The One-Page Marketing Plan That Actually Gets Used

Most marketing plans are researched, written and then sit on a shelf collecting dust. They often never make it past the document they're written in.

They get built once a year, usually under pressure. The documents themselves are usually too long and forgotten by week three. Twenty-five pages of goals, strategies, and tactics that sounded great in the planning meeting and then quietly disappear into a folder no one opens again.

Here's a shocking revelation: a marketing plan only works if you actually use it. And the plans that get used aren't the most thorough ones. They're the simplest ones.

If you've ever built a marketing plan that looked impressive and changed nothing, this one's for you.

Why Most Marketing Plans Fail Before They Start

It's not that the thinking behind a long, detailed marketing plan is wrong. It's that complexity kills follow-through.

A plan that takes 20 minutes to read isn't something you check on a Monday morning. It's something you reference once, file away, and quietly abandon when the work gets busy, which for most professional service firms, is always.

The plans that drive results share one thing in common: they're simple enough to use every single week.

What Belongs on a One-Page Plan

A one-page marketing plan isn't a shortcut. It's a filter. It forces you to identify what actually matters and cut everything else.

Here's what should be on it:

  • Your audience, in one sentence.
    Not three personas. The one client you most want more of.
  • Your core message.
    The one thing you want people to understand about your firm, stated simply enough to repeat from memory.
  • Your three priority channels.
    You simply cannot (and should not) be everywhere. List the two or three places your audience actually pays attention.
  • Your monthly content rhythm.
    A realistic cadence you can sustain, not an aspirational one you'll abandon in 60 days because it’s too much.
  • Your single most important metric.
    One number that tells you if the plan is working, or not. You don’t need a dashboard.
  • Your next action.
    The one thing you'll do this week to move the plan forward.

That's it. If it doesn't fit on one page, it's not a plan, it's a wish list.

Why Simplicity Outperforms Complexity

There's a reason a one-page plan tends to outperform a thick one: you'll actually open it and it’s easy to reference.

A plan you can see at-a-glance becomes a working document. It’s something you leave on your computer desktop or print out so you can check it before a content calendar gets built, before a new tactic gets added, or before a shiny new platform pulls your attention away from what's already working.

A plan buried in a slide deck or a 20-page PDF becomes background noise. It technically exists but doesn't DO anything.

The goal isn't to capture every possible idea. It's to capture the few that matter enough to act on consistently.

How to Build Your Marketing Plan in 30 Minutes

You don't need a retreat or a consultant to get a first draft on paper. Block 30 minutes and work through it in order:

  • Write down the one client you want more of and be specific.
  • Write the one sentence you want them to remember about your firm.
  • Pick the two or three places they're most likely paying attention.
  • Decide what you can realistically publish or send every month, without burning out.
  • Choose one number you'll track. This could be inquiries, referral conversations, website visits, whatever matters most right now.
  • Write down the one thing you'll do this week to start.

 That’s six steps, one page, no fluff.

What Happens When Firms Actually Use Their Plan

We've seen this play out again and again: firms with simple, visible plans make faster decisions. When a new opportunity or shiny idea comes up, they have something to check it against. They can quickly ask: does this fit the plan, or is it a distraction?

Firms without that filter say yes to everything, spread their effort thin, and wonder why nothing is moving the needle.

You don't need a more complicated marketing plan. You need one you'll actually look at.

Strip it down to what matters, write it on a single page, and put it somewhere you'll see it, not tucked away in a folder, a wall or a notes app you open weekly.

Simple isn't a lesser version of strategic. Done right, it's the most strategic version there is.

You Do the Work. We'll Make Sure People See It.

At Mayes MarCom, we help professional service firms cut through the noise and build marketing plans that actually get used, not just written. If you're ready for a plan that fits on one page and drives real results, let's talk.

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