A meta-orchestrator that assembles all 9 squares of the direct response
marketing lifecycle into a single canvas document. Covers the full prospect
→ lead → customer journey across three acts: Before (get them to KNOW you),
During (get them to LIKE you and buy), After (get them to TRUST you, buy
again, and refer others).
This skill works in three starting states — from nothing, from partial work,
or as an audit of an existing plan — and always produces a single output
document: marketing-plan-canvas.md.
Use this skill when the goal is the complete marketing system, not one
piece. It is the entry point for any of these situations:
description
unified view
not converting
Do NOT use this skill when the user wants deep work on a single square.
Invoke the dedicated component skill directly for that (e.g.,
target-market-selection-pvp-index for square #1 alone).
Before starting, determine the user's starting state:
Minimum viable input (always ask if absent):
Check for existing outputs from component skills. If the user has worked
through any of the 9 dependent skills, those outputs become the content for
the corresponding square. Ask:
> "Have you worked through any of the individual marketing squares before?
> If so, share those documents and I'll integrate them. Otherwise I'll ask
> you the minimum question for each square."
For each square, the decision rule is:
summary for the canvas
before proceeding
Orient the user before gathering any input. Explain:
The 1-Page Marketing Plan organizes all marketing into 9 squares across
3 acts, reflecting the 3 stages every customer passes through:
┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ MY 1-PAGE MARKETING PLAN │
├─────────────────┬──────────────────┬────────────────────────┤
│ ACT I: BEFORE │ (Prospect) │ Goal: they KNOW you │
├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼────────────────────────┤
│ #1 My Target │ #2 My Message │ #3 Media to │
│ Market │ to Them │ Reach Them │
├─────────────────┴──────────────────┴────────────────────────┤
│ ACT II: DURING │ (Lead) │ Goal: they LIKE you │
├─────────────────┬──────────────────┬────────────────────────┤
│ #4 Lead │ #5 Lead │ #6 Sales │
│ Capture │ Nurture │ Conversion │
├─────────────────┴──────────────────┴────────────────────────┤
│ ACT III: AFTER │ (Customer) │ Goal: they TRUST you │
├─────────────────┬──────────────────┬────────────────────────┤
│ #7 World-Class │ #8 Increase │ #9 Orchestrate │
│ Experience │ Customer LTV │ Referrals │
└─────────────────┴──────────────────┴────────────────────────┘
Key insight: this is a direct response framework for small and medium
businesses. It is NOT mass marketing or branding. Every square is designed
to produce a measurable, trackable result.
For each of the 9 squares, determine the status:
Present a quick status table to the user and confirm before proceeding.
WHY for the order: target market must be decided before writing a message,
and media channel only makes sense once you know who you're reaching and
what you're saying. Reversing this order is the definition of "random acts
of marketing."
Square #1 — Target Market
target-market-selection-pvp-index(3-5 bullets)
target-market-selection-pvp-indexsentence — their role, their problem, their situation."*
irresistible-offer-builder outputs feed into the offer framingfor this segment (cross-reference).
Square #2 — Message to Target Market
marketing-message-and-usp-craftingmarketing-message-and-usp-craftingWhy should your target customer choose you over every alternative,
including doing nothing?"*
irresistible-offer-builder is the cross-cutting input here —a strong offer makes the message concrete.
Square #3 — Advertising Media
advertising-media-roi-framework(3-5 bullets)
advertising-media-roi-frameworkspecific channels (e.g., Facebook ads, LinkedIn, local newspaper,
email list, Google search)."*
WHY for the order: leads must be captured before they can be nurtured,
and nurturing must happen before conversion. The sequence is the system.
Square #4 — Lead Capture
lead-capture-ethical-bribe-designbullets)
lead-capture-ethical-bribe-designWhat do you offer them in exchange (e.g., free report, checklist,
webinar, free consultation)?"*
Square #5 — Lead Nurture
lead-nurture-sequence-design(3-5 bullets)
lead-nurture-sequence-designWhat's your current sequence (email, phone, direct mail) and how long
does it run?"*
Square #6 — Sales Conversion
sales-conversion-trust-system(3-5 bullets)
sales-conversion-trust-systemWhat's the final step that gets someone to buy (sales call, proposal,
checkout page, in-person meeting)?"*
irresistible-offer-builder is a direct feed into square #6 —the offer structure determines conversion rate.
