Why Is It Shaped Like a Funnel?
Not everyone who hears about you becomes a customer. Say 10,000 people discovered your business in a month. Of those, 2,000 visited your website, 300 asked for a quote, and 80 made a purchase. It narrows from top to bottom — that's why it's a funnel. Your goal is both to fill the top with enough people and to reduce drop-off at each transition.
The Four Stages of the Funnel
- Awareness (Top of Funnel): The person first hears about you. They have a problem but don't know who to call. The job here is to get noticed — social media, search engines, word-of-mouth, or ads feed this stage.
- Interest (Upper-Middle): They start researching you. They read blog posts, watch videos, check reviews. No price inquiry yet — they're looking for trust.
- Consideration (Middle-Lower): They compare options. 'Can this company solve my problem, and is the price reasonable?' References, case studies, and a free consultation offer convert this stage.
- Purchase (Bottom of Funnel): They decide. If the process is easy — clear pricing, simple contact, fast response — the deal closes. If it's complicated, they leave.
- Loyalty (Post-Funnel): They became a customer, but the work isn't done. A happy customer brings new ones; a dissatisfied one can drive away ten potential buyers.
The Difference Between Top and Bottom of Funnel
Someone at the top of the funnel doesn't know you yet — sending them a price quote is premature. Content, brand awareness, and trust-building work at this stage. Someone at the bottom is ready to decide; instead of 'follow us,' offer a clear proposal, references, and easy contact. Ads, SEO, and social media feed the top; retargeting, email, and offers close the bottom.
How Do You Know Where the Funnel Is Clogged?
If lots of visitors come to your site but no one asks for a quote, the problem is in the consideration stage. If quotes come in but don't close, the issue is pricing or trust. If there are no visitors at all, the problem is awareness. Analytics tools like GA4 and CRM data show these breaking points in numbers — you don't have to guess.
