Creative Brief Handouts-Notes and Case Studys
Creative Brief Handouts-Notes and Case Studys
Creative Brief Handouts-Notes and Case Studys
If the answer is a “no” or a “maybe”, it’s time to go back to the drawing board.
What Are Some Creative Brief Examples?
The best way to understand a creative brief is to see a few real-life examples.
Here’s a creative brief for Reebok shoes.
This brief focuses extensively on the audience. In a competitive, brand-focused
market, understanding the audience is crucial for created better targeted
marketing.
Here’s a more visual creative brief for Quaker Oats. This one has an unorthodox
structure. If you look closer, however, you’ll notice that it has the same
fundamentals as Reebok’s brief above.
For another example of an unorthodox creative brief, take a look at this one for
Paypal. It eschews conventional sections and uses a bold visual design instead.
This just goes to show that creative briefs are flexible in their content and design.
You can use whatever format you need as long as it works for both the client and
the creative team.
In the next section, I’ll walk you through the ideation process for making a
creative brief.
1. The Product
A creative campaign starts and ends with the product. After all, this is what you're
tasked with selling. If you don't understand it well, you can't expect your creative
team to do a good job of it.
Start by asking the client some fundamental questions about the product:
What product are you advertising?
What category does it belong to?
Where is the product currently being sold? Where is it being advertised? Where
will it be advertised in the future?
What is the product's current status in the market?
What are the product's existing brand values?
What is the product's price point? How many variants are currently available?
Your goal is to map the product's current brand perception. This will be a
combination of factors - price, quality, perceived quality, etc.
Use the client's existing records, market surveys, and customer data to
understand the product and its brand better.
You'll use it later when you write the creative brief.
2. The Business
The business and the product can often have a complex relationship. In some
cases, the business brand might be completely independent of the product. In
most other cases, they might affect each other in a symbiotic relationship.
For example, Toyota (the company) and Toyota Camry (the car) have different
brand perceptions.
A customer might see Toyota as "reliable" and "efficient". But he might see
Camry as "unreliable" after a spate of recalls.
Business and product brand perceptions often bleed into each other. If a
customer has repeated bad experiences with a product, he might associate that
with the business itself.
The exception is when the business is "invisible" to the customer. This usually
happens with B2B brands, holding companies, etc.
For example, Luxottica manufactures several iconic eyewear brands such as
Ray-Ban, Oakley, etc. But the Luxottica brand itself is invisible to customers.
Poor performance from one of its product is unlikely to affect its brand
perception.
Your goal should be to:
Analyze the business' brand perception.
Understand the business' relationship to the product brand.
Map the factors affecting the business' brand perception.
In the creative brief, this information will be a core part of the campaign’s
“background” section.
For example, this brief for Red Bull introduces the problem by framing it in
context of the business:
3. The Market
The 'market' is a combination of the “Three C’s”:
Competitors, their strengths, weaknesses, market position, and media strategy
Context for the campaign - political, social, and technological movements.
Category, i.e. how people see the product category.
All these have a marked influence on the campaign.
For example, the popular "Mac vs PC" campaign wouldn't be successful if Apple
was the market leader.
Similarly, an overly positive, upbeat campaign wouldn't work in a down economy.
Your goal should be to analyze the following aspects of the market:
Competitors:
What are the product's and the brand's chief competitors? What is their market
share compared to the product?
What is the competition's marketing strategy? Where do they advertise?
What kind of messaging and tone does the competition use?
What kind of customers buy the competitor's products?
Context:
How does the market currently see the product or its category?
Is there a cultural moment you can tap into to promote the product?
What cultural values, ideas, or events can you align the product with?
How is the economy doing? Is it a time for optimism? Or are people concerned
with saving?
For example, to celebrate its 100th anniversary, Oreo aligned itself with a bunch
of cultural and historical events:
In a time of "activist brands", businesses are increasingly aligning their products
with social and cultural movements. Think of how you can tap into the zeitgeist to
create a better brand message.
Category:
How do people perceive this product category? What factors affect this
perception?
Is there a change in people’s perception of the category? Is this change positive
or negative? What is leading this change?
Are there any category conventions you can use in the campaign?
4. The Customers
Your customers are important, more so than anything else on this list.
(Image source)
A deep understanding of the target audience, its wants, desires, and tastes is
crucial for writing a creative brief.
To do this, start by describing the following:
Demographics data (age, sex, income, marital status)
Psychographics data (interests, aspirations, lifestyles, habits)
What they think about the product and the brand right now ("boring", "fun", "not
for me", etc.)
What you want them to think about the brand ("change perception", "shift frame
of reference", etc.)
Frustrations, aspirations, life need, and shared belief you can tap into.
The purpose of all this data is to find a trigger that will motivate them. This trigger
should align with the campaign's objectives.
For example, Toyota sells an MPV - Toyota Sienna - that had shrinking market
share. Part of the reason for this decline was the general unpopularity of MPVs
among young parents. For a lot of young people, MPVs are "boring" and "old
school".
To get these customers to consider Sienna as an alternative, Toyota had to
change their perceptions.
To do this, Toyota created a YouTube campaign highlighting the the inherent
“coolness” of the Sienna, such as this music video:
5. The Campaign
Every campaign has a specific goal, message, and audience. It's not uncommon
for brands to run several campaigns at the same time with different messages.
Your job is to understand the goals for your campaign and find a way to get
there. That is, to define the campaign's strategy and approach.
To do this, answer the following questions:
What is this campaign trying to do? Increase awareness? Increase traffic? Get
more shares? Be as specific as possible.
What customer action would make the campaign "successful"? Fill out a form?
Click a link? Call the business?