1-Page Marketing Plan
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Your Entire Marketing Strategy on One Page
To build a successful business, you need to stop doing random acts of marketing and start following a reliable plan for rapid business growth. Traditionally, creating a marketing plan has been a difficult and time-consuming process, which is why it often doesn’t get done.
In The 1-Page Marketing Plan, serial entrepreneur and rebellious marketer Allan Dib reveals a marketing implementation breakthrough that makes creating a marketing plan simple and fast. It’s literally a single page, divided up into nine squares. With it, you’ll be able to map out your own sophisticated marketing plan and go from zero to marketing hero.
Whether you’re just starting out or are an experienced entrepreneur, The 1-Page Marketing Plan is the easiest and fastest way to create a marketing plan that will propel your business growth.
In this groundbreaking new book you’ll discover:
• How to get new customers, clients or patients and how to make more profit from existing ones.
• Why “big business” style marketing could kill your business and strategies that actually work for small and medium-sized businesses.
• How to close sales without being pushy, needy, or obnoxious while turning the tables and having prospects begging you to take their money.
• A simple step-by-step process for creating your own personalized marketing plan that is literally one page. Simply follow along and fill in each of the nine squares that make up your own 1-Page Marketing Plan.
• How to annihilate competitors and make yourself the only logical choice.
• How to get amazing results on a small budget using the secrets of direct response marketing.
• How to charge high prices for your products and services and have customers actually thank you for it.
From the Publisher
Publisher : Page Two (May 5, 2018)
Language : English
Paperback : 232 pages
ISBN-10 : 1989025013
ISBN-13 : 978-1989025017
Reading age : 18 years and up
Item Weight : 12 ounces
Dimensions : 6 x 0.5 x 9 inches
Customers say
Customers find the book brilliant, worth their time, and fun to read. They say it’s concise, simple, and straightforward. Readers appreciate the actionable insights and blueprint for action. They also appreciate the useful information and examples.
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9 reviews for 1-Page Marketing Plan
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Original price was: $17.95.$11.59Current price is: $11.59.
MS –
The thoroughly well-laid out plan
This book is brilliant.I cannot decide what I loved most about it â whether it was the superb conversational tone, amazingly solid business advice or that Allan actually preaches what he practices (which happens depressingly rare nowadays).Are there any flaws in âThe 1-Page Marketing Plan?â Only perceived ones and only a few. Letâs start with them.Cons1. Give them what they wantâ¦The author tricks you into buying the book with his 1-page slogan. And he provides that indeed. But itâs just the tip of the tip of the iceberg. You get the tip and the whole iceberg attached to it.â¦then give them what they need.And itâs a huge iceberg to swallow. The amount of content condensed into this book is mind-blowing.2. More for Rookies.This book is ideal for people who are getting their feet wet in the entrepreneurial world. I found only a couple missing elements in the whole structure of Allanâs business program. But it also means that if you have some experience in business you have probably heard of or lived through most of the advice provided in the book.On the plus side, Allan has a talent for conveying his points in a way that penetrates thick skulls. So, even if itâs something you are familiar with it still may make you take action.3. Missing puzzles.What small business owners need is a full operation manual for their businesses and the author provides just that. With two exceptions I could put my finger on: there is nothing, or very little, about a vision for your business and idea validation at its early stages. Yeah, I know, itâs nitpicking. 1-page Marketing Plan is dedicated to existing business owners and assumes they have a vision and validated their idea. However, if you cover the whole picture, you shouldnât make exceptions.PROS1. From Practice.I cannot praise the author enough for his book marketing. I make a living as a book advertiser. Gosh! So many authors, even business book authors, have no clue about it. I need to teach them basics before we can even start.Allan Dib is a superb marketer. His book is #1 in a competitive category and it ranks high consistently, meaning he knows how to actually sell his own book.The same experience shines through the pages of his book. Allan has been there and done that. âThe 1-Page Marketing Planâ is not a theoretical thesis. It comes straight from experience. I appreciate this very much.2. AdviceAs I mentioned in the âConsâ section, Allan shares much more than a single marketing tactic. His business advice is rock solid and truly comprehensive. It is also up to date like a few business books are. For example, the utmost emphasis on tracking your marketing campaigns is, of course, common sense, but in the modern world it is also a must. âHalf the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I donât know which half.â â John Wanamaker âIt should be a crime to say that today.â â Allan DibAllan is not shy about admitting that he borrows heavily from Gerber and his âE-Myth.