Picture from @Amelia_Torode
Today's IPA Modern Briefing conference was packed to bursting point with insightful and thought provoking ideas and information, some of which I think could be game changers. I've tried to get them down for you here;
1. Try version numbering your briefs from Glyn Britton (Albion) @glyndot
At Albion briefs are split into two distinct categories
The first half of the brief acts as a constant reminder of
what needs to be done (the commercial objectives).
The second half provides an outline of what the best solution
is at the moment.
The second half will be constantly
updated as the brief is worked on by a team of carefully selected individuals
hence the need to number your briefs as you go.
2. Talk about people in a way that makes me love and
respect them from Richard Huntington
(Saatchi & Saatchi) @adliterate
Richard Huntington made a very compelling case for us all to stop caricaturing
the consumer / punter (both terms he spat out with disgust) in our briefs.
Recalling a conversation he once had where Steve Henry told him ‘I want you to
talk about people in a way that makes me love and respect them,’ Richard drove
home the need for us to speak about human beings we have actually met if we are
to inspire meaningful work.
3. Three
changes to briefing from
Patricia McDonald (Isobar) @PatsMc
1. A business problem is a behaviour change in disguise
2. We need network insights not just consumer ones
3. What is the one thing we need to do or make (not
just say)
All fairly self explanatory I think full presentation here
4. Have a clear sense of where you want to get to but be utterly flexible on how you get there from Patricia McDonald (Isobar) @PatsMc
Disputing the ‘light a hundred fires’ ethos which has become prevalent recently, Patricia offered a counter argument which resonated with me. ‘Have a clear sense of where you want to get to but be utterly flexible on how you get there’ encapsulated the ‘staying in beta’ notion whilst also maintaining a firm grip on the 'grand strategists' role, something which I have been trying to articulate for a long time.
5. Everything
is media from Jason
Gonslaves (BBH)
The big
lesson to be learnt form Droga5’s Grand Prix for Good winning plasters is that everything can be media. Taking this into consideration means that ‘media
is far too important to be left to media agencies’.
6. And finally
Always
get odd numbers into briefings from Glyn Britton (Albion) @glyndot
That way there is never a stale mate on decision making.
Hope that’s useful, let me know what you think.
The
full IPA Modern Briefing presentation is available here.
Ps. Continue the conversation at #ipamodernbriefing
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