“Random Rewriting vs Systematic Diagnosis” Concept: A split-screen comparison showing two approaches to fixing a funnel.  Left side (Random Rewriting — Chaotic): A person silhouette frantically rewriting text, moving buttons, changing colors, adding testimonials. Above them, scattered thought bubbles: “Rewrite headline,” “Swap CTA,” “Add more proof,” “Change design,” “Send more traffic,” “Maybe the offer is weak?” The page is chaotic, desaturated red/grey. Label: “Guessing. Treating symptoms. The real leak remains untouched. Time and money wasted.”  Right side (Systematic Diagnosis — Structured): The same person silhouette, now working through a structured 10-step worksheet. Each step is a glowing diagnostic test. Below the worksheet, a clear diagnosis appears: “The page has a Buyer Temperature Leak. Cold traffic is landing on a page written for warm buyers. The first repair is to add recognition and context above the fold.” Label: “Diagnosing. Finding the exact leak. One targeted repair. Efficiency and clarity.”  A curved arrow points from left to right with the word: “Guess → Diagnose → Repair.”  Style: Dark charcoal background. Left side: desaturated red/grey, chaotic, scattered. Right side: warm gold/amber, structured, organized, glowing.  Interaction: Hovering the left side reveals each random guess (rewrite headline, swap CTA, add proof, change design). Hovering the right side reveals the 10-step diagnostic process and how it leads to a precise repair. A toggle switches between “Random Rewriting” and “Systematic Diagnosis.”

Our Three Step Process

May 30, 2026

Chap 1 | Resource 2 (a) | The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™

“Random Rewriting vs Systematic Diagnosis” Concept: A split-screen comparison showing two approaches to fixing a funnel.  Left side (Random Rewriting — Chaotic): A person silhouette frantically rewriting text, moving buttons, changing colors, adding testimonials. Above them, scattered thought bubbles: “Rewrite headline,” “Swap CTA,” “Add more proof,” “Change design,” “Send more traffic,” “Maybe the offer is weak?” The page is chaotic, desaturated red/grey. Label: “Guessing. Treating symptoms. The real leak remains untouched. Time and money wasted.”  Right side (Systematic Diagnosis — Structured): The same person silhouette, now working through a structured 10-step worksheet. Each step is a glowing diagnostic test. Below the worksheet, a clear diagnosis appears: “The page has a Buyer Temperature Leak. Cold traffic is landing on a page written for warm buyers. The first repair is to add recognition and context above the fold.” Label: “Diagnosing. Finding the exact leak. One targeted repair. Efficiency and clarity.”  A curved arrow points from left to right with the word: “Guess → Diagnose → Repair.”  Style: Dark charcoal background. Left side: desaturated red/grey, chaotic, scattered. Right side: warm gold/amber, structured, organized, glowing.  Interaction: Hovering the left side reveals each random guess (rewrite headline, swap CTA, add proof, change design). Hovering the right side reveals the 10-step diagnostic process and how it leads to a precise repair. A toggle switches between “Random Rewriting” and “Systematic Diagnosis.”

Our Three Step Process

May 30, 2026

Chap 1 | Resource 2 (a) | The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™

The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ It is a full-page diagnostic tool that helps you identify why a funnel page is not converting before you rewrite, redesign, or send more traffic to it. It examines the major conversion leak points: first-glance clarity, buyer temperature, offer clarity, proof strength, CTA strength, page flow, friction, and trust. Use it when a page looks finished but performance feels weak, because the problem is rarely “the whole page.” Usually, one or two invisible leaks are weakening the entire buyer journey.


Prefer Audio Or Video?

The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ is also available as:

🎧 A guided audio walkthrough explaining full-page funnel diagnosis, buyer temperature alignment, offer clarity, proof strength, CTA friction, and conversion leak detection.

🎥 A practical video breakdown with real funnel autopsies, weak-page examples, before/after repairs, and section-by-section conversion diagnostics.

Choose the format that fits how you learn best.

[Listen To The Audio Walkthrough]
[Watch The Video Breakdown]

——


Why Most Funnels Get Misdiagnosed

Most funnels are not fixed properly because they are not diagnosed properly.

The founder looks at the page and says:

“The headline needs work.”

The designer says:

“The layout needs to be cleaner.”

The ads person says:

“We need better traffic.”

The copywriter says:

“The offer needs sharper language.”

The team says:

“Maybe we need more testimonials.”

Everyone guesses.

Then the page gets rewritten.

Or redesigned.

Or rebuilt.

Or duplicated.

Or sent more traffic.

And the real problem remains untouched.

That is how funnels waste time.

Not because people are lazy.

Because they are treating symptoms instead of finding the leak.

A funnel page does not usually fail for one dramatic reason.

It fails because one or more parts of the buyer journey create friction.

The page may be clear but untrusted.

The offer may be strong but poorly explained.

The proof may exist but appear too late.

The CTA may be visible but emotionally too early.

The headline may attract attention but the body copy may lose belief.

The page may speak to a hot buyer while the actual visitor is still cold.

The funnel may ask for action before enough certainty has been built.

That is why this resource exists.

The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ helps you stop guessing and start diagnosing.

——


What This Resource Helps You Do

The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ helps you inspect a funnel page section by section and identify the exact conversion leaks weakening performance.

Use it when:

your page gets traffic but weak conversions

visitors click but do not enquire

people read but do not act

buyers say “interesting” but delay

the page looks good but feels commercially soft

you are not sure whether the problem is copy, offer, proof, CTA, traffic, or trust

your CTA gets ignored

your offer needs too much explaining

your proof feels weak or misplaced

your page feels long but not persuasive

your funnel has attention but no movement

buyers hesitate before taking the next step

your team keeps rewriting without knowing what is broken

This is not a random feedback worksheet.

This is a conversion leak diagnostic.

The goal is simple:

Find the real reason the page is not moving the buyer forward.

Because until the leak is found, every fix is a guess.

——


The Core Principle™

Do not rewrite before diagnosis.

That is the rule.

Most people try to fix funnels by changing words too quickly.

They rewrite headlines.

They swap CTAs.

They add testimonials.

They shorten sections.

They add urgency.

They change colours.

They move buttons.

But they do not first ask:

Where exactly is the buyer losing clarity, belief, trust, desire, or momentum?

That is the question that matters.

A funnel autopsy is not about making the page prettier.

It is about identifying the point where buyer movement weakens.

The buyer may lose movement because:

they do not understand the offer

they do not feel the problem matters

they do not trust the claim

they do not recognise themselves

they do not see enough proof

they are not ready for the CTA

they feel overwhelmed

they do not know what happens next

they do not believe the result is possible

they do not feel the cost of doing nothing

The page is not broken everywhere.

Find the leak.

Then repair the leak.

——


What A Funnel Autopsy Actually Is

A funnel autopsy is a structured diagnosis of the page after performance has disappointed you.

It asks:

What was the page supposed to do?

Who was the page supposed to move?

What action was the visitor supposed to take?

Where did clarity fail?

Where did belief fail?

Where did proof fail?

Where did the CTA fail?

Where did the buyer’s temperature mismatch the message?

Where did the page ask for too much too soon?

Where did the buyer stop feeling safe enough to continue?

This is not emotional criticism.

This is not “I like it” or “I do not like it.”

This is not design opinion.

This is page forensics.

You are looking for evidence.

Not vibes.

——


The Funnel Autopsy Rule™

A funnel page should create movement.

Every section should move the buyer closer to action.

That movement may be:

from confusion to clarity

from indifference to relevance

from scepticism to belief

from interest to desire

from doubt to proof

from hesitation to safety

from passive reading to active next step

If a section does not create movement, it is either weak, misplaced, overlong, under-supported, or unnecessary.

That is the standard.

Do not ask:

“Does this section sound good?”

Ask:

“What does this section make the buyer more ready to believe, feel, or do?”

If the answer is unclear, the section is not doing enough work.

——


Before You Start: Capture The Funnel

Do not audit from memory.

Do not audit the page you wish existed.

Audit the page that is actually live or drafted.

Page Being Audited

What page are you auditing?

Homepage / Landing Page / Sales Page / Application Page / Webinar Page / Product Page / Lead Magnet Page / Offer Section / Other

Main Offer

What is being offered?

Target Buyer

Who is the page meant to convert?

Buyer Temperature

What type of buyer is most likely arriving?

Cold / Warm / Hot / Mixed / Unsure

Traffic Source

Where are visitors coming from?

Paid ads / Organic search / Social media / Email / Referral / Direct / Community / Sales call / Other

Desired Action

What should the visitor do next?

Book a call / Buy / Apply / Download / Sign up / Watch / Enquire / Join waitlist / Other

Current Page Performance

What is weak?

Low scroll / Low CTA clicks / Low enquiries / Low purchases / Low applications / High bounce / Low trust / Weak lead quality / Other

Current Concern

What do you suspect is wrong?

Evidence Available

What evidence do you have?

Analytics / Heatmaps / Call recordings / Buyer comments / Sales objections / Email replies / Form data / Ad performance / User testing / Other

——


The Funnel Autopsy Sequence™

Run the page through these ten diagnostic areas:

  1. First-Glance Clarity

  2. Buyer Temperature Match

  3. Offer Clarity

  4. Problem & Consequence

  5. Page Flow

  6. Proof & Trust

  7. CTA Strength

  8. Friction & Risk

  9. Buyer Language

  10. Conversion Leak Priority

Do not skip around.

A funnel has sequence.

The autopsy should too.

——


Diagnostic 1: First-Glance Clarity™

Core Question

Can the visitor understand the page quickly enough to keep going?

Before the page can persuade, it must orient.

The visitor needs to understand:

what this is

who it is for

why it matters

what changes

what to do next

If the page fails here, everything else becomes harder.

A page with weak first-glance clarity forces the visitor to decode meaning before they can feel desire.

That is expensive.

Attention does not wait for clarity.

Questions To Ask

Can the visitor understand the page within seconds?

Does the headline create immediate orientation?

Does the subheadline clarify the promise?

Does the first screen name the buyer’s problem?

Does the page avoid vague language?

Is the CTA visible and understandable?

Does the hero visual build meaning or simply decorate?

Would a stranger know what this page is about?

