You've built your Million Dollar Message™. You've mapped your Product Roadmap™. You've picked your path in the Model Builder™. Maybe you've drafted your SCRIPT™ or your Enrollment Amplifier™. You've got the content.
Now you need the pages that turn strangers into leads and leads into paying clients. And this is where most people mess it up.
Jay Abraham always said there are two ways to double your business: get more customers, or raise your prices. When it comes to digital marketing funnels, there's a simpler version of that: you can double your traffic, or you can double your conversions.
Alex Hormozi talks about this constantly. The businesses in his portfolio that make the biggest gains aren't the ones spending more on ads. They're the ones who got disciplined about conversion rate optimization — making the pages they already have convert better.
Most people obsess over traffic and completely neglect their pages. So the moment they try to scale, they hit a wall. CPAs go through the roof, lead quality drops, and they can't figure out why. The answer is almost always the pages.
Some of you are getting 22% to 30% opt-in rates. I've seen 60% to 70% opt-in rates on the same type of pages. The difference isn't the traffic source. The difference is how the page is built.
This guide is the page-by-page blueprint for your Zero Selling System™ funnel. Five pages. Each one has one job. By the end, you'll know exactly what goes on each page, in what order, and why.
Before we touch any specific page, you need the principles. These apply to every page in your funnel — opt-in, thank-you, checkout, booking, confirmation. Every single one. They also apply to your enrollment amplifiers, your emails, and any content you produce.
This comes from Steve Krug's book by the same name. It has over 4,600 five-star reviews, it reads like a cartoon book, and it's one of the first principles I apply to everything I build.
The idea is dead simple: when someone lands on your page, they should never have to figure out what the page is, what they're supposed to do, or where to click. Every question mark adds to their cognitive load. And every bit of cognitive load gives them a reason to leave.
Your page should be self-evident. Three seconds. That's how long someone will give you before they decide to stay or bounce. In those three seconds, they need to know: what is this, what do I get, and what do I do next.
This means no navigation menus. No links to your social media. No multiple calls to action. Why would you have links to your Facebook and Twitter on your landing page when you fought like heck to get people FROM Twitter to your landing page? That causes leaks. One page, one action, one goal.
This is Joe Sugarman's concept from The Adweek Copywriting Handbook, one of the best marketing books ever written. Sugarman was the creator of BluBlocker sunglasses, and his principle is simple: every element on your page has one job — get them to consume the next element.
The headline pulls them into the sub-headline. The sub-headline pulls them into the image. The image pulls them into the form. The form pulls them into the button.
If any element ends in dead air — a complete thought with no forward pull — the visitor stops. And once they stop, they leave.
Think about the last time you watched a show on streaming. The big crescendo happens, you think you're done, and then the cliffhanger: "And then I discovered something that changed everything." End of episode. And you click "next episode" at 1 AM when you weren't planning on it, because you have to figure out what the heck happens.
That's the slippery slide. Your page is a slide. Grease every inch of it. This is exactly how we write enrollment amplifiers, emails, and ads — with cliffhangers and forward momentum.
You see this all the time: a button that says "Submit." Or "Free Webinar." Or "Book a Strategy Call." There's no value there.
It's not "Book a strategy call." It's "Let's build your 90-day plan." The button describes what they GET, not what they DO.
It's not "Free lead magnet." It's "Get your one-page keto diet plan." It's the payoff. Every button, every link, every call to action must answer the question: what's in it for them?
Submit
Learn More
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Book a Strategy Call
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Build Your 90-Day Plan
See My One-Page System
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Every single element on your page should be carefully constructed with payoff messaging. If there's no payoff, it doesn't belong on the page.
Less clicks. Less fields. Less decisions. One page, one job, one action.
The math is simple: every element that doesn't directly support the ONE action you want them to take is friction. And friction kills conversions.
This is why, later in this guide, you'll see that the checkout can be a pop-up instead of a separate page. Why send them to a separate checkout page when they can click the button and I can embed the checkout right there? At scale, moving from a separate checkout page to an embedded one can lift conversions by 10 to 15%. Every click counts.
Another Krug principle. People don't read your page top to bottom like a book. They scan. They look at the headline. They look at the image. They look at the button. If those three things make sense, maybe — maybe — they read the sub-headline and the bullets.
