects are looking for information, not products. They’re searching for answers to questions, reading articles, watching videos, and scrolling social feeds. Your job is to show up with genuinely useful content that earns their attention and trust. Primary TOFU channels and what works on each: SEO and blog content: Target informational keywords where your expertise intersects with your prospects’ questions. “How to reduce customer churn” is a TOFU query for a customer success platform. “Best CRM for small business” is mid-funnel. Know the difference. Publish content that answers the question better than anything else ranking for it. Blog content compounds over time: a well-optimized post published today can drive traffic for 2-3 years. Check our keyword research template to find the right TOFU keywords. Social media (organic): Share insights, data, and perspectives on LinkedIn (B2B) or Instagram/TikTok (B2C). Don’t sell at this stage. Build recognition by being consistently useful. LinkedIn posts with native carousels and text-based thought leadership generate 3-5x more engagement than link posts. Paid advertising: Use Google Ads (search), Meta Ads (awareness), and LinkedIn Ads (B2B targeting) to put your TOFU content in front of new audiences. The goal isn’t direct conversion. It’s driving traffic to a blog post, video, or resource that starts the relationship. Keep TOFU ad spend focused on content promotion, not product pages. YouTube and video: Tutorial and how-to videos rank in both YouTube and Google search. A 5-10 minute video answering a common question can generate thousands of views per month. Include a CTA to your lead magnet in the video and description. Podcasting and guest appearances: Being a guest on podcasts your audience listens to puts you in front of pre-qualified prospects. The ROI is slower than paid but the trust factor is higher because you’re being introduced by a host the audience already follows. The critical transition: every TOFU asset should include a path to MOFU. A blog post should offer a content upgrade. A YouTube video should mention a free guide. A social post should link to a resource. Without this bridge, you generate awareness that never converts.
Middle of Funnel

How do you build the middle of funnel (consideration)?

The middle of funnel is where most funnels break. TOFU brings people in. BOFU closes them. But MOFU is where you earn the right to make an offer. At this stage, prospects know they have a problem and they’re evaluating approaches. They’re comparing options, reading reviews, and deciding who to trust with their time and money. The MOFU toolkit: Lead magnets: This is where you capture email addresses. Offer something valuable enough that people will exchange their contact information for it: a template, checklist, calculator, mini-course, or webinar. The lead magnet should be directly relevant to the problem your product or service solves. Read our guide on how to build an email list for detailed lead magnet strategies. Email nurture sequences: Once someone opts in, send a sequence of 5-8 emails over 2-4 weeks. Each email should teach something useful, build credibility, and gradually introduce your offering. Don’t pitch in email 1. Educate in emails 1-3, share case studies or social proof in emails 4-5, and make a soft offer in emails 6-7. Check our marketing automation workflow examples for ready-made sequence structures. Webinars: Live or pre-recorded webinars let you spend 30-60 minutes teaching a topic in depth. Webinar attendees are high-intent leads. They’ve committed time, which signals serious interest. End every webinar with a specific offer and a limited-time incentive to act. Case studies and social proof: At the consideration stage, prospects want evidence that your approach works. Case studies showing specific results (e.g., “Increased organic traffic by 340% in 6 months for a B2B SaaS client”) are far more persuasive than general claims. Include the challenge, the approach, the results, and ideally a client quote. Retargeting ads: Show ads to people who’ve visited your site but haven’t converted. Retargeting with case studies, testimonials, or MOFU content (not product pages) keeps your brand visible during the evaluation period. Retargeting ads typically convert 2-3x better than cold traffic ads because the audience already knows you. The MOFU-to-BOFU transition requires a clear signal. In B2B, it might be requesting a demo or attending a deep-dive webinar. In ecommerce, it’s adding a product to the cart. In SaaS, it’s starting a free trial. Design your nurture to drive toward that specific action.
Bottom of Funnel

How do you build the bottom of funnel (conversion)?

