For your product or service to succeed in a crowded market, you need to understand how potential buyers turn into loyal, repeat customers.
A customer acquisition funnel does exactly that, helping you visualize how to attract, convert, and retain potential buyers.
But the process isn’t one-size-fits-all. For a customer acquisition funnel to work, you have to tailor each step to your audience and make continuous tweaks to optimize it.
Here’s what you need to know.
What is a customer acquisition funnel?
A customer acquisition funnel is a visual representation of the steps a company must take to turn prospects into repeat customers. It serves as a framework for understanding and optimizing the customer journey.
Picture a standard plastic funnel—the kind you might find in your kitchen or garage. A customer acquisition funnel is shaped just like that. It opens up at the top as you cast a wide net for leads, and narrows as those prospects drop off or convert.
Unlike a marketing funnel, which focuses on capturing prospects’ initial attention and interest, the customer acquisition funnel follows a complete path through 4 stages: awareness, consideration, conversion, and retention.
4 stages of the customer acquisition funnel
Acquiring customers is no easy feat—but the process runs more smoothly when you break it down into stages. Then, you can tailor your marketing and customer experience (CX) strategies to meet your prospects’ needs and guide them through the conversion process.
Let’s take a closer look at each stage, along with actionable tips for how to move leads from one stage to the next:
1. Awareness
Let's say someone out there needs a project management tool that integrates with Slack, their messaging platform. And, you’ve built just the thing. The problem? They have no idea your company or product exists.
In the awareness stage of the customer acquisition funnel, you change that—you market and advertise your offer to get it in front of potential buyers and pique their interest.
This top-of-the-funnel (TOFU) stage has 2 sub-stages:
Discovery: the point where a lead enters the funnel. Your potential customer has a problem, and you want them to discover your company’s solution. To do that, get to know your ideal customer (keep reading to learn how) and connect with them through the channels they frequent.
Interest: this is when your prospect learns what you have to offer. You introduce a potential customer to your company and its positioning and products, and start to nurture a relationship with them.
Try these techniques to get leads’ attention and spark their interest:
Write and publish original articles on topics related to your product or service
Optimize existing blog posts on your website to pull in more search engine traffic
Share tips or testimonials on the social platforms your target audience prefers
Create television or radio commercials, direct mail flyers, social media ads, or website banner ads
Build a welcome email sequence to send to new newsletter subscribers to introduce them to your company and offerings
2. Consideration
Your prospect is in the middle of the funnel (MOFU) now. At this stage, you’ve captured their attention. Now, they need more information to help them make an informed decision.
The consideration stage has 2 substages:
Research: your lead looks for more details about your products and services on your website and third-party review sites, and compares your offers with others
Intent: the lead is pretty sure they know which product is right for them, but they need more information—like a case study or a free demo—to confirm they’re making the best choice
Try these techniques to help shoppers determine whether your offer is a good fit:
Add a page to your website with a detailed product comparison chart
Create product demo videos highlighting your offer’s features and benefits
Interview satisfied customers to create case studies showcasing their wins with your product
Offer a free demo of a software-as-a-service (SaaS) product or a free sample of an ecommerce item
3. Conversion
As they near the bottom of the funnel (BOFU), your prospect is ready to take action.
Sometimes, that’s as quick and easy as clicking the ‘buy now’ button—but it could include additional steps, like negotiating to customize a package or contract.
Note: your prospects have likely taken small actions, or micro-conversions, along the way—like clicking on a link in a promotional email or adding a product to their cart. This stage refers to the macro-conversion, the main action you want the buyer to take—whether that’s purchasing a skillet or subscribing to a productivity app.
Try these techniques to help a buyer make their decision and increase conversions:
Use website analytics to identify where and why users drop off
Send reminder emails to shoppers who left items behind to reduce cart abandonment
Pay close attention to your ecommerce product pages, including everything a buyer might need to make their decision (like videos or detailed product descriptions)
Remove friction from your checkout process by shortening forms and offering multiple payment options
💡 Pro tip: use heatmaps to find and eliminate friction near the point of conversion. Heatmaps help you visualize trends in click, scroll, and move data. For example, you might see that only 6% of website visitors scroll as far as your signup link, or that users try to click the wrong part of the page.
