--- name: creative-brief description: Generate a complete creative brief from product/offer info using the GET framework. Use when starting work on a new offer, product, or campaign and need to gather brand info, identify target avatars, map pain points, and create a structured brief for the creative team. --- # Creative Brief Generator Generate a comprehensive creative brief using direct response principles and the GET framework from Tyler's 8 Step Ideation system. ## The GET Framework (Detailed) The GET framework simplifies brand information gathering into a focused, actionable format. This replaced the previous 8+ hour creative briefs with a streamlined approach. ### G - Get (Target Customer/Market Segment) Identify the specific target customer. When testing new creative, focus on the top-performing, proven market segment first. Scale horizontally to unproven segments later once you have winning ads and angles. **Questions to Answer:** - Who is the primary target customer? - Demographics: age range, gender, location, income level - Psychographics: values, beliefs, lifestyle, aspirations - Daily habits: morning routines, media consumption, shopping behavior - What market segments exist? Which is proven/highest performing? **Example (Mushroom Coffee):** - GET: Women 30-60+ struggling with low energy, caffeine habits, or daily crashes - They want to gain their energy and confidence back every single day - Using adaptogenic mushrooms as the mechanism ### E - Problems (Surface & Deep) Brain dump ALL surface-level problems. Do not stop at one - brainstorm extensively. The copywriting process will peel back the onion to find the TRUE underlying problem. **Surface Level Problems:** - What immediate issues does the customer face? - What symptoms are they experiencing? - What frustrations do they encounter daily? **Deep Problems (Peel Back the Onion):** - What is the TRUE underlying problem? - What emotional pain sits beneath the surface issue? - What have they tried before that didn't work? - Why do they feel stuck or hopeless? **Example:** - Surface: Low energy, afternoon crashes, caffeine dependency - Deep: Feeling like they've lost themselves to aging, menopause disrupting their identity, inability to keep up with family/work demands ### T - Two Outcomes (Desired State) List desired outcomes the specific market segment wants to achieve from the product. Think transformation, not features. **Questions:** - What outcomes does the customer want? - What transformation are they seeking? - What does success look like for them? - Before state vs. After state? **Example:** - BEFORE: Exhausted, in pain, mood swings, can't play with grandkids - AFTER: Energized, confident, able to work 8 hours AND play with grandkids ### Buy Triggers (USPs, Mechanisms, Proof) **Unique Selling Propositions:** - What makes this product different? - Why should they buy THIS versus alternatives? **Unique Mechanism:** - What is the proprietary method/ingredient/process? - How does it work differently than competitors? - What makes it believable? **Proof Elements:** - Social proof (reviews, testimonials, user count) - Authority (expert endorsements, credentials, certifications) - Results data (statistics, before/after, case studies) - Media mentions, awards, recognition ## Step-by-Step Brief Creation Process ### Step 1: Gather Brand Info Using GET Complete the GET framework for the offer. Document everything - keywords, buzzwords, and relevant terminology will be critical later. ### Step 2: Analyze Top & Worst Performers Review existing ad account data: - What are the top performing ads? WHY are they working? - What are the worst performing ads? WHY are they failing? - Base decisions on present data, not theories - Learn from mistakes - they reveal what to avoid ### Step 3: Extract Keywords & Buzzwords From your GET research, identify: - Industry terminology (technical terms customers use) - Emotional trigger words (pain language, desire language) - Power words that resonate with the avatar - Phrases from customer reviews/testimonials - Competitor language that's working ### Step 4: Create Target Avatar Profiles Build detailed avatar profiles: ``` AVATAR: [Name] - Age/Gender: - Location: - Income Level: - Daily Routine: (morning to night) - Media Consumption: (what platforms, when, how long) - Buying Behavior: (impulse vs. researcher, price sensitivity) - Internal Dialogue: (what they say to themselves) - External Dialogue: (what they say to others) - Biggest Fear: - Biggest Desire: ``` ### Step 5: Map Pain Points to Outcomes | Pain Point | Emotional Impact | Desired Outcome | Product Solution | |------------|-----------------|-----------------|------------------| | [Surface problem] | [How it makes them feel] | [What they want instead] | [How product solves it] | ### Step 6: Output Structured Brief ``` ## CREATIVE BRIEF: [Product/Offer Name] Date: [Date] Prepared by: [Name] ### TARGET AVATAR Primary: [Detailed description of #1 avatar] Secondary: [If applicable] ### CORE PROBLEM Surface: [Immediate problem] Deep: [True underlying emotional problem] ### DESIRED TRANSFORMATION BEFORE: [Current painful state - specific, vivid] AFTER: [Desired state - specific, aspirational] ### UNIQUE MECHANISM [What makes this work - the proprietary method/ingredient/process] Why it's believable: [Proof supporting the mechanism] ### KEY MESSAGES 1. Primary: [Main selling proposition] 