Which of the following best describe the consideration stage of the marketing funnel?

A marketing funnel describes your customer’s journey with you.

From the initial stages when someone learns about your business, to the purchasing stage, marketing funnels map routes to conversion and beyond.

With careful analysis, a marketing funnel lets you know what your company must do to influence consumers at certain stages. By evaluating your funnels, you can potentially drive greater sales, more loyalty and stronger brand awareness.

The Evolution of the Marketing Funnel 

At the end of the 20th century, Elias St. Elmo Lewis created a model highlighting the stages of a customer’s relationship with a business. The “AIDA” model indicates that every purchase involves: 

  • Awareness: The prospect is aware of their problems and possible solutions for them.
  • Interest: The prospect shows interest in a group of services or products.
  • Desire: The prospect begins to evaluate a certain brand.
  • Action: The prospect decides whether to purchase.

Defining the Marketing Funnel

The basics of the marketing funnel have stayed the same since the 1900s. However, no single model is universally accepted by all companies. Some prefer to keep their model simple, using the “TOFU-MOFU-BOFU” strategy which refers to the top of funnel, middle of funnel, and bottom of funnel as distinct elements.

Others believe that adding “loyalty” and “advocacy” stages to the funnel improves the marketing strategy. After all, businesses lose up to $1.6 trillion a year when customers leave them.

Which of the following best describe the consideration stage of the marketing funnel?

Strategies for Each Stage of the Marketing Funnel

The marketing funnel works as a unified whole. This means that every section needs to work perfectly for the journey to be successful. There are many things that reduce friction in their marketing funnel. For instance:

  • Awareness: Branded content strategies appeal to audiences and make them receptive to future interactions.
  • Consideration: Brand advocates and social proof assist customers when they’re comparing you against competitors.
  • Conversion: A simple purchasing process reduces the risk of buying.
  • Loyalty: A loyalty program with regular discounts, email interactions and social media maintains customers.
  • Advocacy: Receptive individuals in your loyalty program support your future marketing funnels.

The Benefits of Marketing Funnels

Marketing funnels simplify the customer journey and make it easier for companies to follow. These solutions map out each stage of their client’s decision process and plan the steps they want to take in each.

A marketing funnel applies to almost any customer interaction. Whether you’re looking for online sales, generating traffic for your brick and mortar store or collecting clicks as an affiliate, you need a marketing funnel. The funnel is powerful way to bring visibility to every stage of connecting with your customer. 

The biggest benefit of marketing funnels is their measurability. Your funnel shows you where you’re losing customers, to help you pivot your strategy. For instance, if you lose customers before they ever get to the second stage, you need a better brand awareness campaign.

The Difference Between B2B and B2C Marketing Funnels 

Marketing funnels often change depending on your customer base. 

  • B2C customers often navigate the funnel alone or with trusted advisors like family and friends. B2C clients may never interact directly with a company representative.
  • B2B customers have larger, more focused buying groups. B2B consumers interact directly with sales representatives in the lower stages of the marketing funnel.

Adjusting your funnel to suit your user personas instantly makes it more effective.

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How to optimize your marketing funnel for the customer journey

Ask 10 marketers about marketing funnels and you’ll probably get 10 different answers. Why is that? A marketing funnel isn't a one-size-fits-all strategy; your marketing funnel is uniquely tailored to how your buyer buys.

Which of the following best describe the consideration stage of the marketing funnel?

This works well if you know the habits of your target audience. Your marketing funnel provides more value to your marketing strategy when you understand your customers—then you can make informed decisions to improve the customer experience as they move through the funnel.

Our goal with this piece is to help you get the most out of your marketing funnel. We cover:

  • What is a marketing funnel?

  • 3 stages of the marketing funnel

  • How to measure the success of your marketing funnel

  • 3 tools to increase conversion rates throughout the funnel

TL;DR: every marketing funnel is unique and should be designed for how customers buy—not how you want to sell. Combining quantitative and qualitative data will help you understand how real customers shop and behave on your site, so you can optimize your marketing funnel for the customer journey and increase conversions.

What is a marketing funnel?