Skincare brand fresh uses Contentsquare’s Heatmaps to help them analyze customer behavior on key pages, leading to dozens of impactful discoveries and improvement opportunities.
“Contentsquare can help us to know which content to push—for example, on the homepage, we use heatmaps to see which content is performing the best, where people click and where they do not click," says Geraldine Servouze, Global Ecommerce Director at fresh.
The result? Streamlined customer journeys—and data-driven optimizations.
![[Visual] heatmaps-zoning-elements](http://images.ctfassets.net/gwbpo1m641r7/3DqJkn0v2NqzqliOf9X4WI/10dd549e1b0e53954bd0cd2cd860d5f7/2-heatmaps-zoning-elements.png?w=3840&q=100&fit=fill&fm=avif)
Heatmaps show you where users engage—and don’t engage—on your website
4. Retention
Some funnels—like the typical sales funnel—stop before this point, but the customer acquisition funnel continues through to retention.
Customer acquisition is about more than just securing a sale; it’s about creating dedicated customers and brand advocates. Retaining a loyal customer base means you spend less on customer acquisition in the future.
To create a delightful customer experience (CX) and maintain customers’ trust, you need to understand exactly what they want and need.
Try these techniques to boost customer satisfaction and improve customer retention:
Keep a close eye on metrics like retention rate, churn rate (the percentage of customers who stop buying from you over time), and customer lifetime value (the revenue earned from the average customer over time)
Incentivize purchases with a loyalty or rewards program
Provide multiple customer support methods—like chatbots and a self-serve knowledge base—to give customers the answers they need when they need them
Send targeted emails based on past-purchase data
💡 Pro tip: collect feedback from real customers to learn what makes them stay—or leave. Some of our favorite tools to gather user feedback include:
Interviews: get valuable insights by talking with individual customers. With Contentsquare, you can schedule, record, and share interviews. (Bonus: these interviews show customers you value their insights and care about their experience.)
Feedback widgets: put a feedback widget on any page of your site. Customers just click a button to weigh in on which page elements work and which cause them to exit the funnel
Surveys: hear what customers really think by launching a Net Promoter Score® (NPS) survey. An NPS survey tells you how likely people are to recommend your product or company—a great indication of customer loyalty
Reminder: you can collect and use feedback to guide your decisions at any stage in the funnel—not just this one. It’s a great way to keep customers’ needs front and center.
![[Visual] Exit-Intent- Survey](http://images.ctfassets.net/gwbpo1m641r7/1UqasWRBnczjIUsx8wDIMB/149e80ca4b764400d3295ddb4c9c254b/Feedback_Widget__1_.png?w=1920&q=100&fit=fill&fm=avif)
Capture in-the-moment customer feedback to improve your customer acquisition funnel
4 essential steps to creating a customer acquisition funnel
You know having a customer acquisition funnel will help you attract and retain customers, saving your marketing and advertising budgets down the road. But how do you build and optimize that funnel so it works for your goals—and for your customers?
Here are 4 steps to build a customer acquisition funnel that works, so you avoid losing buyers to leaks.
1. Know your audience
Building an effective customer acquisition funnel hinges on knowing—really knowing—your target audience. Understanding your buyers goes far beyond demographics; you also have to understand their motivation, behavior, habits, and goals.
You need to take an empathetic, customer-centric approach to know where to find leads and what will drive them to action. You can use the insights you gather to segment your audience to deliver more personalized messaging, too.
Here are 2 great ways to gain a better understanding of buyers:
Review existing user personas, or profiles of your target users
Create a customer journey map (CJM), which is a visual overview of the touchpoints a customer has with your brand on their path to purchase
💡 Pro tip: conduct market research to inform your user personas and CJMs. Surveys and interviews work well to collect data about who your customer is, and what goals and obstacles they face.
But don’t forget to collect observational and user behavior research, too. Watching session replays, which let you observe real users’ mouse movements, clicks, and scrolls, helps you deeply understand their experience.
As Jan-Willem Wilmsen, Digital Specialist at E.ON, says, "Instead of abstract data and numbers in columns, we can now really see what people are doing on our website. We can see their experience. It’s visual."

Session Replay in Contentsquare provides a glimpse into the customer journey
2. Choose the right channels
If you want to attract new customers, you need to be where they are. Do they constantly refresh their email at work, or spend more time networking on LinkedIn?
