Whether you’re a business owner, in email marketing, or a sales rep at a startup, knowing the basics of how the sales funnel works will help you create more effective processes and bring in more clients.
What is a sales funnel?
A sales funnel is a visual description of the different stages of the sales process, from the very beginning until the “end” when you’ve made the sale and have a paying customer.
The sales funnel stages:
There are three stages in the typical B2B sales funnel: (1) Awareness & Discovery at the top, also known as the top of the funnel or TOFU, (2) Interest & Engagement in the middle, also known as the middle of the funnel or MOFU, and (3) Decision & Purchase at the bottom, also known as the bottom of the funnel or BOFU.
Keep in mind that there are many representations of a sales funnel to be found and most companies will have their version based on their specific sales journey and CRM settings. In this blog post, we’re gonna keep it simple and divide it into three stages.
Here’s a little something to help you visualize the sales funnel and its three stages:
This illustrates that the sales process requires many leads or opportunities to come through the top because most of them will drop off and not make it until the end of the process where they become paying customers.
The top of the funnel is the phase of the sales journey where your prospects are entering the stage of “Awareness & Discovery”.
During this stage of the sales funnel, prospects are coming into contact with your brand, solution, or product for the first time. Whether you are a large or small business, this is the moment you get to create your narrative and explain your value.
This stage is where they are engaging with your content online, running into a landing page, hearing about you from a user, or seeing an advertisement campaign you’ve been running.
Once a prospect passes the awareness phase, they move to the middle of the funnel. This is the phase of the sales journey where they begin to show “Interest & Engagement”.
This might signify that they’re interested in learning more about how you can help them solve a specific issue that they have, or become better acquainted with types of content that speak directly to their use cases.
The prospects that move from the top of the funnel to the middle of the funnel have also likely already decided they’re going to be spending money on a solution, product, or service that will solve their specific pain points.
This doesn’t mean they’ll end up spending any of their budgets with you, but rather that they’ve already internalized the fact that they need help in reaching their goals.
The third phase is the bottom of the funnel.
This is the section of the sales journey where your prospects enter the stage of “Decision & Purchase”.
They are acquainted with what you can offer and understand how you can solve their pain-points, have most likely already explored what your competitors can offer them, and are now ready to become your new customers.
When a prospective buyer makes it to this step, it indicates that they have a budget and are ready to begin the last stages of negotiation.
This is the moment where they’ll look at the package they’re interested in buying.
They’ll likely want to speak to an implementation manager or be looking to understand who will train the team to use the solution and how long it will take.
As you might notice, all parts of the funnel have specific requirements that must be met for prospective customers to move through them, and that these components vary from one company to another.
Let’s explore each part of the funnel in more detail, and also look to understand what is important to each member of the sales team within each stage.
Top of the sales funnel (TOFU): Awareness & discovery
The top of the funnel is the first stage of the sales process that leads will go through in their journey towards becoming a paying customer.
During this phase, leads are just becoming aware of your product/solution and are discovering information about it.
This is the time in the sales funnel where yourmarketers have the opportunity to spread awareness about who you are and what you can do.
It’s a phase that will allow you to educate your prospects and position yourself through brand, product, solution, insights, or use cases.
The top of the funnel is the stage of the sales funnel where you are going to be exposed to the largest number of people.
The larger the pool of prospects you influence in this stage, the more you’ll have to work with into the next stage.
Let’s look into the types of assets and activities that can serve as lead magnets and will allow you to create awareness and enable discovery during the first stage of the sales funnel.
Content
There are a variety of assets and content you can create to allow potential customers to learn about your product, service, or solution.
Below is a list that will give you a basic idea as to what type of content works well during this stage. When creating content, it’s important to make sure it’s relevant to your buyer persona.
We’ll divide it into types of content that would be produced for inbound and outbound lead generation, you can click through here to read about the difference.