So design for the scanner. If someone only reads the headlines on your page — just the headlines, nothing else — is the value proposition clear? If not, your headlines are just labels, and labels don't convert.
Here's the Hormozi rule that makes this actionable: instead of a section header that says "How It Works," put how it actually works IN the headline. Instead of "What Our Customers Say," put what your customers actually say in the headline.
"How It Works"
"What Our Customers Say"
"What Makes Us Unique"
"About Our Process"
"Three Steps, One Result, Zero Guesswork"
"247 Coaches Doubled Revenue in 90 Days"
"One System Replaces Your Entire Funnel"
"Done in 30 Minutes, Working by Friday"
Alex Hormozi's value equation from $100M Offers is one of the best checklists for landing page copy. It maps perfectly onto our Million Dollar Message™ strategy. Four variables:
| Variable | What It Means | Where It Lives on Your Page |
|---|---|---|
| Dream Outcome | What's the big result they want? | Your headline (currency + metric from your MDM) |
| Perceived Likelihood | Do they believe they can actually get it? | Social proof, risk reversal, framework image |
| Time Delay | How fast can they get the result? | Timeline in your headline or sub-headline |
| Effort & Sacrifice | How easy is it? What pain do they avoid? | Sub-headline: "Without [pain], [pain], [pain]" |
Increase dream outcome and perceived likelihood. Decrease time delay and effort. That's the formula. As Frank Kern always says, the only marketing message you need at its core is: how to get more of what you want without the stuff you hate. That's every marketing message on the planet that works.
Notice how this maps directly to our MDM format: currency + metric + timeline − obstacles. We've been doing this all along. The Hormozi framework just gives you a diagnostic checklist to make sure your page copy hits all four.
Over 80% of your landing page traffic comes from mobile. YouTube, Facebook, email — that's where your people encounter you, on their phone. So you better be sure that when your landing page loads in vertical format, the headline doesn't take up seven miles of screen and the button is above the fold.
Most page builders handle this automatically, but it's critical that you actually view your pages on a phone before going live. If your page doesn't look clean on a phone, it doesn't work for the majority of your audience.
Your Zero Selling System™ funnel is five pages. Five touchpoints. Each with one job.
| # | Page | One Job |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Opt-In Page | Convert a visitor into a subscriber |
| 2 | AA Thank-You Page | Educate and drive to paid session purchase |
| 3 | Checkout | Collect payment with zero friction |
| 4 | Booking Page | Get the session on the calendar + resell the value |
| 5 | Booking Confirmation | Resell the session, drive to community, stack proof |
Traffic comes in at the top. A paying, pre-educated, pre-sold client comes out the bottom. And every page in between has exactly one job — move the right person to the next step.
The AA video is a sales video that sells the paid strategy session. It's not about your whole coaching program. It's not your backend offer. Everything on the AA page is geared toward getting them to go on a date with the paid session. That's it.
You need about 2 to 3% of leads to book a paid session on day one. Another 2 to 3% will come over the next 30 days through your nurture content. That's all you need.
The opt-in page has one job: convert a visitor into a subscriber. That's it. Not sell them. Not educate them. Not impress them. Just get the email.
Lead-gen page physics are the opposite of sales page physics. On a sales page, you add elements to overcome objections. On a lead-gen page, you remove elements to reduce friction. Challenge yourself to see how few elements you can have on a web page. Less is more, ad nauseam.
This is the only section 100% of your visitors will see. Statistically, 60% of people will never scroll past it. Hormozi says spend 80–90% of your effort right here. Your job is to ensure that everything they need to take action is above the fold — meaning they never have to scroll to achieve the goal of the page.
Here's the structure, top to bottom:
"For coaches, consultants, and agency owners who want to..."
This does one thing — it qualifies. The right person reads this and thinks "that's me." The wrong person reads it and leaves. Both outcomes are good.
"The New One-Page System We Use to Sign 3–5 New Clients Every Week"
This is your dream outcome. Specific, measurable, desirable. Not "grow your business" — that's vague. Not "learn my 7-step system" — nobody cares about your steps. They care about the result AFTER the steps. The word "new" is underutilized. People want novelty. They don't want the same old thing. A unique mechanism they've never seen piques curiosity. Use your MDM. If it scored 20+, this headline converts on its own.