2. Secondary: [Supporting benefit] 3. Tertiary: [Additional benefit] ### PROOF ELEMENTS - Social Proof: [Reviews, testimonials, user count] - Authority: [Expert endorsements, credentials] - Results/Data: [Statistics, percentages, outcomes] ### KEYWORDS & LANGUAGE Approved: [List of keywords to use] Avoid: [List of words/phrases to avoid] ### TONE & STYLE Voice: [How creative should sound] Feel: [Emotional quality to convey] Visual Direction: [General aesthetic guidance] ### COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE Direct Competitors: [Who they compare to] Market Position: [Where this product sits] Key Differentiator: [What sets it apart] ``` ## Direct Response Principles to Apply ### LFA Core Desires (Life Force Eight) These are hardwired human desires that drive purchasing decisions: 1. **Survival/Life Extension** - Health, longevity, avoiding death 2. **Food/Drink** - Taste, nutrition, enjoyment 3. **Freedom from Pain/Danger** - Safety, security, protection 4. **Sexual Companionship** - Attraction, intimacy, relationships 5. **Comfortable Living** - Convenience, ease, comfort 6. **Superiority/Winning** - Status, competition, being the best 7. **Care for Loved Ones** - Protection of family, providing 8. **Social Approval** - Belonging, acceptance, respect ### Learned Wants Secondary motivators that drive decisions: - Convenience, speed, and price (bargain at a dollar a day) - Information and knowledge - Efficiency and productivity - Quality and craftsmanship - Beauty and style ### Intensification Put claims into ACTION in a clear, concise way the user could replicate at home: - Before/after demonstrations - Side-by-side comparisons (like ShamWow) - Speed/ease demonstrations (show how quick/simple) - Visual proof of results **Example:** Instead of saying "cleans better," SHOW it cleaning in real-time, side-by-side with competitor. ### Authority Building Methods to establish credibility: - Expert approval (doctors, scientists, industry experts) - Credentials and certifications - Brand owned by authority figure - Celebrity/influencer endorsement - TikTok green screen effect showing press/media **Key:** Show authority in an authentic way. The medium has changed (UGC) but psychological desires remain constant. ### Mass Desire Tap into forces always at play in the public's mind: 1. **Mass Instinct** - Universal human drives 2. **Mass Problem** - Widespread issues affecting many (weight loss, menopause) 3. **Mass Education** - Common knowledge being challenged 4. **Trend Reversal** - Going against conventional wisdom **Example:** Tire company during WWII - "Tire rubber is important for the military. We want our military to win. Buy tires that last longer so military has more rubber." ### Means-End Chain Sell the benefit of the benefit: - Don't sell the coffee -> Sell the energy - Don't sell the energy -> Sell being better in bed - Don't sell features -> Sell the transformation **Example (Mushroom Coffee):** Not selling coffee, not even selling energy - selling "intensifying your orgasm by 50%" or "being able to play with grandkids after 8-hour workday" ### Belief Building The creative's job is to CREATE BELIEF. Conversion is a byproduct of belief. **Three elements that create belief:** 1. **Insider Perspective** - Someone who works in the industry 2. **Established Authority** - Expert, doctor, lawyer, public figure 3. **Human-First Story** - Real person who experienced the result **Key insight:** "If the user watching an ad doesn't believe what they're watching is true, the conversion doesn't happen." ### The Trojan Horse Principle 1. **Story earns attention** - Hook and engage first 2. **Proof builds trust** - Social proof, testimonials, demonstrations 3. **Product comes LAST** - Don't sell too early "If you sell too early, you're killing the potential of that ad and killing belief." ## Founder Ad Integration (When Applicable) If the offer has a founder who can appear in creative: **Why Founder Ads Work:** - Faces build trust (we're hardwired to track faces before we can read) - Authenticity is scarce in AI-generated content world - No one can copy your founder - Creates long-lasting customer relationships - Never fatigue - ads last years in accounts **Founder Brief Questions:** - What's the craziest thing a customer ever told you? - Why did you start this? - What annoys you about your industry? - What is your brand NOT? - What's the wildest compliment you've received? **Key:** Questions, never scripts. Encourage stories, not statements. ## Cross-Industry Ideation Notes When developing the brief, consider: - What industries share this avatar? (busy moms buy baby products AND meal delivery) - What's working in those adjacent industries? - How can successful concepts translate to this offer? This opens "blue ocean" opportunities by applying proven angles from saturated industries to less saturated ones. ## Framework Integration Every ad should fit into a proven framework. Frameworks provide: - Control variables for testing - Ability to form hypotheses on performance - Consistent structure across all creative testing **Without frameworks:** "If you don't understand what is inside your ads, how are you going to control them? How can you form hypotheses on why they are or are not performing?" --- Sources: Tyler's 8 Step Ideation, VISCAP AI Creative Framework, LeadsIcon Creative Flow, Kamal Founder Ads, Jason K Creative Tips