At the bottom of the funnel, prospects have decided they need a product or service like yours. The question is whether they’ll choose you or a competitor. Every element at this stage should reduce friction, address remaining objections, and make it easy to say yes. BOFU conversion tactics: Free trials and demos: For SaaS and software products, let prospects experience the product before paying. Free trials convert 15-25% of users when the onboarding experience is strong. Live demos work better for complex B2B products where the prospect needs guidance on how the product fits their specific situation. Landing pages optimized for conversion: Your BOFU landing pages should have one clear CTA, social proof (testimonials, logos, case study snippets), an FAQ section addressing common objections, and no navigation links that could distract from the conversion action. A/B test headlines, CTAs, and social proof placement. Even small changes at BOFU have outsized revenue impact because you’re working with the most qualified prospects. See our landing page checklist for the full optimization framework. Proposals and custom quotes: For services businesses and B2B, send proposals within 24 hours of a qualified inquiry. Speed matters. The first vendor to send a quality proposal wins the deal 50% of the time (Drift, 2025). Use our proposal template as a starting point. Urgency and scarcity (used honestly): Limited-time offers, seasonal pricing, or inventory-based scarcity can accelerate decisions. But only if it’s real. Fake countdown timers that reset when you refresh the page destroy trust. Real urgency: “We take on 3 new clients per month and March has 1 spot left.” That’s credible if true. Risk reversal: Money-back guarantees, free onboarding, “cancel anytime” terms, and pilot programs remove the risk of a bad decision. For B2B services, offering a paid discovery phase (a small project before a full engagement) lowers the commitment and lets the client experience your work quality firsthand.
Retention

How do you add a retention loop?

Acquiring a new customer costs 5-7x more than retaining an existing one. A funnel that stops at purchase is leaving the most profitable part of the customer relationship on the table. The retention stage turns one-time buyers into repeat customers and referral sources. Post-purchase retention tactics:
  • Onboarding sequences: The first 7-14 days after purchase are critical. Send a welcome email within 5 minutes, provide clear next steps, and check in on day 3, day 7, and day 14. SaaS companies that run structured onboarding see 2-3x higher 90-day retention than those that don’t.
  • Customer success touchpoints: Proactive check-ins at 30, 60, and 90 days after purchase. Ask how things are going, offer help, and identify upsell opportunities. Don’t wait for complaints.
  • Loyalty and rewards programs: For ecommerce, a points-based loyalty program increases customer lifetime value by 20-30% on average. For B2B services, offer preferred pricing or priority access for long-term clients.
  • Referral programs: Happy customers are your best acquisition channel. Offer a reward for referring new customers. Structure it so both the referrer and the new customer benefit. B2B referral programs are underused because companies assume enterprise buyers don’t refer, but they do when the referral process is easy.
  • Upsell and cross-sell sequences: After a customer has used your product for 30-60 days, introduce complementary products or premium tiers. Base the timing on usage data, not arbitrary dates. If a customer is actively using your basic plan and hitting limits, that’s the moment to present the upgrade.
The retention loop feeds back into the funnel. Referrals generate TOFU traffic. Case studies from happy customers become MOFU content. Upsells increase customer lifetime value, which lets you spend more on acquisition. This is how the funnel becomes a growth engine rather than a one-time pipeline.
Templates

What does a sales funnel look like for different business types?

The core framework stays the same, but the specific tactics differ by business model.

