Hierarchy of Effects Funnel Presentation Slide for PowerPoint & Google Slides


Description
This visually engaging funnel diagram illustrates the classic Hierarchy of Effects model—a six-stage marketing framework that maps the customer journey from initial awareness to final purchase. Each level of the funnel is color-coded and labeled: Awareness, Knowledge, Interest, Preference, Conviction, and Purchase. Supporting text beside each tier describes the psychological transition a consumer undergoes at each step, helping audiences grasp the logic behind modern advertising and brand engagement strategies.
The funnel design uses a gradient palette with smooth transitions from pinks and purples at the top (representing early engagement) to blues and reds near the purchase stage. This clear visual flow enhances message retention and guides viewers naturally from top to bottom. Rounded edges, drop shadows, and subtle background contrasts create a modern, presentation-ready look. Ideal for marketing presentations, strategy briefings, or customer journey mapping, the slide offers complete customization in both PowerPoint and Google Slides, ensuring seamless adaptation to any branding needs.
Perfect for marketers, educators, or consultants, this slide can be reused in campaign development sessions, training modules, or pitch decks to demonstrate brand impact and funnel optimization. By visualizing buyer behavior, teams can align messaging, improve targeting, and boost conversions with confidence.
Who is it for
This funnel slide is tailored for digital marketers, campaign managers, advertising strategists, and brand consultants seeking to explain or optimize the customer journey. Educators and students in marketing programs can also leverage it for academic presentations and case studies.
Other Uses
Beyond marketing funnels, this layout can illustrate employee onboarding phases, sales qualification steps, customer retention models, or even behavioral science processes. Recolor and relabel the funnel to adapt it for educational content, organizational change strategies, or product adoption paths.
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