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Content marketing funnel: stages, templates & metrics

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15 min read
April 29, 2026
Contributor: Alex Lindley

Content marketing funnels are one of the most reliable ways to turn attention into revenue. But they work best when they’re mapped to real search intent and measured by stage.

Today's buyers research independently across channels, jump between funnel stages, and expect value long after the purchase. Without a clear funnel strategy, even strong content struggles to convert.

In B2B, content carries most of the buyer journey. Gartner research shows that 67% of B2B buyers prefer a rep-free buying experience, relying on digital content to evaluate solutions before engaging with sales.

This guide explains how to structure a content marketing funnel that fits today’s buyer journey. By the end, you’ll have a complete framework for planning, optimizing, and scaling a content funnel that delivers measurable growth.

What is a content marketing funnel?

A content marketing funnel is a structured framework that organizes your content around the stages of the buyer journey, from first discovery to long-term loyalty. It helps you attract new audiences, nurture interest, and guide them toward conversion with content built around the questions they're already asking.

Unlike a sales funnel focused on transactions, a content funnel builds trust by giving readers the right information at each stage of their journey. It's also distinct from the broader marketing funnel, which spans paid, owned, and earned channels.

Let’s compare two popular approaches to see how they differ and when to use each.

Comparing classic and modern funnel frameworks

The two most common funnel models are the classic three-stage framework (TOFU, MOFU, BOFU) and a seven-layer model that adds post-purchase stages like implementation and advocacy.

img-semblog

The classic 3-stage funnel

The three-stage funnel is simple to run, making it ideal for smaller teams and short sales cycles.

  1. Awareness (TOFU): Potential customers first encounter your brand and recognize a need or problem. Content is educational, broad, and designed to attract attention without pushing products.
  2. Consideration (MOFU): Prospects research options and evaluate solutions. Content becomes more specific, comparing approaches and positioning your expertise.
  3. Decision (BOFU): Ready-to-buy users weigh final options. Content focuses on proof, with case studies, testimonials, and clear next steps.

These three stages build a smooth path from discovery to purchase. But for longer, more complex buyer journeys — especially in B2B or high-value transactions — this linear model can miss key moments after conversion.

The modern 7-layer model

The seven-layer content architecture, popularized by marketing analytics platform Swydo, recognizes that buyer journeys are rarely linear. People jump between touchpoints, revisit earlier stages, and keep engaging post-purchase. Each layer has its own content goals and success metrics:

  1. Discovery: Introduce your brand and capture attention
  2. Education: Establish authority with original analysis and expert perspective
  3. Consideration: Demonstrate how your solution addresses specific needs
  4. Validation: Show proof through customer reviews and case studies
  5. Conversion: Focus on product-specific decisions and purchasing actions
  6. Implementation: Help new customers succeed with onboarding and best practices
  7. Amplification: Encourage advocacy through testimonials and referrals

This model extends the funnel beyond purchase to strengthen loyalty and advocacy, turning customers into a steady source of referrals and renewals.

Which content marketing funnel model should you use?

Start with the three-stage funnel if you have a small team, a simple offer, or a short sales cycle. Use the seven-layer model when your buyers need more proof, your sales cycle is longer, or retention and expansion drive most revenue.

Use this quick comparison to choose the funnel model that matches your sales cycle, resources, and retention goals: 

Framework

Best for

Stages

Strengths

Limitations

3-Stage Funnel

B2C, small teams, short sales cycles

TOFU → MOFU → BOFU

Simple to manage; focuses on conversion

Stops at purchase; overlooks retention

7-Layer Model

B2B, complex or high-value journeys

Discovery → Education → Consideration → Validation → Conversion → Implementation → Amplification

Captures post-purchase value; better for long-term relationships

Requires more content and coordination

If you’re just starting out, begin with the three-stage funnel and expand over time. 

As your analytics and resources mature, layering in validation, implementation, and amplification stages will help you turn one-time buyers into long-term advocates.

How to map your funnel to the buyer journey

Mapping your funnel means matching content types and topics to where each persona is in their buying decision. Start with audience definition, then align stage-specific content to the questions readers ask.

Identify your audience and define personas

Effective funnels start with detailed buyer personas grounded in real customer behavior, not assumptions.

