Content Brief Authoring
A senior content strategist's playbook for authoring per-piece content briefs that actually guide writers to produce content worth publishing.
Most content briefs are some flavor of broken. The thin version is a keyword, a word count, and a deadline; the writer fills in everything else from scratch and the output is generic. The thick version is a 4-page document nobody reads, that the writer skims for the headline and the outline and ignores the rest. Either way, the brief failed at its job: making the writer's work easier and the output more predictable.
This skill is the middle path. It defines the 12 fields that earn their keep in a content brief, the fields that bloat without helping, and the discipline of writing briefs that route a writer (human or AI) toward a content piece that ranks for its target keyword, gets cited by AI engines, converts the right reader, or whatever the success criteria say. It assumes you have decided what to write (see content-strategy for program-level decisions) and now you are briefing each piece. The piece itself gets written separately (see content-and-copy).
When to use this skill: briefing a writer (human or AI) on an individual content piece, auditing existing briefs that are not producing good content, building a brief template for a content program, or running a brief-generation pipeline through Frase, AirOps, or another tool.
What this skill is for
This skill spans the per-piece editorial brief discipline. It composes with three sister skills, and the distinction between them is what keeps each one sharp.
creative-briefis a project brief. It bridges discovery to execution at the project level: a new website, app, brand, or campaign. Audience, goals, scope, success at project scope.content-strategyis a program-level editorial strategy. Pillars, calendar, topic clusters, governance. What to produce across a quarter or a year.content-and-copyis the writing itself. Voice, structure, edit pass, tone calibration. Execution scope for general editorial.- This skill is the per-piece brief between
content-strategy(program decided) andcontent-and-copy(piece gets written). It briefs a single content artifact: keyword, intent, audience, outline, entities, success criteria.
The clean reading order: content-strategy decides what to produce; this skill briefs each piece; content-and-copy writes it. If the team is briefing a redesign or a new brand build, that is creative-brief, not this skill.
The audience: content strategists, SEO content marketers, editorial leads, content ops managers, agencies running content programs at scale, and any PM or marketer briefing a writer (human or AI). The voice is senior content strategist to junior content marketer. Specific, opinionated, honest about what makes a brief useful versus useless.
Thin vs thick vs effective briefs
The keystone distinction. Three concrete shapes.
Thin brief. Keyword, word count target, deadline. Maybe a one-line summary of the angle. The writer fills in everything else from scratch. Output is generic, drifts off-topic, does not rank, and does not convert. The cost is the rewrite cycle: editor spends two hours rewriting because the writer chose the wrong intent, the wrong audience, or the wrong outline.
Thick brief. A 4-page document with executive summary, brand-guidelines refresher, comprehensive competitive analysis, voice guidelines, plus the actual brief somewhere in the middle. The writer skims for the outline, ignores the rest. Output is not materially better than from a thin brief because the writer never read most of the document. The cost is the authoring time: the strategist spends three hours producing pages of context the writer will never absorb.
Effective brief. One to two pages. Every field earns its keep. Writer reads all of it because there is no fluff. Output is predictable enough that the editor does not have to rewrite the lede. The cost is the discipline of cutting fields that do not change writer behavior.
The discipline. Every field in the brief has a job. If you can remove the field without degrading the output, remove it. The brief is the contract between editorial leader and writer; vague contracts produce vague output, overstuffed contracts produce output that reflects only the parts the writer read.
Most briefs that are not working are thin, not thick. The instinct to add more usually makes the brief worse. The instinct to be more specific in fewer fields usually makes the brief better.
The 12 fields of an effective brief
A useful brief has 12 fields. Skip any of them and the writer fills the gap from priors; the gap is where output drifts.
- Target keyword + supporting cluster. Primary keyword plus 3 to 5 supporting keywords from the same cluster. The cluster is what tells the writer the topic has range; the primary is what the piece optimizes for.
- Search intent classification. Informational, navigational, commercial, or transactional. Plus the dominant SERP format check (article, listicle, comparison, video, tool). The intent decides what kind of piece this is; the format decides the shape.
- Target audience. Specific role and sophistication level. Not "anyone interested in X." A senior data engineer at a 500-person SaaS company is a target; "data people" is not.
- Job to be done. The problem the reader is trying to solve when they land on the piece. One sentence. Specific.
- Word count / depth target. Calibrated to the SERP, not to a content quota. If the top 10 are all 1,200 words, briefing 3,000 wastes effort; if the top 10 are all 4,000 words, briefing 1,500 produces a piece that cannot rank.
- Heading structure outline. H2s and H3s explicit, ordered logically. The outline is where the writer reads the brief most carefully; spend time here.
- Required entities, statistics, citations. For AEO and GEO, the named tools, methods, experts, and statistics the piece must cover. The entity gap is the agent's prioritization signal.
- Internal linking strategy. 3 to 5 pages this piece should link out to with anchor text; 1 to 3 existing pages that should link back to this piece after publish.
- External proof points. Required citations, sources, expert quotes. Not optional.
- Anti-patterns. What not to do. Off-topic tangents the writer might wander into, off-brand voice, AI clichés the brief explicitly forbids by listing them in a do-not-use list (the standard set of overused corporate-speak adjectives, throat-clearing openers, and verbs that signal AI generation).
- Success criteria. What good looks like. Rank for the target keyword in 90 days. Get cited by ChatGPT for the cluster within 60 days. Drive 50 trial signups in the first 30 days. Measurable, time-bound, tied to the program goal.
- Author voice and tone reference. Link to the brand-voice guide. If the piece needs a tone shift from the default voice, note it here in one sentence.
The fields that do not earn their keep, and should be omitted from briefs unless the writer is brand new to the program:
- Long executive summary (the brief itself is the executive summary)
- Brand-guidelines refresher (link to it; do not repeat)
- Comprehensive competitive landscape (link to research; do not dump)
- Brief history of the publication, company, or brand (irrelevant to this piece)
Detail and templates per content type in references/brief-templates.md.
Search intent classification
The four standard intents:
- Informational. The reader wants to learn. SERP usually shows articles, guides, explainers.
- Navigational. The reader wants a specific brand or page. SERP usually shows the brand site at #1; ranking against navigational intent is mostly impossible unless you are the brand.
- Commercial. The reader is researching a purchase. SERP usually shows