A complete marketing system captured on a single page. Instead of a 50-page marketing plan that never gets executed, the 1-Page Marketing Plan distills everything into a 3x3 grid of nine squares — each representing a critical stage in turning a stranger into a raving fan.
"Marketing is not an event — it is a process."
Most businesses treat marketing as a series of disconnected tactics: run an ad here, post on social media there, attend a trade show when the budget allows. The 1-Page Marketing Plan replaces this randomness with a structured, sequential process built around three phases of the customer journey:
Each phase contains three squares, giving you nine total building blocks. When all nine work together, you have a marketing machine — not a collection of tactics.
Goal: 10/10
Rate your marketing plan from 0 to 10 based on how completely and specifically you have filled in all nine squares of the grid. A score of 10 means every square contains specific, actionable content — named target segments, a written USP, identified media channels with budgets, a designed lead magnet, a mapped nurture sequence, a defined sales process, a documented customer experience, an ascension model with pricing tiers, and a referral system with scripts and tracking.
| Score | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 0-3 | Fragmented tactics, no cohesive plan, significant gaps |
| 4-6 | Some squares filled but vague; missing key phases (usually AFTER) |
| 7-8 | All squares addressed with reasonable specificity; some lack detail |
| 9-10 | Every square contains specific, measurable, actionable content ready for execution |
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ BEFORE │
│ (Target: Prospect) │
│ 1. Target Market 2. Message 3. Media │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ DURING │
│ (Target: Lead) │
│ 4. Capture Leads 5. Nurture 6. Convert │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ AFTER │
│ (Target: Customer) │
│ 7. Experience 8. Lifetime Value 9. Referrals │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Core concept: Use the PVP Index (Personal fulfillment, Value to marketplace, Profitability) to select a niche you can dominate. Stop trying to sell to everyone. The riches are in the niches.
Why it works: When you narrow your focus, your message becomes more specific, your offer becomes more relevant, and your cost of acquisition drops. A specialist always commands higher fees and deeper trust than a generalist.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS startup | Score 3 potential ICP segments using PVP Index | Chose "mid-market e-commerce" over "all online businesses" |
| Local service business | Define geographic + demographic niche | "Homeowners 35-55 in the North Shore with pools" |
| Freelancer/consultant | Pick an industry vertical to own | "B2B fintech content marketing" instead of "marketing" |
| E-commerce brand | Identify psychographic tribe | "Minimalist urban professionals" not "people who like bags" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Niche selection must be based on genuine ability to serve the market well, not on targeting vulnerable populations for exploitation.
See: references/target-market.md
Core concept: Your message must answer one question: "Why should I buy from you rather than your nearest competitor?" This answer is your Unique Selling Proposition (USP). Without it, you are a commodity competing solely on price.
Why it works: A clear USP gives prospects a reason to choose you, gives your marketing a consistent theme, and eliminates the need to compete on price. It transforms your business from "one of many" to "the only one."
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS product | Define the unique mechanism | "The only CRM that auto-generates follow-up emails using your voice tone" |
| Agency | Create a proprietary process | "Our 5-Phase Growth Sprint" — named, trademarked, diagrammed |
| Retail brand | Craft a bold guarantee | "If your shoes wear out in under 2 years, we replace them free" |
| Professional service | Build authority positioning | "The tax firm that has saved mid-market retailers $47M since 2018" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Your USP must be truthful and deliverable. Never claim results you cannot substantiate or make guarantees you have no intention of honoring.
See: references/craft-message.md
Core concept: Use direct response marketing principles for every advertising dollar you spend. Every ad must be trackable, measurable, and designed to generate a specific response — not "brand awareness." Choose media channels where your target market actually spends time.