Start by asking four key questions:

  1. Who are they? Know their job titles, industries, and demographics.
  2. What do they need? Identify their pain points, motivations, and success criteria.
  3. What limits their decisions? Know their budget, time limits, expertise, and internal approval processes.
  4. What might stop them from choosing you? Be aware of common objections or misconceptions.

Then, document these insights in a persona matrix. Include each persona’s:

  • Situation/trigger: What starts their journey
  • Jobs-to-be-done: What they’re trying to achieve
  • Success criteria: How they define a win
  • Preferred content: Formats and channels they trust most

When your funnel is built around defined personas, your messaging reflects what customers actually need — not what your team thinks they want.

Align content to user needs

Each funnel stage reflects a different level of awareness and motivation. When your content matches that level, readers move toward conversion.

The goal is to meet readers where they are and give them a clear next step.

Top of funnel (TOFU): awareness content

The awareness stage is about visibility and value. People are realizing they have a problem, so your role is to educate and build trust. 

Prioritize content that answers “what” and “why” questions. Introduce ideas — don’t pitch solutions yet.

Best TOFU content formats:

  • Blog posts that answer common questions
  • Short explainer or concept videos
  • Infographics or data visuals
  • Social content that introduces ideas
  • Beginner ebooks or podcasts that frame key concepts
  • AI-friendly Q&A blocks that pair a clear definition with a direct answer and supporting context

Middle of funnel (MOFU): consideration content

In the consideration stage, your audience is comparing solutions. They've identified the problem; now they're researching how to solve it.

Your content should help them evaluate options, understand your approach, and see what success looks like when they choose you.

Best MOFU content formats:

  • How-to guides or frameworks with clear steps
  • Webinars or demos that show your process
  • Email nurture sequences with practical takeaways
  • Comparison articles or ROI templates
  • Lightweight gated resources like checklists or templates that demonstrate expertise

Bottom of funnel (BOFU): decision content

At the decision stage, readers are ready to choose. But they need proof that yours is the best solution for them. 

BOFU content should remove uncertainty, showcase results, and make next steps easy. This is where content that converts earns its keep — proof-heavy, decision-focused, and free of friction.

Best BOFU content formats:

  • Detailed case studies with real metrics
  • Customer testimonials or reviews
  • Free trials, consultations, or demos
  • Transparent pricing pages and ROI calculators
  • Product comparison or “why choose us” guides

Post-purchase: retention and advocacy content

The funnel doesn’t end at conversion. Retention and advocacy content helps customers find quick wins and stay engaged, turning them into long-term promoters.

Best post-purchase content formats:

  • Onboarding emails and best-practice guides
  • Customer success stories or community spotlights
  • Advanced webinars or certification programs
  • Referral programs and user-generated content campaigns

Stage-by-stage content summary

Use this table to match buyer mindset to content focus, formats, and the metric that proves progress:
 

Funnel Stage

Buyer Mindset

Content Focus

Example Formats

Key Metric

TOFU: Awareness

Problem-aware, exploring options

Educate and attract

Blog posts, infographics, short videos, podcasts

Reach & engagement

MOFU: Consideration

Solution-aware, comparing approaches

Demonstrate expertise & value

Webinars, templates, email nurture, comparisons

Leads & sign-ups

BOFU: Decision

Ready to buy, seeking reassurance

Prove results & reduce friction

Case studies, demos, testimonials, ROI tools

Conversions

Post-Purchase: Loyalty

Customer success & advocacy

Retain and delight

Onboarding, communities, success stories

Retention & referrals

Build your funnel: 5 steps to get started

A content funnel requires structured planning, from researching audience intent to measuring performance. The five steps below outline how to build and refine it using Semrush tools.

Step 1: Research keywords and competitors by funnel stage

To attract qualified traffic at every funnel stage, start by uncovering what your audience searches for and what competitors already own.

Find intent-based keywords

Use the Semrush Keyword Magic Tool to explore broad seed terms (e.g., “project management software”).

Keyword ideas for the seed keyword "project management software" along with metrics like intent, volume, difficulty, etc. on the Keyword Magic tool.