SaaS funnel:
  1. TOFU: Blog content targeting problem-aware keywords + YouTube tutorials + LinkedIn thought leadership
  2. MOFU: Free tool or calculator as lead magnet, 5-email nurture sequence, comparison guides (your product vs. competitors), customer case studies
  3. BOFU: Free trial (14 or 30 days) with in-app onboarding, live demo for enterprise prospects, pricing page with clear tier differentiation
  4. Retention: In-app onboarding checklists, usage milestone emails, NPS surveys at day 30/90, annual plan upgrade prompts, referral program
  5. Key metric: Trial-to-paid conversion rate. Benchmark: 15-25% for self-serve, 25-40% for sales-assisted (ProductLed, 2025).
Ecommerce funnel:
  1. TOFU: Instagram and TikTok content (product demos, lifestyle imagery), Google Shopping ads, influencer partnerships, SEO for product-adjacent topics
  2. MOFU: Discount pop-up for first-time visitors (10-15% off), email welcome series showcasing best sellers and brand story, user-generated content and reviews
  3. BOFU: Cart abandonment email sequence (3 emails over 48 hours), free shipping thresholds, limited-time bundles, live chat on product pages
  4. Retention: Post-purchase thank you + tracking email, review request at day 7, replenishment reminders (consumable products), VIP tier for repeat buyers
  5. Key metric: Cart-to-purchase conversion rate. Benchmark: 30-40% for optimized stores (Baymard Institute, 2025).
Services/consulting funnel:
  1. TOFU: SEO content targeting “how to” and “best practices” queries, LinkedIn posts and articles, guest podcast appearances, speaking at industry events
  2. MOFU: Audit or assessment tool as lead magnet (e.g., free SEO audit), email course (5-day series on a specific topic), detailed case studies with ROI data
  3. BOFU: Strategy call or discovery session (free, 30 min), custom proposal within 24 hours, pilot project option for risk-averse prospects
  4. Retention: Monthly reporting with insights (not just data), quarterly strategy reviews, expansion into additional service lines, referral incentives
  5. Key metric: Discovery call to client conversion rate. Benchmark: 20-35% for well-qualified leads.
B2B enterprise funnel:
  1. TOFU: Industry reports and original research, analyst briefings, trade show presence, account-based marketing (ABM) campaigns targeting specific companies
  2. MOFU: Gated whitepapers and benchmark reports, executive roundtables, personalized outreach from sales development reps, ROI calculator
  3. BOFU: Multi-stakeholder demo with customized use cases, business case document with projected ROI, security and compliance review, proof of concept or pilot
  4. Retention: Dedicated customer success manager, quarterly business reviews, executive sponsor relationships, expansion campaigns targeting additional departments
  5. Key metric: Pipeline-to-close rate. Benchmark: 15-25% with average sales cycles of 3-9 months.
Measurement

What metrics should you track at each funnel stage?

Each stage of your funnel has specific metrics that tell you whether it’s working.

Stage Metrics to Track What They Tell You
TOFU Website sessions, organic traffic, social reach, cost per click, new visitors Are you reaching enough new people? Is your awareness spending efficient?
MOFU Lead capture rate, email opt-in rate, lead magnet downloads, email open/click rates, webinar registration rate Are visitors converting to leads? Is your nurture content engaging?
BOFU Demo/trial requests, proposal sent rate, cart abandonment rate, close rate, average deal size, days to close Are qualified leads converting? What’s causing drop-off before purchase?
Retention Customer lifetime value (CLV), churn rate, Net Promoter Score, repeat purchase rate, referral rate Are customers staying? Are they referring others?
Review funnel metrics weekly at a high level and monthly in depth. Calculate stage-to-stage conversion rates to identify your biggest leakage point. If 5,000 people visit your site, 250 become leads (5% conversion), but only 3 request a demo (1.2% lead-to-demo), your MOFU is the bottleneck. Fix that before spending more on TOFU traffic. Set up GA4 with proper event tracking to measure these metrics automatically. Mark key funnel transitions as key events (conversions) so you can see the full path in your analytics.
Expert Advice

Pro tips for funnel optimization

  1. Fix the leakiest stage first. Calculate conversion rates between every stage. The stage with the lowest conversion rate relative to benchmarks is your biggest opportunity. A 10% improvement at the leakiest stage will have more impact than a 10% improvement anywhere else. We always start funnel work here at ScaleGrowth.Digital.
  2. Build your funnel backward. Start with your conversion mechanism (checkout page, demo booking, proposal process), verify it works, then build MOFU, then TOFU. Too many businesses build awareness first and never get around to building a conversion path. Traffic without a funnel is wasted spend.
  3. Segment your funnel by audience. A VP of Marketing and a Marketing Coordinator have different pain points, different objections, and different decision-making authority. One funnel won’t serve both. Create parallel paths that address each persona’s specific needs.
  4. Use behavioral triggers, not time-based delays. Send the demo offer when someone visits your pricing page 3 times, not 14 days after opt-in. Behavioral triggers convert 2-3x better than calendar-based sequences because they respond to actual intent signals.
  5. Test one stage at a time. Changing your TOFU ads, MOFU emails, and BOFU landing page simultaneously makes it impossible to know what moved the needle. Isolate one stage, test, measure, confirm improvement, then move to the next stage.
Pitfalls

