Do you cringe at the mention of a “brief”? It’s just a document for clients and “suits,” right? Wrong!
A brief has the potential to be the single biggest factor to determine your profit margin, which means you should care about them.
Creating a great design brief takes extra effort and time, yet a tight brief can save a designer up to 20% of the project’s timeline. If you’re working on a fixed-fee project, then that adds up to hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars saved.
If you’re being paid for time and materials, then you won’t necessarily be losing money, but we all know how soul-destroying getting negative feedback and constant requests for changes can be, all because of a poor brief. It causes frustration for both the designer and the client.
How to develop a top design brief
Ask questions
Don’t be afraid to ask questions. Ask as many as possible, and keep asking until you are satisfied that you understand what your client’s brief is. A great way to do this is by using a briefing template that you know and trust and that you feel has all of the necessary questions (so that you don’t forget to ask certain ones). Don’t just email the template to your client. Go through it with them. Discuss each question and even fill it in for them.
Communicate with your clients
Explain to the client the importance of the brief. Your clients are probably busy people, too, and so they might not appreciate the importance of spending extra time creating a brief.
Collaborate with your clients and colleagues
Collaborate. The more people involved in a design project (this could include more than one person on the client’s side, as well as the designer, the account manager, the creative director), the more important the brief becomes. Make sure that you all collaborate on the brief, so that by the time it is approved, everyone who is involved will understand what is required and what the brief is.
Use a written document
Always put the brief in writing. If you’re a freelancer, then you might not like this one. Just taking a verbal brief from the client is often quicker and easier. While discussing the brief is important, a written document gives you more cover and helps to protect your profit margin. If you’ve ever heard a client say, “I think you misunderstood what I meant” or “I don’t recall saying that,” then you’d know that having the brief in writing is the only option.
Use a single document
Have one brief, in one place. The best way to explain this is with a scenario. I’m sure many of you have experienced this: the client provides a written brief, and you meet (or Skype) to discuss it. Cool — you know what they want. A few days later, you receive an email with a few updates. Then the client calls to change something else. You’re now a week into the project, and the written brief you received is out of date, and keeping track of the phone calls and email conversations is getting confusing. What was the brief that the client approved? Keeping the brief in one place where all communication is documented will help to keep the project on track and keep disputes to a minimum.
Use the cloud
Put your brief in the cloud. Annotating a PDF or tracking changes in Microsoft Word gets messy. Long email trails and forgotten conversations are even messier. You’re a web designer, so use the web for your briefs. It will increase your productivity, your client’s productivity and your bottom line.
The final word
Briefs are never going to be the “exciting” part of web design, or any creative process. However, spending time developing a brief properly and giving it the care it requires, all the way to its final approval, leads to several things:
- higher profit margins;
- happier clients;
- happier designers;
- more productive freelancers and studios.
Sounds simple, right? Take a few moments to think about your briefing process. Could it be improved? Are you wasting time and money because of poor or lazy briefs? The time to improve your briefing process is now.
How do you manage your briefs? Do you use formal documents? Let us know in the comments.
Featured image/thumbnail, briefing image via Shutterstock.