What the Business Blueprint Is For
The Business Blueprint is a one-page tool designed to help small businesses see their business clearly before making branding decisions.
Branding works best when it is grounded in how a business actually operates — who it serves, what it offers, how it earns, and what it costs to deliver. Without that foundation, branding can feel unmoored from reality.
The Business Blueprint creates that foundation in a single view.
Why a Single Page Matters
Most small business owners carry a lot of detail in their heads. The Blueprint asks you to slow down and put the essentials on paper — not to create a formal business plan, but to see the shape of your business at a glance.
When everything is visible at once, patterns become clearer. Gaps become easier to spot. Branding decisions become easier to make because they are connected to something real.
The Eight Sections of the Blueprint
The worksheet is organized into eight labeled sections. Each one asks a simple question about your business.
Customers
Who are you serving? Describe your customers in terms of who they are, what they need, and what stage of life or business they are in.
If you have done work with a customer persona or an empathy map, this is where that thinking lands.
Offer
What do you sell or provide? List your services, products, or packages as they currently exist — not as you imagine them.
Revenue Model and Price
How do you earn? This includes your pricing structure, whether you charge hourly, by project, by retainer, or by product.
Channels
How do customers find you? List the ones that are currently active, not the ones you intend to use.
Value Proposition
What is the core reason a customer chooses you over another option? This connects directly to branding as a decision-making framework.
Costs
What does it cost to operate? Include tools, platforms, contractors, materials, time.
Partners
Who do you rely on or collaborate with? Suppliers, subcontractors, referral partners, platforms, or collaborators whose work supports yours.
Teams and Resources
Who is involved in delivering what you offer? This section makes visible what it actually takes to deliver on your offer.
How to Fill It Out
Start by filling in what you know with confidence. Then move to the sections that feel less clear. Uncertainty in a section is useful information.
What to Do With It Once It Is Filled In
Read it as a whole. Ask yourself:
- does the offer match the customers I described?
- do my channels reach those customers?
- does my value proposition reflect what I actually deliver?
- are there sections that feel thin or uncertain?
How the Blueprint Connects to Branding
The Business Blueprint makes the reality of your business explicit. It gives your branding decisions a place to stand.
It pairs naturally with the Business Commitment Matrix and the Onlyness Statement.
Getting the Blueprint
The Business Blueprint is available as a free downloadable worksheet here.
This article is part of a larger series on branding. You can explore the full collection of guides and tools in the Branding for Small Businesses hub.