Weak Signals

First-glance clarity is weak when the page uses:

vague headline

clever but unclear phrasing

broad audience language

abstract benefits

decorative visuals

unclear CTA

too many ideas above the fold

no visible buyer condition

generic language like “growth,” “strategy,” “solutions,” or “success”

The visitor may think:

“This looks professional, but I do not know what it means.”

That is a leak.

Strong Signals

First-glance clarity is strong when the visitor can quickly say:

“This is for me.”

“I know what problem this solves.”

“I understand what changes.”

“I know why this matters.”

“I know what to click next.”

That is the first conversion gate.

Repair Direction

Fix the first screen before fixing the rest of the page.

If the first screen is unclear, the rest of the page may never get a proper chance.

Worksheet

What is unclear above the fold?

What does the headline currently communicate?

What should it communicate more clearly?

What buyer condition should appear sooner?

What CTA confusion exists?

What visual confusion exists?

What needs to be rewritten first?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 2: Buyer Temperature Match™

Core Question

Does the page match the buyer’s readiness level?

A page can be well written and still fail if it speaks to the wrong buyer temperature.

Cold buyers need more context.

Warm buyers need more specificity.

Hot buyers need directness, proof, and action.

A cold buyer may not yet understand the problem.

A warm buyer may understand the problem but not trust your solution.

A hot buyer may already want the outcome but need reassurance before acting.

If the page treats all visitors the same, friction rises.

Buyer Temperature Definitions

Cold Buyer

They may not fully understand the problem yet.

They need:

recognition

education

problem clarity

context

reason to care

low-pressure next step

Warm Buyer

They understand the problem but are comparing options.

They need:

positioning

proof

mechanism clarity

differentiation

specificity

objection handling

Hot Buyer

They already feel the pain and want movement.

They need:

clear offer

strong proof

direct CTA

risk reduction

decision support

fast action path

Questions To Ask

What temperature is the page written for?

What temperature is the traffic actually bringing?

Does the page assume too much awareness?

Does the page explain too slowly for a hot buyer?

Does the CTA ask too much from a cold buyer?

Does the proof appear too late for a warm buyer?

Does the page match the visitor’s stage of readiness?

Weak Signals

Buyer temperature mismatch happens when:

cold traffic lands on a page that assumes trust

hot buyers are forced through excessive education

warm buyers see claims without enough proof

the CTA asks for commitment too early

the page pushes urgency before belief

the page explains basics to someone already ready to act

the funnel treats social traffic and email traffic the same

Strong Signals

The page matches buyer temperature when:

cold buyers are given context and recognition

warm buyers are given proof and differentiation

hot buyers are given direct action and reassurance

the CTA matches trust level

the page does not ask for more commitment than the visitor is ready to give

Repair Direction

Match the page to the traffic source.

A page built for warm email subscribers may fail with cold ad traffic.

A page built for cold traffic may feel slow to hot buyers.

Worksheet

Where is the traffic coming from?

What is the likely buyer temperature?

Cold / Warm / Hot / Mixed

What does this buyer already know?

What do they not yet believe?

What do they need before acting?

Is the current page too fast, too slow, or just right?

Too fast / Too slow / Just right / Unsure

What needs to change?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 3: Offer Clarity™

Core Question

Can the buyer clearly understand what is being offered?

A funnel cannot convert strongly if the offer is foggy.

Offer fog happens when the buyer cannot clearly understand:

what the offer is

who it is for

what problem it solves

what result it creates

how it works

why it is different

why it matters now

The buyer may like the idea but still hesitate because the offer has no clear shape.

Interest without offer clarity creates delay.

Questions To Ask

Can the buyer explain the offer in one sentence?

Is the result clear?

Is the mechanism clear?

Is the audience clear?

Is the offer specific enough to remember?

Does the page sell the result or merely describe the process?

Does the offer feel commercially meaningful?

Does the buyer understand why this offer is different from alternatives?

Weak Signals

Offer clarity is weak when the page says:

custom strategy

growth support

marketing solutions

business transformation

premium consulting

done-for-you systems

full-service support

high-converting funnels

These phrases may sound valuable, but they often lack offer shape.

The buyer thinks:

“What exactly am I getting?”

Or:

“Why is this different?”

That is a leak.

Strong Signals

Offer clarity is strong when the buyer can quickly identify:

the buyer condition

the painful problem

the desired result

the mechanism

the next step

Example:

“An offer clarity audit for service businesses whose pages explain what they do but still fail to give buyers a strong reason to enquire.”

Now the offer has shape.

Repair Direction

Compress the offer into a clear line.

Use this structure:

For [specific buyer] who [specific problem], this helps [specific result] through [specific mechanism] without [painful friction].

Worksheet

What is the current offer?

Who is it for?

What problem does it solve?

What result does it create?

What mechanism creates the result?

What painful friction does it remove?

What makes it different?

Write the offer in one clear sentence:

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 4: Problem & Consequence™

Core Question

Does the page make the problem feel important enough to solve?

Many pages explain the offer but fail to make the problem matter.

That creates passive interest.

The buyer thinks:

“This sounds useful.”

But not:

“I need to deal with this.”

The difference is consequence.

A strong page shows the cost of leaving the problem unresolved.

That cost may be:

lost revenue

wasted traffic

weak trust

delayed decisions

wrong-fit leads

low conversion

buyer confusion

repeated frustration

missed opportunity

emotional fatigue

If consequence is missing, urgency stays weak.

Questions To Ask

What problem does the page name?

Does the buyer already feel this problem?

Does the page show why it matters?

Does it reveal the cost of inaction?

Does it show what keeps leaking?

Does it create enough tension to make the offer relevant?

Does the page make staying the same feel uncomfortable?

Weak Signals

Problem and consequence are weak when the page says:

“We help you improve.”

“We support growth.”

“We make marketing better.”

“We optimise your funnel.”

“We build strategy.”

This explains activity.

It does not expose pain.

Strong Signals

Problem and consequence are strong when the page says:

“You are sending traffic into a page buyers do not trust yet.”

“Qualified visitors are leaving before they understand why your offer matters.”

“Your proof appears after doubt has already started winning.”

“Your CTA asks for action before enough certainty has been built.”

Now the buyer feels the cost.

Repair Direction

Name the real consequence.

Do not exaggerate.

Do not fake urgency.

Make the existing cost visible.

Worksheet

What problem is the page solving?

What happens if the buyer ignores it?

What keeps leaking?

What becomes more expensive?

What frustration repeats?

What does the buyer privately worry about?

What consequence should be made clearer?

Write the consequence in one sentence:

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 5: Page Flow™

Core Question

Does the page move the buyer in the right psychological order?

A funnel page is not just a collection of sections.

It is a sequence.

If the sequence is wrong, the buyer feels friction.

For example:

proof appears before the buyer understands the claim

the CTA appears before trust is built

features appear before the problem matters

testimonials appear without context

pricing appears before value is clear

the founder story appears before buyer recognition

the page explains the method before the buyer cares about the problem

That weakens movement.

A strong page earns the next section.

The Basic Page Movement

A strong funnel page usually moves through:

  • recognition

  • problem

  • consequence

  • offer

  • mechanism

  • proof

  • objections

  • CTA

  • reassurance

This does not mean every page must follow the same layout.

But the buyer should not feel emotionally out of order.


Questions To Ask

Does the page start with buyer recognition?

Does it make the problem matter before explaining the solution?

Does the offer appear at the right moment?

Does proof appear near the claims it supports?

Does the CTA appear after enough belief has been built?

Does each section make the next section feel necessary?

Does the page create momentum or feel like disconnected blocks?

Weak Signals

Page flow is weak when:

sections feel random

proof appears too late

the CTA appears too early

the story comes before buyer relevance

features appear before pain

the offer appears before the problem is clear

the page repeats instead of progressing

each section feels isolated

Strong Signals

Page flow is strong when:

each section answers the buyer’s next question

proof appears when doubt rises

the CTA feels earned

the buyer feels progressively clearer and safer

the page creates forward movement

the sequence feels natural

Repair Direction

Map the buyer’s questions.

Then order the page around those questions.

The page should not follow what the founder wants to say.

It should follow what the buyer needs to believe next.

Worksheet

List the current page sections in order:








What question does each section answer?

Where does the sequence feel out of order?

What section appears too early?

What section appears too late?

What section should be removed?

What section should be moved?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 6: Proof & Trust™

Core Question

Does the page give buyers enough reason to believe?

The buyer does not only need to understand the offer.

They need to trust it.

Proof is what reduces the buyer’s belief burden.

Without proof, the buyer has to carry too much uncertainty alone.

They may think:

“Sounds good, but is it real?”

“Has this worked before?”

“Will this work for someone like me?”

“Can I trust this enough to act?”

Proof should answer those doubts.

Not decorate the page.

Questions To Ask

What claims does the page make?

What proof supports those claims?

Is the proof close enough to the claim?

Does the proof feel real?

Does the proof feel specific?

Does the proof reduce doubt?

Does the proof match the buyer’s situation?

Does the proof appear before the CTA?

Does the page rely too much on unsupported claims?

Weak Signals

Proof and trust are weak when:

testimonials are generic

proof appears too late

screenshots lack context

results are claimed but not shown

the proof wall feels random

the page uses logos without explanation

proof feels staged

proof does not support nearby claims

the buyer has to imagine too much

Strong Signals

Proof and trust are strong when:

proof appears where doubt rises

testimonials show transformation

screenshots are easy to inspect

before/after proof shows visible movement

proof supports specific claims

proof feels real and grounded

the page feels safer as the buyer scrolls

Repair Direction

Do not simply add more proof.

Add the right proof in the right place.

Ask:

“What doubt is rising here, and what proof would reduce it fastest?”

Worksheet

What is the biggest claim on the page?

What doubt does that claim create?

What proof supports it?

Is the proof nearby?

Yes / No / Partially

What proof feels strongest?

What proof feels weakest?

What proof is missing?

What proof should be moved closer to the CTA?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 7: CTA Strength™

Core Question

Does the CTA create clear, low-friction movement?

The CTA is not just a button.

It is the visible bridge between attention and action.

A weak CTA creates uncertainty.

A strong CTA creates movement.

The buyer should understand:

what happens next

why clicking matters

what value they receive

how much effort is required

whether the action feels safe enough

If the CTA is vague, passive, too aggressive, or too early, conversion leaks.

Questions To Ask

Is the CTA specific?

Does it imply a payoff?

Does it match the buyer’s temperature?

Is it repeated at the right moments?

