creator-briefing-faq-generator
Generate a ready-to-send FAQ document that anticipates and answers the most common creator questions about a campaign brief, reducing back-and-forth messages and delays. This skill should be used when creating a campaign brief FAQ, writing answers to common creator questions about a brief, building an FAQ attachment for an influencer brief, reducing back-and-forth with creators after sending a brief, anticipating creator questions before launch, preempting influencer confusion about deliverables or timelines, generating a brief companion FAQ, writing a creator-facing Q&A for a campaign, drafting briefing clarifications for influencers, or creating a FAQ sheet to send alongside a content brief. For writing the campaign brief itself, see campaign-brief-generator. For writing individual content briefs, see content-brief-builder. For chasing creators who have not responded to a brief, see universal-creator-follow-up-chaser.
NPX Install
npx skill4agent add archive-dot-com/creator-marketing-skills creator-briefing-faq-generatorTags
Translated version includes tags in frontmatterSKILL.md Content
View Translation Comparison →Context Check
.claude/brand-context.mdInformation Gathering
- The campaign brief — Ask the user to paste the full campaign brief, content brief, or key details of the campaign. Accept any format: a polished PDF-style brief, bullet points, a Notion doc export, or even rough notes. The messier the input, the more likely creators will have questions — which makes the FAQ more valuable. Ask: "Paste your campaign brief or the key details of the campaign you are briefing creators on."
- Creator tier and type — Nano, micro, mid-tier, macro, or a mix. Gifting-only creators behave differently than paid creators. Ask: "What tier of creators are you briefing — nano, micro, mid-tier, macro, or a mix? Are they paid, gifted, or both?"
- Platform and format — Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Stories, static posts, or multi-platform. Each platform generates different questions. Ask: "What platform and content format are you briefing for?"
- Content approval process — Does the brand review drafts before posting? How many revision rounds? What is the turnaround time? Approval process is the number one source of creator confusion. Ask: "Do you review creator content before it goes live? If yes, how many revision rounds and what is your review turnaround time?"
- Product shipping details (if applicable) — Are you sending product? When does it ship? Is there a tracking process? Gifting campaigns generate a predictable set of logistics questions. Ask: "Are you shipping product to creators? If yes, what is the shipping timeline and process?"
- Known pain points (optional) — Has the user run similar campaigns before? What questions came up last time? Ask: "Have you run a similar campaign before? What questions or confusion came up with creators?"
Core Principles
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Every Question They Ask Is a Gap in the Brief — If 15 out of 20 creators ask "when do I need to post by?", the brief failed to communicate the timeline clearly. The FAQ is not a bandage for a bad brief — it is a companion document that addresses the questions a good brief still generates. Some questions are inevitable regardless of brief quality: approval process details, shipping logistics, payment timing, FTC disclosure specifics. The FAQ handles these so the brief stays clean and scannable. Test: if an FAQ answer contradicts or restates what the brief already says clearly, cut it. The FAQ fills gaps, not echoes.
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Answer Once, Answer Completely — Every FAQ answer must be specific enough that the creator does not need to message you for clarification. "Content is due soon" is not an answer. "Submit your draft by [date] at 11:59 PM [timezone] via [method]" is an answer. Partial answers generate follow-up questions, which defeats the entire purpose. Each answer should end the conversation on that topic. Test: after reading the answer, would a creator have zero follow-up questions about that topic?
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Write for Skimmers, Not Readers — Creators scan. They do not read top-to-bottom. They open the FAQ, search for the one thing they need, and close it. Structure every answer for scanning: bold the key detail, keep answers under 3 sentences where possible, use bullet lists for multi-part answers. If a creator cannot find their answer in under 10 seconds of scanning, the FAQ structure has failed.
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Tone Is a Trust Signal — A FAQ that reads like a legal document signals "this brand is going to be difficult to work with." A FAQ that reads like a casual text signals "this brand does not take the partnership seriously." Hit the middle: professional, direct, warm. Address the creator as "you." Use plain language. Never say "the creator shall" or "all deliverables must." Say "post your content by [date]" and "include #ad in your caption." The FAQ sets the tone for the entire working relationship.
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Specificity Prevents Disputes — Vague FAQ answers create the same problems as no FAQ. "We may use your content on our channels" leads to creators claiming they never agreed to usage rights. "We will repost your content on our brand Instagram and may use it in paid ads for up to 90 days" is clear enough that both parties know what was agreed. Every answer that involves rights, money, or deadlines must be precise enough to prevent a dispute.
FAQ Category Framework
Category 1: Deliverables and Content Requirements
- How many pieces of content do I need to create?
- What format and length — Reel, TikTok, Story, static post?
- Are there specific talking points or key messages I need to include?
- Can I use my own creative style, or do you need me to follow a specific format?
- Do I need to show the product in use, or can I do a voiceover or lifestyle shot?
- Are there specific hashtags or tags I need to include?
Category 2: Timeline and Deadlines
- When is my content due?
- When should I post?
- Is there a specific posting window or can I choose the time?
- What happens if I need more time?
Category 3: Content Approval Process
- Do you need to approve my content before I post?
- How do I submit my draft for review?
- How long does the review take?
- How many rounds of revisions are included?
- What kind of feedback will I get?
- What if I disagree with a revision request?
Category 4: Compensation and Payment
- How much am I being paid and when?
