{"id":674,"date":"2026-05-23T08:05:03","date_gmt":"2026-05-23T08:05:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/reach.cat\/blog\/how-to-brief-clipping-campaign-2026\/"},"modified":"2026-05-23T08:05:03","modified_gmt":"2026-05-23T08:05:03","slug":"how-to-brief-clipping-campaign-2026","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/reach.cat\/blog\/how-to-brief-clipping-campaign-2026\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Brief a Clipping Campaign That Gets 10x More Submissions in 2026"},"content":{"rendered":"
The brief is the single highest-leverage decision a brand manager makes before launching a clipping campaign. A weak brief produces 5 mediocre submissions. A strong brief produces 50 to 500 high-quality clips from the best editors on the platform. The difference between the two is not budget. It is clarity. This guide is the exact template, with field-by-field guidance, the specific examples that convert in 2026, and the seven mistakes that cause campaigns to underperform regardless of CPM. If you have already read how to launch a clipping campaign<\/a>, this article is the deeper layer that determines submission velocity and average clip quality. For the broader context on how brands use clippers in 2026, see the brand playbook<\/a>.<\/p>\n Calculate your campaign budget before you write the brief. Use the clipping fee calculator<\/a>.<\/p>\n Clippers do not read campaign briefs the way brand managers write them. Brand managers write briefs to communicate strategy. Clippers read briefs to answer one question: “Can I produce a clip that gets approved and earns me money in the next 60 minutes?” Every brief should be optimized for that question. The submission rate of your campaign is directly proportional to how quickly a clipper can answer “yes.”<\/p>\n The 2026 data on Reach.cat shows a clear pattern. Campaigns with under 200 words in the brief receive 3x more submissions than campaigns with 800+ words. Campaigns with three or more specific example clips linked at the top receive 4x more submissions than campaigns with no examples. Campaigns with a binary “do this \/ don’t do this” structure receive 2x more submissions than campaigns with prose paragraphs. The pattern is consistent across every niche.<\/p>\n The implication: the brief is not a document. It is a checklist. Strip everything that does not directly help a clipper decide what to make. Move strategy context to internal documents. The clipper does not need to know your quarterly OKRs. They need to know what 30 seconds of footage to extract, how to package it, and what disqualifies a submission.<\/p>\n Use this exact structure. Every field is mandatory. The order matters because clippers scan top-to-bottom and bail when the first three fields are unclear.<\/p>\n\n
The Anatomy of a Brief That Gets Submissions<\/h2>\n
The 7-Field Brief Template (Copy-Paste Ready)<\/h2>\n