Why it works: Direct response marketing eliminates waste. Instead of hoping people remember your brand, you ask them to take a specific action right now, and you measure whether they did. This turns marketing from a cost center into a profit center.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| B2B SaaS | LinkedIn ads + content marketing | Targeted decision-maker roles with lead magnet ads |
| Local business | Google Ads + direct mail | "Plumber near me" search ads plus neighborhood postcards |
| E-commerce | Meta ads + email | Lookalike audiences from best customers, retargeting with email |
| Professional services | Podcast guesting + SEO | Authority-building through niche podcasts, capture via blog content |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: All advertising must be truthful and comply with platform policies and local advertising regulations. Never use deceptive claims or bait-and-switch tactics.
See: references/advertising-media.md
Core concept: The goal of your marketing is not to make an immediate sale — it is to build a database of interested prospects. Use lead magnets to exchange value for contact information. Your database is the most valuable asset in your business.
Why it works: Only about 3% of any market is ready to buy right now. If your marketing only targets that 3%, you miss the other 97% who will buy later. Lead capture lets you stay in contact with the full market and sell to them when they are ready.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Free trial or interactive tool | "Free website audit — get your score in 60 seconds" |
| Consultant | Downloadable framework or checklist | "The 7-Point Financial Health Checklist for Clinic Owners" |
| E-commerce | Quiz or discount | "Find your perfect mattress — take our 2-minute sleep quiz" |
| Local service | Free estimate or inspection | "Free 15-point roof inspection — book online in 30 seconds" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Always deliver on the promise of the lead magnet. Never use deceptive opt-in tactics or sell contact information to third parties without explicit consent.
See: references/capture-leads.md
Core concept: Most leads are not ready to buy immediately. Lead nurturing is the process of building a relationship over time through consistent value delivery, education, and trust-building until the prospect is ready to purchase.
Why it works: People buy from those they know, like, and trust. Nurturing accelerates the know-like-trust cycle by positioning you as a helpful authority rather than a pushy salesperson. It keeps you top-of-mind so when the prospect is finally ready, you are the obvious choice.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Onboarding email sequence + in-app messages | 7-day welcome series showing one feature per day |
| Consultant | Weekly newsletter + case studies | "Friday Insights" email with one actionable tip per week |
| E-commerce | Browse abandonment + cart abandonment sequences | "Still thinking about it?" email with social proof |
| Local service | Seasonal reminder emails + SMS | "Spring is here — time for your annual AC check-up" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Always provide an easy, one-click unsubscribe. Never mislead about email frequency. Respect communication preferences and comply with anti-spam regulations.
See: references/nurture-leads.md
Core concept: Conversion is the process of turning a nurtured lead into a paying customer. It requires removing friction, overcoming objections, building trust through social proof and guarantees, and making it as easy as possible to say yes.
Why it works: Even the best leads need a clear path to purchase. Pricing psychology, risk reversal, and structured sales processes dramatically increase conversion rates by addressing the real reasons people hesitate: fear of making a mistake, lack of trust, and confusion about the next step.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Free trial to paid conversion flow | 14-day trial with guided onboarding, upgrade prompt at "aha moment" |
| Consultant | Discovery call to proposal pipeline | 30-min discovery call, custom proposal within 24 hours |
| E-commerce | Optimized checkout with trust signals | One-page checkout, money-back guarantee badge, real-time support chat |
| Local service | Estimate to booking process | Same-day estimate, instant online booking, "price lock" guarantee |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Never use high-pressure tactics, artificial scarcity (false deadlines/limited quantities), or manipulative closing techniques. The sale should be a natural outcome of demonstrated value and genuine fit.
See: references/sales-conversion.md
Core concept: The sale is not the finish line — it is the starting line. Delivering a world-class experience turns customers into a tribe of loyal advocates. Use systems and technology to ensure consistency, and design intentional "moments of truth" that surprise and delight.