A marketing funnel is a series of stages to guide prospects through the customer journey. The funnel helps marketing teams plan and measure efforts to attract, engage, and convert prospects through content and other marketing materials, like landing pages and ads.

Marketing funnels are commonly based on the ‘AIDA’ model:

  • Awareness

  • Interest

  • Desire

  • Action

But you can simplify the funnel into a three-stage model:

  • Top of the funnel (TOFU): awareness

  • Middle of the funnel (MOFU): consideration

  • Bottom of the funnel (BOFU): conversion

Note: you can rename or add stages like ‘loyalty’ and ‘advocacy’ to any funnel model, but the function of the marketing funnel—to attract, engage, and convert leads—remains the same regardless of how you identify specific stages.

For the rest of this article we'll look at the TOFU/MOFU/BOFU funnel model.

💡 Keep in mind: sometimes marketing funnels and conversion funnels are thought of as interchangeable, but it’s important to understand the subtle differences between them.

Marketing funnels generate leads: they attract prospects at the top of the funnel, and help marketers measure and track efforts to engage and convert prospects in the middle and bottom of the funnel.

Conversion funnels generate sales: they capture the customer journey from awareness to conversion, which could mean buying a product, completing a form, signing up to a list, or another type of micro-conversion.

👉 Read more: learn how to optimize your ecommerce conversion funnel for the nonlinear customer journey.

The traditional funnel model is linear, beginning at the top of the funnel and ending at the bottom, where your prospects convert.

The challenge is that marketing funnels don’t always work like this in the real world. People don’t always jump into a funnel right at the top and progress step-by-step through each stage until they come out the bottom, a new customer.

Many people bounce in, out of, and around the funnel before they convert. Or, they may make it to the bottom of the funnel and then (gasp!) drop out, never to be seen or heard from again.

The marketing funnel—like people's real-life buying behavior—is nonlinear, which is why it's important to understand the customer journey from the moment of awareness to the moment of conversion. And part of that is understanding how each stage works in the traditional marketing funnel model.

1. Top of the funnel: awareness

The top of the funnel (TOFU) is where prospects become aware of your brand and engage with it for the first time. They might not know a lot about your product or service yet, so this stage focuses on content and marketing material that promotes brand awareness.

Use this stage to attract prospects, and show them what you have to offer:

  • Create a landing page or infographic that introduces your brand, service, or product to new visitors.

  • Share a post on social media that highlights your unique selling proposition (USP).

  • Use paid ads on social media and in podcasts that are relevant to your target audience.

2. Middle of the funnel: consideration

Potential customers enter the middle of the funnel (MOFU) once they’ve engaged with your brand in a meaningful way: maybe they’ve subscribed to an email list, are following you on social media, or have signed up for a webinar.

Use this stage to engage with prospects—to earn their trust and set your brand apart:

  • Write an article or white paper that provides value, answers a question, and solves a problem for your potential customers.

  • Invite visitors to participate in a survey to learn more about the drivers, hooks, and barriers they encounter with your brand.

  • Share case studies and product comparisons.

  • Create landing pages specific to individual customer segments.

💪 Pro tip: surveying potential customers is an opportunity to learn how real people shop and behave on your site. Ask open-ended questions like

  • Where did you hear about us?

  • What are you hoping to find on our site today?

  • What persuaded you to [take a specific action]?

  • What are your concerns or questions about [our product or service]?

👉 Read more: nobody knows more about what your customers want than your customers themselves—here are 15 more website survey questions to ask.

3. Bottom of the funnel: conversion

The bottom of the funnel (BOFU) is the last place prospective customers go before they convert. You’ve gotten their attention, built trust, and fostered a relationship with them.

Use this stage to convert prospects—give them specific reasons to choose your brand over your competitors:

  • Offer a trial or demo so visitors can experience your product or service first-hand.

  • Write a how-to guide or article that answers questions and eliminates any doubt or blockers potential customers may experience.

  • Share social proof, like customer reviews and testimonies, to build even more trust.

  • Make feature and price comparison charts easy to access and understand.

  • Send segmented email marketing campaigns and use on-site surveys—for example, send an email to users that have abandoned their shopping cart, or put an exit survey

    on the checkout page.

