How To Write An Inspired Creative Brief, 3rd Edition: A creative's advice on the first step of the creative process
By Howard Ibach
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About this ebook
Fundamentals on thinking about and writing the creative brief, the first step in the development of advertising creative. The document, and the process of briefing with the creative brief, can make the difference between mediocre creative solutions and work that measurably improves ROI.
Howard Ibach
Howard Ibach is the author of the critically acclaimed graphic textbook How To Write An Inspired Creative Brief, 2nd edition, which is ranked No. 1 on About.com's "10 Advertising Books You Absolutely Must Read." He joined the faculty of the Association of National Advertisers' School of Marketing in January 2017, and travels the country leading workshops that provoke client-side marketers with his radically sane insights on the Creative Brief. He was an award-winning advertising copywriter and creative director for 26 years. His specialties were long-form direct response and radio. He worked for legacy shops Ogilvy One, DDB Direct, Wunderman, J. Walter Thompson, and Team One, among many others. Howard earned his BA from the University of Tampa and an AM from Brown University. He is an essayist, college educator and public speaker. He volunteers at InsideOUT Writers, Inc., a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering incarcerated youth. He lives in Los Angeles.
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How To Write An Inspired Creative Brief, 3rd Edition - Howard Ibach
Introduction to the third edition
The year 2019 marked the 10th anniversary of the first publication of How To Write An Inspired Creative Brief. This year my book entered its second decade. Not bad for a self-published paperback not quite 150 pages long. It’s still selling after all these years.
I waited six years to update and revise the book, what is now the 2nd edition. Only five years went by before I felt compelled to return to the manuscript and update it again. I think that speaks highly of the document and the process I chose to write about. The creative brief will always be the first step of the creative process. And the inspiration that fills up the creative brief will always need a renewal to keep the inspiring flames burning. I am always thinking about how to think about the creative brief. Its role is so vital that I can’t help but engage in meta-thinking.
The upgrades to this new edition, the 3rd, are fewer in total pages, and may appear subtle, but they are significant. The primary differences between the 2nd and 3rd editions are 1) the addition of a new chapter to expand on my thinking about collaboration (Chapter 9); and 2) a re-write of Chapter 13, the core of this book, which takes the reader through my thinking about how to answer each question on a creative brief.
The changes in Chapter 13 were a direct result of having taught workshops on writing briefs for a dozen years, most especially the last three and a half years for the Association of National Advertisers’ Marketing Training and Development Center as an instructor. In 2019 alone, I met thousands of strategists, creatives and brand advocates all across the United States.
Every one of these dedicated professionals struggled with the creative brief. They were in good company. As a colleague who makes his living as a strategist, and a brief writer, likes to say, Writing a creative brief is easy. Writing an inspiring creative brief is hard.
The reason so many of us struggle is because we want to get it right.
The effort is worth it. A brilliant, inspiring creative brief produces better, more effective creative work in fewer rounds. That translates to saved money, saved time, better morale. And better sales!
I hope it is some consolation that in updating this book for you, the brief writer, you know that I relentlessly strive to inspire you to write brilliant briefs. We all want to get it right.
Howard Ibach
Los Angeles
Introduction
In my experience, the creative brief is the Rodney Dangerfield of business documents in the world of professional communications. It gets no respect. Not because it isn’t used. It is.
The respect thing arises because the creative brief is so ubiquitous that it’s taken for granted. It’s part of the scenery and no one really sees it for its true value.
It’s our own fault, too. Those of us in communications have short attention spans and get bored easily. We’re the original A.D.D. sufferers. We’d rather spruce up the creative-brief template than work on filling in the boxes with better answers.
I wrote this book to show you that anyone can write an inspired creative brief. There’s an inner visionary you just haven’t discovered yet, and I’m here to show you the way.
This book is for anyone who:
• Sells a product or service
• Works with marketing, advertising, PR, interactive or web-based professionals
• Is an advertising, marketing, PR, interactive or web-based account manager, executive, supervisor or director and either writes or directs those who write creative briefs for creative teams
• Is an advertising, marketing, PR, interactive or web-based creative (i.e. writer or art director) who works from the creative brief to produce any form of communication for a product or service
• Is an educator who teaches marketing, advertising or PR
• Is a student of business, marketing, advertising or PR
This book is a companion to a workshop I authored and facilitate, Inspired Creative Brief Workshop, which is designed to engage participants with individual and group exercises, and includes a multimedia presentation. But this book is still a teaching device and therefore interactive. You’ll find a few exercises and teasers sprinkled throughout.
And it’s the result of a lot of reading and working from creative briefs in 20+ years in the advertising agency and marketing services businesses. I’ve seen every kind of brief, from the mediocre to a piece of literature. Few of the latter, many of the former.
The book exists because I could find nothing like it anywhere, in the library or online. It’s not the final word I’m sure. I hope it sparks interest and discussion.
"Rules
inspire
creativity."
1 Build a better box.
When I began my career as a copywriter, I viewed rules with disdain. I wanted nothing to interfere with the creative process. Nothing to stand between me and a big idea. You know, the whole live free or die
thing. It’s a philosophy the young and inexperienced find especially appealing.
Now, 30 years into my career, I have a different view.
It’s not that I’ve become a conformist. Hardly. It’s that I understand the liberating nature of constraint. The tighter the box in which you force me to work, the more likely it is that I’ll find a way to produce a big idea.
I was reading an article somewhere, I no longer remember the publication, when I came across the following three words:
Rules inspire creativity.
They got me thinking about the creative brief. Because the brief is a document filled with rules. You might even say constraints. These constraints are imposed on the brief writer for a reason. The brief is designed to be an act of reduction, of summarizing as succinctly as possible, the very essence of a product or service’s most desirable attributes.
You, the creative brief writer, are forcing your creative team to