If you're running HubSpot, you already own most of the tools you need to turn anonymous website visitors into identified, qualified leads. The problem isn't the platform — it's that these features tend to get switched on once, left in their default state, and quietly forgotten. Six months later nobody can remember why the pop-up says what it says, the CTAs still point at last year's ebook, and the forms haven't been touched since launch.
This guide walks through the core HubSpot features that do the heavy lifting in converting traffic to pipeline: smart CTAs, landing page A/B testing, live chat, forms, pop-ups, conversion paths, and behavioural email triggers. For each one, we'll cover what it does, how to set it up properly, and — more importantly — how to keep it working, because a conversion asset that isn't reviewed monthly decays fast.
Standard CTAs show the same button and offer to every visitor. Smart CTAs let you vary the content based on lifecycle stage, list membership, device, or country — so a first-time visitor sees an introductory offer while an existing contact sees something further down the funnel.
Setup basics:
Where it goes stale: the anonymous-visitor variant is usually fine long-term, but the "known lead" and "customer" variants are the ones nobody updates once the original campaign ends — so returning visitors keep getting offered something they already downloaded eight months ago.
HubSpot's native A/B testing splits traffic between two versions of a landing page and reports on conversion rate, so you're making page decisions on evidence rather than opinion.
Setup basics:
Where it goes stale: most accounts run one or two tests in the first month post-launch and never again. Your traffic sources, audience, and offers change quarter to quarter — a page optimised for last year's campaign mix isn't necessarily optimised for this one.
Chat converts intent in the moment, which is exactly when a visitor is most likely to have a question that, left unanswered, sends them straight back to Google.
Setup basics:
Where it goes stale: chatbot scripts are usually written once at setup and never revisited even as the product, pricing, or messaging changes — so the bot ends up contradicting the website around it.
Forms are the actual mechanism of conversion, so they deserve more scrutiny than they usually get.
Setup basics:
Where it goes stale: forms accumulate fields over time as different stakeholders request "just one more" data point, quietly dragging conversion rate down without anyone tracing the cause.
Used well, these recover visitors who are about to leave without converting. Used badly, they're the reason people install ad blockers.
Setup basics:
Where it goes stale: pop-ups are usually the least-revisited asset in the whole stack because they "just run in the background" — which means the offer inside them is often the oldest, least relevant thing on the entire site.
A conversion path — CTA, landing page, thank-you page, and the follow-up workflow that fires afterward — is the full unit that should be reviewed together, not as four disconnected assets.
Setup basics:
Where it goes stale: this is the one most likely to have quiet gaps — a path built for a campaign that ended, still technically live, no longer linked from anywhere current.
Workflows that fire based on what a contact actually does — page views, email opens, form re-submissions, deal stage changes — convert far better than static, scheduled nurture sequences because the timing matches genuine buying signals.
Setup basics:
Where it goes stale: behavioural workflows are the most complex asset in HubSpot and, correspondingly, the one people are most reluctant to touch once it's built — so they keep firing on assumptions about buyer behaviour that may no longer be true.
Every one of these features follows the same lifecycle: a burst of setup energy when it's implemented, then months (sometimes years) of silence while the rest of the business — messaging, offers, ICP, pricing, product — keeps moving underneath it. The tools don't fail. They just go quietly out of sync with everything they're supposed to be reflecting.
HubSpot is genuinely good at giving you the machinery. What it doesn't do is tell you when a smart CTA variant is showing a dead offer, or flag that your top landing page hasn't been A/B tested since the quarter it launched. That part has to be a deliberate, recurring discipline — someone actually looking at the conversion stack every month and asking what's stale, what's underperforming, and what's worth testing next.
That's the gap our Growth Sprint retainer is built to close. Rather than a one-off HubSpot setup or a static audit, it's a monthly cycle of reviewing exactly the assets covered in this guide — CTAs, landing pages, forms, pop-ups, conversion paths, and behavioural workflows — and systematically testing and refreshing them so they keep pace with your business instead of freezing at whatever state they were in on launch day. If you're already on HubSpot and want these features doing more than sitting dormant, it's worth a conversation.