💡 Keep in mind: every customer experiences your marketing funnel differently. You might create content for the top of the funnel, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that customers can only access it at that stage. For example, someone might jump directly to the middle or bottom of the funnel because they’re already aware of their problem and your solution, and are ready to purchase.

👉 Read more: create a unique marketing funnel tailored to how your buyer wants to buy—not how you want to sell. Learn how psychographics and personas can help you get to the truth about why and how people buy.

Measuring the success of your marketing funnel

Understanding your customers requires observing and communicating with them—not just looking at numbers on a chart and making assumptions. To measure your marketing funnel's success, you need both quantitative and qualitative data (more on this later).

That said, there are still some key quantitative metrics to keep in mind when you measure your marketing funnel's success and effectiveness.

4 marketing funnel metrics you should measure

1. Cost per acquisition (CPA)

CPA measures how much you’re spending on marketing to acquire each new customer. Teams usually look at this number to analyze their paid advertising, email marketing, social media, and other paid marketing efforts.

To get this number, divide the entire cost of your marketing campaign by the number of conversions. From there, the idea is pretty simple: if the cost outweighs the gain, you might want to consider ending the campaign or testing alternatives.

2. Customer lifetime value (LTV)

LTV measures the continuous value a customer brings to your company. This metric is all about retention, which carries particular weight for SaaS (software as a service) companies because subscribers pay regularly. However, LTV also gives insight to industries like ecommerce and traditional sales—if you can predict the likelihood of a customer making another purchase.

💡 Keep in mind: CPA and LTV are affected by factors like marketing and company costs and how you price your product or service. It's hard to know how much prospective customers are willing to pay, especially if you're a SaaS startup. Market research alone won't tell you how much to charge—you have to test prices and listen to your customers.

👉 Read more: learn which factors to consider when pricing your SaaS product.

3. Conversion rates

Conversion rate measures the frequency of conversions. Some marketers only focus on the final conversion: sales—but you can measure each stage's success through micro-conversions or goal conversions. For example:

  1. TOFU conversion: how many visitors convert to marketing qualified leads (MQLs)

  2. MOFU conversion: how many MQLs convert to sign-ups or subscribers

  3. BOFU conversion: how many sign-ups or subscribers convert to customers

Measuring goal conversion rate allows your team to make more informed decisions about each funnel stage rather than just the final outcome.

4. Conversion rate per channel

Each marketing channel has different goals, so it’s important to analyze the success of each one. These channels might include

  • Organic search

  • Paid ads (Display, SEM, Social, Podcasts)

  • Referrals and influencers

  • Email

Like with goal conversions, teams with clear definitions for conversions in each channel will have an easier time measuring success. Ask yourself:

  • Is clicking on a paid ad a conversion?

  • Is responding to an email a conversion?

  • Is signing up for a newsletter a conversion?

Answering questions like these will help you identify what you want from each channel, so you can measure whether it’s working or not.

💡 Keep in mind: traditional analytics tools like Google Analytics work well for tracking and measuring quantitative metrics like traffic, exits and bounces, cost per acquisition, and goal conversions.

But to measure the success of your marketing funnel, you need to understand how people are using your website (beyond traffic and conversions) and why they behave a certain way while they browse or shop. Then, you can optimize your marketing funnel to increase conversions at each stage of the customer journey.

👉 Read more: learn how to combine the powers of Google Analytics and Hotjar to get the full picture of user behavior on your site.

Now you know: when you focus on measuring quantitative data (i.e. numerical data) without considering qualitative data (i.e. how people experience your marketing funnel and how they think or feel throughout their customer journey), you’re missing an important part of the picture.

Here are three tools to give you qualitative data that'll help you increase conversions throughout the marketing funnel:

  1. Heatmaps: to understand user behavior

  2. Session recordings: to understand individual journeys

  3. Surveys: to get user feedback

1. Understand user behavior with heatmaps

AN EXAMPLE OF A HOTJAR SCROLL MAP (LEFT) AND MOVE MAP (RIGHT)

Heatmaps show popular (red) and unpopular (blue) areas and elements on your page, and reveal how people move on and interact with your site in aggregate. Analyze website heatmaps to identify page elements that are (or aren't) working to get people moving through your funnel.