Then filter by “Intent” to align keywords with funnel position:

  • Informational (TOFU): “what is …,” “how to …,” “guide to …”
  • Commercial (MOFU): “best …,” “top …,” “vs,” “alternatives”
  • Transactional (BOFU): “pricing,” “demo,” “free trial,” “buy”
Applying the search intent filter on the Keyword Magic tool to only show informational keywords.

This segmentation tells you which keywords belong at which stage of your funnel.

Audit your competitors' coverage

Open Organic Research to see which keywords and pages drive the most traffic for your top competitors.

Filter by funnel intent to spot imbalances — where rivals dominate TOFU but neglect MOFU, for instance.

Data from the Organic Research tool showing a rival dominating a TOFU keyword but neglecting a MOFU keyword.

Identify content gaps and quick wins

Export keyword data from Keyword Magic Tool and Organic Research, then cross-reference both lists in the Keyword Gap tool or a spreadsheet.

Keyword Gap report showing how a domain's keywords perform compared to its competitors.

Look for:

  • New content opportunities: Gaps where competitors rank and you don’t
  • Opportunities to update and deepen existing content: Keywords where both rank but you trail behind 

By starting with intent-aligned research, you build a funnel that captures qualified traffic at every stage.

Step 2: Audit existing content and identify gaps

Before creating anything new, analyze what you already have. A funnel audit shows which stages are strong, which are neglected, and where your current content fails to move readers forward.

Categorize by funnel stage

Export a full list of URLs from your CMS or analytics platform, then label each by intent (TOFU, MOFU, BOFU, post-purchase). You might find that most assets live at the top of the funnel, leaving mid- and bottom-stage content thin or missing entirely.

Evaluate content performance

Use Semrush’s Site Audit to find technical issues that can suppress performance (crawlability, internal linking problems, broken pages, duplicate tags).

Page-level metrics on Site Audit showing data like incoming and outgoing links, markup, etc. along with errors & warnings to be addressed.

Then use Google Analytics (GA4) to judge engagement (engaged sessions, scroll, conversions) and Position Tracking to confirm whether pages still rank for the keywords and intent you care about.

Score and prioritize

Group pages into three buckets:

  1. Keep: Performing well; only minor SEO refreshes needed
  2. Improve: Good potential but low engagement or outdated data
  3. Remove or redirect: Off-topic, duplicate, or no longer useful

Document content gaps

Prioritize your next builds with a gap planner, mapping persona, stage, and the action to take:

Persona

Funnel Stage

Topic / Keyword Gap

Priority

Next Step

SaaS Marketing Manager

MOFU

“ROI framework for marketing campaigns”

High

Create guide and link from TOFU blog 

Solopreneur / Small-business owner

MOFU

"Content calendar template for small teams"

High

Design downloadable template and capture leads via form 

Agency owner / Consultant

BOFU

"Marketing ROI dashboard for client reporting"

Medium

Build template plus case study showing client results

By auditing first, you’ll invest effort where it matters most and close the gaps that keep potential customers from progressing through your funnel.

Step 3: Plan and create stage-specific content

With research complete and content gaps identified, it's time to translate insights into an actionable plan. A good funnel prioritizes intent-aligned content marketing tactics that move users from discovery to decision.

A common starting point is a roughly balanced split:

  • ~40% TOFU to attract new audiences
  • ~40% MOFU to nurture and educate
  • ~20% BOFU to convert

Adjust based on what your data tells you — if your TOFU is already strong, shift effort downstream to where conversion and revenue impact are easier to prove.

Use Semrush’s SEO Content Template to generate on-page recommendations for every piece. It suggests semantically related keywords, target length, and readability benchmarks so you can optimize without guesswork.

Key recommendations for a keyword on the SEO Content Template showing semantically related keywords, target text length, readability benchmarks, etc.

Then, connect your stages intentionally:

  • Link TOFU articles to relevant MOFU resources
  • End MOFU pieces with CTAs toward BOFU assets such as demos, trials, or pricing pages

When each piece flows into the next, your funnel becomes a conversion engine instead of a content library.

Step 4: Distribute and promote across channels

Distribution strategy changes by funnel depth. What works for awareness will fall flat at the decision stage, and vice versa.

