Creative brief


A creative brief is a document used by creative professionals and agencies to develop creative deliverables: visual design, copy, advertising, web sites, etc. The document is usually developed by the requestor and approved by the creative team of designers, writers, and project managers. In some cases, the project's creative brief may need creative director approval before work will commence.

Description

In advertising agencies, creative briefs are written after the client briefs the agency. After receiving the client brief, the account manager is responsible to sort the data out to come up with a creative brief.
The creative brief, consisting of a series of simple questions asked by the creative team and answered by the requestor, becomes the template for the creative execution. As the creative develops, there may be potential for it to move off track. If this happens, team members can refer back to this mutually agreed upon document to see where the divergence began. Within an advertising agency environment, it is typically the responsibility of the account manager to ensure that the creative execution is "on-brief". :
Creative briefs can come in many flavors and are usually tailored to the agency or group that is developing the creative deliverable. They know which questions are of paramount importance to them in order to deliver a high-quality creative execution.
The precise nature of a creative brief varies from company to company, however a typical creative brief may contain:
A creative brief must be directional and inspirational. Directional elements refer to marketing elements and inspirational elements refer to tone of voice, feeling of the advertisement.