Many marketers focus on generating traffic first. A more effective approach is to perfect the bottom of the funnel—like post-booking emails and landing pages—before driving traffic. This ensures you can actually convert the audience you build, preventing wasted effort.
Most content fails because its intention is selfish: to convert a user. A successful strategy treats the content itself as the final product, designed solely to provide value and build a relationship. This consumer-centric approach, which avoids treating content as a top-of-funnel tactic, is what builds long-term trust and a loyal audience.
Driving website traffic via SEO is only half the battle. If visitors arrive and have no immediate, low-friction way to book a service or engage (like an online scheduler or effective chat), the marketing investment is wasted. Traffic is useless if there is no clear and easy path to conversion.
When growth stalls, the default is often to chase more top-of-funnel leads. Instead, founders should first focus on optimizing their existing funnel through lifecycle marketing and better converting the leads they already have.
Marketers often over-optimize form fields while ignoring the core value exchange. A weak call to action like "Request a Demo" offers no immediate value. A strong, front-and-center offer (e.g., "Save 20% Today") is the primary motivator for a user to provide their information.
Stop trying to convert customers directly within an email. An email's primary function is to provide enough evidence and intrigue to earn a click through to a dedicated sales page. The sales page, not the email, is responsible for the final conversion. This shift makes copy more conversational and less pushy.
Top marketing leaders view gating content as an obsolete tactic designed solely to hit arbitrary "lead commit" targets for sales. The modern approach is to give away information freely to educate buyers and build trust, reserving forms only for high-intent, bottom-of-funnel actions.
Overly nurturing content often attracts 'non-buyer energy'—people who are inspired but never purchase because you've given everything away for free. Shift to 'activating' content that embodies conviction and authority, which mirrors possibility and attracts buyers ready to invest immediately.
Instead of diving into logistics like catering, the team built the event's landing page first. This counterintuitive approach acts as a forcing function, compelling them to define the event's story, value proposition, and target audience before committing resources to execution and getting lost in the weeds.
Eliminate distractions and force a decision by creating form pages with no scroll functionality. This singular focus on the form fields can dramatically increase conversion rates compared to pages with additional information below the fold.
After discovering that 78% of their best customers consumed at least two pieces of long-form content before buying, the company mandated this step in their sales process. This pre-qualification ensures new leads behave like past high-value customers, systemically increasing conversion rates for ideal clients.