Why it works: Customer experience is the ultimate competitive moat. Products can be copied, prices can be undercut, but a remarkable experience creates emotional loyalty that competitors cannot replicate. It also dramatically reduces churn and increases lifetime value.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Structured onboarding + proactive support | Welcome video from founder, 30-day check-in call, quarterly business reviews |
| Consultant | Client delivery framework with milestone celebrations | "Phase Complete" celebration emails, handwritten thank-you notes |
| E-commerce | Unboxing experience + post-purchase communication | Custom packaging, surprise sample, handwritten card, "how to get the most from your purchase" email |
| Local service | Service delivery ritual + follow-up | Uniformed team, floor mats at entry, same-day follow-up call asking "how did we do?" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Customer experience systems must genuinely serve the customer, not create lock-in or switching costs that trap them. Always make it easy to leave — that confidence is what makes them stay.
See: references/customer-experience.md
Core concept: The most expensive sale is the first one. Once someone is a customer, increasing their lifetime value through upsells, cross-sells, an ascension model, and retention strategies is the highest-leverage activity in your business.
Why it works: Acquiring a new customer costs 5-25x more than retaining an existing one. Increasing customer retention by just 5% can increase profits by 25-95%. Your existing customers already know, like, and trust you — selling more to them is dramatically easier than finding new buyers.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Tiered pricing + usage-based expansion | Free trial, Starter $49/mo, Pro $149/mo, Enterprise custom |
| Consultant | Engagement ladder | One-time audit $2K, quarterly retainer $5K/mo, fractional CMO $15K/mo |
| E-commerce | Subscription + complementary products | One-time purchase, subscribe-and-save 15% off, bundles, accessories |
| Local service | Annual plans + add-on services | Single service visit, annual maintenance plan, premium plan with priority scheduling |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Upsells must genuinely benefit the customer. Never upsell products or services the customer does not need simply to inflate revenue. The ascension model should reflect increasing value, not just increasing price.
See: references/lifetime-value.md
Core concept: Do not leave referrals to chance. Design a systematic referral program that makes it easy, rewarding, and natural for happy customers to send new business your way. Also pursue strategic partnerships and joint ventures for exponential reach.
Why it works: Referred customers have higher conversion rates, higher lifetime value, lower acquisition costs, and shorter sales cycles than any other source. A recommendation from a trusted friend or colleague is more persuasive than any ad you could ever run. Yet most businesses never proactively ask for referrals.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | In-app referral program | "Invite a friend, you both get 1 month free" with one-click sharing |
| Consultant | Strategic partnership network | Reciprocal referral agreements with complementary service providers |
| E-commerce | Ambassador program | Top customers get a personal referral code with 15% commission |
| Local service | Referral cards + review requests | Physical referral cards with QR code, automated post-service review request |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Referral incentives must be transparent and disclosed. Never incentivize dishonest reviews or recommendations. Referral programs should benefit all three parties: the referrer, the referred, and your business.
See: references/referral-systems.md
These cross-cutting principles apply across all nine squares:
| Principle | Description | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Trackable | Every marketing action must be measurable | Use unique URLs, phone numbers, promo codes per channel |
| Measurable | Know the ROI of every dollar spent | Calculate CAC, LTV, conversion rates per channel and campaign |
| Uses compelling headlines | Grab attention with benefit-driven headlines | Lead with the outcome the prospect desires, not your product features |
| Targets a specific audience | Speak to one person, not everyone | Use language, examples, and references specific to your niche |
| Makes a specific offer | Tell people exactly what to do next | "Download the guide," "Book your call," "Start your trial" |
| Demands a response | Create urgency and a reason to act now | Genuine deadlines, limited availability, fast-action bonuses |
| Includes multi-step follow-up | One touch is never enough | Automated sequences across email, retargeting, phone, direct mail |
| Delivers value first | Lead with generosity, not a sales pitch | Free content, tools, assessments before asking for money |
