Acquisition Funnel
An acquisition funnel is the staged path a prospect follows from first discovering your brand to becoming a captured, qualified lead. It maps awareness, interest, and conversion into measurable steps.
In depth
Each stage of the funnel filters audience volume against intent, so a large pool of cold visitors narrows into a smaller set of people who are genuinely ready to engage. Traffic enters at the top through ads, search, or referrals, then moves toward a conversion event such as completing a quiz or submitting a form. Instrumenting every transition with tracking lets you see exactly where people drop off, which channels deliver buyers rather than browsers, and what your real cost per qualified lead is.
The most common pitfall is optimizing only the top of the funnel: teams celebrate cheap clicks while ignoring that those visitors never convert. In a scorecard quiz funnel, the funnel does double duty by both moving people forward and scoring them, so a lead who finishes is already segmented by fit. That tight coupling of progression and qualification is what separates a high-yield acquisition funnel from a leaky one that simply generates traffic.
Example in practice
Frequently asked questions
What are the main stages of an acquisition funnel?
Most funnels include awareness, interest or consideration, and conversion. In a quiz funnel, the conversion stage doubles as qualification, since finishing the quiz both captures the lead and scores their fit.
How is an acquisition funnel different from a sales funnel?
An acquisition funnel focuses on turning strangers into leads, while a sales funnel takes those leads toward a purchase. They overlap at the handoff point where a qualified lead is passed to sales.
How do I measure acquisition funnel performance?
Track conversion rate at each stage, cost per qualified lead, and drop-off points. Tools like a conversion tracking pixel let you attribute which channels actually produce buyers rather than just clicks.