"Without complicated funnels, awkward sales calls, or spending another dollar on ads that don't convert"
This reduces perceived effort and sacrifice. It answers the question "yeah, but what's the catch?" before they even ask it. Pull these directly from your MDM obstacles.
This is our secret sauce. Most people put a stock photo here, or a headshot, or some AI-generated picture of a guy working at a computer. We don't. We use the visual of your Product Roadmap™ as a one-page framework.
This one image does three things at once:
Your eyeballs and your brain go, "Man, do I have all that? Do I need that? What is that?" Now you need to complete the funnel to understand it. You can't click away because you have all these open curiosity loops. Use this image on your opt-in page, in your ads, and as your video thumbnail. Always. No deviation.
Right under the framework image, place a five-star rating with a short, specific testimonial quote and the person's name. This combination has all the psychological triggers needed to elicit an opt-in.
This is counterintuitive. It's pretty much proven across the industry that a two-step opt-in works better than showing the form fields directly on the page. Clay Collins demonstrated this at scale when he launched LeadPages across all clients, and it's been replicated consistently since.
When you have your form fields visible on the page, it's like you're asking for something. It creates a subtle psychological resistance. Believe it or not, requiring them to click a button first — which then reveals the email field in a pop-up — converts better, even though clicking is technically friction. Two-step opt-ins are one of the few exceptions to the "reduce every click" rule.
The button itself should have a payoff: "Get the Free Checklist Now" — not "Submit" or "Download."
When they click, the pop-up repeats the headline payoff and asks for one field: email address. That's it. Not their first name, phone number, company, or current revenue. You can gather that later. Right now, you need their email. Every additional field reduces your conversion rate. If you're not getting enough conversions, remove the name field. Your email system can replace it with "Hi friend" — which is fine.
Many high-converting opt-in pages don't even need below-the-fold content. But if you have it, keep it simple:
Long origin stories. Multiple CTAs. Video players. Urgency countdowns. Pricing. Navigation menus. Links to your social media. Links to articles. About us. Contact us.
Video opt-in pages consistently underperform image opt-in pages. When you put a video on the opt-in page, you're introducing the paradox of choice: do I watch the video, or do I opt in? The video comes next, on the thank-you page. This page exists to get them to the video.
Every element that isn't your headline, framework image, social proof, or CTA button is an escape route. And every escape route is a conversion you lose.
This page has one job: educate the lead and drive them to purchase a paid strategy session. And it starts with the T&T Strategy.
I never give someone just a template. Or just a cheat sheet. I always pair it with a video.
"Get this template AND the training." "Download the cheat sheet AND watch the video walkthrough."
The lead magnet is the Template. The Authority Amplifier™ video is the Training. They deploy together. Always. T&T is a single unit.
You plant this seed from the beginning — even in your ads and emails. You don't say "get this cheat sheet." You say "get this template and training." Get this worksheet and this workshop. It's a package. That's how you build authority.
"You're In — Check Your Email in 5–10 Minutes"
Two jobs. One — confirm their action so they're not anxious. Two — buy yourself 5 to 10 minutes (roughly the length of the video) before they go check their inbox. Why? Because the highest consumption rate for your Authority Amplifier™ video happens right now. This is the one window you'll never have again for a new lead to watch this video.
Then: "Watch this quick video to see exactly how to use it right now." The payoff is not "watch this video." The payoff is see exactly how to use the thing you just opted in for.
"The New One-Page System We Use to Sign 3–5 New Clients Every Week"
Same headline. Same promise. Same payoff. You are not deviating. The visitor sees the same promise reinforced twice. They opted in FOR that promise, and the thank-you page immediately delivers on it.
"Without complicated funnels, awkward sales calls, or spending another dollar on ads that don't convert"
Intentional. Consistent. Same.
This video should auto-play. Why? Because requiring a click is friction. A percentage of people who land on this page will never click play. If the click isn't an option and the video just starts, you've reduced friction and increased the view rate. The video follows the SCRIPT™ content framework structure for your VSL — this is the one flagship sales video that pitches the paid strategy session.
Important distinction: This VSL is NOT selling your backend coaching program. You're not pitching your whole high-ticket offer. This video sells the paid strategy session. One thing. Everything is geared toward getting them to go on a date with the paid session.
