You don’t need a perfect funnel.
You need a working funnel.
Most solo entrepreneurs get stuck because their funnel vision is way bigger than their current capacity. On the whiteboard? Gorgeous. In real life? Half-built landing page, abandoned sales copy, and a checkout that still says “Test Product.”
This is where the idea of a Minimum Viable Funnel (MVF) saves your sanity.
A Minimum Viable Funnel is the smallest, simplest version of a funnel that:
- Clearly communicates your offer
- Gives people a way to say yes
- Delivers what you promised
Not the “forever” version. Just the first functioning version that can take payments and deliver value.
Let’s build that in 7 days.
Step 1: Get painfully clear on the offer (Day 1)
Your funnel can’t compensate for a fuzzy offer.
Answer these questions in writing:
- Who is this for? Be specific.
- What problem are they stuck in right now?
- What result are you helping them get?
- What exactly do they get when they buy? (sessions, templates, modules, access, etc.)
- What’s the promise in one sentence?
If you can’t fit your offer into one sentence, your funnel will be confusing. Simple example:
“I help solo service providers turn their scattered ideas into a simple, launch-ready funnel in 30 days.”
Doesn’t have to be fancy. It just has to be clear.
Your only job on Day 1 is to lock this in.
Step 2: Map a 3–5 page funnel (Day 2)
You don’t need 19 steps. For most offers, you can launch with 3–5:
- Opt-in or direct sales page (depending on price/offer)
- Main sales page
- Checkout page
- Thank-you / onboarding page
- Optional: a basic confirmation email sequence
Pick one path:
- Path A – Direct to sale:
- Ideal for lower-ticket offers or warm audiences.
- Traffic → Sales Page → Checkout → Thank-You.
- Path B – Lead magnet first:
- Ideal for more complex or higher-trust offers.
- Traffic → Opt-In → Nurture Email → Sales Page → Checkout → Thank-You.
Choose one. Not both. Not “depends.” One.
Day 2 is just about mapping the flow and deciding what you absolutely need to build.
Step 3: Draft your sales page “ugly” first (Day 3)
Day 3 is for messy, fast sales copy.
Use this structure:
- Headline – Who it’s for + what they want.
- Problem / Pain – What’s not working for them right now.
- Vision / Outcome – What changes when this is solved.
- Introduce Your Offer – What it is and how it works.
- What’s Included – Break down components and benefits.
- Who It’s For / Not For – Help people self-select.
- Proof – Testimonials, examples, your experience.
- FAQs – Answer the obvious fears and questions.
- Price + CTA – Be direct. Don’t bury the ask.
Don’t format. Don’t pretty it up. This is a word dump day. Design comes later.
Step 4: Build your checkout and thank-you flow (Day 4)
On Day 4, you create:
- Checkout page
- Clean layout
- Clear product name and price
- Minimal fields (only what you truly need)
- Trust signals (refund policy, secure payment note)
- Thank-you / onboarding page
- Confirm their purchase
- Tell them exactly what happens next
- Give them access or explain how/when they’ll get it
- Offer one clear next step (like joining a community, filling an intake form, or booking a call)
Think of this as the “welcome mat” to your offer. If you do nothing else, make sure it doesn’t feel like a dead end.
Step 5: Add a single follow-up email sequence (Day 5)
This is the part everyone overcomplicates.
You’re not building a saga. You’re building a bridge.
Write 3 emails:
- Delivery / Reminder email
- If they opted in: deliver the free thing.
- If they hit the sales page: remind them of the offer and key benefit.
- Story / Value email
- Share a story or example that shows the problem and the cost of staying stuck.
- Give one small actionable tip.
- Direct offer email
- “Here’s what I’ve built to help with this.”
- Who it’s for.
- Why now is a good time.
- Link to the sales page.
Schedule them over a few days or send manually if that’s all your brain can handle today. Minimum viable means done beats automated.
Step 6: Give yourself a “good enough” design pass (Day 6)
Now you can pretty things up—but with restraint.
Focus on:
- Readable fonts and font sizes
- Clear headings and subheadings
- Enough white space so it doesn’t feel like a wall of text
- Buttons that actually look like buttons
No endless tinkering. No font rabbit holes. No full rebranding.
Give yourself one or two timed passes to:
- Fix obvious typos
- Clarify confusing sentences
- Make the layout not painful to look at
Then stop.
Step 7: Test it, launch it, and let it be imperfect (Day 7)
Before you go public:
- Click every link
- Do a test purchase (use a heavy coupon or test mode)
- Make sure emails actually send
Then:
- Share the offer with your list
- Mention it on social a few times
- Personally invite a handful of people you know it’s perfect for
The point of a Minimum Viable Funnel isn’t to win design awards. It’s to:
- Start conversations
- Collect data
- Make real sales
- Show you what to improve next
You can always refine. You can’t improve what doesn’t exist.
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