The 5-Question Brief That Gives You a Full Week of Marketing in 10 Minutes

The blank page isn't a creativity problem - it's a structure problem. Here's the repeatable weekly brief that stops you starting from scratch every single time.

3rd July, 2026
Rulrr
content strategyAI toolslocal marketingcontent creationsmall business

Most local business owners don't struggle with marketing because they lack ideas. They struggle because every week starts the same way: an open tab, a blinking cursor, and ten minutes wasted trying to remember what worked last time. The problem isn't creativity - it's the absence of a repeatable structure that tells you what to say, who to say it to, and why it matters this particular week. Fix the structure, and the ideas follow. Here is the exact 5-question brief that does exactly that.

Why 'Just Post Something' Is Costing You More Than You Think

Reactive marketing - grabbing your phone, shooting something in the shop, writing a caption on the fly - feels productive. It rarely is. Posts built without a clear direction tend to be generic, unmemorable, and completely disconnected from anything your business actually needs to drive that week. You're spending real time for zero strategic return. The owners who consistently outperform aren't posting more than you. They're thinking once per week with a clear framework, then letting that thinking do the work across every piece of content they put out.

You don't need more content. You need one clear weekly intention that every piece of content points toward.
- The core principle behind structured content planning

The 5-Question Weekly Brief (Answer These Once, Use Them Everywhere)

Block ten minutes - Sunday evening, Monday morning, whenever your week resets. Open a notes app, a doc, or a simple template. Answer these five questions honestly and specifically. The more concrete your answers, the less work every downstream task becomes.

A barbershop owner reviewing his weekly content notes before opening

How One Brief Becomes Five Pieces of Content

Once you have answers to those five questions, the translation is straightforward. Q1 becomes your call-to-action and determines which offer or service anchors your posts. Q2 becomes your tone and the lens you write through. Q3 gives you your timing hook and your most shareable angle. Q4 becomes your mid-week educational or value-led post - the one that builds trust rather than asks for anything. Q5 becomes your end-of-week social proof moment: a photo, a testimonial snippet, a result. Five inputs. Five distinct content directions. No blank page. This is why platforms like Rulrr's AI Content Studio are built around structured input - because when your brief is specific and local, the output stays on-brand and useful rather than generic and forgettable.

The Brief in Practice: A Restaurant Owner's Real Example

A restaurant owner planning her weekly marketing at the kitchen pass

From Five Answers to a Full Week

Q1: Fill Thursday evening covers - slowest shift of the week. Q2: Local couples and after-work groups who already know us. Q3: Farmers market on the high street this Saturday - chance to tie in sourcing story. Q4: Customers don't know the set menu runs Thursday only. Q5: A table of six left a glowing Google review on Sunday - quote it. From those five answers: a Thursday set-menu post with a direct booking link, a behind-the-scenes sourcing reel tied to the market, an educational caption about the Thursday exclusive, and a screenshot of the Sunday review. Four pieces. Ten minutes of thinking. The rest is execution - which, at that level of clarity, moves fast.

Make It a Habit, Not a Heroic Effort

The brief only works if it takes ten minutes and happens every week without fail. A few things that make it stick: keep the five questions saved somewhere you open naturally - Notes, WhatsApp to yourself, a pinned doc. Answer them in bullet points, not paragraphs. Don't edit as you write. The goal at this stage is direction, not polished copy. Once the brief exists, the copy, the captions, and the ad angles all have a clear brief to work from - whether you're writing them yourself, handing them to a tool, or feeding them into a platform that does the heavy execution for you. Structure is the only thing that separates a business that markets consistently from one that markets whenever it remembers to.

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