These are two of the most used (and confused) terms in digital marketing. One in three entrepreneurs use "funnel" and "landing page" as synonyms. They're not synonyms β and confusing them leads to building systems that don't work.
What a landing page is
A landing page is a single web page designed for one action only: click a button, leave an email, buy a product. One goal, one CTA, no distractions.
It's a component β a brick inside a larger system.
What a funnel is
A funnel is the complete system that takes a person from "doesn't know you exist" to "paying customer (and then brand ambassador)". It includes landing pages, emails, ads, retargeting, checkout, post-purchase follow-up β all connected in sequence.
The landing page is a brick. The funnel is the house.
The difference in practice
Concrete example:
- You run a Facebook ad
- People arrive on a landing page (lead magnet)
- They leave their email
- They receive a 5-email sequence
- The fifth email leads to a sales page
- They purchase β receive an upsell
- Post-purchase: onboarding email + review request
Here you have 3+ landing pages, dozens of emails, ads, automated sequences. Everything together is the funnel. Each single page is a landing page.
When a single landing page is enough
A single landing page suffices when:
- You're validating an idea with minimal budget
- You're selling something simple and low-cost (impulse purchase)
- You already have a warm audience that knows your brand
- You're collecting emails to build a list (optin page)
When you need a complete funnel
A complete funnel is necessary when:
- The product costs $50+ (the customer needs to be educated)
- You're talking to cold traffic (they don't know you)
- You want to maximize LTV with upsells and repeat purchases
- You're scaling with ads and need sustainable economics
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