Inbound content to generate leads for the first stage of the sales funnel:
- Blog posts: Blogging allows you to target specific keywords that potential buyers might be searching online that would lead them to discover you. This is a way to align yourself with their concerns, goals, or pain points. SEO is a very important part of the blogging process as it will let your content be discoverable on Google. In order to gain from it, make sure to provide relevant call-to-action (CTA) buttons throughout the post.
- eBooks: Creating eBooks is a great way to position your company as a thought leader within your industry. By doing this, you’re creating a piece of content that should provide value to your target audience, and by gating it, you can gain inbound leads to fill your pipeline. Gating (content your leads are downloading) is when you offer a piece of content in return for someone’s contact and company information. It’s as if a “gate” is around it and to unlock that gate, a visitor must leave something in return (as we mentioned before, it is usually their contact details).
- Guides: This is a type of gated content that should provide quick and highly actionable content to your readers. For example, checklists for things they should prepare before their first meeting with a prospect, or templates for social.
- Infographics: Using great visual assets will allow you to showcase numbers, or short text within an image to make it easily digestible. In order to capture leads, you can gate a part of it, or create a back end document explaining the data that (and would require someone to leave an email address).
- Reports & whitepapers: These are typically used as a way to combine data and insights that could provide a better understanding of a topic, industry, or phenomenon. Gating these assets will allow you to gauge the interest that your prospective buyers might have.
- Paid social media posts: This is a great tool to drive discovery to your brand. Using social enables you to build and target a certain audience you think will be highly relevant to your message.
- Videos: The audio-visual nature of videos means that they’re really easy to consume and engage with. This makes them a perfect asset to engage prospective buyers. Pairing them up with gated content, such as a guide, will allow you to make the most of this type of content.
- Testimonials: Social proof. Sharing success stories allows you to showcase how you’ve helped your clients achieve their goals.
Outbound content to generate leads for the first stage of the sales funnel:
- Email: To reach out to people who you think would be relevant users of your product or solution, sending an email is a great way to approach them for the first time, and explain in short why you think you can help them.
- Insights: Coming up with insightful anecdotes based on your prospect’s industry is a great way to get the conversation started. Share these ideas with them (through email, or social media) and allow them to better understand how you can help them solve their pain points.
- Slide show presentations: They can help to deeply explain a certain subject, and coupled with visual aids, can be templatized so that you can easily make it relevant to personas in different companies or industries.
- Social media posts: Can help drive traffic to your website, or other gated content. They can even be used to start conversations that will result in meetings.
- Video mails: Creating a video within an email is a great way to engage your target audience in a way that feels more personal and will catch their attention.
- Webinars: Having a speaker present a subject on which they are highly knowledgeable can create great results in terms of pipeline.
Sales Funnel Examples for TOFU
Microsoft
In this TOFU example, we see that Microsoft offers students free use of Office 365. This is a great way to get young people familiarized with the product and build loyalty towards the brand. The premise here would be that if you’re familiar with Windows, it’s it takes some effort to switch out of it. For now, they’re giving their product away for free to this audience base, so in the future, when these young people are no longer students and can pay full price, they’ll most likely convert to paying users of Office rather than switching to another operating system.
IBM
Here is an example of IBM’s news blog, the Industrious. It is a gated downloadable booklet that corresponds to industry trends. Users can read it and learn about how IBM is solving different pain points for companies in different industries.
Personas & the sales funnel
During every stage of the sales funnel, different stakeholders within the sales organization will have distinct goals for that specific stage. We’re going to explore what are the goals for two main stakeholders during TOFU.
Sales Managers: Outbound
For sales managers that are targeting outbound leads, the priority during the top of the funnel activities is to create more pipeline for themselves.
The implications of this are that they’re going to be searching for ways to acquaint more people with the brand, product, or solution (remember this is the stage of awareness and discovery).
As we mentioned earlier, there are many ways to reach out to potential customers using content during this stage, such as emails, insights, slideshow presentations, social media posts, video emails, and webinars.