Does the CTA feel connected to the offer?

Does microcopy reduce hesitation?

Does the page support the CTA with enough proof?

Does the buyer know what happens after clicking?

Weak Signals

CTA strength is weak when the button says:

Submit

Learn More

Contact Us

Get Started

Click Here

Read More

Or when:

there is no microcopy

the CTA appears before trust

the CTA feels too high commitment

the payoff is unclear

the next step feels vague

the CTA does not match the page promise

Strong Signals

CTA strength is stronger when the button says:

Run The Funnel Autopsy

Find My Biggest Page Leak

Get The Clarity Scorecard

Show Me What To Fix First

Book The Offer Audit

Download The Worksheet

See The Breakdown

Now the action feels specific.

The buyer knows what they are moving toward.

Repair Direction

Make the CTA payoff clear.

Then reduce hesitation with microcopy.

Worksheet

What is the current CTA?

What does the buyer get after clicking?

What payoff does the CTA imply?

What hesitation might stop the click?

Is the CTA too early, too late, or correctly placed?

Too early / Too late / Correct / Unsure

What microcopy would make the action feel safer?

Rewrite the CTA:

Rewrite the microcopy:

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 8: Friction & Risk™

Core Question

What makes the buyer hesitate before acting?

Even if the page is clear and persuasive, friction can still stop action.

Friction can be practical or psychological.

Practical friction includes:

long forms

unclear next step

slow page speed

confusing checkout

hidden pricing

too many fields

unclear process

weak mobile experience

Psychological friction includes:

fear of wasting money

fear of being pressured

lack of trust

unclear outcome

weak proof

uncertainty about what happens next

too much commitment too soon

A funnel autopsy must identify both.

Questions To Ask

What might make the buyer hesitate?

What feels risky?

What feels unclear?

What feels too much effort?

What feels too high commitment?

What question is unanswered before action?

What objection is not handled?

What practical step creates friction?

What emotional concern is still active?

Weak Signals

Friction is high when:

forms are too long

next steps are unclear

the buyer does not know what happens after clicking

the CTA feels like a trap

pricing is hidden without reason

there is no reassurance

the offer feels risky

proof is weak near action

mobile experience is heavy

the page asks for commitment before trust

Strong Signals

Friction is lower when:

the next step is clear

forms are simple

microcopy reassures

proof appears near CTA

the process is explained

risk is reduced

expectations are clear

the buyer feels safe enough to act

Repair Direction

Reduce the perceived cost of action.

Ask:

“What would make this next step feel easier, safer, and more obvious?”

Worksheet

What practical friction exists?

What psychological friction exists?

What is the buyer afraid of?

What question remains unanswered?

What could make the next step feel safer?

What could make the form easier?

What reassurance should appear near the CTA?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 9: Buyer Language™

Core Question

Does the page sound like the buyer’s world or the business’s internal language?

Weak pages often use seller language.

Strong pages use buyer language.

Seller language sounds like:

conversion architecture

marketing optimisation

strategic growth

customer journey

brand positioning

funnel performance

digital transformation

Buyer language sounds like:

people click but do not enquire

buyers do not trust the page fast enough

the offer sounds useful but forgettable

the page looks good but still does not move people

we keep sending traffic into a page we do not fully trust

The second version creates recognition faster.

Why?

Because it sounds closer to the buyer’s private thought.

Questions To Ask

Does the page use language the buyer would actually use?

Does it name the problem how the buyer feels it?

Does it avoid internal terminology?

Does it sound human?

Does the page reflect real objections?

Does it include phrases from sales calls, DMs, reviews, emails, or support messages?

Would the buyer say, “That is exactly it”?

Weak Signals

Buyer language is weak when the page uses:

corporate phrasing

internal terminology

abstract benefits

polished but lifeless language

jargon

seller-first descriptions

phrases the buyer would never naturally say

Strong Signals

Buyer language is strong when:

the buyer recognises their own thoughts

the problem feels emotionally accurate

the page names real friction

the copy feels specific and human

the language sounds like it came from the market

the buyer feels seen rather than sold to

Repair Direction

Replace internal language with market language.

Use real buyer phrases wherever possible.

Worksheet

What phrases sound like internal business language?

What would the buyer say instead?

What objections have buyers actually said?

What phrases appear in calls, messages, reviews, or emails?

What line should be rewritten in buyer language?

Rewrite it:

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 10: Conversion Leak Priority™

Core Question

What is the first leak that should be fixed?

This is where the autopsy becomes useful.

Do not finish the worksheet with a vague list of problems.

Finish with a priority.

Most pages have several weaknesses.

But not every weakness matters equally.

Some leaks are cosmetic.

Some leaks are structural.

Some leaks are killing movement.

The goal is to identify the first repair.

Not every possible improvement.

Questions To Ask

Which diagnostic scored lowest?

Which weakness appears earliest on the page?

Which leak affects the buyer’s ability to understand the offer?

Which leak affects trust most?

Which leak affects action most?

Which repair would create the biggest performance improvement fastest?

Which issue should be fixed before everything else?

Common Priority Logic

If first-glance clarity is weak, fix that first.

If buyer temperature is wrong, fix the message-to-traffic match.

If offer clarity is weak, fix the offer before rewriting sections.

If consequence is weak, fix the tension.

If page flow is weak, reorder the argument.

If proof is weak, support the claims.

If CTA is weak, clarify the action.

If friction is high, reduce risk.

If buyer language is weak, replace seller language.

Worksheet

Lowest score:

Second-lowest score:

Most damaging leak:

Where does it appear?

Why is it damaging conversion?

What should be fixed first?

What should not be touched yet?

What evidence will show whether the repair worked?

Score

Priority clarity score: ___ / 5

Status: Clear Priority / Weak Priority / No Clear Priority

——


The Complete Funnel Autopsy Scorecard™

Score each diagnostic from 1 to 5.

First-Glance Clarity: ___ / 5

Buyer Temperature Match: ___ / 5

Offer Clarity: ___ / 5

Problem & Consequence: ___ / 5

Page Flow: ___ / 5

Proof & Trust: ___ / 5

CTA Strength: ___ / 5

Friction & Risk: ___ / 5

Buyer Language: ___ / 5

Conversion Leak Priority: ___ / 5

Total Score: ___ / 50

——


Score Interpretation

42–50: Strong Funnel Foundation™

The page has a strong conversion foundation.

It is clear, well-sequenced, aligned with buyer temperature, supported by proof, and has a clear CTA path.

You can test, refine, and optimise.

34–41: Good Page, But Leaking™

The page is workable, but one or two leaks are weakening performance.

Fix the lowest-scoring areas before doing a full rewrite.

This page likely needs targeted repair, not total reconstruction.

24–33: Conversion Leak Environment™

The page has several active leaks.

Visitors may understand parts of the page but lose momentum before action.

The issue may involve offer clarity, trust, CTA friction, page sequence, or buyer mismatch.

Do not scale traffic yet.

Repair the structure first.

0–23: Funnel Autopsy Failure™

The page is not conversion-ready.

It may be unclear, misaligned, untrusted, poorly sequenced, or asking for action too early.

Do not rewrite randomly.

Return to the highest-leverage fundamentals:

clarity

buyer temperature

offer

consequence

proof

CTA

friction

——


Funnel Leak Diagnosis™

Use your lowest scores to identify the dominant leak.

Leak 1: Clarity Leak™

Low score in:

First-Glance Clarity

Meaning:

The visitor does not understand the page fast enough.

Repair:

Clarify the headline, subheadline, visual, and CTA.

Leak 2: Buyer Temperature Leak™

Low score in:

Buyer Temperature Match

Meaning:

The page is speaking to the wrong awareness level.

Repair:

Match the message to the traffic source and buyer readiness.

Leak 3: Offer Fog Leak™

Low score in:

Offer Clarity

Meaning:

The buyer cannot clearly understand what is being offered or why it matters.

Repair:

Compress the offer into a clear buyer-problem-result-mechanism line.

Leak 4: Consequence Leak™

Low score in:

Problem & Consequence

Meaning:

The problem does not feel important enough to act on.

Repair:

Make the cost of inaction visible.

Leak 5: Sequence Leak™

Low score in:

Page Flow

Meaning:

The page sections appear in the wrong psychological order.

Repair:

Reorder the page around the buyer’s next question.

Leak 6: Trust Leak™

Low score in:

Proof & Trust

Meaning:

The page asks for belief without enough evidence.

Repair:

Move proof closer to claims and strengthen weak proof.

Leak 7: CTA Leak™

Low score in:

CTA Strength

Meaning:

The buyer does not feel enough clarity or payoff around the next step.

Repair:

Rewrite CTA and microcopy around specific value.

Leak 8: Friction Leak™

Low score in:

Friction & Risk

Meaning:

The next step feels too risky, unclear, heavy, or high commitment.

Repair:

Reduce form friction, explain next steps, add reassurance.

Leak 9: Language Leak™

Low score in:

Buyer Language

Meaning:

The page sounds like the business, not the buyer.

Repair:

Replace internal language with real market language.

Leak 10: Priority Leak™

Low score in:

Conversion Leak Priority

Meaning:

The team does not know what to fix first.

Repair:

Choose the lowest-scoring, earliest, most damaging leak.

——


My Dominant Funnel Leak

My lowest score is:

My dominant funnel leak is:

Clarity / Buyer Temperature / Offer Fog / Consequence / Sequence / Trust / CTA / Friction / Language / Priority

The first repair I need to make is:

The repair should happen in this section:

The evidence I will use to judge improvement is:

——


Funnel Autopsy Repair Map™

Use this to decide what to do next.

If The Page Is Unclear

Do not redesign first.

Repair:

headline

subheadline

visual direction

CTA

one-sentence page explanation

If Buyer Temperature Is Wrong

Do not blame the offer first.

Repair:

traffic-to-message match

awareness level

amount of education

CTA commitment level

proof timing

If The Offer Is Foggy

Do not add more sections first.

Repair:

buyer condition

problem

result

mechanism

offer line

If Consequence Is Weak

Do not add fake urgency.

Repair:

cost of inaction

visible friction

buyer frustration

commercial loss

emotional pressure

If Page Flow Is Weak

Do not rewrite every section.

Repair:

section order

buyer question sequence

proof placement

CTA timing

repeated sections

If Proof Is Weak

Do not add random testimonials.

