This, from Eliel, E. H.; Wilen, S. H., "Stereochemistry of Organic Compounds", Wiley:New York, 1994, page 1196 (Glossary):
"Conformational Isomer (conformers). One set of stereoisomers that differ in conformation, that is, in torsion angle or angles. Only structures corresponding to potential energy minima (local or global) qualify." (italics mine.)
Please note that kriggy's example includes an eclipsed conformation, which fails to meet the local-or-global-minimum criterion.
Perhaps a more suitable example of conformational isomerism is provided by the chair-to-chair ring-flip process whereby cis-diaxial-1,3-dimethylcyclohexane equilibrates with cis-diequatorial-1,3-dimethylcyclohexane. The cis-diaxial conformation resides in a local minimum, whereas the cis-diequatorial conformation represents the global minimum for this equilibration process.