@Chrissy Hogue Bartels Your Action Plan is where the journey quietly loses people, and it is not because of anything dramatic. It is because Step 2 offers seven options and treats them all as equal. Continue learning, do the personal development course, review the FAQ, book a call, explore the model again, share a question, pause and reflect. All listed the same way. All equally valid. When everything is a next step, nothing is the next step. The reader finishes the lesson feeling seen, and then they stall because they have no idea which door is meant for them. The path you are actually trying to build (FAQ first, then a call) is in there. It is just buried between six other choices with no weight and no sequence. "Review the FAQ" and "Book a Q&A conversation" are not the same kind of action as "pause and reflect," but your list treats them that way. Step 3 does not help, because you drop three links without telling the reader what each one is actually for. Someone who is genuinely curious about the business path could hit the FAQ, not find what they needed, and close the tab. There is no sentence that says: the FAQ is designed to answer the questions most people have before they book. If what you read makes sense to you, the call is where you take it further. The fix is simpler than it sounds. You do not need seven options. You need one question: where are you right now? If you are still exploring, the FAQ is your next step. If the FAQ makes sense and you want to talk it through, the call is a no-pressure conversation. That is it. Two doors, in order, with a reason behind each one. The permission to pause or go back is already in your lesson. You gave them that in the body. The Action Plan does not need to repeat it. The Premium line at the end has potential, but right now it arrives without setup. One bridge sentence that ties the Premium offer back to what the lesson just said about implementation being where people stall would turn that closing line into something that belongs there.