Writing
Content Brief Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A content brief generator produces the complete brief an editor hands a writer before a piece begins, with every field that prevents a wasted draft. Enter a working title and content type, and it lays out the essentials — goal, audience, search intent or angle, keywords, target length, outline, must-include points, tone, links and sources, call to action, SEO meta, and a deadline with an owner. Editors and content managers use it to brief writers clearly and to cut the back-and-forth that comes from a vague assignment. A strong brief is the single biggest lever on content quality: it tells the writer exactly what success looks like, so the first draft lands close to the target instead of needing a rewrite. Fill each field with the specifics for your piece, name the one action it should drive, and never let a writer start without knowing the goal and the audience.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Enter the working title.
- Choose the content type.
- Fill each field with specifics for the piece.
- Name the one action the piece should drive.
Use Cases
- •Briefing a writer before a piece begins
- •Keeping content on-strategy and on-keyword
- •Cutting revision cycles from vague assignments
- •Standardising briefs across a content team
- •Aligning freelancers with house expectations
Tips
- →State the single goal before anything else.
- →List must-include points the writer cannot skip.
- →Name the search intent and primary keyword.
- →Always include a deadline and an owner.
FAQ
what makes a brief effective
Specificity. A brief that names the exact goal, audience, angle, and must-include points lets the writer hit the target on the first draft. Vague briefs produce vague drafts and endless revisions, so the value is in removing every avoidable guess.
why include search intent and keywords
Because content that ignores what readers are actually searching for rarely gets found. Naming the search intent and primary keyword keeps the piece answering a real question and aligned with how people look for it, which is essential for organic reach.
how detailed should the outline be
Detailed enough to guide, loose enough to leave craft to the writer. List the key sections or beats and the must-include points, but let the writer shape the prose. A brief sets the destination; it does not need to dictate every sentence.
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