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Copywriters, Your Block Is a Brand Brief in Disguise

June 7, 2026

the brief is the problem

You're stuck because the brief is unclear and you've been polite about it.

Bad inputs make bad copy. You can't out-craft a vague brief, and most of what looks like writer's block for copywriters is actually a failure to push back on the brief earlier in the process. We walk through how to push back without burning the client, the three questions that turn a mushy brief into a writable one, and the boundaries that protect the work and your billable hours. The brief is part of the work. Fixing it isn't disloyalty — it's the actual job.

Vague brief signs · what to ask

Vague brief sign Pushback question
'Make it pop' Pop how — funny, urgent, or visual?
'It should feel premium' Compared to which competitor?
'We want both bold and approachable' Pick one as primary, one as secondary
'The audience is everyone' Name the one person who must buy

The three brief-fixing questions

  • What is the single most important action this copy should drive?
  • Who is the one person we're writing for? Name them, age, life stage.
  • What feeling do you want them to walk away with — pick one word.

A copywriter's block is almost never a craft problem. It's a brief problem. Fix the brief and the copy practically writes itself. That's not magic — it's hygiene.

— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven

From the Maven Catalog

  • Master Course — Copywriter's Brief Audit
  • eBook — Push Back, Bill More
  • Toolkit — Copywriter's Toolkit
  • Planner — Client Project Planner

Stop trying to out-craft the bad brief. Send the three questions. Wait for the answers. Then write. The block dissolves immediately.