Repair:

claim-to-proof alignment

proof strength

proof placement

testimonial specificity

screenshot context

If CTA Is Weak

Do not simply make the button brighter.

Repair:

CTA wording

payoff

microcopy

trust support

friction level

If Friction Is High

Do not push harder.

Repair:

risk

form length

next-step clarity

reassurance

expectation setting

If Buyer Language Is Weak

Do not make the page more “premium” by making it vague.

Repair:

real buyer phrases

sales call language

objections

private frustrations

recognisable wording

——


Weak vs Strong Funnel Diagnosis Example

Weak Diagnosis

“The page is not converting. We need better copy.”

This is too vague.

It does not identify the actual leak.

It creates random rewriting.

Strong Diagnosis

“The page is attracting warm buyers, but the offer section is vague, the proof appears too late, and the CTA asks for a call before the buyer has enough trust. The first repair should be moving a specific proof asset directly under the offer claim and rewriting the CTA around a lower-friction diagnostic.”

This is useful.

It identifies:

buyer temperature

offer issue

proof issue

CTA issue

first repair

That is a real autopsy.

——


The Funnel Autopsy Summary™

Complete this after scoring the page.

Page Being Audited

Main Offer

Target Buyer

Traffic Source

Desired Action

Biggest Symptom

Low clicks / Low scroll / Low enquiries / Low purchases / Weak lead quality / High bounce / Other

Lowest Score

Dominant Leak

Why This Leak Matters

First Section To Repair

First Copy Element To Repair

Headline / Subheadline / Offer Line / Proof / CTA / Microcopy / Objection Section / Other

First Proof Element To Repair

First Friction Element To Repair

What Not To Touch Yet

Repair Priority




Success Metric

How will you know the repair worked?

CTA clicks / Enquiries / Applications / Purchases / Scroll depth / Lead quality / Reply rate / Other

——


Final Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™

Use this as your complete working version.

Current Page

Page:

Offer:

Target buyer:

Traffic source:

Buyer temperature:

Desired action:

Main performance issue:

Current Page Elements

Headline:

Subheadline:

Offer line:

Main proof:

CTA:

Microcopy:

Main objection section:

Final CTA:

Diagnostic Scores

First-Glance Clarity: ___ / 5

Buyer Temperature Match: ___ / 5

Offer Clarity: ___ / 5

Problem & Consequence: ___ / 5

Page Flow: ___ / 5

Proof & Trust: ___ / 5

CTA Strength: ___ / 5

Friction & Risk: ___ / 5

Buyer Language: ___ / 5

Conversion Leak Priority: ___ / 5

Total: ___ / 50

Diagnosis

The biggest leak is:

This leak appears in:

This leak weakens conversion because:

The buyer likely thinks:

The page currently asks the buyer to:

But the buyer still needs:

First Repair

The first repair should be:

Why this comes first:

What should be changed exactly:

Rewritten Core Elements

New one-sentence page explanation:

New offer line:

New consequence line:

New proof placement:

New CTA:

New microcopy:

Final Verdict

Strong Funnel Foundation / Good Page, But Leaking / Conversion Leak Environment / Funnel Autopsy Failure

Why?

——


Final Execution Challenge™

Take one underperforming funnel page and run the full autopsy.

Do not rewrite yet.

Do not redesign yet.

Do not add new traffic yet.

Diagnose first.

Find the lowest score.

Find the dominant leak.

Find the first repair.

Then fix only that first.

Because the goal is not to make the page different.

The goal is to make the page move the buyer more effectively.

A page does not improve because more words are added.

It improves when the right friction is removed.

——


Final Principle™

A funnel page does not fail in general.

It fails somewhere specific.

That is the point.

Somewhere, the buyer loses clarity.

Somewhere, the offer becomes foggy.

Somewhere, the proof arrives too late.

Somewhere, the CTA feels too risky.

Somewhere, the page speaks to the wrong buyer temperature.

Somewhere, the buyer’s trust stops increasing.

Somewhere, movement breaks.

The job of The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ is to find that somewhere.

Not to guess.

Not to decorate.

Not to rewrite blindly.

But to diagnose.

Because once the real leak is visible, the repair becomes obvious.

And when the repair becomes obvious, the funnel stops being a mystery.

It becomes a system.

One leak at a time.

One repair at a time.

One clearer buyer movement at a time.

That is how weak pages become stronger pages.

Not through random optimisation.

Through diagnosis before repair.

——

From:
The $100M Funnel Playbook. Book I: Foundation — Buyer Psychology, Offer Clarity, And The Page Architecture Behind High-Converting Funnels
By Maris Spalins.

——

Copyright Notice

© 2026 The $100M Funnel Playbook / Winyourclients / Maris Spalins. All rights reserved.

This resource, including the frameworks, terminology, examples, scorecards, templates, prompts, methods, and written explanations, is original intellectual property created for The $100M Funnel Playbook. Book I: Foundation — Buyer Psychology, Offer Clarity, And The Page Architecture Behind High-Converting Funnels and published through Winyourclients.

No part of this resource may be copied, reproduced, screenshotted, republished, redistributed, sold, adapted, uploaded, scraped, stored in a database, included in training data, used to train artificial intelligence systems, or used to create derivative commercial or educational materials without prior written permission.

Limited reference, quotation, or sharing is only permitted where the source is clearly and visibly credited.

Any permitted reference must include at least one of the following source credits:

The $100M Funnel Playbook by Maris Spalins
or
Winyourclients — www.winyourclients.com
or
Maris Spalins / Winyourclients

Screenshots, excerpts, summaries, or redistributed versions must not remove, hide, alter, crop out, or obscure the original source, author name, book title, website name, or copyright notice.

This resource is provided for personal learning and implementation only. It is not licensed for resale, republishing, redistribution, AI training, template cloning, course creation, consulting delivery, or commercial reuse without written permission from Maris Spalins or Winyourclients.

For permission requests, licensing, citation approval, or commercial usage enquiries, contact:

Winyourclients
www.winyourclients.com

or

Email directly to Jacob on: help@winyourclients.com

“The Funnel Autopsy Scorecard — 10 Tests” Concept: A minimalist, elegant 10-point scorecard floating in darkness. Each test is listed with a score (1–5) represented as glowing bars:  Test	Score (1–5) 1. First-Glance Clarity	▰▰▰▰▰ 4 ✅ 2. Buyer Temperature Match	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ 3. Offer Clarity	▰▰▰▰▰ 3 ⚠️ 4. Problem & Consequence	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ 5. Page Flow	▰▰▰▰▰ 3 ⚠️ 6. Proof & Trust	▰▰▰▰▰ 3 ⚠️ 7. CTA Strength	▰▰▰▰▰ 3 ⚠️ 8. Friction & Risk	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ 9. Buyer Language	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ 10. Conversion Leak Priority	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ Total Score: 26/50 — “Conversion Leak Environment”  Below the scorecard, a diagnostic summary: “The page has several active leaks. Visitors may understand parts of the page but lose momentum before action. The issue may involve offer clarity, trust, CTA friction, page sequence, or buyer mismatch. Do not scale traffic yet. Repair the structure first.”  Style: Luxury stationery meets forensic UI. Dark charcoal background, gold foil lines, serif for test names, monospace for scores. Red/yellow/green status indicators. The card feels like a serious diagnostic instrument.  Interaction: Hovering any test row expands a detailed explanation of that test, including diagnostic questions and weak/strong signals. Clicking the row allows the user to adjust the score (1–5); the total score and diagnostic summary update dynamically. A “Run Full Autopsy” button applies all 10 tests to a sample page.
“The 10 Funnel Autopsy Tests — Diagnostic Dashboard” Concept: A minimalist, 10-panel grid or dashboard. Each panel represents one diagnostic test with an icon, core question, and score gauge:  Test 1 (First-Glance Clarity): Icon: eye/glance — “Can the visitor understand the page quickly enough to keep going?”  Test 2 (Buyer Temperature Match): Icon: thermometer — “Does the page match the buyer’s readiness level?”  Test 3 (Offer Clarity): Icon: diamond/offer — “Can the buyer clearly understand what is being offered?”  Test 4 (Problem & Consequence): Icon: domino/impact — “Does the page make the problem feel important enough to solve?”  Test 5 (Page Flow): Icon: sequence arrows — “Does the page move the buyer in the right psychological order?”  Test 6 (Proof & Trust): Icon: shield/evidence — “Does the page give buyers enough reason to believe?”  Test 7 (CTA Strength): Icon: arrow/button — “Does the CTA create clear, low-friction movement?”  Test 8 (Friction & Risk): Icon: roadblock/shield — “What makes the buyer hesitate before acting?”  Test 9 (Buyer Language): Icon: speech bubble — “Does the page sound like the buyer’s world or internal business language?”  Test 10 (Conversion Leak Priority): Icon: checklist/pin — “What is the first leak that should be fixed?”  Style: Glass-morphism, dark background. Each panel is a translucent card with gold foil text. Red/yellow/green gauge indicators. The layout feels like a high-end forensic dashboard.  Interaction: Hovering any panel expands a detailed explanation of that test, including diagnostic questions, weak signals, and strong signals. Adjusting any gauge updates a master scorecard. Clicking the panel pins it to a “Priority Fix” sidebar.
“The Leak Priority Map — What to Fix First” Concept: A minimalist, vertical priority map showing the logical order of repair based on leak type.  Top (Fix First — Highest Priority): First-Glance Clarity — “If the page is unclear, nothing else matters.” — Bright gold  Second: Buyer Temperature Match — “Speaking to the wrong awareness level kills relevance.” — Warm gold  Third: Offer Clarity — “A foggy offer creates passive interest, not action.” — Deep gold  Fourth: Problem & Consequence — “No consequence = no urgency.” — Amber  Fifth: Page Flow — “Wrong sequence creates emotional friction.” — Orange  Sixth: Proof & Trust — “Unsupported claims create scepticism.” — Dark orange  Seventh: CTA Strength — “Weak payoff = weak action.” — Soft orange  Eighth: Friction & Risk — “Hesitation kills the final step.” — Warm amber  Ninth: Buyer Language — “Seller language feels distant.” — Soft amber  Bottom (Fix Last — Lower Priority): Conversion Leak Priority — “After fixing leaks, reprioritize.” — Cool grey  A small arrow points down the map, with a label: “Repair in this order. Not all leaks matter equally.”  Style: Architectural priority map meets luxury UI. Dark background, vertical gradient from bright gold to cool grey. Thin gold connecting lines.  Interaction: Hovering any priority level expands a detailed explanation of why that leak should be fixed at that stage. Clicking the level shows a case study of a page that fixed that leak first. A slider lets the user move a leak up or down the priority order to see how mis-prioritization delays results.
“The Complete Funnel Autopsy Lab — Interactive Tool” Concept: A minimalist, interactive autopsy lab. The interface shows:  Top section: A text area where the user pastes their page URL or describes their funnel page (headline, offer, target buyer, traffic source, desired action, current performance issue).  Below: The 10 diagnostic tests as expandable cards. Each card shows:  Test name and icon  3-5 diagnostic questions  Weak signals checklist  Strong signals checklist  A score slider (1–5)  A “What’s Leaking?” analysis button  Below the cards: A master scorecard that updates dynamically, showing total score (0–50) and interpretation (Funnel Autopsy Failure / Conversion Leak Environment / Good Page But Leaking / Strong Funnel Foundation).  Bottom section: A “Generate Autopsy Report” button that compiles all scores, weakest areas, dominant leak diagnosis, and specific repair recommendations into a downloadable PDF. A “Priority Fix List” shows the top 3 leaks to address first, in correct repair order.  Style: Luxury UI meets interactive forensic lab. Dark background, gold sliders, clean typography. Feels like a serious funnel-diagnostic instrument.  Interaction: The user fills out the page description. They work through each test, answering diagnostic questions and adjusting scores. The master scorecard updates in real-time. Clicking “Generate Autopsy Report” produces a diagnostic PDF with specific, actionable recommendations for each failing test.

