© Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd The perfect campaign brief Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot...

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© Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd The perfect campaign brief Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot Marketing

Transcript of © Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd The perfect campaign brief Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot...

Page 1: © Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd The perfect campaign brief Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot Marketing.

© Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd

The perfect campaign brief

Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot Marketing

Page 2: © Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd The perfect campaign brief Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot Marketing.

© Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd

The perfect brief…why?

The better your agency brief, the better and more accurate the results will be. So if you’d like:• better, more effective, measurable work• cost and time efficiency• fairer remuneration

read on for our six steps to briefing success….

Page 3: © Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd The perfect campaign brief Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot Marketing.

© Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd

Step 2: where are we now?

This is the section that describes the background of the brief - the current position of the brand or the issue at hand• What is the history behind the campaign?• What is the current status?• Why is there a need to change? 

The brief should try to contain the following information (as relevant): • product or service description • manufacturing or service delivery• distribution channels • market size (volume and value) • customer• usage data • the brand’s positioning • its history of brand communications • competitive brands/products • communications activity to date

Page 4: © Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd The perfect campaign brief Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot Marketing.

© Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd

Step 3: where do we want to be?

This is the section where you state the campaign objectives - the desired destination of the journey.  

Typical objectives are to effect improvements in: • sales • usage • awareness • image • reputation • profitability • customer profile • shareholder value• and/or response levels

Page 5: © Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd The perfect campaign brief Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot Marketing.

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Step 4: who are we talking to?

This is the section where you outline the target market. • All communications are designed to elicit some form of response from a particular

group of people. These target groups should be defined and prioritised as accurately as possible via demographic and behavioural data, lifestyle data, product/service usage, attitudes, etc.

• Equally important are the insights that you and your agencies already hold about these target groups that can be leveraged to create the desired reaction.

• Often your agency will conduct further research to generate even greater understanding – and your existing insights will provide them with a useful and welcome platform to build on.

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Step 5: how will we measure success?

This is the section where you outline campaign measurement • You and your agencies need to know what success (or failure) will look like. • Measures should be put in place to establish whether or not the campaign

delivers against its desired objective. • How will the campaign be measured?• When will it be measured? • What benchmarks currently exist?• Who will measure it?

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Step 6: practical considerations

The agency response(s) to your brief will have many consequences in terms of implementation, so it’s important that all the key practicalities for them to bear in mind are included in your brief. These fall into four main areas: Area 1: Campaign requirements• What materials do you need?• What formats?• What quantities?• Do you have copy written/ ready/ signed off?

 

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© Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd

Step 6.2: practical considerationsArea 2: timings• What are the key delivery dates? • What are the key payment dates? • When should the key project milestones be set?• What are the booking dates or deadlines for media? • Should it consider the timings of other campaigns? • Is there another related event? (e.g. a sales conference with a deadline that precedes

the media copy date) • How do you want the creative timings to run?• What phases of pre-testing research are planned? • What are the logistics of production?

 

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© Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd

Step 6.3: practical considerationsArea 3: budget• Tackle budget upfront to reduce the reworking of solutions; the need to reduce total costs

and to improve integration across the campaign. • Your approach to setting the budgets may vary from brief to brief. Ideally, you will know the

budget from the outset, in which case it should be clearly stated and broken down into its component parts.

• Sometimes ‘scenario budgeting’ will be required in order to give clear direction to the agency.

 Area 4: approvals• The final piece of detail needed in the brief is who has the authority to sign off the work

that the agency produces?• This person (or people) should also be the one(s) to sign off the brief before it is given to

the agency.

 

Page 10: © Copyright 2013 Upshot Marketing Ltd The perfect campaign brief Liz Wakefield, MD, Upshot Marketing.

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Best wishes for a successful campaign