Content Brief Template — turn one idea into a clear keyword, angle, audience, outcomes, sources, and CTA plan
You want to write a blog post or article or guest post or even a journal-style feature that looks professional and you also want to earn money from your writing, so this template helps you build a strong content brief before you write a single line. You will decide the keyword, the angle, the audience, the outcomes, the sources, and the call to action in simple sentences, and you will do this in a calm order that works whether you are writing for your own blog or for a magazine-style website similar to wired.com. When your brief is clear, your draft becomes faster, your editor has fewer questions, and your chances of getting accepted and getting paid increase.
The 10-minute content brief sprint for blogs, magazines, and guest posts
Instead of staring at a blank page you will follow a short routine. You will open a few pages in your browser, you will skim with a purpose, and you will fill the brief from top to bottom with simple long sentences. In ten minutes you will know your main keyword, your unique angle, who you are talking to, what change they get from the article, which sources you will use, and what call to action will help you or your client earn money.
10-minute content brief — minute by minute
- Write a simple working title such as “How to [result] without [pain]”.
- Write one sentence: “The business goal of this piece is to [attract leads / sell a product / grow newsletter / build authority].”
- Decide the content type: blog post, feature article, guest post, landing-style guide, or journal essay.
- Type your topic into a search engine and note the main phrase people seem to use.
- Write one line: “Primary keyword = [phrase]; intent = [learn / compare / buy / be inspired].”
- List two to four supporting phrases or questions that you see repeating in top results.
- Scan three to five competing pieces and ask, “What have they all missed or only touched lightly?”
- Write: “Angle = [unexpected or clearer way] of looking at [keyword topic] for [specific reader].”
- Write a promise line: “After reading, the reader will be able to [specific action].”
- Write who they are in everyday words, for example “freelance writer starting out” or “busy founder who hates marketing jargon”.
- Describe what they already tried and why it did not work.
- Write one emotion word for how they feel now and one emotion word for how they should feel after the piece.
- Set a word-count range such as 1,500–2,000 words for a deep blog post or 2,500+ for a magazine feature.
- Write a quick path: “Hook → Context → Sections 1–3 → Examples → Sources → CTA.”
- Decide if you will use second person (“you”), first person (“I”) or third person (“they”).
- Write down at least three credible sources such as reports, research, expert quotes, or case studies.
- Pair each source with the claim it will support, for example “stat about creator income” or “quote about how WIRED editors think about story angles”.
- Decide if you need your own small demo, mini case study, or screenshot to make the article feel original.
- Write one reader CTA, such as “join the newsletter”, “download a template”, “start a free trial”, or “book a call”.
- Write one writer CTA for yourself, such as “add this piece to portfolio”, “send link in pitch email”, or “use as sample for WIRED-style pitches”.
- Write the success metric, for example “click-through rate on CTA button” or “number of enquiries in one month”.
What you capture in a strong content brief (and why it matters)
A good content brief is not just a list of keywords. It is a simple map that shows why the piece exists, who it is for, what angle you will take, what outcome the reader gets, which proof you will bring in, and what action you want at the end. This table shows you the core elements you will collect every time.
| Element | What you write (one or two lines) | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Keyword & Intent | Primary keyword and 2–4 supporting phrases, plus a short note on whether readers want to learn, compare, or buy. | Aligns your piece with real searches so you can get traffic and long-term organic readers, not random clicks. |
| Angle | One clear sentence about the story you are telling, the opinion you hold, or the unique way you will explain the topic. | Helps your article stand out next to similar pieces and gives editors a sharp hook to say yes to. |
| Audience | A simple description of who the reader is, what they already know, and what they are struggling with right now. | Keeps your tone and examples at the right level so beginners are not lost and advanced readers are not bored. |
| Outcomes | Reader outcome (“After this they can…”) and business outcome (“For the blog this piece should…”). | Turns your article into a useful tool that solves a problem for the reader and supports a goal for the site. |
| Sources & Proof | List of datasets, reports, expert voices, and examples you will quote or summarise in the article. | Makes your piece trustworthy and reduces the chance that an editor will reject it for being too thin or vague. |
| CTA | Primary call to action plus one backup option, with a short explanation of where the CTA leads. | Connects your carefully written article to a real next step such as a sign-up, a purchase, or a pitch opportunity. |
| Format & Structure | Target word count, content type, and a rough list of sections or headings you expect to use. | Helps you estimate how much time you need to research and draft and keeps your story from wandering. |
| Voice & Style | Notes on pronouns, reading level, humor, sentence length, and any house rules you must follow. | Makes your piece match the style of serious sites like WIRED or a client blog, which means less editing time and more repeat work. |
Template_01: One-page content brief — [Editable] Fill your own data
Write in full sentences so future you or an editor can understand your thinking very quickly. You do not need perfect grammar at this stage, you only need clear meaning and honest details that match the website where you want to publish and earn.
