Sales Funnel Fundamentals – Why Numbers Matter

Day 1 of 30 · Build Your Sales – 30 Days to More Deals

Today you'll learn how sales funnels work and why tracking numbers is critical. This is the foundation of the course – everything you learn builds on this.


Daily Goal

  • Understand what a sales funnel is and why it matters
  • Identify the 5 main funnel stages (Lead → Qualified → Connected → Engaged → Closed)
  • Create your own funnel template in a spreadsheet
  • Set daily/weekly/monthly targets for the first stage

Why it matters

  • No numbers = no control. If you don't measure, you can't improve.
  • Forecasting: With numbers, you can predict how many deals you'll close.
  • Quick fixes: If you see you're stuck at one stage, you immediately know where to improve.
  • Motivation: Hitting daily targets motivates and eliminates "hoping".

Explanation

What is a sales funnel?

A sales funnel is a model that shows how potential customers move from "don't know you" to "bought".

Simple example:

  • 100 people visit your website (Lead)
  • 20 people fill out a contact form (Qualified)
  • 10 people talk to you on the phone (Connected)
  • 5 people attend a demo (Engaged)
  • 2 people buy (Closed)

This means: 2% conversion from lead to close.

The 5 funnel stages (for B2B sales)

Stage What it means Example
1. Lead Someone who might be interested LinkedIn connection, email list, website visitor
2. Qualified Lead who fits your ideal customer profile (ICP) Right company size, budget, need
3. Connected First conversation happened Phone call, email exchange, LinkedIn message
4. Engaged Demo/presentation happened, interest shown Demo completed, proposal sent
5. Closed Deal closed, contract signed Payment received, project started

Conversion rates (B2B averages)

These aren't gospel, but good starting points:

  • Lead → Qualified: 20-30% (20-30 qualified out of 100 leads)
  • Qualified → Connected: 40-50% (8-10 connected out of 20 qualified)
  • Connected → Engaged: 30-40% (3-4 engaged out of 10 connected)
  • Engaged → Closed: 20-30% (1 closed out of 4 engaged)

Total: 100 leads → ~1 close (1% conversion from lead to close)


Examples

Good example: Measurable funnel

Monthly targets:

  • 400 new leads (20 daily)
  • 200 qualified (10 daily)
  • 48 demos (12 weekly)
  • 12 closes (12 monthly)

Why it's good: Every stage has a concrete number, broken down daily/weekly/monthly. You know if you're behind and where to accelerate.

Bad example: "Hoping"

Monthly targets:

  • "Many leads"
  • "Good deals"
  • "Hope we close 5"

Why it's bad: No measurable target, no control, no forecasting. You're just hoping.


Practice 1 – Create funnel template (15 min)

Create your own funnel template in Excel or Google Sheets:

  1. Open a new spreadsheet and create this structure:
Stage Daily Target Weekly Target Monthly Target Conversion
1. Lead 20 100 400 100%
2. Qualified 10 50 200 50%
3. Connected 2 12 48 24%
4. Engaged 0 4 16 33%
5. Closed 0 1 4 25%
  1. Calculate conversion rates: For each stage, determine what percentage moves forward.
  2. Set your targets: Start with closes (e.g., "4 deals monthly"), and work backwards.
  3. Save as template: You'll use this every day.

Practice 2 – Set up daily tracking (10 min)

Create a simple daily tracking table:

Date New Leads Qualified Connected Demo Closed
2026-01-22 0 0 0 0 0

Task: Fill this table every day and review weekly/monthly totals.


Key Takeaways

  • Funnel = forecasting. If you know the numbers, you know how many deals you'll close.
  • Every stage needs a target. It's not enough to focus only on closing – you need activity at every stage.
  • Daily tracking = control. If you don't measure daily, you lose control.
  • Conversion rates change. Measure, improve, optimize continuously.

Optional Resources

Day 1: Sales Funnel Fundamentals – Why Numbers Matter | Build Your Sales – 30 Days to More Deals | Amanoba