How to Create the Perfect Brief for a Copywriter [+Template]

Have you ever received a text from a copywriter and thought, “this is not what I asked for at all”? Hours of revisions, team frustration, and delayed publications all these are often symptoms of one fundamental cause: a weak brief.

A good brief isn’t just a “nice-to-have.” It’s the most important document in the entire content creation process. It’s your insurance policy for quality, consistency, and most importantly results.

In this article, we won’t just give you another dry checklist. We will show you how to transform your brief from a simple task into a strategic tool that saves time, eliminates misunderstandings, and empowers your writers to create content that truly performs. Better yet, at the end, you’ll find a ready-to-copy template that you can implement with your team today.

Why Your Current Brief Isn’t Working: Anatomy of the Problem.

Most briefs fail because they are either too vague or too chaotic.

  • The Vague Brief (“Write about running shoes”): This offloads all the strategic work research, competitor analysis, defining the target audience—onto the copywriter. The result? A text that is, at best, correct, but has no competitive edge.
  • The Chaotic Brief (A 5-page document with 20 links): This overwhelms the writer with a mass of unstructured information, forcing them to guess what’s truly important. The result? Decision paralysis and a text that tries to say everything, ultimately saying nothing specific.

The perfect brief is the golden mean. It is comprehensive yet clear and organized. It treats the copywriter as a partner—providing them with all the strategic “building blocks” so they can focus on what they do best: crafting an engaging and effective narrative.

The Structure of a Perfect Brief: 7 Elements You Can’t Skip

Consider these sections the non-negotiable minimum. Each element plays a crucial role in transforming a task into a recipe for success.

1. Strategic Context (The “Why”)

This is the most important, yet most often overlooked, section. Before you tell the writer what to write, explain why you are writing it.

  • Business Goal: What is this content meant to achieve? (e.g., “Generate sign-ups for a webinar,” “Build awareness for a new product feature,” “Attract organic traffic for keyword X”).
  • Persona (Target Audience): Who are we talking to? Provide more than just demographics. Describe their problems, goals, and fears. (e.g., “We’re talking to ‘Martha, the Content Manager,’ who struggles with team chaos and is looking for ways to scale content production”).
  • Funnel Stage: Where is the reader in their journey? (Top of the Funnel – ToFu, Middle of the Funnel – MoFu, Bottom of the Funnel – BoFu). This determines the tone and level of detail.

2. SEO Guidelines (The Foundation of Visibility)

Don’t leave SEO to chance. Provide the writer with precise data that allows them to write for algorithms without losing a natural feel.

  • Focus Keyword: The single most important phrase.
  • Secondary Keywords: 3-5 supporting phrases that help broaden the topic.
  • Entities and Questions (NLP & Semantics): A list of terms, questions (from “People Also Ask”), and concepts that Google considers relevant to the topic. Tools like Contadu, or manual SERP analysis are invaluable here.

3. Proposed Structure and Headings (The Article’s Skeleton)

Don’t make the writer reinvent the wheel. Analyze the top 10 results in Google and prepare a logical structure for them.

  • Working Title (H1): A suggestion that clearly communicates the topic and benefit.
  • H2, H3 Headings: Outline the key sections of the article. This gives the writer a framework to work within and gives you confidence that all important points will be covered. However, leave them room for their own creativity.

4. Key Messages and Value (The “What”)

What is the one thing the reader must remember after reading this text?

  • Key Takeaway: A single sentence summarizing the article’s most important message.
  • Unique Value Proposition: How will this article be different from others on the same topic? Does it offer unique data, deeper analysis, a better template, or a controversial thesis?

5. Content and Style Guidelines.

Ensure consistency with your brand voice.

  • Tone of Voice: (e.g., “Expert but approachable,” “Semi-formal and inspiring,” “Direct and to the point”).
  • Dos and Don’ts: (e.g., “Use real-life examples,” “Avoid industry jargon without explanation,” “Write in the second person – ‘You'”).
  • Linking Requirements:
    • Internal Links: Provide 2-3 specific articles from your blog that the writer should link to.
    • External Links: Should the writer link to external, non-competitive sources and studies?

6. Call to Action (CTA)

Every piece of content must have a purpose. Tell the writer what you want the reader to do after finishing the article.

  • Primary CTA: (e.g., “Sign up for a Contadu demo,” “Download our free template,” “Comment on the article”).
  • CTA Placement: Where should it be located? (At the end? In the middle of the text?).

7. Resources and Inspiration.

Help your writer, don’t force them to search blindly.

  • Links to Top Competitor Articles: Provide 2-3 links to top-ranking Google results with a comment: “See how well they did section X, but they are missing Y—we need to do it better.”
  • Internal Data and Research: Do you have any unique statistics, case studies, or graphics the writer can use?

The Perfect Brief Template – Copy and Implement

Here is a ready-made template that you can copy into your project management tool (e.g., Contadu, Asana, Notion) and start using right away.

 

Creative Brief: [Working Article Title]

1. STRATEGIC CONTEXT

Business Goal of the Content:
Persona (Target Audience):
Funnel Stage (ToFu/MoFu/BoFu):

2. SEO GUIDELINES

Focus Keyword:
Secondary Keywords:
(add more on new lines)

Required Entities & Questions (from SERP analysis):
(add more on new lines)

3. STRUCTURE & HEADINGS

H1 (Title):
Meta Description (approx. 155 characters):
Draft Structure:
(paste the proposed structure here, e.g., H2s, H3s…)

4. KEY MESSAGE & VALUE

Key Takeaway:
Unique Value Proposition (How will we stand out?):

5. STYLE & GUIDELINES

Tone of Voice:
Required Internal Links:
(paste links on new lines)

Rules for External Links:

6. CALL TO ACTION (CTA)

Primary CTA:
Placement and Format:

7. RESOURCES & INSPIRATION

Competitor Analysis (What they do well, what they’re missing):
(paste links on new lines)

Internal Materials (Graphics, Data, Case Studies):
(paste links on new lines)


Deadline: [Date]
Word Count (suggested): [e.g., 1500-2000 words]

Conclusion: A Brief is an Investment, Not a Cost

Spending an extra 30 minutes preparing a solid, strategic brief is one of the best investments you can make in your content marketing process. It’s an investment that pays for itself many times over in saved time, higher quality content, and most importantly better business results.

Stop treating briefs as a necessary evil. Start using them as a tool to build a competitive advantage. Your team, your writers, and your budget will thank you for it.

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