Content Brief: What It Is
A content brief is the instruction document a writer receives before producing a piece: the audience, the intent, the message, the keyword and the action the piece must win. A good brief is a target map; a bad one is a topic and a word count.
Table of Contents
What a real brief contains
- The reader. One persona, with the pain point in the customer’s phrasing.
- The intent. What the reader is trying to do when they meet this piece.
- The action. The one thing the piece exists to make happen: a click, an enquiry, a next paragraph read.
- The message and theme. Which storyline of the company’s framework this piece serves.
- The evidence. The facts, numbers or stories the writer builds from, ideally from primary sources.
The uncomfortable truth about briefs
Most briefs are a translation of a translation: the customer said something to a salesperson, the salesperson summarized it to a manager, the manager compressed it into an email, and the writer received the residue. In my experience the email brief is lousy and off-point more often than anyone admits, and one conversation with the salesperson changes everything.
The rule
Where the brief and the primary source disagree, the primary source wins. A writer who has interviewed the sales team can ignore a wrong brief with evidence and with pride; a writer who has interviewed nobody can only obey it.
The interviewing method sits in voice of customer research, and briefs built this way are how I run copywriting engagements.
This micro-blog is part of Rajat Jhingan’s copywriting essentials. Explore more micro blogs here.
By Rajat Jhingan — Content Strategist & Copywriter