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The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ It is a full-page diagnostic tool that helps you identify why a funnel page is not converting before you rewrite, redesign, or send more traffic to it. It examines the major conversion leak points: first-glance clarity, buyer temperature, offer clarity, proof strength, CTA strength, page flow, friction, and trust. Use it when a page looks finished but performance feels weak, because the problem is rarely “the whole page.” Usually, one or two invisible leaks are weakening the entire buyer journey.


Prefer Audio Or Video?

The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ is also available as:

🎧 A guided audio walkthrough explaining full-page funnel diagnosis, buyer temperature alignment, offer clarity, proof strength, CTA friction, and conversion leak detection.

🎥 A practical video breakdown with real funnel autopsies, weak-page examples, before/after repairs, and section-by-section conversion diagnostics.

Choose the format that fits how you learn best.

[Listen To The Audio Walkthrough]
[Watch The Video Breakdown]

——


Why Most Funnels Get Misdiagnosed

Most funnels are not fixed properly because they are not diagnosed properly.

The founder looks at the page and says:

“The headline needs work.”

The designer says:

“The layout needs to be cleaner.”

The ads person says:

“We need better traffic.”

The copywriter says:

“The offer needs sharper language.”

The team says:

“Maybe we need more testimonials.”

Everyone guesses.

Then the page gets rewritten.

Or redesigned.

Or rebuilt.

Or duplicated.

Or sent more traffic.

And the real problem remains untouched.

That is how funnels waste time.

Not because people are lazy.

Because they are treating symptoms instead of finding the leak.

A funnel page does not usually fail for one dramatic reason.

It fails because one or more parts of the buyer journey create friction.

The page may be clear but untrusted.

The offer may be strong but poorly explained.

The proof may exist but appear too late.

The CTA may be visible but emotionally too early.

The headline may attract attention but the body copy may lose belief.

The page may speak to a hot buyer while the actual visitor is still cold.

The funnel may ask for action before enough certainty has been built.

That is why this resource exists.

The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ helps you stop guessing and start diagnosing.

——


What This Resource Helps You Do

The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ helps you inspect a funnel page section by section and identify the exact conversion leaks weakening performance.

Use it when:

your page gets traffic but weak conversions

visitors click but do not enquire

people read but do not act

buyers say “interesting” but delay

the page looks good but feels commercially soft

you are not sure whether the problem is copy, offer, proof, CTA, traffic, or trust

your CTA gets ignored

your offer needs too much explaining

your proof feels weak or misplaced

your page feels long but not persuasive

your funnel has attention but no movement

buyers hesitate before taking the next step

your team keeps rewriting without knowing what is broken

This is not a random feedback worksheet.

This is a conversion leak diagnostic.

The goal is simple:

Find the real reason the page is not moving the buyer forward.

Because until the leak is found, every fix is a guess.

——


The Core Principle™

Do not rewrite before diagnosis.

That is the rule.

Most people try to fix funnels by changing words too quickly.

They rewrite headlines.

They swap CTAs.

They add testimonials.

They shorten sections.

They add urgency.

They change colours.

They move buttons.

But they do not first ask:

Where exactly is the buyer losing clarity, belief, trust, desire, or momentum?

That is the question that matters.

A funnel autopsy is not about making the page prettier.

It is about identifying the point where buyer movement weakens.

The buyer may lose movement because:

they do not understand the offer

they do not feel the problem matters

they do not trust the claim

they do not recognise themselves

they do not see enough proof

they are not ready for the CTA

they feel overwhelmed

they do not know what happens next

they do not believe the result is possible

they do not feel the cost of doing nothing

The page is not broken everywhere.

Find the leak.

Then repair the leak.

——


What A Funnel Autopsy Actually Is

A funnel autopsy is a structured diagnosis of the page after performance has disappointed you.

It asks:

What was the page supposed to do?

Who was the page supposed to move?

What action was the visitor supposed to take?

Where did clarity fail?

Where did belief fail?

Where did proof fail?

Where did the CTA fail?

Where did the buyer’s temperature mismatch the message?

Where did the page ask for too much too soon?

Where did the buyer stop feeling safe enough to continue?

This is not emotional criticism.

This is not “I like it” or “I do not like it.”

This is not design opinion.

This is page forensics.

You are looking for evidence.

Not vibes.

——


The Funnel Autopsy Rule™

A funnel page should create movement.

Every section should move the buyer closer to action.

That movement may be:

from confusion to clarity

from indifference to relevance

from scepticism to belief

from interest to desire

from doubt to proof

from hesitation to safety

from passive reading to active next step

If a section does not create movement, it is either weak, misplaced, overlong, under-supported, or unnecessary.

That is the standard.

Do not ask:

“Does this section sound good?”

Ask:

“What does this section make the buyer more ready to believe, feel, or do?”

If the answer is unclear, the section is not doing enough work.

——


Before You Start: Capture The Funnel

Do not audit from memory.

Do not audit the page you wish existed.

Audit the page that is actually live or drafted.

Page Being Audited

What page are you auditing?

Homepage / Landing Page / Sales Page / Application Page / Webinar Page / Product Page / Lead Magnet Page / Offer Section / Other

Main Offer

What is being offered?

Target Buyer

Who is the page meant to convert?

Buyer Temperature

What type of buyer is most likely arriving?

Cold / Warm / Hot / Mixed / Unsure

Traffic Source

Where are visitors coming from?

Paid ads / Organic search / Social media / Email / Referral / Direct / Community / Sales call / Other

Desired Action

What should the visitor do next?

Book a call / Buy / Apply / Download / Sign up / Watch / Enquire / Join waitlist / Other

Current Page Performance

What is weak?

Low scroll / Low CTA clicks / Low enquiries / Low purchases / Low applications / High bounce / Low trust / Weak lead quality / Other

Current Concern

What do you suspect is wrong?

Evidence Available

What evidence do you have?

Analytics / Heatmaps / Call recordings / Buyer comments / Sales objections / Email replies / Form data / Ad performance / User testing / Other

——


The Funnel Autopsy Sequence™

Run the page through these ten diagnostic areas:

  1. First-Glance Clarity

  2. Buyer Temperature Match

  3. Offer Clarity

  4. Problem & Consequence

  5. Page Flow

  6. Proof & Trust

  7. CTA Strength

  8. Friction & Risk

  9. Buyer Language

  10. Conversion Leak Priority

Do not skip around.

A funnel has sequence.

The autopsy should too.

——


Diagnostic 1: First-Glance Clarity™

Core Question

Can the visitor understand the page quickly enough to keep going?

Before the page can persuade, it must orient.

The visitor needs to understand:

what this is

who it is for

why it matters

what changes

what to do next

If the page fails here, everything else becomes harder.

A page with weak first-glance clarity forces the visitor to decode meaning before they can feel desire.

That is expensive.

Attention does not wait for clarity.

Questions To Ask

Can the visitor understand the page within seconds?

Does the headline create immediate orientation?

Does the subheadline clarify the promise?

Does the first screen name the buyer’s problem?

Does the page avoid vague language?

Is the CTA visible and understandable?

Does the hero visual build meaning or simply decorate?

Would a stranger know what this page is about?

Weak Signals

First-glance clarity is weak when the page uses:

vague headline

clever but unclear phrasing

broad audience language

abstract benefits

decorative visuals

unclear CTA

too many ideas above the fold

no visible buyer condition

generic language like “growth,” “strategy,” “solutions,” or “success”

The visitor may think:

“This looks professional, but I do not know what it means.”

That is a leak.

Strong Signals

First-glance clarity is strong when the visitor can quickly say:

“This is for me.”

“I know what problem this solves.”

“I understand what changes.”

“I know why this matters.”

“I know what to click next.”

That is the first conversion gate.

Repair Direction

Fix the first screen before fixing the rest of the page.

If the first screen is unclear, the rest of the page may never get a proper chance.

Worksheet

What is unclear above the fold?

What does the headline currently communicate?

What should it communicate more clearly?

What buyer condition should appear sooner?

What CTA confusion exists?

What visual confusion exists?

What needs to be rewritten first?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 2: Buyer Temperature Match™

Core Question

Does the page match the buyer’s readiness level?

A page can be well written and still fail if it speaks to the wrong buyer temperature.

Cold buyers need more context.

Warm buyers need more specificity.

Hot buyers need directness, proof, and action.

A cold buyer may not yet understand the problem.

A warm buyer may understand the problem but not trust your solution.

A hot buyer may already want the outcome but need reassurance before acting.

If the page treats all visitors the same, friction rises.

Buyer Temperature Definitions

Cold Buyer

They may not fully understand the problem yet.

They need:

recognition

education

problem clarity

context

reason to care

low-pressure next step

Warm Buyer

They understand the problem but are comparing options.

