I don't think you're understanding the term properly. Conflict means tension. There's no list of "Put the conflict here and then put something else" when you're writing a story. Conflict must come throughout the story, right up to the climax, or your story is boring.
The rising action of a plot is the series of events that build up the story's conflict and tension leading to the climax. It is where complications arise, characters face obstacles, and the stakes are raised, propelling the narrative towards its peak.
the top three most interesting things that happen in your story before it reaches the climax, the top thing that happens in your story, or the last thing before the falling action what leads you out of the story.
climax. then falling action. then resolution. then denouement
A plot diagram.
Action that builds tension
A+ the sequential pattern of events as they occur in a story.
Rising action
The rising action includes the series of events that precede the climax.
Progress of the plot is rising action. The unfolding of it is the falling action.
Rising action and falling action
Complications are the new factors added to the plot that give the main character new problems to deal with.
is the part of the plot where the conflict begins to be worked out and tensions lessen
rising action.
rising action
the rising action