| Has a backend | The real profit is in the second and third sale | Design your product ladder before your first campaign |
| Mistake | Why It Fails | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Targeting everyone | Dilutes message, inflates acquisition cost, creates generic marketing | Use PVP Index to select one niche and dominate it before expanding |
| No USP — competing on price | Attracts price-sensitive buyers, destroys margins, creates a race to the bottom | Develop a genuine USP based on specialization, unique mechanism, or bold guarantee |
| Running brand awareness ads with no tracking | No way to measure ROI, no accountability, money disappears | Apply direct response principles to every ad: track, measure, call to action |
| No lead capture — sending traffic to home page | 97% of visitors are not ready to buy now and leave forever | Create lead magnets and dedicated landing pages to capture contact info |
| Ignoring existing customers | Missing the highest-ROI marketing (retention and upsells) | Build the AFTER phase: experience, LTV, and referral systems |
| No follow-up system | Leads go cold, opportunities die, money is left on the table | Implement automated nurture sequences and a CRM from day one |
| Question | If No | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Can you describe your ideal customer in one specific paragraph? | Your targeting is too broad | Complete the PVP Index and ideal customer avatar worksheet |
| Can you complete this sentence: "We are the only _____ that _____"? | You lack a USP | Work through the USP creation process in the message reference |
| Do you know your Customer Acquisition Cost per channel? | You are flying blind on media spend | Set up tracking for every channel and calculate CAC weekly |
| Do you have a lead magnet that converts at 20%+ on your landing page? | Your lead capture is underperforming | Test new lead magnets and optimize your opt-in page |
| Do you have an automated email sequence of 5+ emails for new leads? | Leads are going cold without nurture | Build a welcome sequence using the templates in the nurture reference |
| Do you proactively ask for referrals with a script and system? | You are leaving your best acquisition channel to chance | Design a referral program using the frameworks in the referral reference |
references/target-market.md — PVP Index scoring, ideal customer avatar worksheet, niche selection framework, common targeting mistakesreferences/craft-message.md — USP creation process, elevator pitch formula, differentiation strategies, commodity trap avoidancereferences/advertising-media.md — Direct response principles for channel selection, CAC tracking, media buying, organic vs paid, attributionreferences/capture-leads.md — Lead magnet types, CRM setup, opt-in page design, speed-to-lead, lead scoringreferences/nurture-leads.md — Email sequence templates, content cadence, multi-channel nurture, segmentation, automationreferences/sales-conversion.md — Pricing psychology, risk reversal, objection handling, sales call structure, proposal templatesreferences/customer-experience.md — Moments of truth, NPS, surprise and delight, tribes and community, technology systemsreferences/lifetime-value.md — LTV formulas, ascension model design, reactivation campaigns, retention, raising pricesreferences/referral-systems.md — Referral program design, partnerships, affiliate programs, referral scripts, trackingreferences/one-page-plan-template.md — Blank 9-square template with prompts, two worked examples, planning exercise guideAllan Dib is a serial entrepreneur, rebellious marketer, and technology expert. He has started, grown, and successfully exited multiple businesses in various industries. Allan is the founder of Successwise, a business coaching and consulting firm that helps businesses implement marketing systems for rapid growth. His book "The 1-Page Marketing Plan" has become an international bestseller, translated into numerous languages, and is widely regarded as one of the most practical marketing books ever written. His follow-up book "Lean Marketing" extends the framework with modern, resource-efficient strategies for businesses of all sizes. Allan is known for making complex marketing concepts accessible and actionable, with a relentless focus on implementation over theory.
Build a complete marketing plan covering the full customer journey from stranger to raving fan.
See optimization implementation details for output format specifications.
| Error | Cause | Resolution |
|---|---|---|
| Authentication failure | Invalid or expired credentials | Refresh tokens or re-authenticate with optimization |
| Configuration conflict | Incompatible settings detected | Review and resolve conflicting parameters |
| Resource not found | Referenced resource missing | Verify resource exists and permissions are correct |
Basic usage: Apply one page marketing to a standard project setup with default configuration options.
Advanced scenario: Customize one page marketing for production environments with multiple constraints and team-specific requirements.