Match channels to intent at each stage:

  • TOFU: Lean on discovery channels — SEO, organic social reach, and earned media. The goal is to get in front of audiences who don't know you yet.
  • MOFU: Re-engage interested visitors with email nurture, retargeting, and community sharing where prospects already ask questions (Reddit, niche Slack groups, LinkedIn)
  • BOFU: Get targeted with high-intent search campaigns, sales-enabled sequences, and direct CTAs to demos, trials, or pricing

Step 5: Measure, iterate, and optimize

Track performance to see where traffic drops, where leads convert, and which assets contribute to revenue.

Key metrics by funnel layer

Top of funnel (TOFU): Measure reach and awareness

  • Organic traffic and impressions show visibility growth
  • Social shares and engagement indicate resonance with your audience
  • Time on page and scroll depth signal content relevance and quality
  • New visitor rate reveals how well you’re expanding audience reach

Middle of funnel (MOFU): Measure engagement and consideration

  • Email sign-ups track how effectively content converts visitors to leads
  • Content downloads reflect perceived value and trust
  • Return visitor rate shows continued interest
  • Pages per session reveals depth of exploration

Bottom of funnel (BOFU): Measure conversion efficiency

  • Demo or trial requests are a direct indicator of purchase intent
  • Sales qualified leads (SQLs) show funnel health for revenue teams
  • Conversion rate reveals how effectively BOFU content closes deals
  • Cost per acquisition (CPA) shows profitability and campaign efficiency

Use Semrush’s Position Tracking to group keywords into TOFU, MOFU, and BOFU lists and monitor visibility trends. 

Rankings Overview on the Position Tracking tool with keywords tagged by funnel stage: TOFU, MOFU, BOFU.

Combine this with analytics data in custom dashboards to visualize movement between stages over time.

Estimate ROI and optimize your funnel

Calculating ROI connects your funnel metrics to business results.

Use this cheat sheet to connect stage metrics to business impact before you calculate ROI:

Metric

What It Tells You

Average traffic per content asset

How much visibility your content generates

Conversion rate at each stage

How efficiently content moves users forward (visitor → lead → customer)

Average customer value (LTV)

Revenue contribution per converted lead

Content creation & promotion cost

Investment required to acquire each customer

For example, if one TOFU article attracts 1,000 visitors per month, and:

  • 5% move to MOFU: 50 leads
  • 10% of those request demos: 5 opportunities
  • 20% of those deals close: 1 customer

That means each article generates roughly 1 customer per month, or 12 per year — and the math compounds for every funnel-aligned piece you publish.

To calculate ROI, use this formula:

ROI = ((Customer lifetime value x Number of customers) - Total content cost) / Total content cost x 100

So if your customer lifetime value (LTV) is $2,000 and the total cost to produce and promote the article is $500, your annual ROI is:

ROI = ((2,000 x 12) - 500) / 500 x 100 = 4,700%

This quantifies exactly how much return each content asset delivers relative to its investment, helping you prioritize the formats, topics, and funnel stages that drive the most value.

Refine underperforming assets and double down on what works, following content marketing best practices to maintain consistency across the funnel.

How to tailor your funnel to real buyer behavior

Buyer journeys vary by market. B2B decisions move slowly and involve teams. B2C decisions move fast and rely on emotion. 

Adapting your funnel to those differences determines how effectively content converts.

B2B vs B2C funnel dynamics

In B2B, buyers do most of their research themselves before speaking to sales. 

That means your funnel carries more weight for B2B audiences. Detailed guides, validation assets, and case studies become substitutes for sales conversations.

But B2C funnels depend on speed and simplicity. Short videos, product reviews, and strong CTAs often outperform deep whitepapers. 

The key is empathy for the buyer's mindset: depth and rigor for B2B, speed and clarity for B2C.

Reference this side-by-side to tailor tone, proof, and formats to the buying context you’re targeting:

Factor

B2B Funnels

B2C Funnels

Buying cycle

Long (weeks or months); requires multiple touchpoints

Short (hours or days); quick decisions

Decision-makers

6-10 stakeholders with distinct priorities

Individual buyer or small household

Content focus

Proof, ROI, risk reduction

Desire, convenience, lifestyle

Tone and format

Detailed, data-driven, educational

Visual, emotional, benefit-led

Goal

Build trust and alignment across roles

Trigger emotion and prompt action

Design for non-linear journeys

Gartner's research shows that B2B buyers don't move through the funnel in a straight line. They "loop" through recurring buying jobs — identifying problems, exploring solutions, validating choices — often revisiting earlier work as new stakeholders join the conversation. Someone might jump from MOFU back to TOFU for education, or skip straight to BOFU after reading a strong case study.