- How do I submit an invoice?
- What is the payment method (direct deposit, PayPal, check)?
- Is there a bonus structure for high-performing content?
- For gifted partnerships: what is the retail value of the product I am receiving?
Category 5: Product Shipping and Logistics
- When will I receive the product?
- How do I confirm my shipping address?
- What if the product arrives damaged or the wrong item is sent?
- Can I choose which products or shades I receive?
Category 6: Usage Rights and Content Ownership
- Can you repost my content on your brand channels?
- Will you use my content in paid ads?
- How long can you use my content?
- Do I retain ownership of the content I create?
- Will I be credited when my content is reposted?
Category 7: FTC Disclosure and Compliance
- What disclosure do I need to include?
- Where should I place the disclosure in my caption or video?
- Do I use #ad, #sponsored, #partner, or something else?
- Does the platform's built-in paid partnership label count?
Category 8: Communication and Support
- Who is my point of contact for this campaign?
- What is the best way to reach you — email, DM, Slack?
- How quickly can I expect a response?
- What if I have an issue that falls outside the brief?
Segment-Aware Adjustments
- Keep the FAQ to 1-2 pages. Creators working with small brands expect a personal, lightweight process — a 5-page FAQ signals bureaucracy they did not sign up for.
- Focus on Categories 1-3 (deliverables, timeline, approval). SMB campaigns are usually straightforward on payment and logistics.
- Tone can be warmer and more personal. "Message me directly if anything is unclear" works when one person runs the program.
- Skip Category 5 (shipping) if the product ships from a personal address or small warehouse — just include the tracking number in the shipping confirmation email.
- Include all 8 categories. At this scale, creators cannot DM the founder for every question — the FAQ must be comprehensive.
- Standardize answers across all creators. If 100 creators get slightly different answers about usage rights because different team members responded differently, disputes follow.
- Include Category 8 (communication) with named contacts. A team of 3-5 people managing 100+ creators needs clear routing.
- Format for easy copy-paste into your campaign management workflow. The FAQ should live alongside the brief in whatever tool the team uses.
- The FAQ is an operational necessity, not a nice-to-have. At 200+ creators, even a 5% question rate means 10+ inbound messages per briefing round.
- Include detailed Category 6 (usage rights) — enterprise campaigns routinely involve paid media amplification and content licensing.
- Agencies: adapt the FAQ to the client brand's voice, not the agency's. The creator's relationship is with the brand, even if the agency manages the campaign.
- Include version numbering and a "last updated" date. Enterprise campaigns evolve, and creators reference the FAQ weeks after receiving it.
What NOT to Do
- Do not contradict the brief. If the brief says "post between March 1-7" and the FAQ says "post by March 7," that is a contradiction that creates confusion. The FAQ must align with the brief exactly — run a consistency check before finalizing.
- Do not answer questions the brief already answers clearly. If the brief has a clear deliverables table, do not restate it in the FAQ. Instead, reference it: "See the deliverables section of your brief for the full content requirements." Duplication creates version control problems.
- Do not use legal language. "The creator hereby acknowledges" has no place in an FAQ. Write like a human explaining things to another human. Legal terms belong in contracts, not in the document designed to make creators feel comfortable.
- Do not leave placeholder answers. Every bracket, "TBD," or "to be confirmed" in the FAQ is a question the creator will still ask you. If you do not know the answer yet, do not include the question — add it when you have the answer.
- Do not make the FAQ longer than the brief. If the FAQ is longer than the brief itself, the brief is probably too short or the FAQ is over-explaining. A healthy ratio is a brief of 1-3 pages with an FAQ of 1-2 pages.
Output Format
Campaign FAQ: [Campaign Name]
Deliverables and Content
Timeline
Content Approval
Compensation and Payment
Product and Shipping
Usage Rights
Disclosure and Compliance
Communication and Support
Quality Check
- Brief consistency check — Read every FAQ answer against the original brief. Does any answer contradict, modify, or restate what the brief already says clearly? Contradictions confuse creators. Restatements create version control problems. Cut or fix both.
- The "zero follow-up" test — Read each answer as if you are a creator who has never worked with this brand. After reading the answer, do you have any follow-up questions about that topic? If yes, the answer is incomplete.
- The scan test — Scroll through the FAQ quickly. Can you find the answer to "when is my content due?" in under 5 seconds? If the FAQ requires careful reading to find basic information, restructure it.
- The tone test — Read the FAQ aloud. Does it sound like a helpful team member explaining the campaign, or does it sound like a legal document or a corporate memo? If it is the latter, rewrite it.
- Would a creator partnerships manager who just finished writing a brief actually attach this FAQ to the brief before sending it to 50 creators — without editing it first? If the FAQ needs significant changes before it is sendable, it is not useful enough.
Related Skills
- If you need to write the campaign brief itself before generating the FAQ, see campaign-brief-generator
- If you need to write individual content briefs for specific deliverables, see content-brief-builder
- If you need to chase creators who have not responded to a brief or FAQ, see universal-creator-follow-up-chaser
- If you need to adapt a brief for different platforms, see multi-platform-format-adapter
- If you need to review submitted content against brief requirements, see content-to-brief-compliance-checker
- If you need to check creator content for FTC disclosure compliance, see ftc-disclosure-spot-checker