Pre-filled example: Content brief for a WIRED-style explainer about content briefs
This example shows how a single idea can turn into a full brief. Imagine you want to write a long, clear explainer for a serious tech-and-culture site that feels similar to WIRED. The goal is to teach beginners how to use content briefs to write better articles and to quietly position yourself as a thoughtful writer they can hire.
Angle bank — three simple angles for the same keyword
You can turn one keyword into several strong ideas just by changing the angle. This helps you adapt the same topic to different websites, which is very useful when you want to write for your own blog, a client content hub, and a magazine-style outlet without repeating yourself.
| Angle type | Pattern sentence you can use in your brief | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| How-to | “Show readers how to use [keyword] in [number] steps so they can quickly [result].” | Brand blogs, how-to sections, beginner audiences. |
| Narrative | “Tell the story of how [person or team] used [keyword idea] to change [situation] and what went wrong and right.” | Magazine features, WIRED-style stories, case studies. |
| Opinion | “Argue that most people are thinking about [keyword] the wrong way and show a clearer approach with proof.” | Ideas sections, essays, guest posts with a strong stance. |
| Comparison | “Compare [keyword method] with [default method] so readers can choose the right option for their budget and time.” | Review-style content, SaaS blogs, affiliate posts. |
| Framework | “Turn [keyword] into a simple [number]-part framework that busy readers can remember and reuse.” | Educational blogs, training sites, newsletters. |
Audience snapshot & outcomes — keep your reader and your earnings aligned
A brief becomes powerful when it connects your reader’s real life to the money outcome you or your client care about. This small table lets you sketch that connection before you draft, so your CTAs feel natural instead of pushy.
| Reader type | Their situation now | Outcome they want | How your article helps |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner blogger | Writes random posts without a plan, gets little traffic and almost no income. | Plan posts that bring steady visitors and first affiliate or service income. | Shows how a content brief organizes keywords, angles, and CTAs into a small system. |
| Freelance writer | Has ideas but editors reject pitches for being vague or off-brand. | Send sharper pitches that match each publication and lead to paid assignments. | Uses briefs to prove fit, show research, and outline the story before emailing an editor. |
| In-house marketer | Must scale content with part-time writers and keep quality consistent. | Give writers clear instructions so drafts match strategy without micromanaging. | Turns this brief into a repeatable template for the whole team. |
Source map — where your proof will come from
Serious websites care about where your information comes from. In your brief you will decide which kinds of evidence you lean on so you do not rely only on your opinion. This small heatmap reminds you which sources usually carry the strongest signals.
CTA planner — connect your article to real next steps
Your content brief is not complete until you know what happens after the reader finishes the article. You will pick a CTA that respects their level of commitment and fits the website’s business model, whether that is selling products, growing a newsletter, or attracting consulting leads.
| CTA type | Example copy | Good for |
|---|---|---|
| Soft education CTA | “Want more simple breakdowns like this? Join the free weekly newsletter for beginner writers.” | Blogs building an email list, early-stage creators. |
| Tool or template CTA | “Download the fillable content brief template so you can plan your next three articles in one sitting.” | Lead magnets, SaaS content, education sites. |
| Service CTA | “If you want help building briefs for your whole blog, book a short call and we will map your first month of content.” | Freelance writers, consultants, agencies. |
| Product CTA | “Use this checklist with our writing dashboard so you can track ideas, briefs, drafts, and invoices in one view.” | Software products, course platforms. |
| Portfolio CTA | “See how this brief turned into a finished article in my portfolio, and feel free to share it if you know an editor who needs this.” | Personal sites, about pages, pitch follow-ups. |
Master content brief checklist — one page you can print
Before you start your draft, read this checklist once. If you can tick every box, you are ready to write a clean article that respects your reader, your editor, and your own time.
| Area | Check | Done |
|---|---|---|
| Keyword & intent | Primary keyword chosen and intent written in one simple sentence. | □ |
| Angle | Angle sentence explains how your piece is different from existing results. | □ |
| Audience | Reader description includes who they are, what they tried, and how they feel now. | □ |
| Outcomes | Reader outcome and business outcome are both written and do not contradict each other. | □ |
| Sources | At least three credible sources listed with notes on what each one proves. | □ |
| CTA | Primary and secondary CTAs chosen, with clear next pages or steps. | □ |
| Structure | Format, rough outline, and word-count range written. | □ |
| Voice | Person, tone, and style rules decided and written in short phrases. | □ |
| SEO & links | Internal and external links planned plus draft meta title and description. | □ |
Your content brief system is ready
You now have a visual, beginner-friendly way to collect the keyword, angle, audience details, outcomes, sources, and CTA for every piece you write. This works whether you are creating a blog post for your own site, a guest article for a client, or a long explainer for a serious outlet that expects strong angles and real evidence. Each time you fill this brief you train yourself to think like an editor, which means you slowly move closer to the level of publications that pay well and protect quality.
Use this template for your next idea. Start with a simple topic and a realistic word-count range, fill every box with plain language, and only then open your drafting document. You will notice that the writing feels lighter because big decisions are already made, and you can finally focus on sentences, examples, and scenes that delight readers and convince editors that you are someone they can trust with their pages.