Common sales funnel mistakes

  1. Skipping the middle of funnel. Going directly from blog traffic to “Book a Demo” CTA ignores the fact that 95%+ of visitors aren’t ready to buy. Build the nurture layer that warms leads before you ask for the sale.
  2. One funnel for all audiences. A startup founder and an enterprise procurement manager have completely different buying journeys. Sending them through the same sequence means the messaging is wrong for at least one of them. Create separate funnels for your primary buyer personas.
  3. No follow-up after the first email. Half of all leads are contacted only once. A single email after sign-up is not a nurture sequence. Build a 5-8 email sequence that delivers value over 2-4 weeks. Persistence (done respectfully) pays off.
  4. Measuring only the final conversion. If you only track “how many people bought,” you can’t diagnose why people didn’t buy. Track conversion rates between every stage to pinpoint where your funnel leaks.
  5. Overcomplicating the first funnel. Your first funnel doesn’t need 47 emails, 12 landing pages, and 8 ad variations. Start with a simple 3-step funnel: one lead magnet, one 5-email sequence, one conversion page. Get that working, then add complexity based on data.
Related Resources

Continue building your funnel

Customer Journey Map Template

Map your entire customer journey to identify funnel stages, touchpoints, and experience gaps. Get Template

Lead Scoring Model Template

Score leads based on behavior and demographics to identify who’s ready for BOFU outreach. Get Template

Marketing Automation Workflows

14 tested automation workflows for welcome series, lead nurture, cart recovery, and more. View Examples

Landing Page Checklist

Optimize your BOFU landing pages with this conversion-focused checklist. Get Checklist

How to Build an Email List

15 strategies for building the email list that powers your MOFU nurture sequences. Read Guide

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to build a sales funnel?

A basic funnel (landing page, lead magnet, 5-email sequence, and conversion page) can be built in 1-2 weeks. A full multi-channel funnel with paid ads, retargeting, sales enablement content, and automation takes 4-8 weeks. Start with the simple version, get it generating leads, then expand based on performance data.

What is a good sales funnel conversion rate?

The average overall funnel conversion rate (visitor to customer) is 3-7%, but this varies widely by industry and business model. B2B SaaS sees 15-35% trial-to-paid rates. Ecommerce averages 2-4% visitor-to-purchase. Services businesses convert 20-35% of qualified leads. Compare your stage-by-stage rates against industry benchmarks rather than using a single overall number.

Do I need special software to build a sales funnel?

Not necessarily. You can build a basic funnel with a website (WordPress, Webflow), an email marketing tool (Mailchimp, ConvertKit, Brevo), and a landing page. Dedicated funnel builders like ClickFunnels or Leadpages speed up the process but aren’t required. For B2B, a CRM (HubSpot, Pipedrive) helps track leads through stages. Start with tools you already have.

What is the difference between a sales funnel and a marketing funnel?

A marketing funnel focuses on awareness and lead generation (TOFU and MOFU). A sales funnel extends through conversion and beyond (BOFU and retention). In practice, the two overlap significantly, and many businesses use “sales funnel” to describe the entire journey from first touch to purchase. The important thing isn’t the label but having a complete path from awareness to revenue.

How many steps should a sales funnel have?

Most high-performing funnels have 5-7 steps. Fewer than 4 means you’re likely skipping the nurture phase. More than 8 adds friction that reduces conversion. For simple products, a 3-step funnel (ad to landing page to checkout) can work. For complex B2B sales, 7+ steps may be necessary to build enough trust and address all stakeholder concerns.

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