â If you want to build a real business, not just a new job without a boss (and without a stable salary), you need systems and processes. Your marketing needs a system and processes as well and âThe 1-Page Marketing Planâ tells you exactly how to implement them.The business advice shared in the book is especially valuable for business rookies who havenât yet read everything from the business shelf in the library.3. Wisdom.Allan Dibâs advice does not focus only on systems and processes. His business acumen is enormous and he is generous in sharing it. For me, it was especially visible when he talks about relationships with customers. I need to nurture those relationships not consider them a given. Allan also knows which particular stories to share to make his point memorable. The story of a car salesman opened my eyes to what it means to keep relationships with customers alive.âEverybody is in salesâ was another business wisdom nugget I got from âThe 1-Page Marketing Plan.âAnd authorâs assessment about big organizations was right on the spot: âPoor service, indifferent staff, and out-of-touch management are hallmarks of large companies.âIâve been working in a corporate environment my whole career and there are no words that describe this world more aptly.I also liked very much whenever Allan gave arguments about why small businesses actually have advantage over big corporations, if they do their marketing right.Another of his gems: âWord of mouth is the business equivalent of a free lunch.âThatâs so true. Itâs amazing when it happens, but depending on free meals is not a strategy to support your family or create a business.Firing problematic customers, not basing your business on a single snow leopard, how to give outrageous guarantees and many other wisdom gems were hidden among this bookâs pages.4. Storytelling.While many of the things Allan teaches about in his book were not new to me, his storytelling is so superb that many things I knew only intellectually finally penetrated to the gut level.For example, I knew very well that itâs so much more effective to keep an existing customer than to attract a new one. They taught me this in my economy classes at university 20 years ago! But only after reading the âThe 1-Page Marketing Planâ it dawned on me how downright stupid it is to neglect your past and existing customers and chase new clients instead.Iâm a numbers guy and I was impressed at how Allan used numbers to illustrate his points.Thus, even if you âkind ofâ already know everything about marketing, systems, processes and keeping your customers satisfied, reading âThe 1-Page Marketing Planâ will not be waste of your time. The authorâs persuasion skills may refresh your knowledge and implement what you know intellectually into practice.5. 1-PageAnd yes, there is a 1-page marketing plan included in the book.In my opinion, itâs well worth the bookâs price. Even the principle that you should have only one place, one sheet, to picture your whole marketing plan with a single glance is worth the price. We are so distracted in the modern world. This single piece may serve you as a single point of focus that will keep your monkey brain glued to the importance of marketing plan for your business.So, even if you already know everything Allan teaches about marketing, customer satisfaction, market research, systems and processes and all that stuff, but you didnât have your whole marketing plan put on a single sheet, you need to read âThe 1-Page Marketing PlanâBy the way, the plan is thoroughly well-laid out in a chronological and logical order. Itâs a masterpiece. Iâm going to use it in my business.
Dave Kinnear –
Not just a marketing plan – a plan for your business.
Persuaded:I will admit that I picked this book up with grave misgivings. I was asked by the authorâs assistant to review the book but declined to do so. Coincidentally, a week later, one of my clients was looking for a way to get his leadership team on the same page when it came to marketing and sales. So, I picked up the Kindle version of the book and promised Iâd let him know what I thought.By the time I finished the introduction, I was shaking my head in agreement with Mr. Dib. Halfway through the book, I was confident enough to recommend that my client get the book for himself. Let me explain some of the reasons why I believe this book is worth your time to read.Layout:The chapters are in a logical order that builds from one marketing principle to another while working toward completing the plan. There are frequent referrals between concepts that tie everything together.I appreciate the way Dib starts each chapter with a summary and a list of what he will be telling you in that chapter. Then, at the end of each chapter, he has an action item and instructions for filling in one block of the nine-block marketing plan.Marketing:It is refreshing to read that Dib believes there is no longer (and maybe never was) a reason for not doing the work of determining the return on investment (ROI) for your marketing budget. Technological advances in digital media make parts of the ROI equation very easy to manage. Print media is also much more targeted and traceable than in the past. So, no excuses! Continuous improvement in marketing effectiveness is possible and required for a well-run business.Dib also dispels the myth that print and direct marketing are “dead,” or dying. He drives home the concept that all the media can be useful and should be used in a mix that is most effective for your target market. Also, yes, some of the determination of the proper combination