The gap between SEO strategy and content execution is the content brief. A vague brief produces content that misses the mark — wrong intent, wrong depth, wrong keywords. A detailed, strategic brief gives writers exactly what they need to create content that satisfies user intent and matches ranking requirements. At Growth Nuts, we invested heavily in developing our content brief framework, and it transformed our content from hit-or-miss to consistently high-performing.
What a Content Brief Should Include
An effective content brief provides the writer with everything they need to produce SEO-optimized content without requiring them to be an SEO expert. The brief should cover the target audience, the search intent, the competitive landscape, the required structure, and the on-page optimization requirements.
- Primary keyword and search volume
Secondary keywords and related terms to include naturally
Target search intent: what is the searcher trying to accomplish?
Target word count based on competitor content analysis
Required H2 and H3 sections based on SERP analysis and topic comprehensiveness
Competitor content analysis: what do the current top 5 results cover?
Content gaps: what do current results miss that your content should include?
Internal linking requirements: which existing pages should be linked to and from?
External source requirements: types of citations or data needed for credibility
Call-to-action placement and messaging guidance
Analyzing the SERP for Brief Creation
Before writing the brief, analyze the first page of Google results for your target keyword. Document the content type (guide, list, comparison, how-to), average word count, common headings, topics covered, and the depth of coverage for each subtopic. This SERP analysis reveals what Google currently rewards for this query and sets the baseline your content must meet or exceed.
Key Insight
We analyzed 500 content briefs and their resulting rankings. Briefs that included specific SERP analysis with recommended headings produced content that ranked an average of 7 positions higher than briefs that only specified the target keyword and word count. The detail in the brief directly predicts the performance of the content.
Writing Effective Target Audience Descriptions
The brief should describe who the content is for in specific, actionable terms. Not 'business owners' but 'small business owners with 5 to 20 employees who are evaluating their first CRM system and need to understand the key differences between options.' This level of specificity helps writers match the reader's knowledge level, vocabulary, and concerns — which directly impacts engagement and time on page.
Setting Intent-Aligned Structure
Different search intents require different content structures. Informational queries need educational content with clear explanations and examples. Commercial investigation queries need comparison frameworks and evaluation criteria. Transactional queries need concise product information with clear conversion paths. Your brief should specify the structure that matches the dominant intent for the target keyword.
The Brief Creation Process
- Identify the target keyword and verify search intent through SERP analysis
- Analyze the top 5 to 10 ranking pages for structure, depth, and content elements
- Identify gaps in existing content that your piece can fill
- Define required headings and subtopics based on competitive analysis
- Specify secondary keywords and related terms with natural usage guidance
- Add internal linking targets — existing pages that should be linked from the new content
- Include style and tone guidelines consistent with your brand voice
- Review the brief with the SEO team to verify completeness before assigning to a writer
Scaling Brief Production
Creating detailed briefs takes time — typically 30 to 60 minutes per brief. Scale the process by building templates for different content types, using tools like Surfer SEO, Clearscope, or Frase to automate competitive analysis, and training team members to produce briefs consistently. The investment in brief quality pays for itself many times over in content performance and reduced revision cycles.
Common MistakeDo not over-prescribe the brief to the point where the writer has no room for creativity and expertise. The best briefs provide strategic direction and SEO requirements while leaving space for the writer's unique perspective and voice. A brief that reads like a fill-in-the-blank template produces robotic content.
Ready to Improve Your SEO?
Get a free audit and actionable recommendations for your business.
Get in Touch