They need:

positioning

proof

mechanism clarity

differentiation

specificity

objection handling

Hot Buyer

They already feel the pain and want movement.

They need:

clear offer

strong proof

direct CTA

risk reduction

decision support

fast action path

Questions To Ask

What temperature is the page written for?

What temperature is the traffic actually bringing?

Does the page assume too much awareness?

Does the page explain too slowly for a hot buyer?

Does the CTA ask too much from a cold buyer?

Does the proof appear too late for a warm buyer?

Does the page match the visitor’s stage of readiness?

Weak Signals

Buyer temperature mismatch happens when:

cold traffic lands on a page that assumes trust

hot buyers are forced through excessive education

warm buyers see claims without enough proof

the CTA asks for commitment too early

the page pushes urgency before belief

the page explains basics to someone already ready to act

the funnel treats social traffic and email traffic the same

Strong Signals

The page matches buyer temperature when:

cold buyers are given context and recognition

warm buyers are given proof and differentiation

hot buyers are given direct action and reassurance

the CTA matches trust level

the page does not ask for more commitment than the visitor is ready to give

Repair Direction

Match the page to the traffic source.

A page built for warm email subscribers may fail with cold ad traffic.

A page built for cold traffic may feel slow to hot buyers.

Worksheet

Where is the traffic coming from?

What is the likely buyer temperature?

Cold / Warm / Hot / Mixed

What does this buyer already know?

What do they not yet believe?

What do they need before acting?

Is the current page too fast, too slow, or just right?

Too fast / Too slow / Just right / Unsure

What needs to change?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 3: Offer Clarity™

Core Question

Can the buyer clearly understand what is being offered?

A funnel cannot convert strongly if the offer is foggy.

Offer fog happens when the buyer cannot clearly understand:

what the offer is

who it is for

what problem it solves

what result it creates

how it works

why it is different

why it matters now

The buyer may like the idea but still hesitate because the offer has no clear shape.

Interest without offer clarity creates delay.

Questions To Ask

Can the buyer explain the offer in one sentence?

Is the result clear?

Is the mechanism clear?

Is the audience clear?

Is the offer specific enough to remember?

Does the page sell the result or merely describe the process?

Does the offer feel commercially meaningful?

Does the buyer understand why this offer is different from alternatives?

Weak Signals

Offer clarity is weak when the page says:

custom strategy

growth support

marketing solutions

business transformation

premium consulting

done-for-you systems

full-service support

high-converting funnels

These phrases may sound valuable, but they often lack offer shape.

The buyer thinks:

“What exactly am I getting?”

Or:

“Why is this different?”

That is a leak.

Strong Signals

Offer clarity is strong when the buyer can quickly identify:

the buyer condition

the painful problem

the desired result

the mechanism

the next step

Example:

“An offer clarity audit for service businesses whose pages explain what they do but still fail to give buyers a strong reason to enquire.”

Now the offer has shape.

Repair Direction

Compress the offer into a clear line.

Use this structure:

For [specific buyer] who [specific problem], this helps [specific result] through [specific mechanism] without [painful friction].

Worksheet

What is the current offer?

Who is it for?

What problem does it solve?

What result does it create?

What mechanism creates the result?

What painful friction does it remove?

What makes it different?

Write the offer in one clear sentence:

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 4: Problem & Consequence™

Core Question

Does the page make the problem feel important enough to solve?

Many pages explain the offer but fail to make the problem matter.

That creates passive interest.

The buyer thinks:

“This sounds useful.”

But not:

“I need to deal with this.”

The difference is consequence.

A strong page shows the cost of leaving the problem unresolved.

That cost may be:

lost revenue

wasted traffic

weak trust

delayed decisions

wrong-fit leads

low conversion

buyer confusion

repeated frustration

missed opportunity

emotional fatigue

If consequence is missing, urgency stays weak.

Questions To Ask

What problem does the page name?

Does the buyer already feel this problem?

Does the page show why it matters?

Does it reveal the cost of inaction?

Does it show what keeps leaking?

Does it create enough tension to make the offer relevant?

Does the page make staying the same feel uncomfortable?

Weak Signals

Problem and consequence are weak when the page says:

“We help you improve.”

“We support growth.”

“We make marketing better.”

“We optimise your funnel.”

“We build strategy.”

This explains activity.

It does not expose pain.

Strong Signals

Problem and consequence are strong when the page says:

“You are sending traffic into a page buyers do not trust yet.”

“Qualified visitors are leaving before they understand why your offer matters.”

“Your proof appears after doubt has already started winning.”

“Your CTA asks for action before enough certainty has been built.”

Now the buyer feels the cost.

Repair Direction

Name the real consequence.

Do not exaggerate.

Do not fake urgency.

Make the existing cost visible.

Worksheet

What problem is the page solving?

What happens if the buyer ignores it?

What keeps leaking?

What becomes more expensive?

What frustration repeats?

What does the buyer privately worry about?

What consequence should be made clearer?

Write the consequence in one sentence:

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 5: Page Flow™

Core Question

Does the page move the buyer in the right psychological order?

A funnel page is not just a collection of sections.

It is a sequence.

If the sequence is wrong, the buyer feels friction.

For example:

proof appears before the buyer understands the claim

the CTA appears before trust is built

features appear before the problem matters

testimonials appear without context

pricing appears before value is clear

the founder story appears before buyer recognition

the page explains the method before the buyer cares about the problem

That weakens movement.

A strong page earns the next section.

The Basic Page Movement

A strong funnel page usually moves through:

  • recognition

  • problem

  • consequence

  • offer

  • mechanism

  • proof

  • objections

  • CTA

  • reassurance

This does not mean every page must follow the same layout.

But the buyer should not feel emotionally out of order.


Questions To Ask

Does the page start with buyer recognition?

Does it make the problem matter before explaining the solution?

Does the offer appear at the right moment?

Does proof appear near the claims it supports?

Does the CTA appear after enough belief has been built?

Does each section make the next section feel necessary?

Does the page create momentum or feel like disconnected blocks?

Weak Signals

Page flow is weak when:

sections feel random

proof appears too late

the CTA appears too early

the story comes before buyer relevance

features appear before pain

the offer appears before the problem is clear

the page repeats instead of progressing

each section feels isolated

Strong Signals

Page flow is strong when:

each section answers the buyer’s next question

proof appears when doubt rises

the CTA feels earned

the buyer feels progressively clearer and safer

the page creates forward movement

the sequence feels natural

Repair Direction

Map the buyer’s questions.

Then order the page around those questions.

The page should not follow what the founder wants to say.

It should follow what the buyer needs to believe next.

Worksheet

List the current page sections in order:








What question does each section answer?

Where does the sequence feel out of order?

What section appears too early?

What section appears too late?

What section should be removed?

What section should be moved?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 6: Proof & Trust™

Core Question

Does the page give buyers enough reason to believe?

The buyer does not only need to understand the offer.

They need to trust it.

Proof is what reduces the buyer’s belief burden.

Without proof, the buyer has to carry too much uncertainty alone.

They may think:

“Sounds good, but is it real?”

“Has this worked before?”

“Will this work for someone like me?”

“Can I trust this enough to act?”

Proof should answer those doubts.

Not decorate the page.

Questions To Ask

What claims does the page make?

What proof supports those claims?

Is the proof close enough to the claim?

Does the proof feel real?

Does the proof feel specific?

Does the proof reduce doubt?

Does the proof match the buyer’s situation?

Does the proof appear before the CTA?

Does the page rely too much on unsupported claims?

Weak Signals

Proof and trust are weak when:

testimonials are generic

proof appears too late

screenshots lack context

results are claimed but not shown

the proof wall feels random

the page uses logos without explanation

proof feels staged

proof does not support nearby claims

the buyer has to imagine too much

Strong Signals

Proof and trust are strong when:

proof appears where doubt rises

testimonials show transformation

screenshots are easy to inspect

before/after proof shows visible movement

proof supports specific claims

proof feels real and grounded

the page feels safer as the buyer scrolls

Repair Direction

Do not simply add more proof.

Add the right proof in the right place.

Ask:

“What doubt is rising here, and what proof would reduce it fastest?”

Worksheet

What is the biggest claim on the page?

What doubt does that claim create?

What proof supports it?

Is the proof nearby?

Yes / No / Partially

What proof feels strongest?

What proof feels weakest?

What proof is missing?

What proof should be moved closer to the CTA?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 7: CTA Strength™

Core Question

Does the CTA create clear, low-friction movement?

The CTA is not just a button.

It is the visible bridge between attention and action.

A weak CTA creates uncertainty.

A strong CTA creates movement.

The buyer should understand:

what happens next

why clicking matters

what value they receive

how much effort is required

whether the action feels safe enough

If the CTA is vague, passive, too aggressive, or too early, conversion leaks.

Questions To Ask

Is the CTA specific?

Does it imply a payoff?

Does it match the buyer’s temperature?

Is it repeated at the right moments?

Does the CTA feel connected to the offer?

Does microcopy reduce hesitation?

Does the page support the CTA with enough proof?

Does the buyer know what happens after clicking?

Weak Signals

CTA strength is weak when the button says:

Submit

Learn More

Contact Us

Get Started

Click Here

Read More

Or when:

there is no microcopy

the CTA appears before trust

the CTA feels too high commitment

the payoff is unclear

the next step feels vague

the CTA does not match the page promise

Strong Signals

CTA strength is stronger when the button says:

Run The Funnel Autopsy

Find My Biggest Page Leak

Get The Clarity Scorecard

Show Me What To Fix First

Book The Offer Audit

Download The Worksheet

See The Breakdown

Now the action feels specific.

The buyer knows what they are moving toward.

Repair Direction

Make the CTA payoff clear.

Then reduce hesitation with microcopy.

Worksheet

What is the current CTA?

What does the buyer get after clicking?

What payoff does the CTA imply?

What hesitation might stop the click?

Is the CTA too early, too late, or correctly placed?

Too early / Too late / Correct / Unsure

What microcopy would make the action feel safer?

Rewrite the CTA:

Rewrite the microcopy:

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 8: Friction & Risk™

Core Question

What makes the buyer hesitate before acting?

Even if the page is clear and persuasive, friction can still stop action.

Friction can be practical or psychological.

