I Wrote Content for Months.A Brief Changed Everything.
I was shipping blog posts without a plan. Not a vague plan, but no actual plan. I'd pick a keyword, open a blank doc, and start writing. Some posts ranked. Most didn't. The ones that ranked felt lucky, not repeatable.
Then I started writing a content brief before touching the article. Nothing fancy, just five things: the target keyword, the search intent (what's the person actually trying to do?), the top three ranking pages and why they rank, the angle I'd take that's different, and the sections I'd cover. Moz's content strategy research backs this up, and once I saw it in practice, I understood why. A brief forces you to research before you write, not after. You see the gaps in what's ranking. You spot the angle that's actually missing.
What changed: posts started ranking faster, and I stopped rewriting halfway through. The brief isn't a cage. It's a map. Our content marketing approach builds this into every piece we create now.
Before your next post, write a one-page brief: target keyword, search intent (one sentence), three competing articles and their main points, your unique angle, and five section headers. Takes 20 minutes. Saves hours of rewriting.
