What ‘briefing for results’ actually looks like
Brand-creator alignment begins with the brief. Fifty-three percent of creators cite clear briefs as critical. Yet, only 10% of them feel that they have any control over the content they produce. The distinction between a controlling brief and a results-oriented brief comes down to where the creative decisions live.
A controlling brief tells a creator what to say, how to say it, what to show, what sequence to follow, and which brand talking points to hit. It treats the creator as a production vehicle. A results-oriented brief tells the creator what you’re trying to accomplish and what you can’t compromise on, then trusts them to figure out the ‘how.’
Here’s what a controlling brief looks like:
Open with a direct mention of the product name. Demonstrate the [specific feature] in the first 15 seconds. Include the following three key messages: [bulleted list]. End with the brand tagline verbatim. Do not reference competitors. Footage must be shot in natural light. The caption must include [specific hashtag and call to action].
Compare that to this results-oriented brief example:
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Goal: Drive awareness among 25-35 year old women considering a career change.
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Must-haves: Disclose the partnership per FTC guidelines, include our URL in bio during the campaign window.
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Can’t-haves: Don’t position us as a last resort or crisis product.
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Success looks like: Content that sparks genuine conversation in your comments. Everything else? Your call. You know your audience better than we do.
The results-oriented brief may be more open-ended, but in some ways, it’s harder to write. It requires the brand to be genuinely clear on what success looks like. But that clarity, combined with creative latitude, is exactly what unlocks a creator’s best work.