This is critical. The buy button should NOT be visible when the page loads. It should appear after they've consumed a significant portion of the video — at least 20%, ideally 60%+.
Why? If the buy button is visible from the start, people will click it without watching the video. They'll see a checkout for $299 with no context, no education, no value built. Of course they're not going to buy. Education is the gap between "that's expensive" and "that's a great deal." The video builds the value. The button appears when they understand why they should do this.
Pretty much every page builder has a delay feature for calls to action. If yours doesn't, it won't stop your progress — but use it if you can.
"Let's Build Your 90-Day Plan" — not "Book Your $299 Strategy Session." The button describes the payoff. The price reveals on the checkout step, after they've already decided they want the outcome.
Below the button, include 3–4 benefit statements summarizing what they'll get from the session. These are quick reinforcements — not a sales page rewrite.
A download link for the lead magnet. That comes in email. This is NOT the page where they get the PDF. This is the page where they meet you and decide if they want to work with you. If you give them the download link here, they'll grab the PDF and leave — and you'll never build authority.
Also: no pricing in the video for your general nurture content Authority Amplifier™ videos. The VSL can reference the session, but for the shorter content videos you'll produce each week, don't include specific pricing. When you change your pricing in a month, you'll have to go back and re-edit every video. Keep those evergreen by saying "go to [YourSite].com" — not "for only $297."
The checkout has one job: collect payment with zero friction. They've already said yes. Don't talk them out of it.
The checkout page is lean and mean. It has the benefits, maybe one quote. It's not a whole sales page. You see a lot of people where their checkout page is basically redoing the entire sales page. Less is more here. They already decided. Collect the money.
After they pay, they book. Calendly, TidyCal, HighLevel, whatever you use. But here's where most people fail: they just show the calendar and nothing else. That's a missed opportunity.
The booking page should resell the value of what they just purchased AND include social proof. This is not just a transaction step — it's a trust-building step.
"You're Confirmed — Let's Do This. I can't wait to help you get crystal clear on a powerful strategy you can start implementing over the next 90 days."
Not "Payment Confirmed — Now Pick Your Time." That's transactional. Your headline is a payoff. Why should they be excited? Because they're about to get crystal clear on the exact steps to reach their goals.
The simplest possible booking element. Embedded, not a link to a separate site. Seamless transition from checkout to booking — no gaps, no confusion.
A brief reminder of what the session includes: duration, format, what they'll walk away with, the guarantee. This reinforces the value while they're picking their time.
Testimonials from people who went through the session and got results. "Other people just like you got crystal clear on their 90-day plan." This is validation that they made the right decision.
People who pay show up. The paid session is one of the biggest filters in the world. If they don't have $300, they don't have $5,000. But you still want them excited. This page makes them feel great about the purchase, not just complete a transaction.
This page is more important than people understand. It's the most underutilized page in most funnels. Most people just say "You're booked! Check your email." And nothing else. That's leaving money and trust on the table.
This page fills the gap between "I just paid" and "my session is next Tuesday" — and that gap is where buyer's remorse lives. This page does three jobs.
"Your 90-Day Mapping Session Is Confirmed! Get ready to get crystal clear on the exact steps you should be taking to reach your goals."
Then restate the benefits. What happens during the session. What they walk away with. What to expect. Three simple steps: we audit your current setup, we build your custom plan, you leave with a roadmap you can implement today. Reset their expectations. Make them excited, not just informed.
If you have a free Skool group, Facebook group, or any community — get them in there NOW. Motivation is at its absolute peak right after purchase. They'll never be more willing to join than they are in this moment.
Your free community is where your nurture content lives. It's a group of engaged leads who haven't yet purchased your backend offer. Every time you create an authority amplifier content video, it goes there. When you create educational videos for each step of your roadmap, they go there. The community is a conversion multiplier — not an essential launch element, but an accelerator once you have it.
This is where the concept of "bingers are buyers" becomes real. Stack your best content right on this page:
Every piece they consume between booking and showing up makes them a better prospect in the session. By the time they sit down with you, they've watched your videos, seen your results, consumed your teaching. The session becomes a confirmation, not a hard sell. They show up pre-sold.
