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← Back to EducationBRIEFS · 4 MIN READ

How to Write
a Web Brief
in 10 Minutes.

A tight brief is the cheapest insurance against a runaway invoice. Eight sections, sixty seconds of brand voice, one goal per page.

52%

of projects experience scope creep — vague briefs are the #1 cause

PMI Pulse of the Profession →

The 8 Sections

01
Business Snapshot

What you sell, to whom, in one sentence.

02
Project Goals

Measurable outcomes, not features.

03
Target Audience

Primary persona, pain point, context of visit.

04
Scope & Deliverables

Pages, features, integrations. Explicit in/out list.

05
Brand & Tone

Voice, visual references, assets available.

06
Technical Requirements

CMS, hosting, SEO, accessibility, integrations.

07
Budget & Timeline

Range and hard deadlines.

08
Success Metrics

How you'll judge it post-launch.

Vague vs Specific

✗ VAGUE (causes rework)
✓ SPECIFIC (builds correctly first time)
"Make it pop"
Primary CTA above the fold, contrasting color, links to /pricing
"Modern and clean"
Generous whitespace, sans-serif headings, max 2 accent colors
"Mobile-friendly"
Loads under 2s on 4G; tap targets 44px minimum
"We need a blog"
10 article templates, author bios, category filtering, RSS
"Make it stand out"
Looks unlike any of the 5 competitors listed below
"Convert better"
Increase quote-form completion rate from 1.4% to 3% baseline

Why Briefs Decide Project Costs

PMI's Pulse of the Profession reports 52% of projects experience scope creep, and the trend is rising. Workamajig and other agency surveys consistently flag vague briefs as the #1 root cause of budget overruns on creative work.

Translation: 10 minutes spent writing a tight brief saves weeks of 'actually, can we also...' billed at hourly rates.

Source: PMI Pulse of the Profession 2018, Workamajig agency surveys.

The 8 Sections That Actually Matter

From HubSpot, Webflow, Smashing Magazine, and A List Apart agency templates. These eight sections cover every legitimate decision a designer or developer needs to make without coming back to ask.

Jobs-to-be-Done — the Right Framing

Clayton Christensen's framing: customers 'hire' a product to do a job. Apply it to your site. Visitors hire your homepage to do something specific — book a quote, compare pricing, trust you enough to call.

Write your brief in JTBD language: 'users hire this page to decide if we're the right fit in under 30 seconds.' Beats a feature list every time.

Brand Voice in 60 Seconds

The fastest brand-voice format that actually works:

  • 3 adjectives we are (e.g. confident, warm, plain-spoken)
  • 3 adjectives we are NOT (e.g. corporate, jargon-heavy, ironic)
  • 2 brands we admire — and one line on why
  • 2 brands we don't — the contrast often clarifies more than the positives

One Conversion Goal Per Page

Every page gets exactly one primary action. Force the choice. If you can't name the single action, the page doesn't have a job yet — and the designer will guess wrong.

One Goal Per Page

Homepage
Book a discovery call
Service page
Request a quote
About
Subscribe to newsletter
Blog post
Download the related guide
Pricing
Start a free trial
Case study
Talk to sales

Send Yours, We'll Quote in Hours.

Use this template as your brief. Email it to us. Quote back same day. Build live in 24 hours.

Send Your Brief