WHY for the order: experience must exist before you can measure
lifetime value, and referrals only happen when the experience is strong
enough to earn recommendation. Act III is where most businesses leave
the most money on the table.
Square #7 — World-Class Experience
customer-experience-systems-designbullets)
customer-experience-systems-designmake sure they feel looked after and impressed — not just served?"*
Square #8 — Increase Customer Lifetime Value
customer-lifetime-value-growthbullets)
customer-lifetime-value-growthhave a higher-tier offer, a subscription, or a natural next product
they should move to?"*
Square #9 — Orchestrate and Stimulate Referrals
referral-system-design(3-5 bullets)
referral-system-designprocess, or does it happen by accident when a happy customer mentions
you?"*
Before writing the canvas document, check:
to the pain of the target in square #1? If they are misaligned, the
advertising in square #3 will reach the right people but say the wrong
thing.
the target from square #1? (Example: LinkedIn reaches B2B professionals;
Facebook reaches consumers and local businesses. Wrong channel =
broadcasting to the wrong audience.)
appeal to the specific target from square #1? A generic lead magnet
attracts generic, low-quality leads.
cutting) back up the promise made in square #2? The message sets
expectations; the offer must fulfil them.
of squares 7, 8, and 9. A business that excels at Before and During but
ignores After is leaving its most profitable customers under-served.
Flag any misalignments to the user before writing the canvas. Suggest the
appropriate dedicated skill to resolve each gap, or ask the minimum
corrective question.
marketing-plan-canvas.md (WHY: a plan that exists only in conversation cannot be executed)Produce the single output document. Format:
# My 1-Page Marketing Plan
Business: [name]
Date: [date]
Status: [Draft / In Progress / Live]
---
## ACT I: BEFORE — Getting Prospects to KNOW You
| Square | Content |
|--------|---------|
| #1 Target Market | [3-5 bullets from skill output or user input] |
| #2 Message | [3-5 bullets: USP, headline, core promise] |
| #3 Media | [Top 1-2 channels, allocation rationale] |
---
## ACT II: DURING — Getting Leads to LIKE You and Buy
| Square | Content |
|--------|---------|
| #4 Lead Capture | [Lead magnet name, capture mechanism] |
| #5 Lead Nurture | [Sequence summary: medium, cadence, length] |
| #6 Sales Conversion | [Conversion mechanism, trust elements, offer summary] |
---
## ACT III: AFTER — Getting Customers to TRUST You, Buy Again, Refer
| Square | Content |
|--------|---------|
| #7 World-Class Experience | [Key experience systems, wow moments] |
| #8 Increase Customer LTV | [Upsell path, retention mechanism, subscription offer] |
| #9 Orchestrate Referrals | [Referral mechanism, incentive, timing] |
---
## Cross-Cutting: Irresistible Offer
[Summary of offer structure — feeds squares #2 and #6]
Source: irresistible-offer-builder skill output (if available)
---
## Coherence Notes
[Any misalignments flagged in Step 6, with recommended next actions]
---
## Next Actions
[Prioritized list: which squares need deeper work via dedicated skills]
For each square, if a dedicated skill output exists, add a reference link:
→ Full detail: skills/[skill-name]/[output-file].md
After writing the canvas, make this explicit to the user:
> "This plan is ready to execute. It is 80% complete — and 80% out the
> door beats 100% in the drawer every time. Marketing is not an event; it
> is a process. Start executing Act I immediately. Refine as you get
> real-world feedback. The squares that are thin will become clearer once
> you are in market."
Identify the single highest-leverage next action (usually: get the target
market clear first if missing, or start running Act I media if it exists).
Minimum required:
serves, what it sells
Higher-value inputs (optional, but each one reduces the questions asked):
scripts, onboarding processes
Not required:
Primary output:
marketing-plan-canvas.md — single document with all 9 squares filledat minimum viable detail, plus coherence notes and next actions
The output has two levels of completeness:
gathered directly from user in this skill. Fast to produce; good enough
to start executing.
with references to full detail documents. Deeper; better for businesses
that have worked through the component skills.