Alternatively, sales managers can use other ways to reach prospective customers that take place offline, such as events, conferences, and industry-specific trade-shows.
Sales Leadership: Managing the Connection Between Marketing & Sales
For sales leadership, the priority during the top of the funnel activities is to correctly manage the connection between marketing and sales.
The use of content to help leads understand your offering is key during the awareness and discovery stage of the sales funnel.
This is why the main concern for sales leadership should be how well the marketing and sales teams are communicating and working together to make the most of their inbound lead generation efforts.
Middle of the sales funnel (MOFU): Interest & engagement
The middle of the funnel, or in short MOFU, is the second stage of the sales process that leads will go through in their journey towards becoming a paying customer.
During this phase, they are gaining interest in your product/solution and are actively engaging with content, and even your sales team.
This is the phase of the sales funnel where you have the opportunity to nurture your leads.
While in the first step they became aware of the solution, the second level of the funnel is focused on a follow-up that centers on teaching them about your solution and walking them through what they could gain by using it.
By positioning yourself as a partner who will strive to bring value, and not making the “hard sell”, you can engage your prospects and act as a trusted advisor during both the sales process and after.
The middle of the funnel is the stage of the sales funnel where you are going to need to be creative in your efforts to personalize and create specific assets that speak directly to each prospective client and their use case.
The larger the pool of prospects you influence in this stage, the more you’ll have to work with into the next stage.
Let’s look into the types of assets and activities that will allow you to create interest and enable engagement during the second stage of the sales funnel.
Nurture Leads
The middle of the sales funnel is the stage where you want to solidify your relationship with your prospective clients.
The idea is to nurture the leads that have passed through to this stage by making them feel that you are paying special attention to them.
You can rely on the following tactics to do this:
- Personalize your insights to suit the use case and industry of the prospect you’re nurturing.
- Educate your prospects according to their unique buyers’ journey, creating how-to’s or specific content that will speak to them and their stage in the purchase process.
- While it might be tempting, don’t email leads every day. You’ll also want to give them space to think and form their own opinions on what you’ve shared with them.
- Don’t send every email to every lead. Try to think and understand what could apply to individual leads, and push each of them to the next stage of the sales funnel. Leave out any extras or “fluff”.
- Re-engage when necessary since people may have other more urgent things they need to do. This doesn’t mean you’re not important, but sometimes it’s easier to get back to something when you have a person to guide you through the process and remind you about the important points.
- Engage as soon as the lead is ready for the nurturing process. Don’t wait because leads can become irrelevant quickly.
- Create content around consumer pain points to show how well you understand the problem you’re going to help them solve (example: show them how your tool can help increase the number of website visitors they receive).
- Find a similar client and ask them for a referral. Seeing how you were able to create value for others is a very strong selling point.
- Don’t rely purely on email lead nurturing, there are other ways you can engage your prospective buyers. Be creative!
Sales Funnel Examples for MOFU
UPS
UPS has a fact sheet about how many airplanes, airports, and flights they serve. During the middle stage of the sales funnel, what they can do is create a personalized fact sheet for every different prospect they are nurturing. For example, if they have a prospect that sells mostly to South America from the United States, they’d want to show how many airports they serve there, how many daily flights they have to all the different countries in the area, and how many of their planes are specifically destined for those routes.
GE
General Electric has a wide variety of case studies that can be filtered through product lines, benefits, and regions. This allows them to speak to many different types of prospective buyers, giving them the chance to explore how working with them can increase efficiency, cut costs, increase ROI, etc.
Personas & the Sales Funnel
In the middle stage of the sales funnel, there are three stakeholders with their own distinctive goals for this phase.
Sales Operations: Lead Scoring
During this process, sales operations teams want to make sure they’re scoring leads correctly so that they can help the sales managers focus on leads in the way that will be most efficient.
Read here to learn more about lead scoring.
Some companies divide their leads by size, geography, industry, or even solution.
