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creative-brief

majiayu000
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Metaai

About

This skill generates structured creative briefs for new products or campaigns using the GET framework. It helps developers gather brand information, define target audiences, and map customer pain points at the start of a project. Its key capability is transforming product details into an actionable brief for creative teams.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Plugin CommandRecommended
/plugin add https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
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git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry.git ~/.claude/skills/creative-brief

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

Documentation


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 PointEmotional ImpactDesired OutcomeProduct 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

GitHub Repository

majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
Path: skills/creative-brief

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