
The 7-Section Framework for High-Converting Landing Pages
High-converting landing pages aren’t about clever design. They’re about saying the right thing in the right order. Here’s the structure that works across every niche.
High-converting landing pages all share the same bones. After building and testing hundreds of them on Kajabi, the structure that works is almost boringly consistent across niches, price points, and audiences. The pages that convert badly fail at the same two things. The pages that convert well do the same seven things in the same order.
Why Most Landing Pages Fail
The most common mistake is leading with features instead of outcomes. A headline like “12-week online course” tells your visitor what it is. It doesn’t tell them what changes for them after they complete it. That’s the only thing they care about.
The second mistake is burying the CTA. Most pages make you read through four sections before you find a button. By that point, the visitor has either decided or left. The CTA needs to appear early, repeat throughout, and be impossible to miss.
The Seven Sections Every Landing Page Needs
This is the structure behind every high-converting landing page I’ve shipped. Each section has one job. When you give it more than one, the page weakens.
1. The Headline
One job: stop the scroll. It should state the transformation your offer delivers, not describe the offer itself. “Stop losing sales to a site that undersells you” works harder than “Kajabi web design services.”
2. The Sub-Headline
Expand on the headline with one specific, credible sentence. Introduce the mechanism: what you do, and for whom. This is where you earn the right to the next paragraph.
3. The Primary CTA
Put it here, above the fold. You’ll repeat it lower down. The visitor who already knows they want this shouldn’t have to scroll to find the button.
4. Social Proof
A number, a name, a result. Not a logo wall, a human saying something specific. “47 coaches enrolled this month” works. A row of brand logos nobody recognizes doesn’t.
5. The Problem Section
Name the pain. Not dramatically, plainly. “You’re getting traffic but not conversions” is more powerful than “Are you struggling to grow your online business?” One is specific. The other is generic enough to mean nothing.
6. The Solution
This is where you show the offer. Structure, benefits, what’s included. Keep it outcome-focused. Every bullet point should answer: “So what does this mean for me?”
7. The Close
Restate the transformation, handle the last objection, and give them the CTA again. Short. Confident. Done.
The best high-converting landing pages read like the writer has been inside the reader’s head. That only comes from knowing your audience well enough to use their exact words back at them.
One Thing Most Guides Don’t Tell You
The page structure matters less than the copy. You can have all seven sections in the right order and still convert at 2 percent if the language doesn’t speak to what your visitor actually feels. High-converting landing pages always sound like they were written by someone who’s been in the reader’s situation.
If you don’t have that voice yet, start with your existing students. Ask them what they were struggling with before they found you. Use those words, verbatim, on your landing page. It will outperform anything you write from scratch.
Where to Start
Pull up your worst-performing page. Run it through the seven sections. Check whether each one is doing its single job, or whether it’s been asked to do two. Most pages can be fixed in an afternoon once you know what’s missing.
If you want help auditing your funnel and rebuilding pages that actually convert, reach out and we’ll walk through your high-converting landing pages strategy together.