To accommodate this:

  • Use clear internal linking so readers can move freely between awareness, consideration, and decision content
  • Offer multiple conversion paths such as demo, download, or email sign-up
  • Track content flow in analytics to learn how people actually progress through their buyer journey

Your goal is to make every touchpoint a relevant next step, wherever your audience happens to land.

Tools, templates, and metrics for ongoing success

An effective funnel runs on systems. Combine research, optimization, and reporting tools to keep production consistent and performance visible. 

This table maps common funnel jobs to the tools that do them:

Goal

Semrush Tool

What It Helps You Do

Research & planning

Content Toolkit

Find topics, build briefs, and align content to intent

On-page optimization

SEO Content TemplateSEO Writing Assistant

Set optimization targets and check drafts before publish

Rank tracking

Position Tracking

Monitor keyword movement across TOFU, MOFU, and BOFU

Site health

Site Audit

Catch technical issues that suppress performance

Reporting

My Reports

Build stage-based dashboards and recurring reports

Competitive intel

Traffic Analytics

Analyze competitor channels and traffic sources

Pair these with your existing stack: an editorial calendar tool for planning, GA4 for engagement, your CRM for deal tracking, and Looker Studio if you already use it for visualization.

Content funnel planner template

To make implementation easier, use our Content Marketing Funnel Planner. This editable template helps you:

  • Map TOFU, MOFU, and BOFU content types
  • Define target keywords and personas
  • Track KPIs and stage-specific success metrics
A filled out Content Marketing Funnel Planner spreadsheet with content ideas organized by funnel stage: TOFU, MOFU, BOFU.

Create a funnel metrics dashboard

Once your funnel is active, track progress through a dashboard that monitors:

  • Performance: Traffic, engagement, and conversions
  • Stage movement: How often (and how) visitors progress through the funnel
  • ROI: Acquisition cost vs. customer lifetime value
  • Efficiency: Time and cost per content asset

Review your dashboard monthly to spot trends and replicate what works.

Use Semrush's My Reports or Google's Looker Studio to visualize metrics by funnel stage so optimization becomes a data-driven habit.

How AI reshapes content creation and discovery

AI search engines and assistants now surface content as direct answers and citations, which changes how each funnel stage performs. Your TOFU content needs to be cite-worthy, your MOFU content needs to be summarizable, and your BOFU content needs to survive even when AI strips away the surrounding context.

AI search visibility

To increase the chance your content is cited or summarized accurately:

  • Use clear question-and-answer formatting for key concepts
  • Support claims with reputable sources and specific data
  • Keep author and trust signals strong (bylines, schema, https)

Use Semrush's AI Visibility Toolkit to monitor where your brand appears in AI summaries and which pages earn citations.

How AI changes each funnel stage

AI Overviews and chat-based search reshape what works at every funnel stage:

  • TOFU: AI answer engines reward content that defines concepts cleanly in self-contained passages. Lead each section with a direct answer, then expand. Generic explainers won't get cited; specific, sourced ones will.
  • MOFU: When AI summarizes comparison content, it strips out hedge language and surfaces clear differentiators. Make your positioning explicit — readers (and the AI summarizing for them) shouldn't have to infer who your content is for or what they should do next.
  • BOFU: AI assistants increasingly handle vendor research, but high-intent searchers still click through for proof. Make case studies, pricing, and ROI calculators easy to surface — and easy for AI to point to.

Putting your content marketing funnel into action

Start with the Content Marketing Funnel Planner template to map your existing assets to TOFU, MOFU, and BOFU. Identify what's missing, fix what's broken, and build one stage-aligned content path at a time around a single persona and topic cluster.

When you're ready to scale, Content Toolkit helps you plan and brief content at every stage, the SEO Content Template optimizes each draft, and Position Tracking shows you which stage is converting — and which one needs the next investment.

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Cecilia Meis
Cecilia is a senior editor and strategist with 12+ years of experience spanning print, digital, and SEO. She’s passionate about optimizing editorial processes, upholding quality standards, and mentoring writers to deliver brand-aligned content.
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