Insights on pricing, marketing, hospitality, and the business behind transformational retreats. By Leni Cavazos.

A retreat sales page that converts high-intent buyers contains 12 specific sections, in a specific order, that mirror the actual buying psychology of a premium retreat guest. Skip any of them and the page loses qualified buyers in silence. This is the hospitality-grade structure.
A retreat sales page is a single long-form page whose only job is to move a qualified buyer from consideration to deposit, not a marketing brochure, not a landing page, not an Instagram bio.
One line that says exactly what the retreat is, for whom, and what transformation it produces. No clever wordplay. No vague promise.
Three to five lines that describe the specific situation the buyer is in, using their own words. This is where customer research pays off.
The specific outcome the retreat produces. Not "transformation", a tangible, observable result.
A short qualifying list. Tells the wrong buyer to leave. Reassures the right buyer that the page was written for them.
A narrative walkthrough of the retreat itself. Arrival, signature moments, delivery, integration. This is the hospitality section.
High-quality imagery of the actual venue. Not stock photography, not iPhone snaps. This single section can swing conversion by 20%.
A short, credibility-forward bio. Not a life story, the specific experience and track record that qualifies you to run this retreat.
Real, specific, named testimonials. Ideally with outcomes attached ("I went from $10K loss to $17K profit"). Vague praise does not convert.
A clear, itemized list. Guests need to know exactly what their money buys. Ambiguity kills deposits.
The price, the payment plan, the deposit structure. No hidden "contact for pricing" unless the tier genuinely requires it.
The real questions past buyers have asked: refund policy, arrival logistics, dietary needs, level of experience required. FAQs are where last-minute objections go to die.
One button. One action. No competing links. "Reserve your seat" or "Apply to join" ,not both.

If you can only build five sections before launch, build hero, venue photography, social proof, pricing, and final CTA.
- Stock photography of smiling strangers
- Vague promises of "transformation" with no specific outcome
- Hidden price or "apply to learn more"
- Testimonials from people whose names and faces are not shown
- Multiple competing CTAs
- Copy written in the leader's voice instead of the buyer's
- Long blocks of dense text with no white space
Long enough to answer every qualified buyer's question, short enough that every section earns its place. Typically 2,500–4,500 words.
Only for luxury tier (above $6,500) and only if the application genuinely qualifies buyers. For mid-tier and boutique, show the price.
Yes, significantly. Two to four 30-second video testimonials from past guests with named outcomes can lift conversion 15–30%.
Approximately two-thirds of the way down, after the experience and social proof sections. Buyers who reach this point are already convinced on value and ready to evaluate price.
Yes, update dates, pricing, and venue details per cohort. The core architecture stays the same.
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