You don’t need another plan you’ll never open. You need a page you can run. This book replaces planning theatre with a working system you can read in a minute and execute for the next 90 days. If you’re tired of meetings that produce eloquence but not evidence, you’re in the right place. What’s inside is practical and unsentimental: define the customer’s pain in plain language, craft a promise you can keep, price with spine, pick fewer channels and make them work, and run a weekly cadence that compounds progress. You’ll learn to build a **one page business plan**, convert it into a **90 day execution plan**, and hold a simple **operating cadence** that keeps teams calm and focused. Clear templates walk you through **offer and pricing model** choices, **channels and funnel design**, and the few KPIs that actually predict outcomes. You’ll set a lightweight **risk register template**, understand **unit economics explained** in one line, and stop drowning in dashboards. This is for founders, operators, and small teams who want strategic clarity without corporate theatre. Expect fewer priorities, stronger promises, and a scoreboard that tells the truth. By the final chapter, you’ll know exactly what to do next Monday—and what to stop doing. If you’ve been searching for **simple business strategy** and **strategic planning for small business** that respects your time and ambition, start here.
The One-Page Business Plan
SKU: 9789374123720
$26.99 Regular Price
$20.60Sale Price
- Elena Marceau writes about strategy the way engineers build bridges: with clear spans, tested materials, and respect for load. Her work champions the modest page that changes behaviour over the glossy deck that changes nothing. Raised between workshops and bookshops, she sees business as a craft—choices, constraints, and care—more than a performance. She draws on field manuals, decision science, and the quiet wisdom of teams who keep promises at scale. When not condensing messy plans into one page, she is walking old industrial canals, thinking about throughput, patience, and why the simplest tools endure.


