This allows sales managers to work more effectively, and focus their resources better.
Sales Managers: Qualifying & Prioritizing
Sales managers have goals to achieve that are usually based on the amount of money they will bring to the company. They need to be very efficient in the way they spend their time, and how they engage prospects.
They aim to qualify prospects in order to quickly understand who has the highest potential to become a paying client and then prioritize those prospects over others.
Sales Leadership: Conversion Rate of Leads
During this middle stage of the sales funnel, sales leadership would want to see what the conversion rate is for the leads passing from the top of the sales funnel to the middle stage.
A good conversion rate suggests that the content being produced at the first stage of the sales funnel is sufficiently relevant in bringing prospects that would convert to the next stages.
If conversion rates are low, it indicates that the type of content is not bringing in the right people, and they’ll eventually become disqualified.
Bottom of the Sales Funnel (BOFU): Decision & Purchase
The bottom of the funnel, or in short, BOFU, is the third and final stage of the sales process that leads will go through in their journey towards becoming a paying customer.
During this phase, they need to make a buying decision and are now looking into the product or solution that is the best fit for their pain points, budget, and goals.
This is the moment of the sales funnel where you are going to be negotiating the details of the deal and pushing them along the buying process.
It’s a terrifying, yet exciting, stage of the sales funnel because on one end you’ve gotten this far and the prospect has shown deep interest in your product or solution.
On the other end, it can be nerve-racking because during this stage the prospect will be measuring you against your competition, or simply weighing the possibility against not purchasing at all.
The bottom of the funnel is the stage of the sales funnel where you’ve already engaged and shown value, so your negotiating skills and ability to meet the client’s demands, while staying true to your company’s capabilities, will be definitive.
Personas & the Sales Funnel
Sales Managers: Closing & Deal Size
During this last stage of the funnel, sales managers will be directing all their efforts towards finding the best deal they can offer to prospects.
This means talking about things like:
- You vs. competitors.
- Installation: How does it work, how hard is it to install the software or product, what is the timeline, etc..
- Training: Your prospect needs to learn to use your product or solution, so speaking about who will train them, and how that training will take place is an important discussion to have during this stage of the sales funnel.
- Software plan: Usually SaaS companies have different packages and permissions within their platform. Talking about what your prospect will get, how many people will have access, or how many queries they can run is something that should be negotiated during this stage.
- Customer service: Supplying clarity on the type of customer service and support that prospects will receive will help them make a decision.
- Pricing and payment options: Does your company require paying clients to shell out a monthly fee, or a yearly fee, will that amount grow with time, will there be any extra charges for adding users, or expanding the plan? These are answers your prospects will want to have before committing to your service.
- Goals and expectations: Knowing explicitly what the prospect’s goals are, and how your product or solution will help them achieve said goals is very important, as well as setting realistic expectations as to how that will happen.
Sales Leadership: Closing & Deal Size
For sales leadership, this stage is all about understanding what is required to close deals, what is their sales organization’s closing rate, and what is the size of the deals being made.
All these values can serve as benchmarks for the team as ways to plan how the company is growing and how to help set goals for the sales managers.
Conclusion
Understanding your prospect’s unique journey through the sales funnel is critical to pushing them towards the bottom stages.
As discussed above, every company will have a distinctive flow through the sales funnel, but this should give you a good idea as to how the basic structure works.
With that knowledge, you can create your own sales funnel, based on your company’s unique customer journey.
Sales Funnel FAQ
What is a sales funnel system?
The sales funnel refers to the buying process that companies lead customers through when purchasing products.
What are the 5 stages of sales funnels?
The 5 stages of sales funnels are Awareness, Interest, Evaluation, Engagement, and Commitment/Purchase.
Sales Intel. Content Manager at Similarweb
Sigal weaves data and insights into engaging content. She holds degrees in Communications and Security & Diplomacy and enjoys reading, traveling, and exploring Tel Aviv.
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