Once you have insight into how users are behaving on key pages of your site, you can focus on making changes that will have the most impact to increase conversions—and either ditch the efforts with less rewarding outcomes, or A/B test alternatives.

🔥 A heatmap example for the top of the funnel (TOFU): look at heatmaps on pages that are a part of your TOFU strategy, like blog and landing pages.

Let's say you want visitors to click on a call to action (CTA) you've placed at the bottom of a landing page. A scroll heatmap might show that only 20% of your visitors are making it to the bottom of the page—which means 80% of them aren't even seeing your CTA. In that case, you could try moving the CTA (or adding another CTA) to the middle or top of the page.

After you've optimized the page, look at heatmaps again to learn whether the change impacted your conversions.

2. Understand individual user journeys with session recordings

AN EXAMPLE OF A HOTJAR SESSION RECORDING

Session recordings capture website visitors' actions—like mouse movements, clicks, taps, and scrolling—so you can see how real users engage with your website from page to page.

Insight from recordings helps you identify blockers or pain points users experience throughout their journey on your site—like broken elements, website bugs, or a confusing design—which might reveal why users drop off at a particular stage of the funnel.

🔥 A session recording example for the middle of the funnel (MOFU): use session recordings segments and filters to find recordings of pages that are a part of your MOFU strategy, like category and product pages, guides and how-tos, case studies, and comparisons.

Let’s say you want users to add a product to their shopping cart from your product comparison page, but the page has a high exit rate and hardly any conversions. A session recording reveals that users are rage clicking on a non-clickable element and are exiting out of frustration. In that case, you could try removing the element, or making it clickable so the page is more intuitive to how real people interact with it.

After you've fixed the page, watch session recordings again to see whether the change improved the user experience (UX).

Note: Hotjar integrates with Google Optimize; you can filter your Recordings by Optimize experiments to test variants and measure results.

3. Get feedback from real users with on-site surveys

AN EXAMPLE OF A HOTJAR SURVEY

On-site surveys are one of the fastest and easiest ways to get direct feedback from real website visitors: find out what’s stopping them from converting, or poll customers who’ve just converted to find out what does work.

Surveys give you a chance to engage with real visitors at each step in the funnel so you can learn how to improve the customer journey and increase conversions.

🔥 An on-site survey example for the bottom of the funnel (BOFU): use on-site surveys on pages that are a part of your BOFU strategy, like how-to or demo pages, category and product pages, and shopping cart or checkout pages.

NPS surveys and post-purchase surveys help measure customer satisfaction so you can learn from customers who've already converted.

Let's say a customer has just purchased on your site. Before they exit, you can ask them to rate their experience on a scale, and follow up with another open-ended question depending on the rating. For example, a high score might lead to a question like, “what did you love most about the experience?” and a low score might lead to “how can we improve your experience in the future?”

Note: you can also invite visitors to participate in an external link survey, giving you the chance to ask more detailed, thoughtful questions to get even more insight from your visitors.

Takeaways and next steps

Marketing funnels help you guide prospects through each stage of the customer journey. There are many ways to approach the traditional marketing funnel, but the key to an effective funnel is understanding your customers.

Combining quantitative and qualitative insights using the tools and tips we cover above will help you build a better funnel that speaks to your customers' unique needs, and increase conversions as a result.

What is the consideration stage of the marketing funnel?

Consideration At the consideration stage, consumers interested in your business and its offerings are considering whether or not to buy. Depending on your business, this could include guides, webinars, reviews, white papers, case studies, comparison charts, and much more.

Which of the following best describes the consideration stage of the marketing?

Consideration Stage: The stage where people are doing heavy research on whether or not your product or service is a good fit for them.

What is consideration in brand funnel?

The consideration stage of the brand funnel measures how many people or the percentage of those who are aware of your brand, would actually consider making a purchase. Only brands that have a compelling offer which aligns with and can deliver on the goals of the target market will be considered.

What does the consideration stage include?

For the prospective buyer, the consideration stage is where they seek specific solutions to their problem and compare the various options. They consider which solution would work best for them. They won't make the purchase yet at this stage, but they will evaluate and narrow down their options.