will be trial-and-error which is why measuring is so critical.On the target market subject, Dib suggests that a narrow focus is best. We cannot be all things to all people in all markets. Combine a narrow focus with the creation of a customer avatar, and you will be able to create a powerful model for marketing and sales personnel to use as a guide for their work.There are many other great tips and ideas for a highly effective marketing program; too many to itemize here. As I mentioned above, it is well worth your time to read what Dib has to say.Sales:Marketing and sales are very closely intertwined. Generally, the sales process is where I disagree with most sales and marketing trainers or authors on these topics. Try as they might, they cannot seem to get to the point where they stop making the process about making the sale. Many start out saying the right things: âItâs about the buyer; You must add value; You must build trust, etc.” Then, inevitably, they wind up inculcating tactics that make things all about the salesperson making the sale. Find out what your customer needs â so you can make the deal. Build a relationship with your customer, because that is what will make them comfortable placing the order. Always be closing.Dib has come the closest I’ve seen so far to reaching my own sales philosophy â if you want someone to buy, stop selling. People want to buy; they do not want to be sold â no matter how pleasant you are as a salesperson. Today, if I want or need something, I have researched it already, and I either have it or have decided itâs not in my budget. Therefore, if youâre trying to manipulate me (no matter what fancy tactic you use) into purchasing something I donât need or canât afford, then youâre serving yourself and not me as the customer.The most egregious sales tactics today are those based on neuroscience. They are designed to use new knowledge about how the human brain works to manipulate people into doing what you want them to do rather than help them understand what it is they want to do. To me, doing that is evil. As a vendor, my job is to be found. That, being found, is why this book is so important and worth reading.Definitions:Dib uses an interesting story to define some of the common terms we use around marketing and sales. âHere’s the simplest, most jargon-free definition of marketing you’re ever likely to come across: If the circus is coming to town and you paint a sign saying, âCircus Coming to the Showground Saturday,â thatâs advertising. If you put the sign on the back of an elephant and walk it into town, thatâs promotion. If the elephant walks through the mayorâs flower bed and the local newspaper writes a story about it, thatâs publicity. And if you get the mayor to laugh about it, thatâs public relations. If the townâs citizens go to the circus, you show them the many entertainment booths, explain how much fun theyâll have spending money at the booths, answer their questions and, ultimately, they spend a lot at the circus, thatâs sales. And if you planned the whole thing, thatâs marketing.âAs you might imagine, my difficulty is only with the portion that states, you âexplain how much fun theyâll have spending money at the booths.â Just show them the booths. Theyâll figure out if they want to spend time and money having fun.Bottom Line:As I said, Dib comes closest to meeting my “don’t sell” sales philosophy. Moreover, he is right on target with the marketing, branding, and promoting philosophy. This book is the most lucid and most thorough book on this topic that I’ve read to date. Also, Dib has more useful resources on his website for those who want to dig deeper. I highly recommend the 1-Page Marketing Plan.
Matt Baier –
Highly focused!
I love how well organized and highly focused this book is! Itâs very comprehensive but not overly wordy. I particularly appreciate that it not only tells you exactly what to do and why but what NOT to do with marketing in todayâs world. It was a lot of fun to read and it strongly encourages action. I am going to create my nine-block-grid one page marking plan right now!
Leslie –
Helpful
Great information for beginning entrepreneurs.
Marie-Claude Paquette –
I have been reading books to improve my business for years and I am very happy to have discovered this book because it is very complete and well structured.First, I wanted to get more clients and make better use of my time. I had a hard time refusing and firing clients and instead of helping me it made me fall. Now I know my target customers better and I am more confident in my projects.The goal is to take action and not be afraid of making mistakes because it is thanks to these that we learn to discover and make better choices.Marketing is very important as well as knowing how to delegate and being well surrounded. So I absolutely recommend this book for your business. May success be within your reach!
Mauricio –
Cada página tiene una muy alta densidad de conocimientos e ideas todas interesantes. Creo que lo tendré que volver a leer 4 veces más
Mladen BojaniÄ –
Kompakt beschriebene Umsetzungstaktiken inkl. Strategie mit gut gewählten Beispielen. Ideal für kleine und mittelständische Unternehmen. Wer das nicht umsetzt ist selbst schuld.
Rimpa Mahato –
This is a must read if you want to make a marketing plan for your business.Topics are easy to digest and examples are helpful to understand the subject.Its a value added purchase.
Cliente Amazon –
Es un libro que comenta lo más importante de una estrategia de Marketing desde un punto de vista de la PYME