Practical friction includes:

long forms

unclear next step

slow page speed

confusing checkout

hidden pricing

too many fields

unclear process

weak mobile experience

Psychological friction includes:

fear of wasting money

fear of being pressured

lack of trust

unclear outcome

weak proof

uncertainty about what happens next

too much commitment too soon

A funnel autopsy must identify both.

Questions To Ask

What might make the buyer hesitate?

What feels risky?

What feels unclear?

What feels too much effort?

What feels too high commitment?

What question is unanswered before action?

What objection is not handled?

What practical step creates friction?

What emotional concern is still active?

Weak Signals

Friction is high when:

forms are too long

next steps are unclear

the buyer does not know what happens after clicking

the CTA feels like a trap

pricing is hidden without reason

there is no reassurance

the offer feels risky

proof is weak near action

mobile experience is heavy

the page asks for commitment before trust

Strong Signals

Friction is lower when:

the next step is clear

forms are simple

microcopy reassures

proof appears near CTA

the process is explained

risk is reduced

expectations are clear

the buyer feels safe enough to act

Repair Direction

Reduce the perceived cost of action.

Ask:

“What would make this next step feel easier, safer, and more obvious?”

Worksheet

What practical friction exists?

What psychological friction exists?

What is the buyer afraid of?

What question remains unanswered?

What could make the next step feel safer?

What could make the form easier?

What reassurance should appear near the CTA?

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 9: Buyer Language™

Core Question

Does the page sound like the buyer’s world or the business’s internal language?

Weak pages often use seller language.

Strong pages use buyer language.

Seller language sounds like:

conversion architecture

marketing optimisation

strategic growth

customer journey

brand positioning

funnel performance

digital transformation

Buyer language sounds like:

people click but do not enquire

buyers do not trust the page fast enough

the offer sounds useful but forgettable

the page looks good but still does not move people

we keep sending traffic into a page we do not fully trust

The second version creates recognition faster.

Why?

Because it sounds closer to the buyer’s private thought.

Questions To Ask

Does the page use language the buyer would actually use?

Does it name the problem how the buyer feels it?

Does it avoid internal terminology?

Does it sound human?

Does the page reflect real objections?

Does it include phrases from sales calls, DMs, reviews, emails, or support messages?

Would the buyer say, “That is exactly it”?

Weak Signals

Buyer language is weak when the page uses:

corporate phrasing

internal terminology

abstract benefits

polished but lifeless language

jargon

seller-first descriptions

phrases the buyer would never naturally say

Strong Signals

Buyer language is strong when:

the buyer recognises their own thoughts

the problem feels emotionally accurate

the page names real friction

the copy feels specific and human

the language sounds like it came from the market

the buyer feels seen rather than sold to

Repair Direction

Replace internal language with market language.

Use real buyer phrases wherever possible.

Worksheet

What phrases sound like internal business language?

What would the buyer say instead?

What objections have buyers actually said?

What phrases appear in calls, messages, reviews, or emails?

What line should be rewritten in buyer language?

Rewrite it:

Score

Score: ___ / 5

Status: Pass / Weak Pass / Fail

——


Diagnostic 10: Conversion Leak Priority™

Core Question

What is the first leak that should be fixed?

This is where the autopsy becomes useful.

Do not finish the worksheet with a vague list of problems.

Finish with a priority.

Most pages have several weaknesses.

But not every weakness matters equally.

Some leaks are cosmetic.

Some leaks are structural.

Some leaks are killing movement.

The goal is to identify the first repair.

Not every possible improvement.

Questions To Ask

Which diagnostic scored lowest?

Which weakness appears earliest on the page?

Which leak affects the buyer’s ability to understand the offer?

Which leak affects trust most?

Which leak affects action most?

Which repair would create the biggest performance improvement fastest?

Which issue should be fixed before everything else?

Common Priority Logic

If first-glance clarity is weak, fix that first.

If buyer temperature is wrong, fix the message-to-traffic match.

If offer clarity is weak, fix the offer before rewriting sections.

If consequence is weak, fix the tension.

If page flow is weak, reorder the argument.

If proof is weak, support the claims.

If CTA is weak, clarify the action.

If friction is high, reduce risk.

If buyer language is weak, replace seller language.

Worksheet

Lowest score:

Second-lowest score:

Most damaging leak:

Where does it appear?

Why is it damaging conversion?

What should be fixed first?

What should not be touched yet?

What evidence will show whether the repair worked?

Score

Priority clarity score: ___ / 5

Status: Clear Priority / Weak Priority / No Clear Priority

——


The Complete Funnel Autopsy Scorecard™

Score each diagnostic from 1 to 5.

First-Glance Clarity: ___ / 5

Buyer Temperature Match: ___ / 5

Offer Clarity: ___ / 5

Problem & Consequence: ___ / 5

Page Flow: ___ / 5

Proof & Trust: ___ / 5

CTA Strength: ___ / 5

Friction & Risk: ___ / 5

Buyer Language: ___ / 5

Conversion Leak Priority: ___ / 5

Total Score: ___ / 50

——


Score Interpretation

42–50: Strong Funnel Foundation™

The page has a strong conversion foundation.

It is clear, well-sequenced, aligned with buyer temperature, supported by proof, and has a clear CTA path.

You can test, refine, and optimise.

34–41: Good Page, But Leaking™

The page is workable, but one or two leaks are weakening performance.

Fix the lowest-scoring areas before doing a full rewrite.

This page likely needs targeted repair, not total reconstruction.

24–33: Conversion Leak Environment™

The page has several active leaks.

Visitors may understand parts of the page but lose momentum before action.

The issue may involve offer clarity, trust, CTA friction, page sequence, or buyer mismatch.

Do not scale traffic yet.

Repair the structure first.

0–23: Funnel Autopsy Failure™

The page is not conversion-ready.

It may be unclear, misaligned, untrusted, poorly sequenced, or asking for action too early.

Do not rewrite randomly.

Return to the highest-leverage fundamentals:

clarity

buyer temperature

offer

consequence

proof

CTA

friction

——


Funnel Leak Diagnosis™

Use your lowest scores to identify the dominant leak.

Leak 1: Clarity Leak™

Low score in:

First-Glance Clarity

Meaning:

The visitor does not understand the page fast enough.

Repair:

Clarify the headline, subheadline, visual, and CTA.

Leak 2: Buyer Temperature Leak™

Low score in:

Buyer Temperature Match

Meaning:

The page is speaking to the wrong awareness level.

Repair:

Match the message to the traffic source and buyer readiness.

Leak 3: Offer Fog Leak™

Low score in:

Offer Clarity

Meaning:

The buyer cannot clearly understand what is being offered or why it matters.

Repair:

Compress the offer into a clear buyer-problem-result-mechanism line.

Leak 4: Consequence Leak™

Low score in:

Problem & Consequence

Meaning:

The problem does not feel important enough to act on.

Repair:

Make the cost of inaction visible.

Leak 5: Sequence Leak™

Low score in:

Page Flow

Meaning:

The page sections appear in the wrong psychological order.

Repair:

Reorder the page around the buyer’s next question.

Leak 6: Trust Leak™

Low score in:

Proof & Trust

Meaning:

The page asks for belief without enough evidence.

Repair:

Move proof closer to claims and strengthen weak proof.

Leak 7: CTA Leak™

Low score in:

CTA Strength

Meaning:

The buyer does not feel enough clarity or payoff around the next step.

Repair:

Rewrite CTA and microcopy around specific value.

Leak 8: Friction Leak™

Low score in:

Friction & Risk

Meaning:

The next step feels too risky, unclear, heavy, or high commitment.

Repair:

Reduce form friction, explain next steps, add reassurance.

Leak 9: Language Leak™

Low score in:

Buyer Language

Meaning:

The page sounds like the business, not the buyer.

Repair:

Replace internal language with real market language.

Leak 10: Priority Leak™

Low score in:

Conversion Leak Priority

Meaning:

The team does not know what to fix first.

Repair:

Choose the lowest-scoring, earliest, most damaging leak.

——


My Dominant Funnel Leak

My lowest score is:

My dominant funnel leak is:

Clarity / Buyer Temperature / Offer Fog / Consequence / Sequence / Trust / CTA / Friction / Language / Priority

The first repair I need to make is:

The repair should happen in this section:

The evidence I will use to judge improvement is:

——


Funnel Autopsy Repair Map™

Use this to decide what to do next.

If The Page Is Unclear

Do not redesign first.

Repair:

headline

subheadline

visual direction

CTA

one-sentence page explanation

If Buyer Temperature Is Wrong

Do not blame the offer first.

Repair:

traffic-to-message match

awareness level

amount of education

CTA commitment level

proof timing

If The Offer Is Foggy

Do not add more sections first.

Repair:

buyer condition

problem

result

mechanism

offer line

If Consequence Is Weak

Do not add fake urgency.

Repair:

cost of inaction

visible friction

buyer frustration

commercial loss

emotional pressure

If Page Flow Is Weak

Do not rewrite every section.

Repair:

section order

buyer question sequence

proof placement

CTA timing

repeated sections

If Proof Is Weak

Do not add random testimonials.

Repair:

claim-to-proof alignment

proof strength

proof placement

testimonial specificity

screenshot context

If CTA Is Weak

Do not simply make the button brighter.

Repair:

CTA wording

payoff

microcopy

trust support

friction level

If Friction Is High

Do not push harder.

Repair:

risk

form length

next-step clarity

reassurance

expectation setting

If Buyer Language Is Weak

Do not make the page more “premium” by making it vague.

Repair:

real buyer phrases

sales call language

objections

private frustrations

recognisable wording

——


Weak vs Strong Funnel Diagnosis Example

Weak Diagnosis

“The page is not converting. We need better copy.”

This is too vague.

It does not identify the actual leak.

It creates random rewriting.

Strong Diagnosis

“The page is attracting warm buyers, but the offer section is vague, the proof appears too late, and the CTA asks for a call before the buyer has enough trust. The first repair should be moving a specific proof asset directly under the offer claim and rewriting the CTA around a lower-friction diagnostic.”

This is useful.

It identifies:

buyer temperature

offer issue

proof issue

CTA issue

first repair

That is a real autopsy.

——


The Funnel Autopsy Summary™

Complete this after scoring the page.