Imagine if you have a 9-step roadmap and you've created a quick educational video for each step. Those nine videos live on this proof wall. People binge them. And bingers are buyers. The more net minutes and hours they spend in your world, the lower the friction of purchasing your backend offer.
Social proof shows up on multiple pages in your funnel, and most people do it wrong. Here's the hierarchy from weakest to strongest:
| Type | Strength | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Text review only | Weakest | A quote from "Steve, Arkansas" feels fake. Everyone does these. People are skeptical. |
| Screenshot | Stronger | A screenshot of analytics or a bank account is harder to fake and more visceral. |
| Photo (transformation) | Stronger still | Before/after photos. Pictures of real people with real results. Emotional connection. |
| Video testimonial | Strongest | A real person telling their story with emotion in their voice. Can't be faked. Maximum trust. |
The rule: be as visual as possible. And never hide your proof in a carousel. Carousels have terrible engagement rates — whatever's hidden doesn't get seen. Show everything. Stack it. Use a "wall of love" format — video reviews, images, text reviews all at once. Overwhelm them with so much proof that they're already sold before they read a word of your copy.
As you build your nurture content and get client results, you're building your proof library. Every testimonial, every screenshot, every video is an asset that compounds over time across every page in your funnel.
Adding stories, urgency, pricing, videos. The opt-in page gets an email address, period, from the maximum percentage of visitors. Everything else is friction. Sexy doesn't sell on lead-gen pages.
Don't use a stock photo. Don't use an AI-generated image of someone working at a computer. Don't use a headshot. It's your one-page framework or your lead magnet — always. Every ad, every page. No deviation.
"Submit." "Learn More." "Download." "Free Webinar." "Book a Strategy Call." Zero payoff. Every button is a payoff message, carefully constructed. What do they get?
"Get the Guide" AND "Watch the Video" AND "Book a Call." Pick one. One page, one action. This includes navigation menus — every nav link is a competing CTA.
Opt-in for a lead magnet, "here's your PDF, see you never." You just ended the relationship before it started. T&T — template and training, always together. If they don't watch the video, they don't meet you, and you have no authority.
Under 8 minutes means your teaching section is too thin — you haven't built enough value. Over 12 minutes and you lose attention on a thank-you page. Sweet spot for a VSL is 8–12 minutes. General nurture content videos are shorter.
Selling your whole coaching program in the AA video instead of the paid session. "Book a free call" on a ZSS funnel. The paid strategy session is the next step — not your backend offer. Everything is geared toward that date.
Show the button after they've consumed the video — not from the start. If someone sees "$299" before they understand why, of course they won't buy. Education bridges the gap between low and high perceived value.
They already said yes. Don't add testimonials, long copy, or a whole sales page to your checkout. Less is more. Collect payment and move them forward.
"You're booked! Check your email." Dead end. You just lost your best chance to pre-sell them before the session and drive them to your community. Resell the value, stack proof, add your content videos.
About Us. Contact Us. Blog. Social links. Every link that's not your CTA is an escape route. A landing page is not your website. Remove all navigation.
Over 80% of your traffic is mobile. If you design on desktop and don't check mobile, your page is broken for most of your audience. Load your pages on your phone before going live.
Here's what to do after reading this guide:
Pull up your current pages — if you have them — and check each one against this blueprint. How many of these principles are you violating right now? If you're building from scratch, start with this structure exactly. No improvisation until you've validated.
If you change nothing else, get your opt-in page headline, sub-headline, framework image, and CTA button right. Load the page — everything they need to take action should be visible without scrolling. That alone will move the needle more than anything else.
If you don't have it there yet, that's the single biggest upgrade you can make. T&T — Template plus Training, always together. This is the difference between a lead who downloads a PDF and forgets you, and a lead who watches 10 minutes of you teaching and decides to book a session.
If it currently says "You're booked, check your email" — add the three sections: resell the session, drive to community (if you have one), and proof wall. This page fills the gap where buyer's remorse lives.
Your success doesn't come from just having your ZSS funnel live. Most people purchase 30 to 90 days after opting in. The only way to capture those buyers is by having authority amplifier content videos to email them on day 2, day 5, next week. Your nurture content is an asset that compounds. Every video you create serves your ads, your emails, your community, your proof wall, and your YouTube presence simultaneously.
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