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How to write a creative brief
1. How To Write A Creative Brief
Creative Brief Shouldn't Depend On Your Perspective
I was with my team a while back interviewing a non-profit to help them with their marketing
efforts. My team is made up of mostly designers, and I asked them to show me a typical
creative brief. What I found interesting was a designers perspective was different than a
marketers on a creative brief. For example, one of my designers had listed, listen to the client,
they are your audience. On the surface that sounds correct, but if you think about it a little, are
they really your audience? Are you designing pieces to appease your client or to actually target
their customers? I told my team I disagreed with them and when you do a creative brief with a
client, yes it is important to be a active listener, but also remembering that the true audience is
THEIR client, not them. Most importantly do not get off track, and once in awhile repeat little
nuggets of their wisdom back to them, so they know you are listening and are actively engaged.
Below is a sample creative brief I handed my team with notes to them. This was meant for
their eyes only, not the clients. I typically do these as a personal interview. I do not hand these
out to the clients to fill out unless asked to do so. The reason is two-fold. One, if you hand
something out to a busy executive expecting a response, you almost never get it back. Second,
personal interviews can ask leading questions to help get a client a more focused answer.
2. Creative Brief
This will be our project description. A brief summary of what we are doing and why.
Overview
General Project Description
Goals/Project Objectives
Examples
§ Position as a premium non-profit organization operating in a niche market
§ Attract interest and reputation
Deliverables Needed
Measurable Objectives- 10% increase in donations? 10% increase ticket sales? 10%
overall revenues?
Audience
We need to understand who the audience is. Let the client guide us. DON"T ASSUME YOU
KNOW THE AUDIENCE or WHAT IT IS LIKE. Remember the first audience is our client
themselves, their employees and volunteers. Need audience demographics if possible.
Examples
Organization: non profit
Core Target: ex- donors, strategic partners-get a profile or two including occupation, age
range, gender, likes, etc.
Secondary Target: Customers- same thing, need profiles
Tertiary Target: ex- private and business sectors potential donors
3. How will our audience(s) use our recommendations, brochures, website, mailers?
What should we avoid when targeting/talking to these audiences?
Tone, Image, and Messages
What story is their message currently telling? Look at branding, logo, website, what intangibles
is it conveying? Is it a vision, attitude, or feeling. For example in clothes a black pinstripe suite
says something different from jeans. We need to write everything down we imagine, our
opinions, how their brand makes us feel,. This is the artistic step for us. Their brand what words
alone cannot.
Examples
Convey fun, family, trust, safety, credibility, formal
Project growth, stability, trust
Timeless/ not trendy
Outgoing, liberal, colorful
Feminine, 'girly', or masculine, or both
Welcoming and approachable
Lively, sophisticated, but not too rich, though. Some things might be too extravagant for
a nonprofit.
What do the audience believe or think, before you start communicating with them?
Are there some specific visual goals
What tone should be use when we engage them?
4. Messages: Features, Benefits and Values
List top features and/or facts about XXXXXXXXXX, and its value to target audiences
How do these stack up against the competition?
If you could get one sentence across, what would that be? How would you prove it?
Other major points?
Budget and Schedule
What are the parameters?
When must the message get to the audience for greatest impact (e.g. service
introduction date, conference, special event, calendar date)?
What is the due date for the finished work?
Process
Who is the point person (on the nonprofit side)?
Do they want meetings during process to help guide us?
Approaches
This is a more mechanical step than artistic. We need to write down what can and can't be
done. This helps us and XXXXXX approach the conceptual stage (or at least our
recommendations) with better clarity and focus.
Examples
Does the brand visually relate to learning, entertainment?
Do they need a minimalist, simplistic approach?
Maybe two-pronged approach- one with donors, one with clients
Can we use different colors, as they evoke different emotional responses
What has been tried, what has failed, why?