Both are valid outputs of this skill. The goal is a canvas that can be
stuck on a wall and used to guide daily marketing decisions.
Systematic, not random
Random acts of marketing — trying Facebook ads this week, a podcast next
week, a direct mail campaign the month after — with no connecting strategy
is the single biggest reason small business marketing fails. The 9-square
canvas is the strategy that connects all tactics.
Direct response, not mass marketing
This framework is designed for small and medium businesses. It is NOT
brand marketing. Every element must be trackable and measurable. If you
cannot measure whether a square is working, it is not a direct response
element — revisit it.
80% ships, 100% stays in the drawer
Paralysis by analysis kills more marketing plans than bad strategy. A
good-enough plan executed today beats a perfect plan executed never.
Set a deadline: this canvas must be complete within one session. Gaps
become the next iteration, not a reason to delay.
Iterate, don't perfect
The first version of the canvas is a hypothesis. Real customers will
tell you what to change. Treat the canvas as a living document — review
it quarterly, update squares that are underperforming, and add depth via
dedicated skills when a specific square becomes a bottleneck.
Marketing is a process, not an event
High-growth businesses make marketing a daily routine. Failed businesses
treat marketing as something they do when revenue drops. The canvas gives
you the system; you provide the consistent execution.
Situation: User runs a bookkeeping business for small trades businesses
(plumbers, electricians). No marketing plan. Gets clients by word of mouth.
How this skill runs:
(cash flow visibility, ATO compliance stress) not generic bookkeeping.
lead-nurture-sequence-design as next step.
execution priority.
Situation: User has outputs from target-market-selection-pvp-index,
marketing-message-and-usp-crafting, and irresistible-offer-builder.
Squares #1, #2, and the cross-cutting offer are done. Squares #3-9 need
work.
How this skill runs:
irresistible-offer-builder)is consistent with the message in #2.
lead-capture-ethical-bribe-design and lead-nurture-sequence-design.
Situation: User has been running Facebook ads for 6 months with no
results. They have a landing page, some emails, and a sales process. Their
marketing "isn't working."
How this skill runs:
has no USP (their ads look like mass marketing), #3 is Facebook only
with no tracking.
without a targeted message, it attracts low-quality leads.
channel.
target-market-selection-pvp-index to sharpen the niche, then marketing-message-and-usp-crafting to rebuild the message
before spending another dollar on ads.
target-market-selection-pvp-index — square #1: niche selection withthe PVP Index (Personal fulfillment, Value, Profitability)
marketing-message-and-usp-crafting — square #2: unique sellingproposition, headline, and message construction
advertising-media-roi-framework — square #3: channel selection andmedia ROI measurement
lead-capture-ethical-bribe-design — square #4: lead magnets andethical bribe design
lead-nurture-sequence-design — square #5: multi-touch nurturesequences for unconverted leads
sales-conversion-trust-system — square #6: trust-building conversionsystems for the final buying decision
customer-experience-systems-design — square #7: world-class experiencedelivery systems
customer-lifetime-value-growth — square #8: upsell, cross-sell, andretention mechanisms
referral-system-design — square #9: systematic referral orchestrationirresistible-offer-builder — cross-cutting: offer construction thatfeeds squares #2 (message) and #6 (conversion)
(framework, canvas, 3 acts), Conclusion (anti-patterns, 80% principle,
marketing-as-process). Canvas downloadable at 1pmp.com.
This skill is licensed under CC-BY-SA-4.0.
Source: BookForge — The 1-Page Marketing Plan by Allan Dib.
Install related skills from ClawhHub:
clawhub install bookforge-target-market-selection-pvp-indexclawhub install bookforge-marketing-message-and-usp-craftingclawhub install bookforge-irresistible-offer-builderclawhub install bookforge-advertising-media-roi-frameworkclawhub install bookforge-lead-capture-ethical-bribe-designclawhub install bookforge-lead-nurture-sequence-designclawhub install bookforge-sales-conversion-trust-systemclawhub install bookforge-customer-experience-systems-designclawhub install bookforge-customer-lifetime-value-growthclawhub install bookforge-referral-system-designOr install the full book set from GitHub: bookforge-skills
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