Page Being Audited

Main Offer

Target Buyer

Traffic Source

Desired Action

Biggest Symptom

Low clicks / Low scroll / Low enquiries / Low purchases / Weak lead quality / High bounce / Other

Lowest Score

Dominant Leak

Why This Leak Matters

First Section To Repair

First Copy Element To Repair

Headline / Subheadline / Offer Line / Proof / CTA / Microcopy / Objection Section / Other

First Proof Element To Repair

First Friction Element To Repair

What Not To Touch Yet

Repair Priority




Success Metric

How will you know the repair worked?

CTA clicks / Enquiries / Applications / Purchases / Scroll depth / Lead quality / Reply rate / Other

——


Final Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™

Use this as your complete working version.

Current Page

Page:

Offer:

Target buyer:

Traffic source:

Buyer temperature:

Desired action:

Main performance issue:

Current Page Elements

Headline:

Subheadline:

Offer line:

Main proof:

CTA:

Microcopy:

Main objection section:

Final CTA:

Diagnostic Scores

First-Glance Clarity: ___ / 5

Buyer Temperature Match: ___ / 5

Offer Clarity: ___ / 5

Problem & Consequence: ___ / 5

Page Flow: ___ / 5

Proof & Trust: ___ / 5

CTA Strength: ___ / 5

Friction & Risk: ___ / 5

Buyer Language: ___ / 5

Conversion Leak Priority: ___ / 5

Total: ___ / 50

Diagnosis

The biggest leak is:

This leak appears in:

This leak weakens conversion because:

The buyer likely thinks:

The page currently asks the buyer to:

But the buyer still needs:

First Repair

The first repair should be:

Why this comes first:

What should be changed exactly:

Rewritten Core Elements

New one-sentence page explanation:

New offer line:

New consequence line:

New proof placement:

New CTA:

New microcopy:

Final Verdict

Strong Funnel Foundation / Good Page, But Leaking / Conversion Leak Environment / Funnel Autopsy Failure

Why?

——


Final Execution Challenge™

Take one underperforming funnel page and run the full autopsy.

Do not rewrite yet.

Do not redesign yet.

Do not add new traffic yet.

Diagnose first.

Find the lowest score.

Find the dominant leak.

Find the first repair.

Then fix only that first.

Because the goal is not to make the page different.

The goal is to make the page move the buyer more effectively.

A page does not improve because more words are added.

It improves when the right friction is removed.

——


Final Principle™

A funnel page does not fail in general.

It fails somewhere specific.

That is the point.

Somewhere, the buyer loses clarity.

Somewhere, the offer becomes foggy.

Somewhere, the proof arrives too late.

Somewhere, the CTA feels too risky.

Somewhere, the page speaks to the wrong buyer temperature.

Somewhere, the buyer’s trust stops increasing.

Somewhere, movement breaks.

The job of The Funnel Autopsy Worksheet™ is to find that somewhere.

Not to guess.

Not to decorate.

Not to rewrite blindly.

But to diagnose.

Because once the real leak is visible, the repair becomes obvious.

And when the repair becomes obvious, the funnel stops being a mystery.

It becomes a system.

One leak at a time.

One repair at a time.

One clearer buyer movement at a time.

That is how weak pages become stronger pages.

Not through random optimisation.

Through diagnosis before repair.

——

From:
The $100M Funnel Playbook. Book I: Foundation — Buyer Psychology, Offer Clarity, And The Page Architecture Behind High-Converting Funnels
By Maris Spalins.

——

Copyright Notice

© 2026 The $100M Funnel Playbook / Winyourclients / Maris Spalins. All rights reserved.

This resource, including the frameworks, terminology, examples, scorecards, templates, prompts, methods, and written explanations, is original intellectual property created for The $100M Funnel Playbook. Book I: Foundation — Buyer Psychology, Offer Clarity, And The Page Architecture Behind High-Converting Funnels and published through Winyourclients.

No part of this resource may be copied, reproduced, screenshotted, republished, redistributed, sold, adapted, uploaded, scraped, stored in a database, included in training data, used to train artificial intelligence systems, or used to create derivative commercial or educational materials without prior written permission.

Limited reference, quotation, or sharing is only permitted where the source is clearly and visibly credited.

Any permitted reference must include at least one of the following source credits:

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or
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or
Maris Spalins / Winyourclients

Screenshots, excerpts, summaries, or redistributed versions must not remove, hide, alter, crop out, or obscure the original source, author name, book title, website name, or copyright notice.

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For permission requests, licensing, citation approval, or commercial usage enquiries, contact:

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“The Funnel Autopsy Scorecard — 10 Tests” Concept: A minimalist, elegant 10-point scorecard floating in darkness. Each test is listed with a score (1–5) represented as glowing bars:  Test	Score (1–5) 1. First-Glance Clarity	▰▰▰▰▰ 4 ✅ 2. Buyer Temperature Match	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ 3. Offer Clarity	▰▰▰▰▰ 3 ⚠️ 4. Problem & Consequence	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ 5. Page Flow	▰▰▰▰▰ 3 ⚠️ 6. Proof & Trust	▰▰▰▰▰ 3 ⚠️ 7. CTA Strength	▰▰▰▰▰ 3 ⚠️ 8. Friction & Risk	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ 9. Buyer Language	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ 10. Conversion Leak Priority	▰▰▰▰▰ 2 ⚠️ Total Score: 26/50 — “Conversion Leak Environment”  Below the scorecard, a diagnostic summary: “The page has several active leaks. Visitors may understand parts of the page but lose momentum before action. The issue may involve offer clarity, trust, CTA friction, page sequence, or buyer mismatch. Do not scale traffic yet. Repair the structure first.”  Style: Luxury stationery meets forensic UI. Dark charcoal background, gold foil lines, serif for test names, monospace for scores. Red/yellow/green status indicators. The card feels like a serious diagnostic instrument.  Interaction: Hovering any test row expands a detailed explanation of that test, including diagnostic questions and weak/strong signals. Clicking the row allows the user to adjust the score (1–5); the total score and diagnostic summary update dynamically. A “Run Full Autopsy” button applies all 10 tests to a sample page.
“The 10 Funnel Autopsy Tests — Diagnostic Dashboard” Concept: A minimalist, 10-panel grid or dashboard. Each panel represents one diagnostic test with an icon, core question, and score gauge:  Test 1 (First-Glance Clarity): Icon: eye/glance — “Can the visitor understand the page quickly enough to keep going?”  Test 2 (Buyer Temperature Match): Icon: thermometer — “Does the page match the buyer’s readiness level?”  Test 3 (Offer Clarity): Icon: diamond/offer — “Can the buyer clearly understand what is being offered?”  Test 4 (Problem & Consequence): Icon: domino/impact — “Does the page make the problem feel important enough to solve?”  Test 5 (Page Flow): Icon: sequence arrows — “Does the page move the buyer in the right psychological order?”  Test 6 (Proof & Trust): Icon: shield/evidence — “Does the page give buyers enough reason to believe?”  Test 7 (CTA Strength): Icon: arrow/button — “Does the CTA create clear, low-friction movement?”  Test 8 (Friction & Risk): Icon: roadblock/shield — “What makes the buyer hesitate before acting?”  Test 9 (Buyer Language): Icon: speech bubble — “Does the page sound like the buyer’s world or internal business language?”  Test 10 (Conversion Leak Priority): Icon: checklist/pin — “What is the first leak that should be fixed?”  Style: Glass-morphism, dark background. Each panel is a translucent card with gold foil text. Red/yellow/green gauge indicators. The layout feels like a high-end forensic dashboard.  Interaction: Hovering any panel expands a detailed explanation of that test, including diagnostic questions, weak signals, and strong signals. Adjusting any gauge updates a master scorecard. Clicking the panel pins it to a “Priority Fix” sidebar.
“The Leak Priority Map — What to Fix First” Concept: A minimalist, vertical priority map showing the logical order of repair based on leak type.  Top (Fix First — Highest Priority): First-Glance Clarity — “If the page is unclear, nothing else matters.” — Bright gold  Second: Buyer Temperature Match — “Speaking to the wrong awareness level kills relevance.” — Warm gold  Third: Offer Clarity — “A foggy offer creates passive interest, not action.” — Deep gold  Fourth: Problem & Consequence — “No consequence = no urgency.” — Amber  Fifth: Page Flow — “Wrong sequence creates emotional friction.” — Orange  Sixth: Proof & Trust — “Unsupported claims create scepticism.” — Dark orange  Seventh: CTA Strength — “Weak payoff = weak action.” — Soft orange  Eighth: Friction & Risk — “Hesitation kills the final step.” — Warm amber  Ninth: Buyer Language — “Seller language feels distant.” — Soft amber  Bottom (Fix Last — Lower Priority): Conversion Leak Priority — “After fixing leaks, reprioritize.” — Cool grey  A small arrow points down the map, with a label: “Repair in this order. Not all leaks matter equally.”  Style: Architectural priority map meets luxury UI. Dark background, vertical gradient from bright gold to cool grey. Thin gold connecting lines.  Interaction: Hovering any priority level expands a detailed explanation of why that leak should be fixed at that stage. Clicking the level shows a case study of a page that fixed that leak first. A slider lets the user move a leak up or down the priority order to see how mis-prioritization delays results.
“The Complete Funnel Autopsy Lab — Interactive Tool” Concept: A minimalist, interactive autopsy lab. The interface shows:  Top section: A text area where the user pastes their page URL or describes their funnel page (headline, offer, target buyer, traffic source, desired action, current performance issue).  Below: The 10 diagnostic tests as expandable cards. Each card shows:  Test name and icon  3-5 diagnostic questions  Weak signals checklist  Strong signals checklist  A score slider (1–5)  A “What’s Leaking?” analysis button  Below the cards: A master scorecard that updates dynamically, showing total score (0–50) and interpretation (Funnel Autopsy Failure / Conversion Leak Environment / Good Page But Leaking / Strong Funnel Foundation).  Bottom section: A “Generate Autopsy Report” button that compiles all scores, weakest areas, dominant leak diagnosis, and specific repair recommendations into a downloadable PDF. A “Priority Fix List” shows the top 3 leaks to address first, in correct repair order.  Style: Luxury UI meets interactive forensic lab. Dark background, gold sliders, clean typography. Feels like a serious funnel-diagnostic instrument.  Interaction: The user fills out the page description. They work through each test, answering diagnostic questions and adjusting scores. The master scorecard updates in real-time. Clicking “Generate Autopsy Report” produces a diagnostic PDF with specific, actionable recommendations for each failing test.

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