To determine which channels to focus on, consider your
Target audience: it all comes back to your customers. Before selecting channels, refer to your user personas, customer journey mapping (CJM), and market research. For example, an ecommerce apparel retailer might turn to TikTok or influencer marketing to connect with their Gen Z demographic
Competitors: conduct a competitive analysis to get inspiration from other companies in the space. Where are your competitors active? Use social listening tools or search engine optimization (SEO) tools to gauge their success. Then, consider if a similar approach will work for you
You need to be present on a mix of channels for best results. Find out where your prospects hang out, and pick a few to focus on.
Note: you might discover that some channels work best at specific funnel stages. For example, you might generate awareness through Facebook ads and blog content, but make email your primary retention tool, sending personalized offers to tell buyers about new products or sales.
3. Create (and execute) a content plan
Once you decide on the best-fit channels, you need a content creation and distribution plan to acquire customers.
When building your funnel, break down your content plan by stage. Ask yourself
What information do customers need to help them get to the next stage? Consider when and where to include product images, descriptions, specifications, features, benefits, prices, testimonials, service plans, warranties, or return policies
How much information do you need to provide? For example, your TOFU B2B SaaS buyer might not be ready for a white paper yet—but it might help seal the deal later, at the middle or bottom of the funnel
How do you package your content? What format will help you connect with customers and provide value at each stage? Think: blog posts, ebooks, explainer videos, user-generated content (UGC), case studies, or email sequences
Remember to keep your ideal customer and their buying journey top of mind as you plan. When in doubt about your content or campaigns, gather more data. Email a quick survey link to existing customers via your email list, or launch one on a high-traffic page of your site.
💡 Pro tip: speed up survey creation with the Contentsquare AI survey assistant. Tell AI your goal for the survey, and it will generate a list of custom questions for you. You don’t have to deliberate about what to ask, how many questions to include, or how to word your questions. That means you can launch your survey—and start collecting valuable insights—faster than ever. Get an AI summary report of the key takeaways, or use our AI-automated survey analysis for more in-depth insights.
Use AI-powered analysis to quickly turn survey insights into action
4. Optimize for conversion
Building a customer acquisition funnel isn’t a one-time event. Once you have the pieces in place, you need to conduct a funnel analysis and make adjustments to make it even better.
Follow this 3-step process to make conversion rate optimization (CRO) a breeze:
Start by checking your quantitative data—the numbers—to see how your funnel is performing. Depending on your company’s goals, you may look at: CLV, churn rate, conversion rate, time-to-conversion rate, drop-off rates, and lead generation rate by channel
Dig deeper into problem areas with qualitative data, looking at customers’ behavior and opinions to determine why your funnel sprung a leak. For example, if you experience a high drop-off rate in your checkout flow, look at session replays for signs of frustration like rage clicks, which are multiple clicks in quick succession. Or collect customer insights via a feedback widget on any page
Run A/B tests. Have a hypothesis about what the problem is? Come up with an alternative solution and test it against the original. For example, if you think a product page needs more detailed descriptions, conduct A/B testing to gauge its performance against the original to see how it fares with customers
Once you know how to improve your customer acquisition funnel, communicate changes with relevant teams like marketing, sales, and CX.
💡 Pro tip: find out where and why users drop off with Funnel Analysis in Contentsquare. With this tool, you can map out key customer journeys, then move seamlessly between graphs of quantitative data to see what’s happening, and qualitative data like session replays to see why.
Want to get even more granular? Try filtering data by marketing channel or country and compare conversion data between segments for richer insights.
![[Visual] funnel-analysis-in-Contentsquare](http://images.ctfassets.net/gwbpo1m641r7/54wqippOGkxHsJp3dO0xU5/5dc87604d0aef8a3940be461c47f91b5/funnel-analysis-in-Contentsquare.png?w=3840&q=100&fit=fill&fm=avif)
Discover where—and why—leads drop off with Contentsquare
Keep your funnel flowing with experience insights
An effective customer acquisition funnel creates a win-win situation: you increase your conversions and CLV, and your customers experience a quicker, easier journey to the product or service they need. Get to know your users through website analytics, rich survey data, heatmaps, session replays, and interviews so you can acquire customers who’ll spread the word about your brand.