Funnels are formulas.
Here's how to read them.
The FunnelDNA framework is a way of seeing your funnel that most operators never develop — not because it's complicated, but because the categories have never been named. Here they are.
Every funnel that converts does the same seven things well across the same seven customer stages. Every funnel that fails misses a specific intersection of one skill and one stage.
The framework names every intersection — so you can find yours.
The full framework, at a glance.
Seven customer stages along the top. Seven skills along the side. The intersections — forty-nine of them — are where your funnel succeeds or fails.
This is the general pattern. Your funnel has its own specific shape — brighter where it's working, dimmer where it's not.
The seven customer stages.
Latent
The buyer has the problem but hasn't named it yet.
Before awareness there's friction. The buyer is stuck, frustrated, or inefficient — but they haven't yet translated the feeling into a named problem or a search query. They're living with it.
Most funnels never reach Latent buyers because they're not looking. Reaching them requires language that names what they're feeling before they know to ask.
Triggered
The problem becomes real. The searching begins.
Something shifts. A frustration tips into naming. A competitor's success becomes uncomfortable. A deadline appears. The buyer starts googling, asking friends, scrolling with intent. The problem is now labeled.
This is where most organic and paid traffic meets the funnel for the first time. Winning here means being discoverable in the exact language the newly-triggered buyer is using.
Exploring
The buyer is orienting. Options are being sorted.
Active research mode. The buyer is comparing solutions, consuming content, building a mental map of the category. They're not yet evaluating specific options — they're forming the criteria they'll use to evaluate later.
Funnels that teach at this stage earn disproportionate trust. Funnels that sell at this stage lose the buyer to the ones that teach.
Evaluating
The shortlist forms. Yours is on it or it isn't.
Narrowed focus. The buyer has moved from category education to specific comparison. They're reading reviews, asking pointed questions, testing pricing against budget. The question shifts from "what is this?" to "is this right for me?"
This is where pages have to do their sharpest work: specific claims, specific proof, specific objection handling. Generalities lose here.
Deciding
The moment of yes or no. Most friction kills deals here.
The buyer has decided — almost. They're at the checkout page, the booking form, the pricing grid. What they need now is permission to move forward and removal of the last three reasons they might not.
Good funnels reduce this stage to a single clean action. Broken funnels introduce new decisions, surprises, or objections at the worst possible moment.
Activating
They bought. Now they need a first win, fast.
The moment after purchase is where most funnels quietly abandon the buyer. There's an email, maybe a dashboard, maybe nothing. But the buyer's commitment is highest right now — and their experience in the first hour sets whether they churn, refund, or stay.
Good funnels engineer a quick, tangible win immediately after purchase. Great ones make that win feel inevitable.
Compounding
Retention, referral, expansion — the phase most funnels ignore.
The customer is using the product, seeing results, and — if the funnel is doing its job — becoming a referrer, a repeat buyer, or an expansion-account. This is where lifetime value is actually built.
Most funnels stop thinking about the customer the moment the receipt fires. The ones that don't are the ones that grow without needing more traffic.
The seven skills every funnel needs.
Offer strategy
What you sell, how it's priced, and how offers stack.
The offer is the thing the funnel is built to sell. It determines what everything else has to do. Weak offers force the copy to overwork, the design to overcompensate, and the traffic to oversource.
This skill lives in the Define phase — before building anything, you decide what you're actually selling, at what price, to whom, and why now.
Market & message fit
Knowing who you're talking to and what they actually hear.
This is the skill that decides whether your funnel is being read. Not how well-written it is — whether it's being read at all. Market fit is who you're for. Message fit is the language they already use for the problem.
When this skill is missing, everything downstream feels polished but lands flat. The buyer scans and moves on without friction — because nothing stuck.
Copywriting
The words that move a buyer from click to purchase.
Headlines, subheads, body copy, CTAs, emails, objection-handling. Copy is the layer that turns attention into understanding and understanding into action.
Good copy is usually the most visible skill and the one operators focus on first. But copy on a weak offer or mismatched message is polish on the wrong surface.
Design & UX
How the funnel feels, flows, and removes friction.
Visual hierarchy, layout, mobile responsiveness, form design, trust signals, loading speed. Design isn't decoration — it's the skill that decides whether the funnel is easy to use or secretly hostile.
When design fails, conversion drops in ways that look like offer or copy problems. They usually aren't.
Tech & automation
The plumbing. It either works or it quietly ruins everything.
Domain setup, integrations, email deliverability, tagging, CRM workflows, payment processing, tracking pixels, automation sequences. The skill that makes every other skill actually function.
When tech fails, it rarely announces itself — it just silently eats conversions and leaves no trail. This is the skill operators most often think they have and most often don't.
Traffic & distribution
Getting the right eyeballs to the funnel in the first place.
Paid ads, organic content, email list warm-up, SEO, partnerships, affiliate channels, referral loops. Traffic is the skill of putting the funnel in front of buyers who are actually in the right stage of their journey.
The fastest way to waste a good funnel is bad traffic. The fastest way to expose a bad funnel is good traffic.
Analytics & optimization
Reading the funnel's signals and making the right changes.
The skill of seeing what the data is actually saying, finding the leaks, running tests that isolate variables, and iterating based on signal instead of hunch. It's the difference between a 1% funnel and a 3% funnel over time.
This is the skill most solopreneurs skip because it feels optional. It isn't — it's what turns a working funnel into a compounding one.
Three phases of work. In order.
The seven skills don't fire simultaneously. They sequence across three phases of work — and the sequence matters more than most operators realize.
Define
Before a single page is built.
The strategic foundation. Who the funnel is for, what it's selling, and what the buyer's journey actually looks like. Skipping this phase is why most funnels fail — not because the tactics are wrong, but because the strategy was never named.
- Offer strategy
- Market & message fit
Build
Execution that serves the strategy.
Once the DNA is defined, the build becomes straightforward. Copy gets written against a clear message. Design serves a known journey. Tech supports specific workflows. The work is still craft, but the questions that make craft hard have already been answered.
- Copywriting
- Design & UX
- Tech & automation
Grow
Where most funnels quietly die.
A built funnel is the starting line, not the finish. Growth is where traffic brings buyers, analytics reveals what's working, and optimization compounds small gains into meaningful ones. The funnels that scale are the ones built with this phase in mind from day one.
- Traffic & distribution
- Analytics & optimization
How the framework reads your funnel.
Knowing the seven skills isn't the point. Using them to read your specific funnel is. Here's how the framework translates into diagnosis.
You understand the framework. Now read your funnel.
The framework shows you how to read a funnel in general. The assessment and the Decode show you what yours actually says. Ready to apply it yourself? That's what Labs is for.
