Most “bad design outcomes” aren’t caused by bad designers. They’re caused by vague briefs.
When you don’t give clear inputs, the designer fills the gaps with their own assumptions. Then you reject the output because it doesn’t match what you imagined. That becomes revision hell, timelines slip, budgets get burned, and both sides feel frustrated.
A strong brief doesn’t micromanage design. It defines the constraints that matter: audience, purpose, tone, competitive context, and where the work will actually be used. The clearer the brief, the fewer revisions you need, and the more likely you get a result that works for the business.
This guide shows the inputs that actually matter (and the ones that don’t), with examples you can copy.
Problem statement: “Make it modern” is not a brief
Design is decision-making. If you don’t define the decision criteria, you’ll get a design that looks fine but doesn’t fit your business.
Vague briefs sound like:
“Make it modern and premium.”
“Something clean and minimal.”
“We want it to pop.”
“Use your creativity.”
Those are preferences, not requirements. A useful brief makes it possible to evaluate the work objectively.
The 10 things you must include in a money-saving design brief
1) The goal (what this design must achieve)
Don’t say “we need a redesign.” Say what it needs to do.
Examples:
“Increase enquiry quality from the website.”
“Make the business feel premium and reduce price negotiation.”
“Improve readability and clarity for mobile users.”
“Create a consistent brand system the team can maintain.”
If the goal is unclear, feedback becomes subjective and endless.
2) The audience (who this is for, specifically)
Define:
who buys
what they care about
how they decide
Examples:
“Business owners in education services who value compliance, trust, and predictable delivery.”
“Founders who need fast execution and measurable outcomes.”
“Busy professionals on mobile who skim before committing.”
Design choices change drastically based on audience. If you skip this, the designer guesses.
3) The offer and priority message (what must be understood in 10 seconds)
Design can’t fix an unclear message. Include the core message you want communicated.
Provide:
one positioning sentence
2–3 key outcomes you deliver
the primary call-to-action
Example:
Positioning: “We help service businesses reduce lead drop-off and improve enquiry quality.”
Outcomes: “Clear offer, high-converting pages, tracked enquiries.”
CTA: “Book a call.”
This prevents designs that look nice but don’t communicate.
4) Competitor set (who you’re compared against)
Give 5–10 competitor references:
3–5 direct competitors (same buyer)
2–3 “aspirational” references (premium benchmarks)
1–2 “don’t look like this” references
This helps the designer avoid accidentally copying your category’s clichés.
Example competitor set structure:
Direct: competitors A, B, C
Aspirational: brands that feel premium in your space
Anti-references: “Avoid this style (too loud / too generic / too corporate)”
5) Tone and brand personality (in plain words)
Avoid abstract brand adjectives without anchors.
Bad:
“Innovative, trustworthy, premium.”
Better:
“Calm, precise, minimal hype.”
“Friendly but not playful.”
“Premium through clarity, not luxury aesthetics.”
“Confident, direct, and structured.”
Even better: give “voice examples”:
“We prefer short, clear headings.”
“We avoid exclamation marks.”
“We prefer specific outcomes over big claims.”
Tone applies to visual design and copy.
6) Usage list (where this design will actually appear)
This is critical and often missed. A logo that works on a website can fail on signage or social.
List every usage:
Website (desktop + mobile)
Instagram posts/stories
Proposals and slide decks
WhatsApp / email signatures
Business cards / letterhead
App icon / favicon
Print brochures (if any)
Also mention constraints:
“Must work in one color.”
“Must remain legible at 24px.”
“Must work on dark and light backgrounds.”
Design without usage is guesswork.
7) What you like and hate (with examples, not words)
Don’t say “I like minimal.” Show 5–8 links/images and explain why.
Format it like:
Like: “This site’s typography hierarchy and spacing rhythm.”
Like: “This brand’s restrained color usage.”
Hate: “This feels too ‘agency loud’ with gradients and gimmicks.”
Hate: “This feels too corporate and cold.”
This reduces subjective feedback later.
8) Must-have elements (and non-negotiables)
Examples:
Keep the existing brand color (or not)
Keep the name unchanged
Include a symbol/icon (or wordmark only)
Must support bilingual text (if relevant)
Must be accessible (contrast, readability)
Also list your “no-go” items:
“No mascots.”
“No overly playful fonts.”
“No cluttered layouts.”
“Avoid stock-photo-heavy direction.”
Non-negotiables save time.
9) Deliverables and file formats (so handover isn’t messy)
Spell this out. Designers often deliver what they think is standard, not what you need.
Common deliverables:
Logo files: SVG, PDF, PNG (light/dark), favicon
Color palette with HEX/RGB
Typography system (font names + sizes)
Social templates (editable)
Slide deck template (editable)
Basic brand guide (short)
Icon style rules (if needed)
Web components / UI tokens (if this is product-related)
If you want editable templates, say so explicitly: “Must be delivered as editable source files.”
10) Timeline, review cycles, and approval process
Design projects fail when feedback comes from too many people.
Define:
one decision-maker
review schedule (example: weekly review)
revision rounds per stage
Example:
“Two rounds of revisions per phase.”
“Feedback consolidated by one person.”
“Approvals required within 48 hours to maintain timeline.”
This prevents “committee design,” which is where budgets go to die.
The brief template you can copy-paste
Use this structure in a Google Doc / Notion page:
Project summary (2–3 lines)
Goal (what success looks like)
Audience (who + context + what they value)
Positioning + priority message (10-second clarity)
Competitors (direct, aspirational, avoid)
Tone of voice (plain language + examples)
Usage list + constraints (where it appears, sizes, backgrounds)
References (likes/hates with why)
Non-negotiables (must-have + no-go)
Deliverables (exact outputs + formats)
Timeline + review cycles + decision-maker
If you provide this, you’ll get better work with fewer revisions almost every time.
Common mistakes that waste money (avoid these)
Asking for “3 completely different directions” without clarity
You’re paying the designer to guess three times.Too many stakeholders giving feedback
This guarantees compromise design.Changing the goal mid-project
You’ll pay for rework.No usage list
You’ll get assets that don’t work in real contexts.No competitor set
You’ll get generic category design.Feedback like “make it pop”
It creates random iteration loops.
Conclusion: clarity is the highest ROI input you can give
Design is expensive when it’s driven by opinions. It becomes efficient when it’s driven by clear goals, defined audience, competitive context, usage constraints, and examples with reasons. Write the brief like you’re defining requirements, not describing taste. You’ll waste less money, need fewer revisions, and get a result that actually helps the business.